Distribution

Right of Way

Dir: various

UK

90 mins

Play Dates

  • Show All
  • London
  • Scotland
  • South West
  • South East
  • North
  • Midlands

Battle U3A

16/01/2023

- 16/01/2023

Bexhill on Sea

Berwick Film & Media Arts Festival

10/09/2022

- 10/09/2022

(Preview Screening)

Berwick-upon-Tweed

BFI Southbank

23/02/2023

- 23/02/2023

Lambeth,

London

Bonington Theatre

26/09/2022

- 26/09/2022

Arnold

Central Saint Martins

29/04/2023

- 29/04/2023

London

Centre for Contemporary Arts (CCA)

23/03/2023

- 23/03/2023

(Screening at GSFF)

Glasgow

City Eye

17/11/2022

- 17/11/2022

Southampton

Creative Arts East

22/02/2023

- 22/02/2023

Wymondham

Deal Film Club

24/01/2023

- 24/01/2023

Deal

Depot

20/09/2022

- 20/09/2022

(Launch Event)

Lewes

Dwellbeing Shieldfield

26/01/2023

- 26/01/2023

Newcastle upon Tyne

Electric Picture House (Wotton)

09/10/2022

- 09/10/2022

Wotton-under-Edge

Exeter Phoenix

04/05/2023

- 04/05/2023

Exeter

Gulbenkian Cinema

27/06/2023

- 27/06/2023

Canterbury

Keswick Alhambra Cinema

28/02/2023

- 15/03/2023

Excluded Dates: 29-9, 11-14 March

Keswick

King Street Cinema

11/03/2023

- 11/03/2023

Ipswich

Laxton History Group

15/02/2023

- 15/02/2023

Laxton

Lowestoft Film Festival

22/10/2022

- 23/10/2022

Lowestoft

LUX

14/01/2023

- 04/03/2023

London

Od Arts Festival

26/05/2023

- 28/05/2023

Otley Film Society

29/06/2023

- 29/06/2023

((Otley Walking Festival))

Otley

Plymouth Arts Centre

27/10/2022

- 27/10/2022

Plymouth

Ramblers Kent

04/02/2023

- 04/02/2023

Folkestone

Stansted Mountfitchet Local History Society

02/02/2023

- 02/02/2023

Stansted

Stroud Film Festival

11/03/2023

- 11/03/2023

TAPE Collective

30/03/2023

- 30/03/2023

(SPACE Colchester)

Lambeth,

London

TAPE Collective

29/04/2023

- 29/04/2023

(SPACE Ilford)

Lambeth,

London

The Art Station

24/02/2023

- 24/02/2023

Saxmundham

The Dukes

14/02/2023

- 16/02/2023

Excluded Dates: 15th

Lancaster

The Forum (Hexham)

07/05/2023

- 07/05/2023

Hexham

The Old Forge

03/11/2022

- 03/11/2022

Kirkby Stephen

The Place Bedford

05/11/2022

- 05/11/2022

Bedford

The Stove Network

10/02/2023

- 10/02/2023

Dumfries

Warwick Arts Centre

08/11/2022

- 08/11/2022

Coventry

Watershed

16/11/2022

- 16/11/2022

Bristol

Wivenhoe Anti Racist Group

23/01/2023

- 23/01/2023

Colchester

Battle U3A

16/01/2023

- 16/01/2023

Bexhill on Sea

Berwick Film & Media Arts Festival

10/09/2022

- 10/09/2022

(Preview Screening)

Berwick-upon-Tweed

Bonington Theatre

26/09/2022

- 26/09/2022

Arnold

Creative Arts East

22/02/2023

- 22/02/2023

Wymondham

Deal Film Club

24/01/2023

- 24/01/2023

Deal

Dwellbeing Shieldfield

26/01/2023

- 26/01/2023

Newcastle upon Tyne

Electric Picture House (Wotton)

09/10/2022

- 09/10/2022

Wotton-under-Edge

Exeter Phoenix

04/05/2023

- 04/05/2023

Exeter

Keswick Alhambra Cinema

28/02/2023

- 15/03/2023

Excluded Dates: 29-9, 11-14 March

Keswick

King Street Cinema

11/03/2023

- 11/03/2023

Ipswich

Laxton History Group

15/02/2023

- 15/02/2023

Laxton

Lowestoft Film Festival

22/10/2022

- 23/10/2022

Lowestoft

Od Arts Festival

26/05/2023

- 28/05/2023

Otley Film Society

29/06/2023

- 29/06/2023

((Otley Walking Festival))

Otley

Plymouth Arts Centre

27/10/2022

- 27/10/2022

Plymouth

Ramblers Kent

04/02/2023

- 04/02/2023

Folkestone

Stansted Mountfitchet Local History Society

02/02/2023

- 02/02/2023

Stansted

Stroud Film Festival

11/03/2023

- 11/03/2023

TAPE Collective

30/03/2023

- 30/03/2023

(SPACE Colchester)

Lambeth,

London

TAPE Collective

29/04/2023

- 29/04/2023

(SPACE Ilford)

Lambeth,

London

The Art Station

24/02/2023

- 24/02/2023

Saxmundham

The Dukes

14/02/2023

- 16/02/2023

Excluded Dates: 15th

Lancaster

The Old Forge

03/11/2022

- 03/11/2022

Kirkby Stephen

Wivenhoe Anti Racist Group

23/01/2023

- 23/01/2023

Colchester

BFI Southbank

23/02/2023

- 23/02/2023

Lambeth,

London

Central Saint Martins

29/04/2023

- 29/04/2023

London

LUX

14/01/2023

- 04/03/2023

London

Centre for Contemporary Arts (CCA)

23/03/2023

- 23/03/2023

(Screening at GSFF)

Glasgow

The Stove Network

10/02/2023

- 10/02/2023

Dumfries

City Eye

17/11/2022

- 17/11/2022

Southampton

Watershed

16/11/2022

- 16/11/2022

Bristol

Depot

20/09/2022

- 20/09/2022

(Launch Event)

Lewes

Gulbenkian Cinema

27/06/2023

- 27/06/2023

Canterbury

The Forum (Hexham)

07/05/2023

- 07/05/2023

Hexham

The Place Bedford

05/11/2022

- 05/11/2022

Bedford

Warwick Arts Centre

08/11/2022

- 08/11/2022

Coventry

We’re told we all have a right to roam in the countryside – but does that apply to everyone equally?

Right of Way is a new feature-length programme that mixes stunning new artists’ commissions with historical archive films that give a bigger picture of questions of access and inclusion in the UK countryside. This programme is presented by the ICO and LUX and supported by the BFI Film Audience Network and Arts Council England. Bookings are available through to September 2023.

It’s inspired by the foundation of the National Trails. Set up to resist sweeping industrialisation, these protected landscapes were created with a vision to ‘connect people to the rural landscape’. But during the COVID-19 pandemic – as people realised anew the importance of nature and open spaces for our health and mental wellbeing – inequalities of access to rural land were being exposed, revealing the disconnect felt by millions of people towards the UK countryside. A 2019 government review found that many Black, Asian and ethnically diverse people view the countryside as an ‘irrelevant white, middle-class club’, concluding that this divide is only going to widen as society changes and ‘the countryside will end up being irrelevant to the country that actually exists’.

The new commissions interrupt and challenge the enduring perception of the rural idyll as an untouched and unchanging space where time stands still. What happens when Black, Asian and other ethnically diverse people enter these landscapes? How can our natural spaces be homes to protest, trespassing, activism and raves? Paired with archive films that show that the life of the countryside contains multitudes and disrupt simple narratives, this programme is a terrific platform for debate on historical and contemporary discussions about who has a right to the great outdoors and who is excluded from it. 

Certificate: Archive Films (U), New Commissions (12A)
Running times: Archive Films 51 minutes, New Commissions 34 minutes. Total running time: 85 minutes

Please note: Black Strangers and Syncopated Green contain sequences with flashing lights, which may be unsuitable for viewers with photosensitive epilepsy.

Touring venues across the UK from 20 September 2022

We’ve commissioned new writing on the themes brought up by the films. Read them here.

Play Dates

This title is no longer available for booking from the ICO

Trailer

About the Films

New commissions

black strangers

Dan Guthrie | UK | 2022

After seeing him mentioned on a Bishop’s Transcript held in Gloucestershire Archives, Dan goes for a walk in the woods in search of Daniel, a man buried in Nympsfield on the 31st December 1719 and described on the document as ‘a black stranger’. Whilst walking, Dan talks directly to Daniel, speculating about the parallels between him and his namesake and wrestling aloud with the problems that come with trying to read the archive at face value and fill in its gaps.

Pastoral Malaise

Ufuoma Essi | UK | 2022

Pastoral Malaise is a meditative reflection on the absences found in rural pastoral environments, that are often framed by a false romanticism and picturesque conventions, constructed as tourist sites within rural landscapes across Britain. Inspired by Una Marson’s poem Spring In England and Dorris Henderson’s 1965 cover of the popular British folk song One Morning In May, the film recalls an imagined relationship to the English landscape told through memories and speculative histories.

Syncopated Green

Arjuna Neuman | UK | 2022

Syncopated Green reflects on the history of outdoor free parties in the English countryside, using rave music, past and present, to help forget the ‘official’ portrayal of England as picturesque, nostalgic, white, and rural. The film invites rave music into the English landscape – turning imperial history inside out. Somewhere between a music video, a memoir and an essay, it asks: how might our future be different if we had other histories to lean on – and dance with?

Archive films

Eastbourne

Gilbert Tomes | UK | 1958

Holidaying in Eastbourne, the Sanderstead Youth Fellowship take in an organised walk over the South Downs from Beachy Head to Cuckmere Haven. Courtesy of Screen Archive South East at the University of Brighton

Pilgrim's Way

William N. Boyle | UK | 1956

From Farnham to Canterbury, this 120-mile trek across the famous Pilgrim’s Way section of the North Downs Way takes in some of south-east England’s prettiest towns, villages and pastures. Courtesy of BFI National Film & Television Archive

Father Thames

unknown | UK | 1935

Recorded over 60 years prior to the establishment of the Thames Path National Trail, this film follows England’s best-known river for 185 miles as it ambles from its source in the Cotswolds through several rural counties and into the heart of London. Courtesy of BFI National Film & Television Archive

Holiday on the North Norfolk Coast

unknown | UK | 1952

Glasgow’s Countryside Club visits the North Norfolk Coast, taking in sights along the still-to-be-established National Trail Path. In this clip the group journeys from Morston Quay to explore Blakeney National Nature Reserve. Courtesy of the East Anglian Film Archive at the University of East Anglia

South Downs Way

unknown | UK | 1975

This amateur travelogue-style documentary follows the route of the South Downs Way three years after its official opening, accompanied by a voiceover providing historical narrative on the route and local history of the areas it passes through. Courtesy of Screen Archive South East at the University of Brighton

Norfolk, 1986

unknown | UK | 1986

One week before Prince Charles opens the Peddars Way Long Distance Path, local journalist Bruce Robinson talks through the book he has written about the historic Roman road it follows. Courtesy of the East Anglian Film Archive at the University of East Anglia

Country Ways: The Ridgeway in October

Paul Slater | UK | 1988

ITV’s popular Country Ways television series explores The Ridgeway National Trail through the eyes of the people that live and work along the historic pathway, commonly known as ‘Britain’s oldest road’. Courtesy of the Wessex Film and Sound Archive at Hampshire County Council

Artists

Arjuna Neuman

Arjuna Neuman was born on an airplane: that’s why he has two passports. He is an artist, filmmaker and writer. With recent presentations at CCA Glasgow; Centre Pompidou, Paris; Manifesta 10, Marseille; Showroom Gallery, London; TPW Gallery, Toronto; Forum Expanded, Berlin Berlinale; Jameel Art Centre, Dubai; Berlin Biennial 10, Germany; Serpentine, London X Qalandia Biennial, Palestine; Gasworks, London; Bold Tendencies, London, UK; Or Gallery, Vancouver; Whitechapel Gallery, London; Istanbul Modern, Turkey; MAAT and Docslisboa, Portugal; Sharjah Biennial 13, UAE; Bergen Assembly, Norway; at NTU Centre for Contemporary Art, Singapore; the 56th Venice Biennale and SuperCommunity; Industry of Light, London; the Haus Der Kulturen der Welt; at Ashkal Alwan and the Beirut Art Centre, Lebanon; Le Gaite Lyric, Paris; the Canadian Centre for Architecture; and the Rat School of Art, Seoul amongst others. As a writer he has published essays in Relief Press, Into the Pines Press, The Journal for New Writing, VIA Magazine, Concord, Art Voices, Flaunt, LEAP, Hearings and e-flux.

Dan Guthrie

Dan Guthrie is an artist, researcher and writer whose practice often explores representations of Black Britishness, with an interest in examining how they manifest themselves in rural areas. In the last year, he has been a participant in East Bristol Contemporary’s Day School programme, a panel member for Stroud District Council’s review of streets, buildings, statues and monuments, and a part-time librarian. His work has been shown at the Whitstable Biennale, Alchemy Film and Moving Image Festival, Focal Point Gallery, Obsidian Coast and the ICA, and he has previously worked as a submissions viewer for London Short Film Festival and Glasgow Short Film Festival.

Ufuoma Essi 

Ufuoma Essi is a filmmaker and artist from south-east London whose work spans film, moving image, photography and sound. Using the archive as an essential medium, her work revolves around Black feminist epistemology and the configuration of displaced histories, with the aim of interrogating and disrupting the silences and gaps of political and historical narratives. Recent screenings, solo and group exhibitions include South London Gallery, Public Gallery, London, Galerie Rudolfinum, Prague; Berwick Film and Media Arts Festival, Berwick; Lisson Gallery, London; Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles; Maysles Documentary Center, New York; and Black Star Film Festival, Philadelphia. Upcoming solo exhibitions include Is My Living in Vain at Gasworks, London (2022) and Te Uru Waitakere Contemporary Gallery, Auckland (2023).

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