Special curator-led tour of Art Without Heroes: Mingei

TOURS

Thursday 25 April 2024

See the exhibition with one of our curators as your guide.

Read more about the exhibition here.

Image: Bowl, Kawai Kanjiro. © National Museums Scotland 

Cray design by William Morris.

Community Iftar at William Morris Gallery

An event organised by PL84U AL-SUFFA

SPECIAL EVENTS

Tuesday 19 March 2024

You are warmly invited to gather together at this time during Ramadan to break your fast and to pray. Taking place in the ground floor Cafe and on the first floor landing of the Gallery. Refreshments are provided.

All members of the community are most welcome.

In partnership with London Borough of Waltham Forest.

Read more about PL84U AL-SUFFA here.

A woman reading at a workshop

Creative Writing Workshop & Book Club

With Waltham Forest Twinning Association

WORKSHOPS

Saturday 16 March 2024

Waltham Forest Twinning Association is holding monthly Creative Writing & Book Club workshops at the Gallery in 2024.

Participants are asked to bring their life experiences from the British, African Caribbean diaspora and Northeast London. These experiences will be shared through spoken and written word, leading to performance and publication opportunities. Creative writing will be followed by a book club ‘with a difference’ where you can discuss and share your favourite books. For all ages.

Facilitator: Jane Ulysses Grell – storyteller, author

Times: 12-2.30pm Creative Writing Workshop, 3-4pm Book Club ‘with a difference’

Where: Acanthus Room, William Morris Gallery

Travel: You are encouraged to use public transport, such as bus 123 or the 34, 97, 215, 275, 357 or SL1 to Bell Corner. Walthamstow Central and Blackhorse Road (Victoria Line) are the nearest tube stations.

Film Screening & Discussion

Telling our Story & The iD Project

FILM

Saturday 9 March 2024

Visit William Morris Gallery for the screening of three films in the Gallery’s Acanthus room on the top floor of the building. The screenings will be followed by a discussion, allowing you the opportunity to share your thoughts and experiences of the subjects raised in the films.

Two short films:

12-30-12.40pm – ‘Telling Our Hurricane Irma Story’ (2019) – Barbuda,10 minutes. The Be Foundation

Trustees from Barbudan based International NGO The Be Foundation, share their Category 5 Hurricane Irma stories in a frank and honest short film, also exposing why they are so passionate about the future of their tiny island in the Caribbean called Barbuda.

12.50-1pm – ‘Telling our Hurricane Maria Story ‘ (2018) – Dominica, 8 minutes. The Waltham Forest Twinning Association

Members and friends of the WF Twinning Association share their stories in a moving short film which captures some of their experiences when they were in Dominica as Category 5 Hurricane Maria struck.

Followed by:

1.15-2.30pm – ‘The iD Project – My Dominica Story’ (2019) – by Richard Etienne. 1 hour. Everyone has a Story to tell

“On the week that marks 15 years since my paps’ passing, I want to gift you the film that was inspired by the great man. I give to you: The iD Project – My Dominica Story”. The multiple award-winning documentary.

Rest in eternal peace – Richard Etienne Snr. 1953-2004

About the Film:
Travel to the beautiful island of Dominica as one British man documents his journey of discovery and identity. Through a captivating narrative, he explores the birthplace of his late father and delves into the rich cultural heritage of Dominica.

About the Director:
Richard Etienne is a British filmmaker and videographer best known for his work as the official videographer to UK Prime Minister Theresa May (2016-19). His debut film ‘The iD Project’ won the Film Reel Award at the 2019 Caribe Film Festival and Best Documentary at the 2019 British Urban Film Festival.

A group of carved wooden kokeshi dolls from Japan

Family Day

Pop the corks!

WORKSHOPS

Saturday 23 March 2024

Marking the opening of the Gallery’s new exhibition, Art Without Heroes: Mingei with a toast to William Morris for his 190th Birthday (24 March). Come along to a crafting session and create your own Kokeshi doll using a champagne cork. These workshops are inspired by the Kokeshi dolls that feature in the exhibition: hand-carved wooden dolls that form part of Japan’s rich folk-craft tradition.

Visitors can also enjoy the new family trail to accompany the exhibition. The activity is suitable for children aged 5+ years.

All materials will be provided.

Activities will take place in the Learning Studio on the top floor of the Gallery.

All children must be accompanied by an adult.

A big thank you to Hometipple who have provided the corks that we will be transforming into Kokeshi Dolls. To continue the celebrations Hometipple is offering 10% off wine and spirits bottles to take home, when you present your Kokeshi Doll at the shop (please note, this offer can only be used for one purchase per doll). Offer ends 30 April 2024.

Image: Kokeshi by Fujita Mitsuhara, courtesy of Sway Gallery London 

Toddler with parent in an art workshop at William Morris Gallery

Mini Morris

Happy Birthday William Morris!

WORKSHOPS

Thursday 21 March 2024

Creative Kids is now Mini Morris!

On 21 March we’re celebrating William Morris’s 190th birthday with the launch of our newly named ‘Mini Morris’ craft workshops for 2 to 5 year olds. We’ll be getting inspired by the patterns and designs in the Gallery’s collection, making our own decorative plates and having a tea party!

Mini Morris sessions are now DROP IN ONLY at both 10am and 1pm.

Morning: 10am to 11.30am

Afternoon: 1pm to 2.30pm

As this can be a messy session, please wear or bring old clothes. Aprons are available. All sessions include a tour of the Gallery, the craft activity, singing and snack time.

Drop in with limited capacity. Please arrive on time and sign up at the front desk.

Please note: One adult per 2 children.

FREE. Donations are always welcome and help to support our Learning programme.

Tree in the sunlight

Family Day

Tell it to the trees

WORKSHOPS

Wednesday 14 February 2024

William Morris was inspired by the nature surrounding his former family home. Follow a tree trail in Lloyd Park and then join us in the Gallery to make a Victorian puzzle purse for sending a Valentine message to your favourite tree.

Puzzle purses were used in Victorian times as love tokens: a piece of paper folded several times over to conceal and then reveal a message from one person to another. These puzzle purses were most often used on Valentine’s Day to send hidden notes. On each folded section the sender could write a line that the receiver could then read by opening the puzzle purse, fold by fold.

The activity is suitable for children aged 5+ years.

All materials will be provided.

Activities will take place on the first-floor landing in the Gallery.

All children must be accompanied by an adult.

If you’re coming along to the Gallery on the 14 February, you can also pick up a tree as part of Waltham Forest Council’s annual Great Tree Giveaway. From 12pm to 3.30pm in Lloyd Park.

Blue cyanotype image of two swans, with water and trees in background

Film Night: Radical Landscapes

SPECIAL EVENTS

Thursday 8 February 2024

Join us for the resurgence of Film Night at William Morris Gallery, showcasing four films by independent filmmakers who each explore the themes of the natural world as a space for artistic inspiration, spiritual connection, and political and cultural explorations.

Great Sale Wood (2024) – Michaela Davis

A short, animated film crafted through the sustainable process of cyanotype, featuring over 2,800 hand-printed frames. Shot around Highams Park Lake, the film explores themes of ecology and climate crisis. A study of interconnected beauty in nature, the film contains a score featuring digitally manipulated audio recordings of the lake.

2:02 mins

The Land we Seek the Land we Dream (2022) – Fourthland

Fourthland’s film is a deep remembrance of, ‘the first story´, performed through various acts in the landscape and a conversation between a group of cross-cultural and intergenerational hands. This piece is an invitation to feel ourselves as part of nature. The main elements of the piece are filmed on and around Leyton Marshes.

17 mins (including meditative piece)

OCAK (2020) –  Zeynep Kaserci

OCAK offers an intimate portrait of a family harvesting hazelnuts, where questions of labour, gender, family, and love come to the fore. With its observational cinematography and unhurried editing style, it offers glimpses into the daily life in rural north-eastern Turkey and explores peoples’ connection to land and their hazelnut gardens, which have been inherited for generations. In Turkish with English subtitles.

28:20 mins

Effigy for a Black Soldier / Protector of the Children (2022) – Maya Campbell

Effigy for a Black Soldier uses a reworking of the folk song Wayfaring Stranger as a storytelling device to explore memories of the artist’s estranged father, who served in the British Army and had a strong Christian faith. This meditates on the complexities that come with being a black man in service of the British Army, suggesting themes of migration, longing for home and the lingering phantom of the British Empire on the diaspora. The unnamed location suggests borders, emphasised by the dynamic presence of the sea and watery interlude that follows.

Protector of the Children alludes to the Nepali folklore figure of the Lahkey, who is said to be a man-eating demon who protects children and townspeople, dwelling deep in the forests of Nepal. The work draws from the artist’s early encounter with the Lahkey mask, when placed into her grandmother’s care at the age of four, and is an intimate video-performance filmed during the artist’s residency at Space A in Kathmandu, Nepal, exploring walking as a methodology to build connection with ancestral land.

10:32 mins

 Image: Still from ‘Great Sale Wood’ Michaela Davis, 2024

Embroidered map

The Quiet Map Project

With Richard Lockett & WalthamScribe

WORKSHOPS

Sunday 28 January 2024

Welcoming neurodiverse participants living in Waltham Forest.

How do personal memories map public space? Some memories are loud, others are quiet. As a neurodiverse artist who has grown up in Waltham Forest, and as a teaching assistant who works with young adults with learning disabilities, Richard Lockett has come to appreciate the quiet memories that other neurodiverse people make about public spaces. But how would these memories look if they were to be transferred onto a map?

The Quiet Map Project aims to collect the memories of a place enjoyed by people who identify as neurodiverse. During the workshop, participants will be asked to draw a personal map of such a space. The artwork produced will be collected by Richard, who will create a wall hanging to be exhibited in Leytonstone Library.

The workshops will foster a meditation on quietness as reflection, a type of communication, and a form of self-representation.

A second workshop will take place on Sunday the 4 February at the Gallery (same time, same place). You are most welcome to come to both. Book here for Sunday 4 February.

Organised by WalthamScribe, currently in residency at William Morris Gallery. WalthamScribe is a creative writing group that explores different forms of storytelling in guided workshop sessions around Waltham Forest.

Embroidered map

The Quiet Map Project

With Richard Lockett & WalthamScribe

WORKSHOPS

Sunday 4 February 2024

Welcoming neurodiverse participants living in Waltham Forest.

How do personal memories map public space? Some memories are loud, others are quiet. As a neurodiverse artist who has grown up in Waltham Forest, and as a teaching assistant who works with young adults with learning disabilities, Richard Lockett has come to appreciate the quiet memories that other neurodiverse people make about public spaces. But how would these memories look if they were to be transferred onto a map?

The Quiet Map Project aims to collect the memories of a place enjoyed by people who identify as neurodiverse. During the workshop, participants will be asked to draw a personal map of such a space. The artwork produced will be collected by Richard, who will create a wall hanging to be exhibited in Leytonstone Library.

The workshops will foster a meditation on quietness as reflection, a type of communication, and a form of self-representation.

A workshop will also take place on Sunday the 28 January at the Gallery (same time, same place). You are most welcome to come to both. Book here for Sunday 28 January.

Organised by WalthamScribe, currently in residency at William Morris Gallery. WalthamScribe is a creative writing group that explores different forms of storytelling in guided workshop sessions around Waltham Forest.

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