Warrington Art Group: Belonging

‘Belonging’ is a new exhibition created by the members of Warrington Art Group, a community of artists, would-be artists and all those interested in art. The members of the group have created an eclectic selection of painting, drawings and photographs and the work includes local landmarks as well as scenes from further afield.

Visitors can also find out how to join the Warrington Art Group as well as other local groups and classes. Engaging with local art groups doesn’t just enrich your cultural experience—it nourishes your mind and spirit. Studies show that involvement in the arts can alleviate stress, enhance cognitive function, and foster a sense of belonging.

Exhibiting artists: Mike Allen, Barbara Alldred, Gill Bate, Pat Brown, Ian Brunt, Wendy Brunt, Tom Callow, Pik Chui Beatrix Choi, Ron Davies, Kathy Guest, Anna Head, Mauren Hill-Willis, Denis Holder, Lyn Morris, Aleks Partington, Norman Partington, David Percival, Roger Rumbold, Lester Scott, Chris Stacey, Stephanie Wong, Victoria Wood and Sui Ming Yeung

WAF Open Exhibition 2024

The Open exhibition returns for 2024 as part of the Warrington Arts Festival. This year’s exhibition will be curated by Warrington artist Sarah Harris.

Full details on how to enter and this year’s guest judges will be announced in the coming weeks.

The Worst Record Covers in the World

The Worst Record Covers in the World is a hilarious collection of over 650 dreadful record sleeves Steve Goldman has collected.

In Steve’s own words:

“To get into my collection the covers have to be unintentionally funny. I want a record where the designers have tried to do something that’s gone horribly wrong. It can’t just be a performer in bad clothes or with an ugly face – though there are a couple that have got in that were just irresistible. And it all has to be good clean family fun – I don’t collect any record covers that are disgusting, gory, violent, sexist, homophobic, transphobic or racist.”

You can hear what the records sound like – the weird, the funny, and occasionally, the good. They’ll hold a vote for your favourite Worst Record Covers. There are kids’ activities too – match the record to a part of its cover, and dress up as a sleeve. And there’s a book of the exhibition too.

The Andie Airfix Exhibition

A retrospective celebrating the work of legendary graphic designer Andie Airfix who grew up in Warrington.

In a career lasting over 40 years, Andie designed a host of iconic album covers for the likes of Def Leppard, The Thompson Twins, Paul McCartney, The Rolling Stones, Metallica, Dead or Alive and Led Zeppelin.

Fred Monks Display

A display of ties designed by local artist Fred Monks (1912-1982).

Fred Monks started his artistic career as a designer at Crosfields soap factory in Warrington before becoming a cartoonist for the Guardian newspapers and then a watercolourist known for his spontaneous local paintings from nature. But unknown to all but a few, Monks also had a second prolific career as a graphic artist including his designs for novelty ties.

On show in the museum are a selection of the luminous ties Monks designed for sale during the early 1950s. These examples have been treated with zinc sulphide-based paints and would glow in the dark after having been held up to the light for a few seconds.

Also on show in the library are a further selection of ties Monks designed for sale during the early 1950s, including some commemorating Queen Elizabeth II’s coronation and cowboy hero Roy Rogers.

Convenience Gallery: The Town is the G...

Convenience Gallery are excited to announce the second launch of The Town is the Gallery Programme launching three new exhibitions across the town of Birkenhead at two different locations.

This is continuing on at the Old M&S, in the Convenience Pop Up, but also at historic Birkenhead Priory. With new exhibitions and installations from artists; Leo Fitzmaurice, Kate Bigley and Camille Smithwick.

At the launch event on Saturday 11th May, they will be doing a walk around of Camille Smithwicks work from 2pm till 4:30pm at Birkenhead priory, before walking over to the town center pop-up, where from 5pm till late will be previewing the new works from Leo Fitzmaurice and Kate Bigley. The Popup will be soundtracked by Queenway collective with a Convenience pop-up bar open across the night.

At Birkenhead Priory (Priory St, Birkenhead CH41 5JH), you will be able to see from 2pm – 4:30pm a preview of:

Camille Smithwick’s: ‘All paths lead to the river’

At the Convenience Pop Up in the old M&S (39 Borough Pavement CH41 2YE), from 5pm – 10pm you will next be able to see:

‘FIT IT’ by Leo Fitzmauirce

‘In a past line’ by Kate Bigley.

Either Join them at 2pm at Birkenhead Priory, or at 5pm at the Convenience Pop Up at the Old M&S for these new shows from brilliant artists. Or join them for both.

Afterwards all works will be available to view during venue operation hours.

For Birkenhead Priory these are:

Wednesday-Friday 1pm-5pm, Saturday & Sunday 10am-5pm

Convenience Gallery Pop Up: Old M&S:

Wednesday – Saturday, 10:30am – 4pm

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Further details about each exhibition can be found on their website and social media.

Installation to Celebrate Pride in Liv...

Bluecoat Display Centre’s In the Window Installation and selling display for Pride in Liverpool 2024 showcases the work of local ceramic artist Simon Dredge, as part of the celebrations for Liverpool Pride.

Simon Dredge is an English ceramic artist, based in Liverpool whose work explores the impact of history in shaping our cultural understanding.

For the Pride window Simon wanted to celebrate the diversity of the gay and queer community in Liverpool and the wider Merseyside area.

Simon wants to bring distant and unheard voices to his work, so for this collection he wanted to include both historical figures interwoven with more modern and well-known people.

For Simon including people who were trailblazers and forward thinking for their time is so important as these are the people who made living now as open and proud LGBTQIA++ possible.

Simon’s plates are made in both porcelain and architectural clays, he uses ceramic body stains, underglaze, acrylic inks, acrylic paints and spray paints on his work.

Meet the Maker Event.
Saturday 27 July 2pm-4pm

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Join them for an informal afternoon where you can come along and have a chat with Simon about his work and have some refreshments with us.

Emma Rodgers & Johnny Vegas

The Bluecoat Display Centre are delighted to announce a selling exhibition of new work by talented north west sculptors Emma Rodgers and Johnny Vegas, which will run from 3 May – 15 June 2024.

St Helens-based comedian Johnny Vegas is perhaps best known for his surreal sense of humour, however he originally trained in art and ceramics at the university of Middlesex. during the covid pandemic, Johnny found solace in creativity, and three decades after he graduated, he returned to the studio following a chance encounter with Wirral-based sculptor Emma Rodgers. together, they have created new works inspired by themes of flight and metamorphosis.

“Confrontation, energy, curiosity, essence of a moment and interaction are the main elements that initially draw me to a new subject and are indicative of the very nature of the animals I have depicted.

“When approaching a new body of work i produce a large amount of visual research. sketching is particularly important as it provides me with a greater understanding of the form. I aim to interpret these drawn qualities into clay and remove the work from pure representation. a jagged line in ink is re-interpreted as a torn clay edge; an arc of soft pencil becomes a soft fold. the energy of the animal and the tautness of the pose are conveyed by a distortion in the medium.” – Emma Rodgers

“Currently, flight, faith, fear of failure and broken/tested faith, are the subjects most fluent in my work. emotional evolution and how best i can express that in 2d or 3d forms. a thought process, be it linked to hope or fear, captured in time. I’ve a head full of butterflies and all of them designed with unique intentions of distraction from the task at hand. when i think to exhibit i’m compelled to try and recreate in clay or oil what I’ve caught in my net that day… before it is once more set free to distract me from the hurried and sometimes ill constructed expectations of normality.” – Johnny Vegas

This exhibition is presented in partnership with the walker art gallery, who will showcase an installation organised by nicola scott, curator of decorative arts, of new works by emma and johnny inspired by the walker’s collections and exploring ideas of mental or physical transformation.

‘Metamorphosis’ will be on display at the Walker Art Gallery from 30 April 2024 – 31 March 2025.

Tate Liverpool: Brickworks

Iconic works from the Tate collection turn the humble brick into the hero in Brickworks, a new display featuring works from the Tate collection at the gallery space at RIBA North.

Shown in Liverpool, a city known for its iconic brick warehouses and the first red brick university, Brickworks is a small display showcasing the transformative power of bricks in art.

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Featuring sculpture, photography and works on paper from the Tate Collection, this show explores the many ways in which this material has been used to make art. Brickworks highlights how everyday materials can be transformed by artists to convey meaning and messages and can play an important role in our society.

Going To The Match

One of the most famous British paintings is to be displayed at Birkenhead’s Williamson Art Gallery & Museum.

LS Lowry’s masterpiece Going to the Match has left its home at The Lowry, Salford and is currently on a tour of five North West venues. The Williamson is the only venue on Merseyside the painting is visiting.

Going to the Match, painted in 1953, is LS Lowry’s best-known and most popular picture. Although he painted football-themed scenes before and after this date it is Going to the Match which has become iconic – an enduring representation of what match day means to fans. The painting features Burnden Park, the original home of Bolton Wanderers Football Club. That year, the Football Association, celebrating its 90th anniversary, had launched a competition called ‘Football and the Fine Arts’ and Lowry’s painting beat 1,700 entries to win first prize.

Going to the Match will be displayed at the Williamson along with a selection of other works by L S Lowry loaned from The Lowry, Salford and private collections, showing lesser-known sides to the artist’s work and his approach. Also on display will be a selection of work from the Williamson’s own collections. These artworks will provide a broader survey of Northern art and artists, examining how Lowry sits within a wider context. They also explore how working-class leisure pursuits, and what they mean to their communities, have been portrayed from the mid-twentieth century to today.

This hugely important and much-loved work of art had been on public display at The Lowry, Salford since it opened in 2000, courtesy of a loan by the then owners the Professional Footballers Association (PFA). However, following the decision by the PFA in 2022 to sell Going to the Match, there were no guarantees that any future owners would share the commitment to keeping the work on public view and free to access.

Following a high-profile campaign, Going to the Match was purchased by The Lowry in Salford for The Lowry Collection at the Modern British & Irish Art Sale at Christie’s in London in October 2022, thanks to the generous support of The Law Family Charitable Foundation.

Supported by a £95,000 grant from Arts Council England through its National Lottery Project Grants programme and additional support from The Sir Bobby Charlton Foundation, the tour means that this iconic painting can be enjoyed by the widest possible audience across the region.

The exhibition will run from 19th April – 27th July.