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BRIEF ENCOUNTERS 37


This image and below Outer Spaces in Aberdeen


artists and worked with landlords, agents and artists to set up a system that worked for all parties. Khadea Santi, communities co-ordinator, who is showing us around Ocean Point on this spring day, elaborates: ‘For artists it’s a chance to have a really good- sized studio where they are not limited by costs per square metre. We cover the building’s heating costs and landlords cover lighting and water. Tey save a lot through rates relief by having the building occupied.’ To date, Outer Spaces is working with


13 local authorities across Scotland and has provided studio space for over 900 artists. In Edinburgh alone, Santi says there are 280 artists enjoying free studio space. In Glasgow it’s higher – close to 400, many of them Glasgow School of Art (GSA) graduates and students. Outer Spaces instructs all occupants in health and safety procedures, and does a thorough condition check and risk assessment of each building. ‘We have to return it back in the same condition’ says Santi. Unsurprisingly, she tells us: ‘We have a waiting list. We say we have a new building coming on, are you interested? And they get really excited. We kind of want to create a community spirit in the building. We try and pair people so there’s a good energy for each


space. People also have the choice.’ Te occupants are also encouraged to collaborate, to put on their own exhibitions and events. And adaptation or personalisation is often possible – especially where a building is clearly in need of refurbishment – including opening spaces up to the community. At Ocean Point, there are roughly 80


artists in residence, and they have been allowed to instal a ‘sonic experimentation’ workshop. Also, on the sixth floor Santi shows us around a vast performance space, purpose-designed but light touch. For this, Outer Spaces invited a ‘curator in residence’ (Claire Feeley) to design the area as she liked, with curving curtains acting as backdrops, and pink ‘tongues’ of carpet to delineate space for improvisation, whether dance or


Outer Spaces instructs all occupants in health and safety procedures, and does a thorough condition check and risk assessment of each building


theatre. Under the title Dissenter, any of the resident artists can use this space. At the back of this floor, the artists share the space with a theatre company called Curious Seeds, who have their own rehearsal space. Outer Spaces also secures grants to commission work, much of it aiming to enrich the conversations between creatives and the local community. A prime example, which came to fruition in March 2025, is a project in Aberdeen, where Outer Spaces currently works with 88 artists across 20 properties. Tree local artists spent six months working with local communities around the subject of mental health. Te resulting works were displayed both inside and outside a disused commercial building in the city centre. It’s a neat resolution of the age-old


urban regen problems where artists reclaim abandoned neighbourhoods, and make them desirable, only to be pushed out when property values rise. Here, both parties have agency. Speaking of which, there are new plans for the regeneration of Leith and Newhaven, with new funding and new investors. But Outer Spaces is confident that when their buildings are re-occupied for their intended business uses, there will be plenty of unoccupied spaces for their artists to move to.


PHOTO: GRANT ANDERSON


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