Privacy & Cookies
Introduction
This page sets out the privacy policy of Migrate Art CIC in respect of our website and mailing list and explains how we use your personal information. Personal information means any information about you which is personally identifiable such as your name, address, telephone number or email address and is generally referred to throughout this policy as “Your Information”. Please note that this privacy policy does not apply to any third party website linked to our site.
Migrate Art CIC is a registered community interest company (Number 12191782) with our registered address at 28 Harrow Way, Kent, ME14 5TU. If you have any questions, complaints or comments about how we use data or would like a copy of any data we hold which belongs to you, please contact us on info@migrateart.com.
Unsubscribe from newsletter
If you would like to remove your email address from our third-party email database (MailChimp) please unsubscribe using the link inside the newsletter or email us directly at: info@migrateart.com
What information do we collect from you?
We may collect and process the following data/information about you:
Your name, delivery address, email address and any other contact information you supply to us, including but not limited to telephone numbers and social media handles.
If you contact us, we may keep a record of that correspondence.
How will we use your information?
We may use Your Information to:
Use your name, address and email to online orders and purchases.
Send you emails containing information and updates about Migrate Art.
Send you newsletter emails containing news about Migrate Art’s upcoming exhibitions, print releases or events.
Respond to any communications you send us.
Gain a clearer understanding of our users and how they interact with the Site; and help improve our site.
Cookies and Google Analytics
Cookies are small pieces of information stored by your browser on your computer’s hard drive. If you want to know more about cookies and how they work, please refer to the following websites: http://www.allaboutcookies.org and http://www.youronlinechoices.com.
We also use Google Analytics, a web analytics service provided by Google, Inc. Google Analytics uses cookies to collect information about details of our users’ visits to the Site (including IP addresses) and the resources they access on it. Google Analytics provides us with reports based on this information in order to us to help us understand how visitors engage with the Site. Google Analytics will not transfer the information it collects to any third party except where required to do so by law. Please note that we will not use Google Analytics to collect any information from which you can be personally identified, and we will not associate the information provided to us by Google Analytics with Your Information. Google Analytics’ cookies will remain on your computer for between thirty minutes and two years from being set / updated, unless you delete them before they expire. For more information about Google Analytics, please visit http://www.google.com/intl/en/analytics/privacyoverview.html.
We also use Facebook Pixel, a web analytics service provided by Facebook Inc. Facebook Pixel collects information about details of our users’ visits to the Site (including IP addresses) and the resources they access on it. Facebook Pixel will not transfer the information it collects to any third party except where required to do so by law. Please note that we will not use Facebook Pixel to collect any information from which you can be personally identified, and we will not associate the information provided to us by Facebook Pixel with Your Information
You may refuse to accept cookies by activating the setting on your browser which allows you to refuse the setting of cookies. Unless you do this, cookies will be issued when you use our Site, but you can delete them via your browser at any time. If you do not accept cookies, or decide to delete them, you will still be able to access and use the Site but you won’t be able to save any items. You can also install the Google Analytics Opt-Out Browser Add-On to prevent Google Analytics cookies being set, which is available for download here: http://tools.google.com/dlpage/gaoptout?hl=en.
Access to your information, correction and unsubscribing
To find out more about how your information will be used, or to make a complaint, please contact us at info@migrateart.com.
You have the right to request a copy of the information that we hold about you. If you would like a copy of some or all of the information we hold about you, please contact us via email info@migrateart.com.
We want to make sure that Your Information is accurate and up to date. You may ask us to correct or remove information you think is inaccurate by contacting us by email at info@migrateart.com.
You have the right to unsubscribe from any emails we send you. You can do this by clicking on the link at the bottom of every email we send to you or by contacting us by email at info@migrateart.com.
CNN
Perched on a branch amidst the cover of darkness is a Xingu screech owl with piercing,fiery ambereyes. Created by British artist Sarah Ball, the artwork is titled “Megascops Stangiae,” referring to the scientific name of this species only found in the Indigenous Xingu region of Brazil.
The Art Newspaper
Artists including Tacita Dean and Shezad Dawood have created works for a new exhibition and auction (From the Ashes)using paints, inks and pastels made from ash and charcoal salvaged from the burning of the Amazon rainforest.
UOL
Londres– Obras de arte feitas com tintas e pigmentos fabricados a partir de cinzas e carvão extraídos de áreas queimadas da Amazônia, criadas por 29 artistas contemporâneos indígenas e não indígenas de vários países, estão sendo expostas em um centro cultural de Londres e irão a leilão pela casa Christie’s no dia 9 de março.
Globo
A organização Migrate Art inaugurou em Londres nesta semana a exposição "From The Ashes" ("A partir das cinzas", em tradução livre) dedicada a angariar fundos para duas associações indígenas do Alto Xingu na Floresta Amazônica, cujas terras têm sido alvo de desmatamento ilegal. contemporâneos - indígenas e não indígenas - de todo o mundo, incluindo Cornelia Parker, Aislan Pankararu, María Berrío, Richard Long, Shezad Dawood e Tacita Dean. As obras estão em exibição na galeria The Truman Brewery.
Huck Magazine
From The Ashes brings 29 Indigenous and non-Indigenous contemporary artists together in support for Xingu Indigenous communities.
Wallpaper*
Mona Hatoum’s striking print, The Blues no. 1-12.7.2020-21 makes an impression in Wallpaper’s top 10 prints to see at London’s Original Print Fair 2023.
GQ Magazine
Turner prize winning sculptor Richard Long has collaborated with Migrate Art to support earthquake relief efforts in Syria and Lebanon.
FAD Magazine
“Fingerprints are both universal and individually unique.” Richard Long’s words sum up his photopolymer etching which featured in FAD Magazine. The creation, ‘War Paint On Slate’, was in collaboration with Migrate Art in response to earthquake relief efforts in Syria and Lebanon.
House & Garden
Christmas and art combine as the unique silk scarves of Migrate Art’s Moral Fibres project features as a go-to present for any art lover come December 25.
Juxtapoz
Radio Juxtapoz shared a very special episode unpacking how art can drive social change, using our collaboration with Love Welcomes, Moral Fibres as a worthy reference point.
Evening Standard
After raising more than £200,000 in proceeds for his viral print, The Standard followed up with Idris Khan to learn his reaction – it was as perfect as you’d expect.
Evening Standard
On March 21 the stark Ukrainian blue and yellow of Idris Khan’s print, I Thought We Had More Time… was seen everywhere across the streets of the UK. The Evening Standard told the important story behind it.
The Art Newspaper
Idris Khan’s Ukraine print was given a special mention in The Art Newspaper, alongside an update on the incredible amount of money it had raised.
Juxtapoz
Art can be a force for change – but the road is not linear. In this first-person article, our founder Simon Butler tells the inspiring story of Migrate Art’s origins, unpacking how the organisation has grown in tandem with its projects, and the inspiring artists and works that have helped to bring it to life.
TIME
When Myanmar’s political system was turned on its head in February 2021, art sprung. In this Time feature, our protest poster project was featured as an example of the way Myanmar’s artists were capturing the resistance, and using art as an empowering disrupter in the country.
Financial Times
From war zones to art - The Financial Times featured Migrate Art’s Scorched Earth in a poignant reflection of the project’s purpose, and the important message behind it.
Hypebeast
The powerful story behind Scorched Earth featured in Hypebeast ahead of the charity auction.
Artnet
Artnet led with Scorched Earth’s origins – where the ashes lay, and how they ended up on the canvases of some of the world’s most renowned contemporary artists.
FAD Magazine
FAD Magazine shared a backgrounder on Migrate Art’s work as it exhibited and auctioned the works of Scorched Earth.
Evening Standard
Our Masks for Meals face coverings made the Evening Standard’s listicle of best face masks to buy as we headed into the Coronavirus pandemic’s first winter in the UK.
Dazed Media
Dazed led with Anish Kapoor’s special contribution to Multicolour ahead of its charity auction in London.
Evening Standard
Multicolour made a splash in this feature in the Evening Standard, outlining the poignant origins to the project, and our organisation.
Artnet
Artnet leads with Sara Shamma’s creation for Multicolour – Alien: Two Heads. The article details the project and its upcoming auction.