A group of people sits at a table with laptops, snacks, and drinks. Two in the foreground focus on their laptops while others chat in the background.
Workshops & Courses

Work Party for Cheats

A play­ful com­mu­nal space for cre­atives to get the stuff done that we just can’t get done. Each par­ty­go­er brings a task that has defeat­ed them.

Date
01/10/24
Region
Bristol
Opening Times
13:00 – 15:00
Over two hours we will endeavour to resolve as many unfinished tasks as we can, using all the skills and energy in the room to swap, steal and cheat our way out of our stuckness. Because doing other people’s work is easier than doing your own work, and collective satisfaction is better than individual smuggery.

To take part, please bring with you an unfinished or unresolved task, along with anything you think might be useful in resolving it. This could be something that you can’t do because you don’t have the skills or don’t have time, or something you are just avoiding because it’s boring or complicated. Feel free to bring something even if you think it’s impossible to be solved by collective cheating.

Work Party for cheats is hosted by Art Business Ltd’s CEO, Rachael Clerke, assisted by alter- egos Rach (admin support), Ray (logistics) and Roy (unhelpful). It was created in response to overwhelm in the arts, grind culture and the endless to-do list. It’s also a practical response to vapid instagram infographics that tell us that it’s ok to stop, drop everything, go easy on yourself, whilst we live in a world where this is not an option for so many. Sometimes you need to (and even want to) get the things done.

In previous Work Parties, participants have done the following tasks for each other: proofread, written budgets, written to pen pals, finished a painting, made a birthday card, given feedback on a novel, toilet trained a puppy, researched impenetrable jargon, shortlisted applications, come up with fundraising ideas, fixed a website, learned about human skin cells, and much more.

“I want to come back and do it again and again and again” - participant feedback