- Title: Lockdown arts magazine to help beleaguered creatives
- Date: 6th July 2020
- Summary: (SOUNDBITE) (English) LIMBO MAGAZINE PUBLISHER, NICK CHAPIN, SAYING: "Even in the creative world, the art world where people are very interested in change, things can be quite conservative and suddenly this moment came along and broke things up and everyone had an opportunity to step back, pause and think about things. We thought that was really important to capture. It's not just about the lockdown. It's also about the broader environment. I think this is a period even now that lockdown is easing when people still feel a tremendous sense of uncertainty, a possibility of change which is really exciting but also some anxiety about what comes next and we've tried to capture all of that in the magazine, both the good and bad and just have a cross section of how creative and artistic people are thinking and feeling now right now all around the world."
- Embargoed: 20th July 2020 16:43
- Keywords: Creative arts magazine LIMBO Magazine beleaguered section of economy lockdown profit share
- Location: LONDON, ENGLAND, UNITED KINGDOM
- City: LONDON, ENGLAND, UNITED KINGDOM
- Country: United Kingdom
- Topics: Celebrities,Arts / Culture / Entertainment
- Reuters ID: LVA005CLO9AAH
- Aspect Ratio: 16:9
- Story Text: Vivian Westwood and Wolfgang Tillmans are among 100 artists who have contributed art and articles to a new magazine LIMBO created especially to help colleagues who are out of work and to capture the world during lockdown.
Responding to increasingly urgent calls from the high-profile sector, Britain announced on Sunday (July 5) it would invest nearly $2 billion in cultural institutions and the arts to help a sector that has been crippled by the COVID-19 pandemic.
Due to be published on Tuesday (July 7), LIMBO was borne of a desire to capture the world in a unique moment in history and to help each other in a time of crisis, its creators said. The magazine upends the traditional publishing model by sharing all revenue equally between the team.
"In the very first week of lockdown I thought to myself 'I'd love to see inside everyone's minds and everyone's home right now," publisher of LIMBO, Nick Chapin, told Reuters.
"All these fantastic creative people, writers, filmmakers. How are they channelling this energy? So I almost saw it as like a hundred windows on the minds and homes of people around the world."
Fifty A-list artists and creatives - from Oscar-winner Andrea Arnold, to Miranda July - waived their fees, allowing funds raised to go to the 50 contributors most in need.
"I wasn't able to get any help from the government when my business fell through. So we definitely felt like we had to do something ourselves. We had to find a way to support our community from the ground up," Chapin said.
The magazine is being sold on an honour system at three different prices, £9 ($11.25) for concessions, £14 ($17.5) normal price and £19 ($23.75) for readers who want to contribute more.
(Production: Stuart McDill) - Copyright Holder: REUTERS
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