Blue Room X LUSH Liverpool – Par...

Join artists from Blue Room to celebrate the launch of their new knot wrap commission with ethical cosmetics company, Lush.

Sun 19 Nov, 11am-4pm
This event takes place at Lush Liverpool, 38 – 46 Church St, Liverpool, L1 3AW.

Artists from Blue Room, Bluecoat’s inclusive arts project invite you to celebrate Party Animals, their exciting new design commission from ethical cosmetics company, LUSH.

The first floor of the LUSH Liverpool store will be transformed into a winter wonderland as Blue Room artists bring elements of the Party Animals design to life with artworks and interactive installations. Step inside Blue Room’s imagined ‘menagerie at the North Pole’ to find tigers in pixie boots, penguins on bicycles… and a partridge in a pear tree.

There will be a chance to meet the artists behind the design and join in with printmaking activities in a drop-in creative workshop. You will also have the opportunity to find the perfect ethical festive gift with a pop-up print shop selling a brand new collection of limited edition art prints created by Blue Room artists in the Bluecoat Print Studio.

Free, donations welcome

Drop-in

Party Animals Garden Trail

Explore the Bluecoat’s secret garden with a trail created by Blue Room, Bluecoat’s inclusive arts project. See how many partying animals you can find this festive season.

From Tue 14 Nov, 11am – 5pm

I-spy a penguin on a bike, an octopus with a present and a tiger in pixie boots…

Artists from Blue Room, Bluecoat’s inclusive arts project, invite you to discover a menagerie of festive characters hidden in the Bluecoat’s secret garden. Pick up a free trail sheet from our Children’s Corner and see how many Party Animals you can spot.

The Party Animals trail celebrates characters from Blue Room’s new knot wrap design commission from ethical cosmetics company, LUSH.

Free entry, donations welcome.

Suitable for all ages

Pulling at the threads of ableism

This mini exhibition is the culmination of the artist’s research and creative exploration into disability identity and how it is affected by an ableist society. Through her lived experience, the artist has explored the feelings and frustrations of living as a disabled person within a world that is not designed to cater to her accessibility needs and in a society that is not comfortable with difference.

Gillian Ashcroft-Smith is an activist and an artist-facilitator who creates art through mixed bricolage and traditional craft methods. She particularly enjoys creating new visually pleasing pieces from rescued, recovered and reused materials.

Pop into the Treasure House Theatre in World Museum

Blackler’s Father Christmas

Do you remember this giant Father Christmas which towered over shoppers in Blackler’s department store each winter from 1957 until 1988?

After undergoing a massive transformation, he went on display in the Museum of Liverpool’s atrium for the first time in more than 20 years in 2016 and has returned for Christmas almost every year since then.

The 18 foot Blackler’s Santa stands proudly in the museum’s Atrium and greets visitors with his jumbo smile. Visitors have been thrilled to be reacquainted with this symbol of their childhood and he has been winning new fans too as a younger generation meet this Liverpool icon.

Vision Through Art

Wirral Society of the Blind and Partially Sighted present their exhibition “Vision Through Art“.

This is a display of multimedia artwork produced by visually impaired people. Their expression through the senses demonstrates how the world is seen from the perspective of sight loss.

The artwork has been produced by members of the Society’s arts, crafts and pottery groups who have a range of eye conditions, including macular degeneration, retinitis pigmentosa, glaucoma and cataracts.

Event

EVENT: On Thursday 9th November 11am-12:30pm artists and WSBPS staff will be in the exhibition to showcase the work, explain the impact of sight loss on the perspective shown in the pieces, and demonstrate some of these eye conditions with simulation glasses. Free, drop-in.

Stirling Prize 2023

Presented since 1996, the RIBA Stirling Prize is the highest accolade in architecture.

Visit Tate Liverpool + RIBA North to see an overview of this year’s shortlist including the winning design, The John Morden Centre by Mæ.

Event

Located in Gallery 2.

Creating Visions: Women Designers 1900...

Iconic designs by Vivienne Westwood, Mary Quant and Laura Ashley are being showcased in a new display celebrating costume, jewellery and decorative objects made by female designers.

Creating Visions: Women Designers 1900-2000 opens at the Walker Art Gallery on 21 October 2023. The display, located in the Craft and Design Gallery, will showcase pieces dating from the early 20th century to the early 21st century. They draw from National Museums Liverpool’s extensive decorative arts collection which is one of the finest in the UK.

The display celebrates 100 years of women designers at the Gallery and features 14 items of dress. These include a mini dress by Mary Quant. Quant, who died in April 2023, is credited with bringing to popularity the era-defining above-the-knee skirts and dresses of Britain’s ‘swinging sixties’.

Also on display will be a pinafore dress by Jean Muir; a tunic dress with matching overcoat by Janice Wainwright; a tunic dress from Vivienne Westwood’s Nostalgia of Mud Collection; a skirt and a long-sleeved top from Vivienne Westwood’s Rolls Royce Collection; an evening cape by Thea Porter; and a glass wedding dress made by Diana Dias-Leão.

Fiona Slattery Clark, Curator of Decorative Art at National Museums Liverpool, said: “Our vast decorative art collection contains some truly exquisite pieces by female designers and it’s been a joy to assemble some of the most exciting and significant designs from the last hundred years for this display.

“As well as featuring designers of global influence and acclaim, we’ll be displaying pieces with an important connection to Liverpool, including evening dresses made by designers who sold their garments in high-end boutiques located on Bold Street in the early 20th century.”

The display will include two Parisian-inspired evening dresses inspired by British designer Lucile and made by T & S Bacon of Bold Street, Liverpool; an evening dress inspired by French designer Madeleine Vionnet; an evening dress by Callot Soeurs Ltd; an evening dress with the label of Elaine Paquin of Bold Street, Liverpool; a full-length summer dress by Gina Fratini; and a full-length summer dress by Laura Ashley.

Also on show will be a selection of jewellery, enamels and glass which will change throughout the duration of the display. Jewellery from the 1980s and ‘90s by female jewellers will be exhibited, including pieces by the internationally renowned Wendy Ramshaw and Jane Adam. From Perspex and acrylic to precious metals and ceramic, a varied mix of materials will be presented.

The enamel display will feature a selection of works by a local artist specialising in enamelled metalwork, Liverpool-born Lily Day (b. 1870). Day studied at Liverpool School of Architecture and Applied Art and became an enamelling/metalwork instructor there. Between 1898 and the early 1920s her work was frequently exhibited at the Walker Art Gallery.

Find out more about the display at liverpoolmuseums.org.uk/walker

Joy – Faith Bebbington

From 10th – 16th November visit the iconic Royal Liver Building on the ground floor between 12pm – 5pm to see the work of renowned local artist Faith Bebbington, whose work was not only the most popular ever seen on The Liverpool Plinth in 2021 but was also one of the selection panel for Liverpool Art Fair, and was interviewed as part of a special event on site in August.

“I studied sculpture at Winchester College of Art, set up my Liverpool studio in 1993 and now work nationally creating public artworks and exhibiting my sculpture. I also devise art projects in partnership with local schools, communities and cultural organisations such as Culture Liverpool and Dadafest.

My artistic practice initially stemmed from having cerebral palsy, a disability that has made me curious about how people and animals move. I explore this through figurative sculptures playing with balance, the process of falling, and capturing sequences of movement whether human or animal. In 2014 my artistic perspective shifted radically after surviving ‘terminal’ cancer! I stopped working with fibreglass resin as my main medium and focused on more sustainable, environmentally friendly ways of working, particularly re-using plastics by breaking the component parts down to then reconstruct them.” Faith Bebbington

This will be the first time since showing with dot-art in 2017, that the public with be able to purchase a Faith Bebbington sculpture, something that has been reserved for public commissions only during that time. With sustainability at the heart of Faith’s practice, purchase of the sculptures supports the ethical value of artwork that prioritises working with recycled materials.

Faith has a diverse range of sculptures on show including works from her Joy collection which inspired the title of the exhibition. Faith’s work acknowledges our need to find JOY, as we navigate through tough times. Sixteen new small-scale recycled paper sculptures will be presented, all created with wastepaper as the key material. The patterned papers used to create the paper mâché surface were collected over time by neighbours, friends, and colleagues.

Faith has created many animal sculptures over her career and now debuts five new hybrid, domestic pet-like Creatures. These sculptures of stretching, growling and slinking creatures have fur coats made from waste plastic milk bottles.

As you visit the exhibition, you will discover the variety of scales Faith explores, from smaller works to her large-scale public pieces that you may recognise from their temporary homes around Liverpool. “Jimmy” the work horse sculpture shown on Liverpool Plinth in 2021 and “Super Rat” which lived on the Baltic Skatepark wall, offering a chance to see public domain works, up close and personal.

In addition to the exhibition, you will have the opportunity to meet the artist and learn more about her process during the exhibition week from the opening evening, a lunchtime workshop, to informal chats with the artist while in residence. Please do visit our socials for details of these events.

All artworks are for sale. (Excluding public artworks)

Opening times: 12-5pm

Crafted

Kirkby Gallery’s biennial exhibition of contemporary craft, design and fine art returns to the gallery from 30 October – 23 December, featuring a host of artists and makers from across the region.

The Crafted exhibition will showcase metalwork, textiles, fashion, ceramics, illustration, collage, painting and book art from artists and makers including Becky Atherton, Kelly Broughton, Kate Bufton, Hollie Cooper, Julie Dodd, Harry Garner, Heston Isle Press, David Holmes, Sue McLaren, Ali Pickard, Catherine Rogers, Julie Taylor, Kate Tidmarsh, Hilary Marteau and the North West Book Art Group.

For 2023, the exhibition has been co-curated with Liverpool Book Art, celebrating the creative practice of book art through unique hand-made books, stories & illustrations, distinctive notebooks, prints, book sculptures, bindings, and more!

Bringing this to life is a unique exhibition on the ground floor of The Kirkby Centre, of the special collection owned by Liverpool Book Art, offering the opportunity to see how diverse this genre of art truly is. This show runs parallel to the Crafted exhibition so the visiting public can enjoy this until the 23rd December also.

Additionally, Liverpool Book Art will be hosting a series of special events and fringe exhibitions throughout the exhibition’s duration to give people an opportunity to explore the artform for themselves. This includes:

The Liverpool Book Art Fair

Friday 3 November, 10.30am – 4.30pm
Meet a range of book artists, and purchase works directly from them.

Half Term Book Art Workshops

Monday 30 October – Saturday 4 November

Throughout the October half term is a series of free workshops for children and adults offering you the opportunity to learn how to make your own book art.
Contact the gallery for more information: [email protected]

Reading copies of artists books will be available for a much closer look, in the main gallery.

Event

All of the artworks in the Crafted exhibition are for sale with a range of price points available, from smaller affordable works through to major pieces which would be sure to make a unique and thoughtful Christmas gift.

Northern Lights: Gallery Wall Launch

Baltic Creative CIC is thrilled to announce the opening of a new exhibition space at Northern Lights.

This unique showcase kicks off a regular programme of events to support the local artist community. This new gallery wall will redefine the traditional gallery experience by transforming the industrial backdrop of this former canning warehouse into a canvas for artists to express their creativity.

The inaugural exhibition, featuring works from Hub Studios, promises to captivate audiences with a diverse range of artistic expressions. Kim Harley-Griffiths, Freida McKitrick and Matthew Storrow from Hub will be exhibiting their artwork and launch a new collection of ceramics, produced after studying under fellow Northern Lights resident, Simon Shaw.