Uncovering Similarities

William Morris and Art from the Islamic World

TALKS AND DISCUSSIONS

Friday 29 November 2024

NOW SOLD OUT!

Part of the William Morris & Art from the Islamic World events and activities programme.

Take a deep dive into the themes of the exhibition William Morris & Art from the Islamic World  with three introductory talks about the links between William Morris’s designs and the Islamic art that inspired him.

With the exhibition’s co-curators Rowan Bain and Qaisra Khan, and Navid Akhtar, producer and journalist.

The talks are followed by a discussion, Q&A and special curator-led tours of the exhibition.

Timings

  • 6pm: Doors open
  • 6.30pm: Introductory tour (optional)
  • 7pm: Talk with Navid Akhtar
  • 7.20pm: Talk with Qaisra Khan
  • 7.40pm: Talk with Rowan Bain
  • 8pm: Discussion followed by audience Q&A

About the speakers

Rowan Bain is the Principal Curator of William Morris Gallery, where she oversees the collections, exhibitions and public programme. She is the co-curator for the exhibition William Morris & Art from the Islamic World. Past exhibitions include Althea McNish: Colour is Mine (2022), Kehinde Wiley: The Yellow Wallpaper (2020) and May Morris: Art & Life (2017). She is the author of William Morris’s Flowers (2019), co-author of May Morris Arts & Crafts Designer (2017) and contributed to Women Pioneers of the Arts and Crafts Movement (2024).

Qaisra M. Khan has a degree in Law and an MPhil in Oriental studies both from the University of Cambridg, and an MA in Islamic Art and Architecture from SOAS, University of London. She worked for the Museum of Islamic Art in Doha and co-curated the groundbreaking exhibition Hajj: Journey to the Heart of Islam at the British Museum in 2012. Qaisra has lectured and broadcast widely on Islamic art and since 2014 has been a curator at the Khalili Collection in London. She is co-curator of the exhibition William Morris & Art from the Islamic World.

Navid Akhtar is an award winning Producer and Broadcast journalist, with over 25 years of experience in UK television and broadcasting for the BBC, Channel 4, BBC Radio 4 and the World Service. Navid was a Senior Producer on the 2013 Ramadan Season at Channel 4, producing a series of 30 Ramadan reflections and the first ever-Muslim ‘Hipster’ call to prayer, broadcast on UK television. In 2015 he founded Alchemiya.com, a streaming platform that showcases Muslim art, culture and history. In 2009 he developed and presented William Morris and the Muslims ‘on BBC Radio 4.

Detail showing teacups and saucers. The insides of the cups are coated in gold leaf

Pam Schomberg

Ceramics

EXHIBITION

Wednesday 2 November 2016 - Sunday 8 January 2017

A Fellow of the Society of Designer Craftsmen, potter Pam Schomberg uses porcelain, stoneware, or a combination of both to make marks and impress pattern into rolled out slabs of clay, with made or found tools. Colour is included at all stages, with the use of oxides, slips, glazes and on-glaze lusters.

‘As a potter you feel you know what you are making, but things can change dramatically from when they go in a kiln to when they come out after firing. Nothing is ever quite as expected, there is always a surprise when the kiln door opens and the contents shine back at you…’

For further information visit: www.pamschomberg.com

Close up monochrome illustration of a face with gas mark and soldiers helmet in front of newspaper cuttings and the word propaganda on a red banner

Think! The Poster Collective

Young People's Exhibition

EXHIBITION

Wednesday 2 November 2016 - Sunday 29 January 2017

Inspired by the themes and techniques of our exhibition A World to Win: Posters of Protest and Revolution, each young artist developed their individual response during a week-long project exploring the gallery, meeting artists, curators and designers and learning new printmaking skills led by artist Della Rees.

The result is a resounding endorsement of the creative talent of young people, their individualism and their thoughtful engagement with the world around them. The art works comment on current events including the murder of Labour MP Jo Cox and the media’s relationship to society, while evoking a strong sense of community and an impression of the world as they would like it to be.

An exhibition in the Discovery Lounge, curated by the William Morris Gallery Young Curators Group.

Image: Hey Have Ya Heard? by Khalil

The cover of The Fox and the Star photographed from above, sitting on the leaves of green ferns

Coralie Bickford-Smith

The Fox and the Star

EXHIBITION

Wednesday 9 November 2016 - Sunday 29 January 2017

The Fox and the Star is a beautifully crafted tale of loss, friendship and discovery from award-winning illustrator and author Coralie Bickford-Smith. This exhibition will tell the fascinating story of the book’s conception and production, with original illustrations and rarely seen proofs. Taking inspiration from William Morris’s Kelmscott Press, every physical detail of this modern classic, from the cloth binding to the carefully chosen paper, has a ‘definite claim to beauty’.

This exhibition will appeal to all ages, from serious book lovers to families who will be able take part in hands-on activities. William Morris’s Kelmscott Press edition of Reynard the Fox, one of Coralie’s key inspirations, will also be on display.

Coralie Bickford-Smith graduated from Reading University where she studied Typography and Graphic Communication, and currently works in-house at Penguin Books. Her designs for the covers of the Penguin Classics clothbound series have attracted international acclaim and refer back to the world of Victorian book bindings.

In 2015 Coralie wrote and illustrated her own book, The Fox and the Star, which was published by Penguin and won Waterstone’s Book of the Year.

Kindly supported by Fullers Builders, Walthamstow.

Image credit: Thomas Lehman

A large crowd dressed in peasant robes gather on a grassy hillside to listen to a speaker

Red Saunders: Hidden

EXHIBITION

Wednesday 11 January - Sunday 12 March 2017

Each scene in photographer Red Saunders’ work is carefully planned and lit, using costumed models in the style of tableaux vivants (living pictures).

John Ball the Hedgerow Priest, the Peasants Revolt 1380 and William Cuffay and the London Chartist 1842 will be displayed outside in front of the Gallery and light up the entrance. Rediscover their extraordinary stories, and the contribution they made to bring about change.

Supported by Impressions Gallery.

Figures on a bridge with a larger bridge looming behind

Sheer Pleasure

Frank Brangwyn and the Art of Japan

EXHIBITION

Saturday 4 February - Sunday 14 May 2017

Sheer Pleasure – Frank Brangwyn and the Art of Japan examines Brangwyn’s love of Japanese art and his collaborative relationships with Japanese artists and patrons.

Brangwyn donated his collection of Japanese prints and paintings to the gallery. They have rarely been displayed and the exhibition includes highlights such as woodblock prints by Utagawa Hiroshige and Katsushika Hokusai and a carefully restored decorative screen.

During the 1910s, Brangwyn met the Japanese artist Yoshijiro Urushibara (1888-1953) in London. Their meeting led to a remarkable example of collaborative printmaking, combining the exuberant bravado of Brangwyn’s designs with the subtle and distinctive techniques of Japanese printmaking. The exhibition explores the collaborative process, with sketches, notes and key block prints, as well as displaying some of their most successful works, such as The Devil’s Bridge and the ambitious Bruges series.

It also tells the story of Brangwyn’s relationship with his patron Kojiro Mutsakata, and their ill-fated plans to create an art gallery in Tokyo.

To complement the exhibition, we have invited painter and printmaker Rebecca Salter RA to display her work in one of our first floor galleries. Having studied at Kyoto City University of the Arts, and having lived in Japan for six years, Salter studied the art of Japanese woodblock printing extensively. She creates prints in collaboration with the Sato Woodblock Workshop in Kyoto, one of just a few surviving in an industry in slow decline. Salter’s work offers scope to compare the complexities of collaboration between designer and maker, artist and patron, Britain and Japan.

Supported by the Decorative Arts Society Collection Access Grant 2016.

Image credit: the Estate of the Artist, William Morris Gallery

Free Community Tours: William Morris & Art from the Islamic World

TOURS

Saturday 9 November 2024 - Sunday 9 March 2025

THESE ARE NOW FULLY BOOKED UNTIL THE END OF THE EXHIBITION RUN. SEE THE WHAT’S ON FOR DATES AND TIMES OF FREE-DROP IN TOURS.

William Morris & Art from the Islamic World is the first exhibition to explore the influence of art from the Islamic world on William Morris, one of Britain’s most important nineteenth century designers and thinkers. Curated by Rowan Bain, Principal Curator, William Morris Gallery, and Qaisra M. Khan, Curator of Islamic Art. Read more about the exhibition.

We are welcoming local community groups, faith groups and charities for free tours of the exhibition.

  • Tours are available Monday to Friday
  • Exhibition opens 9 November 2024 and closes 9 March 2025
  • The Gallery is closed to the public on Mondays, should your group wish to visit at a quieter time
  • Group capacity: 15 people
  • Free of charge

NOTE: These tours are being organised specifically for existing groups and organisations within the community. If you are an individual or a group of friends wishing to attend a free tour, please check our What’s On for the next drop-in curator-led tour. These are also free of charge and do not require a booking.

Image: Exhibition photography by Nicola Tree for William Morris Gallery

Close up on pattern featuring recurring ovals and geometric shapes

PLANTWORKS

A Factory As It Might Be

EXHIBITION

Wednesday 5 April - Sunday 21 May 2017

The artist Clare Mitten’s reimagining of A Factory As it Might Be – William Morris’s vision for how beautiful factories would act as centres of education and creativity – is influenced by Victorian science fiction and bio-inspired technology.

PLANTWORKS explores the relationship of Morris to industrial manufacturing through drawings and paintings of plant specimens, translated into a collection of cardboard models, before transforming back into 2D motifs.

PLANTWORKS is generously supported by the Arts Council and Bow Arts Trust.

Self-portrait of Peter Blake showing head and upper body. He is wearing a denim jacket covered in badges

Be Magnificent

Walthamstow School of Art 1957 to 1967

EXHIBITION

Friday 9 June - Sunday 10 September 2017

Walthamstow School of Art cultivated some of the most influential creative talent of the 1950s and 60s. Leading names in art, fashion, music and film studied and taught here – including Pop Artists Peter Blake and Derek Boshier, musician Ian Dury, filmmakers Ken Russell and Peter Greenaway, and fashion designers Celia Birtwell, Marion Foale and Sally Tuffin.

The exhibition will explore this radical era at the school, showing the early work of these seminal artists and designers and revealing how they were encouraged to explore their creative imagination, taking art and culture in radical new directions.

This incredible era at the school has never been explored or researched in depth, despite the fact that all the leading players cite their time in Walthamstow as key to their later development.  For the first time, the early work of these influential artists and designers will be brought together in one exhibition, to show how it was in the art schools of post-war Britain, rather than the universities, that the benefits of a free, universal secondary education were most evident.

The exhibition will capture the energy, excitement and dynamism of these young artists, teachers and designers as they first started out in their careers. The exhibition will reveal personal testimony and original work created by the pupils and teachers during their time at the school, as well as personal photographs and archival material, film, music and ephemera from the period.

Close up on embroidered flowers

May Morris

Art and Life

EXHIBITION

Saturday 7 October 2017 - Sunday 28 January 2018

This landmark exhibition explores the life and work of May Morris, the younger daughter of William Morris and one of the most significant artists of the British Arts and Crafts movement. May Morris: Art & Life is the most comprehensive survey of May’s work to date, bringing together over 80 works from collections around the UK, many of which have never been on public display.

May Morris: Art & Life has been funded through Art Happens, the Art Fund’s crowdfunding platform.

The exhibition will coincide with the publication by Thames & Hudson of May Morris: Arts & Crafts Designer, which is co-authored by curators at the William Morris Gallery and the V&A.

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