Hinterland

18 - 27 March 2016

Cardross, Argyll and Bute
  • Description
  • Background
  • Manifesto
  • Creative Team
  • Press
  • Partners
 

Hinterland marked the official launch of Scotland’s Festival of Architecture 2016 and was a key highlight in the Year of Innovation, Architecture & Design. Over ten nights from 18 – 27 March 2016, sell-out audiences explored one of Scotland’s most important modernist buildings for the first time in thirty years.  This immense public artwork introduced the long terms plans for the site and celebrated the journey of transition of this architectural icon.

As dusk fell to darkness, a walked route weaved through atmospheric woodland towards the abandoned building complex. Hinterland revealed the full glory of the towering concrete ruin, combining moving light installations and projection with a haunting choral soundscape by composer Rory Boyle, recorded by the St Salvator’s Chapel Choir of the University of St Andrews.

Hinterland presented an open manifesto for the ground-breaking creative work that will be programmed at St Peter’s Seminary from 2018 onwards. Amidst the overwhelming public response and the news of £4.2m in funding to take forward our vision for St Peter’s Seminary and Kilmahew woods, the final evening of Hinterland served as less as a conclusion, and more as a starting point for a promising future.

Awards:

  • Judges Choice Award, Sunday Herald Culture Awards 2016
  • Cultural Event of the Year, Scottish Event Awards 2016
  • Best Cultural Event or Festival, Regional Thistle Awards (West)

“All of the beauty, the rigour, and the poetry is contained within the building…it’s filled with aspiration ”
– Angus Farquhar

“What Hinterland spectacularly succeeds in achieving is showing off the wonderful modernist form of the concrete structure”
– The Herald

“Hinterland’s alchemy of light and sound helps us detect the invisible and see the beauty that lurks amid the ruination.”
– The Guardian

“‘Brought to life’ doesn’t do justice to the work carried out by the team of artists and technicians. Sharp edges and reliefs shift before our eyes, light rushes through cavities only to be extinguished moments later; a graffitied eye can be seen peeping through stories of concrete.”
– The List

 



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