Serene Sketching Activity Pack

RADICAL LANDSCAPES PROGRAMME

Saturday 21 October 2023 - Sunday 18 February 2024

Based on Ruskin’s art theory on “truth to nature”, this drawing pack and its prompts aim to help visitors slow down and take a closer look at the nature around them, and the beauty of Lloyd Park. It includes a drawing pad, coloured pencils, a nature-themed viewfinder, a description and a list of drawing prompts for inspiration. There will be 20 packs available at the front desk with a visitor sign-out sheet.

Mindful Mapping

With Kelly Frank

RADICAL LANDSCAPES PROGRAMME

Monday 15 January 2024

Inspired by artists JMW Turner and Hurvin Anderson from the Radical Landscapes exhibition, this guided painting session will encourage artists to consider their emotional response to the landscape. Using watercolour and masking techniques you will create an experimental map, exploring mindful painting practises, cartographical tools, and social mapping.

This workshop is suitable for beginners. Participants with all levels of experience are welcome.

Kelly Frank is a contemporary painter from East London. Her works explore themes of identity, memory, and relationships. Kelly has taught at various art institutions and utilises innovative teaching approaches to encourage mindfulness through art.

Welcoming participants aged 60 and over.

 

 

LINKED

by Graeme Miller

ARTIST COMMISSION

Saturday 25 November 2023

Graeme Miller’s LINKED has endured as perhaps the largest sonic installation and sculptural entity in London for 20 years. Since 2003 its transmitters have broadcast over a million times the voices of former residents of the buildings demolished to build the M11 Link Road motorway.

Originally commissioned by Museum of London and produced by Artsadmin, LINKED is an artistic response to the creation of the M11 Link Road which involved the demolition of 400 homes, including Miller’s own, amid dramatic and passionate protest.

Along a 3-mile route between Hackney Marshes and Redbridge Roundabout, 20 analogue radio transmitters can be heard by anyone with a special receiver, revealing 60+ voices and testimonies of people who once lived and worked in the area – resident families, road protestors, railway-workers, teachers, disco-goers, and artists from the substantial community living in houses destroyed by the road including several who are better known now – Cornelia Parker, John Smith, Jocelyn Pook, Gary Stevens, Christine Binnie. Together the assembly of voices evokes a cross-section of ordinary East London life and the dramatic events of these buildings’ final moments.

LINKED was intended to remain unseen, an almost secret layer of the geography of the communities where it transmits. It is in perpetual dialogue with the current walker/listener who animates the work with their attention finding their own narratives and in this sense, it is very much a social sculpture intended for a dynamic and changing area. Each 8-minute radio composition relays both the details of personal landscapes and the often dramatic events that took place in the area.

The transmitters broadcast on a single frequency and with a receiver the walker is able to navigate the neighbourhoods adjacent to the motorway, finding pools of sound that relate to the specific locations. Over the passage of time this work about the politics and poetry of place has come to reflect issues relating to community, environment and protest and the impact of sudden, top-down developments on people and place.

Recommended age range 8+

Radio receiver, headphones and maps can be picked up at Leytonstone Library between 1pm and 6pm.

Additional dates:  20 January 2024, 17 February 2024

 

CREDITS

LINKED was originally an Artsadmin project produced by Judith Knight and Mark Godber and commissioned by Museum of London in 2003. The making of LINKED was generously supported by Arts Council England, Heritage Lottery Fund, London Boroughs Grants Committee part of the Association of London Government, Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation and the London Boroughs of Redbridge and Waltham Forest. The restoration of LINKED (2022 – 2024) is supported by Arts Council England.

Artist – Graeme Miller

Researchers – Lucy Cash, Myra Heller, Dan Saul, Michael Sherin, Helen Statman

Technical Manager – Steve Wald

Technical Consultant  – Mike Harrison of White Wing Logic

Executive Producer (LINKED 2023/4) – Nikki Tomlinson

Producer (LINKED 2023/4) – Lydia Newman

The artist would like to thank all the many interviewees, production teams and friends involved in developing LINKED.

LINKED

by Graeme Miller

ARTIST COMMISSION

Saturday 20 January 2024

Graeme Miller’s LINKED has endured as perhaps the largest sonic installation and sculptural entity in London for 20 years. Since 2003 its transmitters have broadcast over a million times the voices of former residents of the buildings demolished to build the M11 Link Road motorway.

Originally commissioned by Museum of London and produced by Artsadmin, LINKED is an artistic response to the creation of the M11 Link Road which involved the demolition of 400 homes, including Miller’s own, amid dramatic and passionate protest.

Along a 3-mile route between Hackney Marshes and Redbridge Roundabout, 20 analogue radio transmitters can be heard by anyone with a special receiver, revealing 60+ voices and testimonies of people who once lived and worked in the area – resident families, road protestors, railway-workers, teachers, disco-goers, and artists from the substantial community living in houses destroyed by the road including several who are better known now – Cornelia Parker, John Smith, Jocelyn Pook, Gary Stevens, Christine Binnie. Together the assembly of voices evokes a cross-section of ordinary East London life and the dramatic events of these buildings’ final moments.

LINKED was intended to remain unseen, an almost secret layer of the geography of the communities where it transmits. It is in perpetual dialogue with the current walker/listener who animates the work with their attention finding their own narratives and in this sense, it is very much a social sculpture intended for a dynamic and changing area. Each 8-minute radio composition relays both the details of personal landscapes and the often dramatic events that took place in the area.

The transmitters broadcast on a single frequency and with a receiver the walker is able to navigate the neighbourhoods adjacent to the motorway, finding pools of sound that relate to the specific locations. Over the passage of time this work about the politics and poetry of place has come to reflect issues relating to community, environment and protest and the impact of sudden, top-down developments on people and place.

Recommended age range 8+

Radio receiver, headphones and maps can be picked up at Leytonstone Library between 11am and 4pm.

Additional dates:  25 November 2023 and 17 February 2024

 

CREDITS

LINKED was originally an Artsadmin project produced by Judith Knight and Mark Godber and commissioned by Museum of London in 2003. The making of LINKED was generously supported by Arts Council England, Heritage Lottery Fund, London Boroughs Grants Committee part of the Association of London Government, Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation and the London Boroughs of Redbridge and Waltham Forest. The restoration of LINKED (2022 – 2024) is supported by Arts Council England.

Artist – Graeme Miller

Researchers – Lucy Cash, Myra Heller, Dan Saul, Michael Sherin, Helen Statman

Technical Manager – Steve Wald

Technical Consultant  – Mike Harrison of White Wing Logic

Executive Producer (LINKED 2023/4) – Nikki Tomlinson

Producer (LINKED 2023/4) – Lydia Newman

The artist would like to thank all the many interviewees, production teams and friends involved in developing LINKED.

LINKED

by Graeme Miller

ARTIST COMMISSION

Saturday 17 February 2024

Graeme Miller’s LINKED has endured as perhaps the largest sonic installation and sculptural entity in London for 20 years. Since 2003 its transmitters have broadcast over a million times the voices of former residents of the buildings demolished to build the M11 Link Road motorway.

Originally commissioned by Museum of London and produced by Artsadmin, LINKED is an artistic response to the creation of the M11 Link Road which involved the demolition of 400 homes, including Miller’s own, amid dramatic and passionate protest.

Along a 3-mile route between Hackney Marshes and Redbridge Roundabout, 20 analogue radio transmitters can be heard by anyone with a special receiver, revealing 60+ voices and testimonies of people who once lived and worked in the area – resident families, road protestors, railway-workers, teachers, disco-goers, and artists from the substantial community living in houses destroyed by the road including several who are better known now – Cornelia Parker, John Smith, Jocelyn Pook, Gary Stevens, Christine Binnie. Together the assembly of voices evokes a cross-section of ordinary East London life and the dramatic events of these buildings’ final moments.

LINKED was intended to remain unseen, an almost secret layer of the geography of the communities where it transmits. It is in perpetual dialogue with the current walker/listener who animates the work with their attention finding their own narratives and in this sense, it is very much a social sculpture intended for a dynamic and changing area. Each 8-minute radio composition relays both the details of personal landscapes and the often dramatic events that took place in the area.

The transmitters broadcast on a single frequency and with a receiver the walker is able to navigate the neighbourhoods adjacent to the motorway, finding pools of sound that relate to the specific locations. Over the passage of time this work about the politics and poetry of place has come to reflect issues relating to community, environment and protest and the impact of sudden, top-down developments on people and place.

Recommended age range 8+

Radio receiver, headphones and maps can be picked up at Leytonstone Library between 11am and 4pm.

Additional dates:  25 November 2023 and 20 January 2024

CREDITS

LINKED was originally an Artsadmin project produced by Judith Knight and Mark Godber and commissioned by Museum of London in 2003. The making of LINKED was generously supported by Arts Council England, Heritage Lottery Fund, London Boroughs Grants Committee part of the Association of London Government, Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation and the London Boroughs of Redbridge and Waltham Forest. The restoration of LINKED (2022 – 2024) is supported by Arts Council England.

Artist – Graeme Miller

Researchers – Lucy Cash, Myra Heller, Dan Saul, Michael Sherin, Helen Statman

Technical Manager – Steve Wald

Technical Consultant  – Mike Harrison of White Wing Logic

Executive Producer (LINKED 2023/4) – Nikki Tomlinson

Producer (LINKED 2023/4) – Lydia Newman

The artist would like to thank all the many interviewees, production teams and friends involved in developing LINKED.

Small Things Are Possible

A 75th Anniversary Windrush commission

ARTIST COMMISSION

Saturday 21 October 2023 - Sunday 18 February 2024

Small Things Are Possible is an immersive piece that spotlights Windrush Generation allotment holders in Waltham Forest, exploring their relationship to the land. The work combines audio and portraiture, creating a living archive of experience, presented at Vestry House Museum within an installation that pays homage to the idiosyncratic allotment sheds of the borough.

To the Windrush generation who left behind bountiful landscapes in tropical climates, starting new lives in heavily industrialised post-war London was a big culture shock. Island life in the Caribbean, even for those who weren’t farmers, fostered a deeper connection to the land and to the food consumed on a daily basis. For Caribbean families, growing their own produce at home was a matter of necessity but also a cultural practice shared by the whole family. Arriving in the UK to a lack of stable or adequate housing meant that, for many, growing their own crops was a distant dream. Until they found allotments.

Windrush generation growers can be found across Waltham Forest’s many allotments. These growing spaces are a firm part of the borough’s cultural identity and the evolving Windrush experience and legacy. Their contribution can be seen in the visual landscape of the allotments, but also in directly enhancing the borough’s ecosystems and urban biodiversity. Beyond the growers, their crops and cultivated plots evidence the resilience and adaptability that have come to characterise this generation; from adapting growing practices to cultivate Caribbean crops in the UK climate, to carefully passing down seeds and knowledge between generations of plot holders.

A zine with text by writer Cairo Clarke and additional images by Abel Holsborough accompanies the portraits and installation. Physical copies can be found at William Morris (ask at front desk) and inside the installation at Vestry House Museum.

Read the Small Things are Possible Zine

A Windrush 75 Commission for London Borough of Waltham Forest.

Sound design by dot.i

Produced by Sandra Jean Pierre

Images by Abel Holsborough

Watch the installation through timelapse

Wild Wired! Rewilding Encounters of Langthorne Park – Showcase event

OFF SITE

Saturday 21 October 2023

Come to Leytonstone Toy Library for a family-friendly showcase event to meet the artists, celebrate and play Wild Wired! Rewilding Encounters of Langthorne Park, a community-driven artistic commission and mobile-friendly game in response to the Radical Landscapes exhibition at the William Morris Gallery.

In a series of artist-led workshops in collaboration with Leytonstone Toy Library and ​​the Youth Club at Worth Unlimited this summer, HERVISIONS invited local residents to imagine the future of Langthorne Park set in a parallel universe, and collaboratively create a narrative, landscapes and characters for a site-specific game. During the workshops, we collaged words and images of local wildlife into stories and visual narratives with the help of image-generating AI systems such as Midjourney and ChatGPT while deliberating on their unperfectness and speculating on how the park could look in hundreds of years. Drawing inspiration from local plants and their medicinal properties and imagining the land of the park as a living body inspired by Taoism, we began to wonder what superpowers its organs could harness.

We are thrilled to invite you to see how the workshop outcomes have transformed into an interactive mobile-friendly game. To play in the park, scan one of the QR codes on banners located around Langthorne Park E11 using your mobile phone and look for passwords nearby to access five game environments.

Leytonstone Toy Library, Birch Grove, London E11 4YG. Light refreshments will be provided.

Wild Wired! Rewilding Encounters of Langthorne Park is co-curated and produced by Zaiba Jabbar and Tanya Boyarkina with Christine Lai. Read more about the commission here.

 

Epping Forest Visitor Centre Chingford

Radical Landscapes: London's Epping Forest

CURRENT EXHIBITION

Saturday 21 October 2023 - Sunday 31 March 2024

In the summer of 1871, thousands of ordinary Londoners gathered on Wanstead Flats to hear speeches against ‘enclosure’ and to protest the loss of common land. They stayed to tear down and destroy fences erected by would-be property developers. This campaign in the 1860s and 1870s – a radical coalition across social divides – led to the preservation of Epping Forest as a public green space under the protection of the City of London Corporation as its conservators.

Through 200 years of popular prints and images, this exhibition explores the shifting balance of power and control over the land now known as Epping Forest. From royal hunting ground to quiet paradise of green space for recreation and wildlife, the survival of its ancient pollarded trees appears to confirm continuity. But what’s a Forest for? And who determines who has access to its resources? Such questions have inspired lawyers and artists, protestors and philanthropists and prompted new and radical thinking about what is to be valued in a shared landscape.

An exhibition organised and curated by Epping Forest Visitor Centre. Part of the Radical Landscapes events and activities programme.

Image: The Gardener’s Magazine, 19 December 1874 © City of London Corporation.

Trees and lake within a forest setting

Forest Bathing at William Morris Gallery

Sponsored by William Morris At Home

RADICAL LANDSCAPES PROGRAMME

Friday 27 October 2023

Forest Bathing is an ancient Japanese practice and a process of relaxation, whilst immersing yourself amongst the trees.

‘Forest Bathing is best described as a slow, relaxing sensory journey designed to calm the body and mind.  The physical and mental health benefits of Forest Bathing have been scientifically proven. Benefits include reduced stress levels, stronger immune system response, and a stabilised cortisol cycle.’   The Forest Bathing Institute.

On Friday 27 October 2023, the Forest Bathing Institute – sponsored by William Morris At Home – will lead a day of Forest Bathing walks in the grounds of the William Morris Gallery. The walks are a unique opportunity to experience the therapeutic benefits of Forest Bathing in the Gallery’s surroundings of Waltham Forest, the place where Morris spent his formative years.

There are two sessions during the day, one for families with children and a second for adults only. The event will also include face painting inspired by William Morris with professional face and body painters, NyGlorious Face Arts.

A Community Garden Open Day event for Radical Landscapes.

 

Supporters and partners

Wild Wired! Rewilding Encounters of Langthorne Park

ARTIST COMMISSION

Saturday 21 October 2023 - Sunday 18 February 2024

Inspired by William Morris’ proto-ecotopian novel News From Nowhere, HERVISIONS digital art studio presents an exciting speculative public artwork exploring the natural environment and landscapes of Langthorne Park E11, produced in collaboration with local communities.

This project aims to explore digital rewilding, connecting the hyperlocal ecology of Langthorne Park to the wider global climate emergency and how boundaries between humans, nature and technology are dissolving. The work draws on themes of identity, social mobility, collective storytelling, and our relationship to place.

In a series of workshops – in partnership with Leytonstone Toy Library – local residents and young people from ​​the Youth Club at Worth Unlimited worked with digital artists Kristina Pulejkova, Melissa Schwarz and Chun Sun to imagine the future of Langthorne Park set in a parallel universe by collaging words and images of local wildlife into a story and visual narrative. With the help of image-generating AI systems, participants learned about how to transform images and think about how the park could look in hundreds of years. Drawing inspiration from local plants and their medicinal properties and imagining the land of the park as a living body, the groups began to wonder what superpowers its organs could harness.

The results of the workshops are re-interpreted into an interactive site-specific game produced with artistic queer duo Eternal Engine and 3D artist ​​Bianca Shonee Arroyo-Kreimes. Game development by Nicholas Delap, graphic design by Alessia Arcuri and animation and motion design by Nerian Keywan.

The Game

You are invited to visit the Long Thorn Valley, a place that exists in the exact location of Langthorne Park on a planet that we will call Other Earth, where organs, organisms, and parasites thrive in symbiotic relationships. The flora and fauna of the Long Thorn Valley are suffering from memory loss caused by air, land and water pollution. Explore the game and play with fantastical creatures to collect their memories. To play, scan one of the QR codes on banners located around Langthorne Park using your mobile phone and look around for passwords to access five game environments.

Visit Wild Wired World

Wild Wired! Rewilding Encounters of Langthorne Park is co-curated and produced by Zaiba Jabbar and Tanya Boyarkina with Christine Lai.

Image: HERVISIONS

 

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