Mersey TV founder to head creative commission

Influential TV producer and brains behind successful series’ Grange Hill and Brookside is set to chair a commission which aims to inspire creative innovation in Liverpool.

Phil Redmond (pictured above), who also founded Mersey TV and sat as creative director and deputy chair of Liverpool’s Capital of Culture year in 2008 will head the commission.

Redmond will be leading an independent review which will review how creativity can be encouraged and nurtured as well as the promotion of creative collaboration and the growth of more businesses.

According to figures from the Office for National Statistics (ONS), the creative sector employs almost 12,000 people across Merseyside in jobsM across media, publishing and ICT through to architecture, design and the performing arts.

Mayor Joe Anderson, who has set up the commission, said:

“Liverpool has long been recognised as a creative city and has produced some of the world’s best writers, artists, comedians, musicians, playwrights and sports people. Whether it is arts or science, culture or business there is something in our DNA which means we have huge amounts of energy, talent and determination.

“I have asked Phil Redmond to look at what more we can do to try and take the city to the next level and make sure that current and future generations have the best possible chance of developing their full potential. The Commission will listen to the views of many of the fantastic organisations in the city and use them as a basis to develop ways in which the city can move to the next level.”

Phil Redmond added:

“Liverpool has always been regarded as a ‘pool of creative talent’ and what the commission will look at is how best we harness that heritage for future growth. What is it about this particular place that created the world’s first wet dock that revolutionised global trade that in turn made it, at one time, one of the richest places on earth? How that influenced its culture so that even through economic decline it further inspired people and their ideas that then went on to have global impact: whether engineering, architecture or literature or football or shopping or music, education, science and the arts the list of Liverpool firsts continues to expand.

“Everything, in the end, comes down to an idea. And that usually means someone, somewhere has been inspired to a single act of creativity. The commission has been drawn from people with experience of developing creativity as a cultural tool and its role in social history and will be looking, above all, at what has, what does and what will continue to influence people and their ideas: then bottle it.”

The other members of the commission are:

Peter Salmon – Director England, BBC
Stuart Cosgrove – Director of Creative Diversity at Channel 4
Alastair Machray – Liverpool Echo Editor in Chief
Sir Ken Robinson – an expert on creativity and innovation
Dr Denise Barrett Baxendale MBE – chief executive of Everton in the Community
Dr David Fleming OBE – Director of National Museums Liverpool
Aideen McGinley OBE – BBC Trust member
Claire McColgan MBE – Director of Culture Liverpool

A final report with recommendations will be submitted to the Mayor towards the end of spring 2015.

Source: The Business Desk

Image source: BBC

You might also like More from author

Leave A Reply

Your email address will not be published.

Username field is empty.