Eurovision
Children in Liverpool take Eurovision to the sky!
2 years ago
Children from across Liverpool City Region will unite with youngsters in Ukraine in a poignant kite-flying display, representing their soaring dreams and shared aspirations.
On Friday 5 May, as part of Liverpool’s Eurovision host city programme, 450 primary school pupils will gather on The Tower Ground, New Brighton, to fly a kite at exactly the same time as 450 children in four Ukrainian cities – Kyiv, Lviv, Khmelnytskyi and Poltava. These cities have been chosen as when connected, they form a rhombus shape on the map, reminiscent of a kite.
In this moving project which is called Land & Sky, Home & Dreams, each pupil has designed their own flag during dedicated workshops, using their artwork to showcase what their hopes are for their future.
And although all 900 youngsters are working together on this powerful shared artwork, there will be subtle, impactful differences in the flying itself.
In Ukraine, not all 450 children can gather in the same location in case at any point they need to find safety in an underground shelter – as a result the children will be located in four regions across the country. Also, the kite strings in Ukraine are ten metres shorter than in Liverpool so that the kites do not enter the no-fly zone.
The Liverpool City Region schools taking part are:
Emmaus Church of England & Catholic Primary School, Croxteth
St Paul’s Catholic Primary School, West Derby
Matthew Arnold Primary School, Dingle
Childwall Church of England Primary School, Childwall
St Michael’s in the Hamlet Primary School
Woodlands Primary School, Formby
Woolton Primary School, Woolton
In Ukraine, the workshops have been facilitated by the Junior Academy of Sciences. The schools taking part are:
Taras Shevchenko No. 112, Kiev
European Collegium, Kiev
3D school, Lviv
Poltava Gymnasium No. 25, Poltava
Volodymyr Krasytskyi Khmelnytskyi Gymnasium No. 1, Khmelnytskyi
Primary school No. 1 of the Khmelnytsky City Council, Khmelnytskyi
Land & Sky, Home & Dreams forms part of the Eurovision EuroFestival which will see 24 commissions – 19 of which are co-productions between UK and Ukrainian organisations – take over the city and promise to be thought-provoking, evocative, fun, joyful, moving and hopeful.
This particular project has been made possible thanks to the support of Spirit of 2012, the Department for Culture, Media and Sport and the Ukrainian Institute. It is being delivered by Go Fly Your Kite – a family-run business based in Northern Ireland which specialises in delivering art kite workshops and projects linked to developing science, technology, engineering and mathematics skills in children and adults across Europe.