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Curated news 26 Apr, 2021

Lockdown stories of learning disabled artists transformed into sound walk by theatre company 

A local East London theatre company has set up a free audio exhibition exploring the changes and challenges the learning disabled community have had to face during lockdown. Helen Bryer and Adam Smith co-directors of the 90-minute exhibition  ‘Still here’ set up the immersive project back in September.   The project is a sound walk with eight stops each lasting around five to 10 minutes, with every break displaying the events poster and QR code. The simple use of a camera on your smartphone can scan the code and access each audio recording and sound. The choice of video caption

Source: Lockdown stories of learning disabled artists transformed into sound walk by theatre company | Eastlondonlines

Submitted by: Andrew Stuck

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nuddle

Back in the 1500s, nuddle had a few meanings that congregated low to the ground: To nuddle was to push something along with your nose or nudge forward in some other horizontal manner. By the 1800s, nuddle started referring to stooped walking, the kind of non-jaunty mosey in which someone’s head is hanging low. You can hear a touch of contempt in a phrase from an 1854 glossary by A. E. Baker: “How he goes nuddling along.” Credits to Mark Peters.

Added by Geert Vermeire

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