Showing posts with label exhibitions. Show all posts
Showing posts with label exhibitions. Show all posts

Thursday, 3 July 2008

Margaret Mellis, the Sainsbury Centre

World Art Collections Exhibition
Sainsbury Centre for Visual Arts

Margaret Mellis - Fisherman 1990 / 1991
Private Collection © the artist, 2008
Photo: Andi Sapey


Margaret Mellis: A Life in Colour
A new exhibition and a new film

The career of the artist Margaret Mellis is the focus of the new exhibition and the new film, Margaret Mellis: A Life in Colour.

The exhibition, which includes excerpts from the film, opens at the Sainsbury Centre for Visual Arts, Norwich, on Tuesday 1 July and runs until Sunday 31 August.

The film
, produced by Jules Hussey and directed by Sue Giovanni, will première at the Picture House Cinema (Cinema City), Norwich, on Tuesday 8 July as part of the events programme accompanying the exhibition.

The Film
Margaret Mellis: A Life in Colour is a 60 minute documentary film which tells the story of the Margaret Mellis’ life in her own words. The film brings together excerpts from Mellis’ diaries and writing, read by actress Susannah York, with interviews by Professor Mel Gooding (1993 and 1994) for the oral history project Artist’s Lives, which is run by the National Life Stories collection based at the British Library Sound Archive (see Notes to Editors for more information).

“The documentary, Margaret Mellis: A Life in Colour, weaves together the artists’ words with archive photographs and film, new stills, Super 8 and video footage, to produce an in-depth study of Margaret Mellis’ life and work. It is an oral history about a visual artist told using a moving image medium”
– Jules Hussey, Producer.

The Exhibition
A Life in Colour is the first major exhibition of work since Mellis stopped making in 2001, aged 87, due to ill health and features over 60 paintings and sculptures. The exhibition spans Margaret Mellis’ career, from the early still-lifes to the abstract reliefs of the 1960s and the magnificent constructions made from driftwood found on the beach near her Suffolk home. The construction Scarlet Undercurrent, Mellis’ final work, is included in the show.

Margaret Mellis Photo: W.L Bednarski

The exhibition reveals Margaret Mellis’ life-long preoccupations: passion for colour and fascination with form.

“For me, painting is way of making discoveries and of making a thing. When the areas of a painting start reacting together and yet hold together, the thing starts to live. Sometimes it gives a sort of kick”
- Margaret Mellis.

Margaret Mellis’ Life
Margaret Mellis was born in China in 1914 of Scottish parents, and moved to Britain as a baby. Fascinated by colour as a child, her remarkable career began at just 16 years of age when she started studying at Edinburgh College of Art (1930 - 34). As a young woman she was awarded a coveted travelling scholarship that allowed her to travel to Paris and across Europe. In 1937 she held a fellowship at Edinburgh College of Art before studying at Euston Road School.

In 1939 Margaret Mellis moved to St Ives, Cornwall, with her first husband, writer and painter Adrian Stokes. They both became central figures in the St Ives School of artists, which included Barbara Hepworth, Ben Nicholson and Naum Gabo. In St Ives, Ben Nicholson encouraged Mellis to experiment with collage and relief, prompting her to “think in a different way, not in colour, which was natural to me”. This was a formative period for Margaret Mellis, working alongside some of the most influential British artists in the 20th century.

In 1948 she married the artist Francis Davison and in 1950 they settled near Diss in Suffolk, moving to Southwold in 1976. It was after Davison’s death in 1984 that Margaret Mellis embarked on possibly her most creative phase, her ‘constructions’, made out of driftwood found on Southwold beach.



Wednesday, 2 July 2008

'Country Walk' exhibition, Beyond the Image Gallery

Beyond the Image Gallery
13, Red house Yard,
Thornham Magna, Eye,

Hosts a collection of work entitled
'Country Walk'
by Jill Hodgson (GRH)

4th - 27th July
Fridays to Sundays 11.00am - 4pm

Further information on the gallery, exhibitions and courses can be found on our website www.beyondtheimage.co.uk

Harleston & Waveney Art Trail 2008

Image detail from: The Wrecked West Pier, Brighton, II - Gill Levin

Harleston & Waveney Art Trail 2008

Sat 5 & Sun 6 July 2008 11.00am - 6.00pm
Sat 12 & Sun 13 July 2008 11.00am - 6.00pm
Sat 19 & Sun 20 July 2008 11.00am - 6.00pm

Thirty professional artists, all within an easy bike ride of Harleston, invite you into their studios over three July weekends to see where and how they work, and to browse a wealth of paintings, prints, sculpture, photography, studio ceramics and textiles. Some studios offer workshops; and at all of them you can purchase original works of art at studio prices.

Entry to all studios is free, and many artists open their gardens too. You can follow the Trail as the mood takes you - a Harleston town route; a village route; or a Bungay route. Bikes are available to hire at the Swan Hotel, Harleston.

Throughout July there will be an exhibition by Trail artists at the new Harleston Gallery and Studio Café where you can see examples of their work and plan your route over a refreshing drink, snack or light meal.

Pick up an illustrated brochure with map and brief descriptions of artists’ work, from the Harleston Gallery, Harleston Information Plus, the Fisher Theatre Bungay, and shops and other public places in Harleston, Bungay and the surrounding villages - and meet for yourself some of the tremendously diverse community of artists living and working in the Waveney Valley.

For more information
Tel: Lesley Rock on 01379 854897
Email: harlestongallery@btinternet.com
Visit www.south-norfolk.gov.uk/leisure to download a brochure.

Tuesday, 24 June 2008

Exhibits at The UpStairs Gallery, Beccles

Commission Free Gallery, UK
The Upstairs Gallery Beccles

July 1st - 29th

DIANE BALL
Hungate Gallery
A new emerging artist, Diane captures the loneliness of subject matter in vast canvases.

14th July - 11th August
JACKIE COOTE
Featured Artist lower Floor

Mixed exhibitions by local artists.
Open Mon-Sat closed Wednesday 10-4.30pm

Smalltown..bigART
For any information on the gallery call the gallery team on
01502 717191

The UpStairs Gallery
Exchange Square
BECCLES
Suffolk
NR34 9HH

www.theupstairsgallery.co.uk

bigARTgallery@aol.com

Thursday, 19 June 2008

Mapping Norfolk, the Sainsbury Centre

World Art Collections Exhibition
Sainsbury Centre for Visual Arts

Photograph of Norfolk by Kabir Hussain

Kabir Hussain
Mapping Norfolk


Mapping Norfolk, a new exhibition of work by artist Kabir Hussain, opens in the Link at the Sainsbury Centre for Visual Arts, University of East Anglia (UEA), Norwich on 1 July and runs until 31 August.

The exhibition has been inspired by the Norfolk landscape, from the salt marshes of north Norfolk to the Broads and the flatlands of the Fens. At the centre of the show are large works in bronze that form a ‘sculptural map of Norfolk’.

Photography, sculpture and drawing by the artist will also be on display. The exhibition is curated by Atsuko Kikuchi, Curatorial Fellow in Cultural Diversity at the Sainsbury Centre.

“The Norfolk landscape expresses its energy in an embracing way, an impression reinforced by Norfolk’s big sky. It has a subtle and confident character”
– Kabir Hussain.

Kabir Hussain was born in Punjab, Pakistan, in 1960. At the age of 7 he emigrated to England with his family and grew up in Yorkshire. His fascination with the landscape stems from his memories of the terrain he saw from the aeroplane on this journey. His experiences of landscape have been diverse, from the altiplano of Peru to the craggy terrain of Eritrea through to the Thar Desert of India. These have informed his sculptural practice.

Work at the Foundry

Having lived in Kings Lynn since 2001, Hussain feels now is the time to explore the countryside he calls home. He explains that “Wanderlust takes you to faraway places. The buzz of a new and alien environment can be enthralling. Over time you become more appreciative of your immediate surroundings, as I have of Norfolk after living here for 7 years. I feel a familiarity with it and have an attachment to it that I wish to build upon. When I first visited the county in 1995, I was struck by its expansive nature. Now I feel is the time to adopt it for formal study”.

In preparation for the exhibition, Kabir Hussain has embarked on a number of journeys on land, by sea and from the air. He began in Kings Lynn where he took a fresh look at some of the routes that have become familiar to him over the years. From there he moved down the coast to explore the mud flats of Snettisham and the expansive views seen from locations which include Ten Mile Bank, Salthouse Church and Sheringham. Hussain then went inland visiting Thetford Forest and the Norfolk Broads.

Research to inform the exhibition has been carried out on a wide range of topics by Kabir Hussain and the curator, Atsuko Kikuchi. Literature and archival materials have been studied and interviews conducted with local residents and experts on topics from history and archaeology to wildlife. Norfolk organisations that have contributed to the research include Norfolk Wildlife Trust, the Norfolk Coast Partnership, Norfolk Museums and Archaeology Service, Norfolk Heritage Centre and the School of Environmental Science at UEA.

Kabir Hussain is a master bronze founder, with over 17 years of experience. His new works that form a ‘sculptural map of Norfolk’ have been cast at the AB Fine Art Foundry in London. Hussain uses a combination of bronze, wax and paper to form delicate textures and shapes giving them the immediacy and intimacy of a watercolour. Displayed with the bronzes will be sculpture, drawings and photographs by the artist.

“We hope the exhibition will inspire people with a sense of community, encourage lively debate about our local environment and give people a fresh perspective on the Norfolk landscape”
– Atsuko Kikuchi.

Accompanying the exhibition will be a new website - www.mappingnorfolk.com - which will feature work by the artist and interviews with local residents and experts. People will also have chance to take part in an online mapping project to create a map of Norfolk with their videos and photographs. For information about events accompanying Mapping Norfolk visit www.scva.org.uk or telephone 01603 593199.


Tuesday, 17 June 2008

Bob Heath's exhibition 'BLUR' extended, 29 June

Bob Heath's exhibition, 'BLUR', currently showing at Beyond the Image Photographer's Gallery, Thornham Walks, Thornham Magna, has been extended by an extra week and will now run until Sunday 29th June.

Further information on the gallery, exhibitions and courses can be found on our website www.beyondtheimage.co.uk

Tuesday, 10 June 2008

CONSTRUCTED 40 Years of the UEA Collection, the Sainsbury Centre

World Art Collections Exhibition
Sainsbury Centre for Visual Arts

Lazlo Moholy-Nagy, Composition

CONSTRUCTED
40 Years of the UEA Collection

Constructed, the most extensive exhibition of the UEA Collection of Abstract and Constructivist Art, Architecture and Design, opens at the Sainsbury Centre for Visual Arts, University of East Anglia (UEA), Norwich, on Tuesday 1 July and runs until Sunday 14 December.

The collection, which was founded in 1968, features sculpture, painting, graphics and design, together with architectural models, stage sets and furniture. Works by David Bomberg, Marcel Breuer, Charles Eames, Le Corbusier and François Morellet will be amongst those on display.


The UEA collection was begun as a response to the modernity of the University of East Anglia’s architecture. In 1968, UEA was one of England’s ‘New Universities’ with a bold concrete campus designed by architect Denys Lasdun to reflect the ambitious inter-disciplinary approach of the young institution.

“Although the UEA Collection was developed in response to Denys Lasdun’s concrete campus, the artists’ use of mathematical systems and repeated geometrical forms make the works in the UEA Collection the perfect complement to the architecture of Norman Foster’s Sainsbury Centre today” – Amanda Geitner, Keeper of the UEA Collection and Head of Collections and Exhibitions at the Sainsbury Centre for Visual Arts.

The UEA Collection was begun in 1968 with a grant of £10,000 from the University Council to form a collection of twentieth century art. The late Peter Lasko, founding art history professor at UEA and subsequently Director of the Courtauld Institute in London, was the founding honorary curator and worked with Alastair Grieve, a lecturer in art history, to identify works for the collection.

The UEA collection, which was moved to the Sainsbury Centre when it opened in 1978, has grown to over 400 objects. New acquisitions to the collection continue to be made; work generously gifted by Ian Tyson and Laura Castagno and work by Jean Spencer (acquired with the support MLA / V&A Purchase Grant Fund) will be on display in the 2008 exhibition.

Gerrit Rietveld - Red-Blue Chair, (replica 1968)
UEA Collection of Abstract and Constructivist, Art, Architecture and Design
UEA 31220 Photo: James Austin

The earliest group of works in the exhibition date from between circa 1910 and 1930 and reflect the origins of a modern ‘movement’. Early exponents included artists and architects associated with the De Stijl Group such as Gerrit Rietveld and those associated with the Bauhaus in Germany such as Wassily Kandinsky (see Notes to Editors for more information).

Works in the 1910 - 1930 section of the show include a Le Corbusier chair and architectural model, a painting by Sonia Delaunay, the Pravda Tower model by the Vesnin brothers, Rietveld chairs, a charcoal drawing by David Bomberg and 2D works by Wassily Kandinsky and Lazlo Moholy-Nagy. Artists began making work now described as ‘constructivist’ in the second decade of the twentieth century.

The First World War and the creation of a new social order through the Revolution in Russia were instrumental in causing many artists to rethink how art and design shapes the way people live. A visual language of order and clarity drew some inspiration from other abstract movements but more importantly, embraced the possibilities presented by rapid technological development and engaged with other disciplines such as mathematics, science and architecture.

“The artists, architects and designers whose work has been chosen for the UEA Collection have a common concern to construct an ordered and rational environment appropriate for the modern world. An underlying theme in the collection is ‘Art and the Machine’, encapsulating the idea that artists strived to control and harmonise machine production”
- Veronica Sekules, Former Keeper of the University Art Collection and now Head of Education and Research at the Sainsbury Centre for Visual Arts.

The exhibition will also feature two other major groups of work. The first, includes a room setting with Isokon furniture, the work of émigré artists who came to England during the Second World War at the invitation of Isokon’s founder Jack Pritchard after the Nazis closed the Bauhaus. It includes furniture designed by the Bauhaus masters, Marcel Breuer and Walter Gropius.

The second is a group described as ‘The British Constructionists’, which includes artists such as Victor Pasmore, Mary and Kenneth Martin, Peter Lowe, Gillian Wise and Anthony Hill. Work of this type was also being made in Europe and further afield – examples by artists such as Jesus Raphael Soto and François Morellet will be on display.

The artists and designers in this section of the show are all interested in the links between art, mathematics and geometry and were inspired by the rapid development of technology. The works include striking 3D constructions, sculptures, reliefs and works on canvas that use a strong simple palette of colours, clean lines and geometric shapes.


Tuesday, 3 June 2008

On the horizon, June 2008 - East of England

Seaside breaks and summer escapes
On the horizon, June 2008 - East of England
including photo competition!

Click image to find out more


Friday, 30 May 2008

The Bergh Apton Sculpture Trail 2008

Horse Sculpture: Rachael Long

The Bergh Apton Sculpture Trail 2008

Sat 31 May & Sun 1 June 2008 10.30am - 6.00pm

Sat 7 & Sun 8 June 2008 10.30am - 6.00pm

The Bergh Apton Sculpture Trail offers an exciting opportunity to view important works exhibited in twelve private gardens set within an idyllic rural Norfolk village.

This year’s theme is “Balance”. Many pieces will be an imaginative response to Climate Change, exploring how we balance our needs responsibly and ethically with those of nature.

61 important East Anglian and international artists have been selected to exhibit including Christopher Le Brun RA, recently short-listed for the “Gateway to England” commission.

Final year students from Norwich School of Art & Design will exhibit in gentle parkland and for the first time Shona stone sculptors from Zimbabwe will be included.

Many works will be for sale giving exclusive access to original works of art by renowned artists.

The Trail will meander through the village, along footpaths, over a landscaped former landfill site and through newly planted woodland. Live music will complement the settings. There will be story-tellers, workshops and a specially composed performance by local schools.

To promote environmentally responsible practice there will be no transport other than for the less mobile. This event will be essentially for walkers & cyclists only (please bring your own bikes).

For more information

Visit: www.berghapton.org.uk

Tel: Lizzie Meadows 01508 550119

Email: sculpturetrail@berghapton.org.uk

Woottens Paint the Iris Competition 2008

Woottens Iris Field Open Days provide one of the most spectacular shows of Bearded Irises in Europe – over two acres of blooms – over 400 varieties.

May 24th – 10th June


WOOTTENS 2008
PAINT THE IRIS COMPETITION

click image to enlarge

Prizes. Rules. Entrance Requirements.


Group 1 for artists over 18 (on 01/05/08)
1st Prize £250.00
2nd Prize £100.00

Group 2 for artists under 18 (on 01/05/08)
1st Prize £200.00
2nd Prize £75.00

Group 3 for artists under 14 (on 01/05/08)
1st Prize £150.00
2nd Prize £50.00

Group 4 for artists under 12 (on 01/05/08)
1st Prize £125.00
2nd Prize £40.00

Group 5 for artists under 9 (on 01/05/08)
Ist Prize £100.00
2nd Prize £30.00


To enter Woottens paint the iris competition.


Stage 1
Download entrance form (pdf file) from www.woottensplants.co.uk

Stage 2
Each entrant must visit the Woottens Iris Fields at Wenhaston between the 24th May and 10th June – you will find a map and directions on the downloaded entrance form. Bring your entrance form to the field and we will stamp it- please note no entrance form will be accepted which has not been stamped. Select an iris at the field you would like to paint (please chose a variety of which there is plenty), ask a Woottens staff member to cut you a stem to take away. We will try to give you a stem with plenty of buds still to open – these open in succession so you should have at least a week to draw and paint the flower! If you have a camera do bring it to the field - most botanical artist use photos as well as live flowers when painting a plant portrait.

Stage 3
All entries must be submitted on A4 paper by August 30th.
All entries must be of a single named variety of Iris from the Woottens Iris Field. Each artist may only submit one picture. All entries must have sticker on reverse side with the name of the iris variety you have painted, your name, your age on 01/05/08, postal address, telephone number and email address if available. All entries must be accompanied with a completed entry form (downloaded from www.woottensplants.co.uk) If you wish your entry to be returned to you after judging, please include a stamped addressed envelope. Woottens cannot be held responsible for any loss or damage to entries in the post or whilst in their care.


The Judging


Each entry will be judged
1) on its accuracy as a portrait of the named variety
2) for boldness of composition and vigour of graphic line.

N.B. The competition will be judged by the RHS gold medal winning, botanical artist Christine Stephenson and by Michael Loftus, founder of Woottens Plants. The decision of the judges is final and no correspondence will be entered into. Woottens reserves the right to use photos of any entries

The Awards
The awards will be presented at Woottens on 5th October. All Prize winners will be expected to collect their prizes in person.

Monday, 26 May 2008

Exhibits at The UpStairs Gallery, Beccles

Commission Free Gallery, UK

Artists now exhibiting
Jenny Pine, Shaun Higgins Woodturner, Patricia Peers, Michelle Payne, David John Barnes, Jan Houchen, Ann Colby, Carole Perkins, Tim Revell, Helen Herbert, Tina Frith, David Feltham, Mary Smith, Rebecca Ollett, Pat Southwood, Mark Ward and Inti Design.

Open 10 - 4.30
Mon-Sat
Closed Weds/Sun bank holiday

01502 717191 15

The Pair, Michelle Payne

Lifecasting service available daily, childrens hands, babies hands and feet, breasts, torso's, buttocks.


August
Exhibiting artists
Suffolk Open Studios, County Show
Other exhibiting artists include Joel Benjamin - first show, Joe Crowfoot, Richard Parsons, Julia Worsley, David Leathers, Stephanie Griffiths, Jackie Coote - Feature Gallery

September
Feature Gallery, David Golding.
Other exhibiting artists include Sue Eaton, Stephanie Griffiths, Michelle Payne, Mark Ward, Fierce Designs.


Open Mon-Sat closed weds/sun bank holiday.

Smalltown..bigART
For any information on the gallery call the gallery team on
01502 717191

The UpStairs Gallery
Exchange Square
BECCLES
Suffolk
NR34 9HH

www.theupstairsgallery.co.uk

bigARTgallery@aol.com

Saturday, 24 May 2008

Activities in Norfolk for a ‘Wild’ May Half Term

Activities in Norfolk for a ‘Wild’ May Half Term

Norfolk is the UK’s premier birdwatching destination and from 26 May to 12 June, the county’s natural credentials will be showcased on BBC Springwatch.

Pensthorpe Nature Reserve near Fakenham, is the new home for the BBC’s popular wildlife programme, presented by Bill Oddie and Kate Humble.

Spring Bank Holiday and May half term is just the time to explore Norfolk’s countryside. As well as Pensthorpe Nature Reserve, the county has many internationally important nature reserves, notably RSPB Titchwell, Norfolk Wildlife Trust’s Cley reserve with its award winning visitor centre and café and The National Trust’s Blakeney Point. Take the Coasthopper bus service from King’s Lynn to Cromer and visit the reserves, or walk a section of the Norfolk Norfolk Coast long distance footpath.

For information on places to visit, accommodation and special events see www.visitnorfolk.co.uk

Here is a selection of Norfolk’s half term offerings.

Visit Pensthorpe Nature Reserve, home of BBC Springwatch 2008, go bug walking, pond dipping or take the Wensum Valley landrover discovery tour; also enjoy the Gardening & Food Fair on Saturday 31 May and Sunday 1 June, www.pensthorpe.com


Explore the North Norfolk Coast by bus. Take the Coasthopper bus from King’s Lynn to Cromer. For timetables see www.norfolkgreen.co.uk


See the new ‘Seahenge’ exhibition, West Norfolk’s great treasure at King’s Lynn Museum. The 4,000-year-old timbers were discovered on Holme beach on the North Norfolk coast and excavated in 1999. www.museums.norfolk.gov.uk


Visit ‘Market Shipborough’, fictional home of Stephen Fry’s Kingdom – real location the Georgian market town of Swaffham. Stephen Fry returns to Swaffham this summer to film a third series www.aroundswaffham.co.uk


Chat to a local artist during Norfolk Open Studios from Saturday 17 May to Sunday 1 June. More than 250 artists across the county are opening the doors of their studios www.nnfestival.org.uk/openstudios


Go on the Fen Tigers Trail at WWT Welney www.wwt.org.uk/welney or try the Wacky Wildlife Quiz Trail at Norfolk Wildlife Trust’s Ranworth Broad www.norfolkwildlifetrust.org.uk Both run from Saturday 24 May to Sunday 1 June


Explore the 5th Bergh Apton Sculpture Trail on Saturday 24 and Sunday 25 May, Saturday 31 May and Sunday 1 June and Saturday 7 and Sunday 8 June. Sixty-one sculptors are exhibiting in private gardens throughout the village www.berghapton.org.uk


BeWILDerwood, the woodland adventure park in the heart of the Norfolk Broads celebrates its first birthday from Saturday 24 May to Monday 26 May. Magical tree houses and strange characters like Thornyclod, Marsh Boggle and the Crocklebog bring this family attraction alive www.bewilderwood.co.uk


Catch the last week of Cloth & Culture NOW, a major contemporary textiles at the Sainsbury Centre for Visual Arts, Norwich. The exhibition, which closes on Sunday 1 June, examines the influence of culture and tradition on contemporary textile practice and features exciting and innovative new large-scale work by 35 artists from Estonia, Finland, Japan, Latvia, Lithuania and the UK www.scva.ac.uk


Fourteen gardens open in aid of the National Gardens Scheme Norfolk at half term, for full details of all garden openings see www.norfolkgardens.org


Norfolk Tourism is the county's established public and private industry partnership. Funded by its 50 partner organisations and EEDA, the partnership is designed to act as a forum for all Norfolk's tourism businesses and local authorities.

www.visitnorfolk.co.uk
Tel 01603 222846

Wednesday, 21 May 2008

Last chance to see Cloth & Culture NOW, Sainsbury Centre

World Art Collections Exhibition
Sainsbury Centre for Visual Arts

Last chance to see:

Cloth & Culture NOW
at the Sainsbury Centre for Visual Arts

Foreground: Dzintra Vilks, Meeting of the World Torn Winds
Photo: Andy Crouch

Cloth & Culture NOW, a major exhibition of international contemporary textile art, closes at the Sainsbury Centre for Visual Arts, Norwich, on Sunday 1 June. People have just two more weekends to catch this immensely popular show (closed Bank Holiday Monday).


“We are delighted with the way Cloth & Culture NOW has captured people’s attention. The show focuses on leading contemporary textile art in a global context, offering something new and different to anyone with an interest in art or textiles. The visitor numbers have been excellent, reflecting popular interest in textiles and the ongoing enthusiasm for what the Centre has to offer since we re-opened two years ago this month”
– Kate Carreno, Deputy Director.

The exhibition examines the influence of culture and tradition on contemporary textile practice and features exciting and innovative new large-scale work by 35 artists from Estonia, Finland, Japan, Latvia, Lithuania and the UK. The artists in the show use traditional techniques and materials such as tapestry, knitting and embroidery, as well as digital print and photography, optic fibres, moulded plastics, rusted metal and even bin bags.

For more information, including sample images and statements by all the artists visit



Thursday, 15 May 2008

Museums at Night Special, Sainsbury Centre

Museums at Night Special
at the Sainsbury Centre for Visual Arts


The Sainsbury Centre for Visual Arts will be open until 10pm on Wednesday 21 May for a Museums at Night Special as part of Museums and Galleries Month. The event is free and will offer something for everyone to enjoy including creative activities, live performances, workshops for families and chance to relax and soak up the vibrant atmosphere. There will also be the unique opportunity for visitors to explore the collections by lantern light.

“The Late Shift always offers a great range of new performance work in the unique surroundings of the Sainsbury Centre, bringing energy to the gallery on Wednesday night when we’re normally open until 8pm. This month’s Museums at Night Special is an opportunity to programme more activities for children and families, invite more people to explore the gallery in the evening, and create a really vibrant atmosphere.”
– Liz Ballard, Late Shift Organiser, Sainsbury Centre for Visual Arts

The evening will include traditional Chinese lion dancing from the Hung Sing Martial Arts School and the opportunity for children to take part in workshops to learn martial art skills and Lion moves. The University of East Anglia Chinese Society will present traditional Chinese music and dancing and there will be chance for visitors to listen to Chinese stories in the gallery.

Activities for children will include making Chinese lanterns and then exploring the collections to find Chinese objects by lantern light; listening to stories based on objects in the collection and making clothes from Chinese newspapers. As part of this event, along with more than seventy other museums and galleries around the country, the Sainsbury Centre will be taking part in a special showing of Nick Park’s Oscar winning animation ‘The Wrong Trousers’ to celebrate the national Museums and Galleries Month theme of ‘Ideas and Innovation’.

Local artists taking part in the event will present work inspired by Chinese culture, exploring its influences on the western world. Stephanie Douet will display objects inspired by Chinese porcelain while artist collective 8modern present a large-scale kinetic light installation called ‘Lantern’, casting reflections around the installation space. London based Taiwanese artist Craig Kao will be making animal costumes inspired by the Robert and Lisa Sainsbury Collection and storyteller Su Squire and visual artist Roberta Wood will be inviting visitors to take part in an interactive poetry web. Entertainment will continue into the evening with music from experimental group Spidermilk and stand up performances from Thomas Ingram, while DJ Wanda will close the evening with a lively DJ set and samba dancing to finish on a high!

“The Museums at Night Special is a chance for people to experience the Sainsbury Centre as they never have before and see the collections in a new light. The entire building will be buzzing with activity and there will be something for everybody to enjoy.”
– Charlotte Peel, Education and Events Officer, Sainsbury Centre for Visual Arts.

The Museums at Night Special is one of a series of Chinese themed events at the Sainsbury Centre to mark Museums and Galleries Month. From Tuesday 27 to Thursday 29 May families can drop in to the education studio for a Children’s Holiday Studio, Chinese Challenges with the opportunity to enjoy independent art activities and make their own Olympic mascots. There will also be chance to find out more about the Chinese objects in the Robert and Lisa Sainsbury Collection with an Art for Lunch talk by one of the Sainsbury Centre guides on Friday 30 May at 1.15pm.


China East is this region’s celebration for Museums and Galleries Month, an annual campaign to encourage new visitors and remind people of the treasures on their doorstep. This year’s national theme of Ideas and Innovation has inspired museums in the East of England to explore China and its far-reaching influence on our culture through their varied and fascinating collections. Participating museums include the Fitzwilliam in Cambridge, Colchester & Ipswich Museum Service, Museums Luton, Saffron Walden Museum and Braintree District Museum.

Tuesday, 13 May 2008

On the horizon, May 2008 - East of England

Click above image to find out more

Thursday, 1 May 2008

Museums and Galleries Month, Norwich


This May museums across the East of England are celebrating Museums and Galleries Month with a festival of free events on a Chinese theme. In Norwich, Norfolk Museums & Archaeology Service and the Sainsbury Centre for Visual Arts are collaborating for the first time to provide the city with a unique chance to experience this fascinating culture at close quarters. From porcelain and lanterns to dragons and fans, family workshops, talks by experts, demonstrations and live performances - there is something for everyone as East meets East!

Lion Dancers from the Hung Sing Martial Arts School, based in Norwich, at the Sainsbury Centre for Visual Arts Photo: Andi Sapey

Many Chinese inventions have influenced Western culture, affecting the way we dress (silk), the way we do business (paper money, postal system), the items we use in our daily lives (porcelain, scissors) and what we eat and drink (tea, noodles).

As Vanessa Trevelyan, Head of Norfolk Museums & Archaeology Service, reflects, the China East theme is about understanding this impact: "China East is about culture not politics. Museum collections throughout our region reflect the far-reaching influence of Chinese technology and artistry on our daily lives. China East is, therefore, as much about understanding ourselves as it is about the enduring relationship between East and West."

This is the focus for events at Norfolk Castle Museum & Art Gallery as it looks forward to the opening of two new decorative arts galleries later this year. Their exciting Museums and Galleries Month programme includes a sneak preview of some of the beautiful objects that will be on display in the new galleries, with a particular emphasis on fine porcelain.

On Saturday 3 and Sunday 4 May
visitors to the Castle will have the chance to watch a live demonstration of the delicate art of hand decoration by staff from the Lowestoft Porcelain factory
- and then have a go themselves in an artist-led workshop activity for all the family.