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Category: In the Community

THE OPEN DOOR


Aude Hérail Jäger | Tisna Westerhof
THE OPEN DOOR – Women’s Quilt of Pride

25 September – 6 October 2024 at hARTslane

Opening event
Wednesday 25 September, 5.30-8pm
Opening Remarks 6.30-7pm

Exhibition Open Times
Thursday – Sunday, 2-6pm
Sunday 6 October, 12 noon – 3pm

Saturday 28 September – 12noon to 2pm. Free and open to all
PROTEST BANNER Workshop with Tisna Westerhof and Aude Hérail Jäger.
What message would you like to write to yourself to be reminded of your autonomy, aspirations and resilience?
The workshop will include quilting and appliqué techniques. Storytelling and freeing our creativity will be part of designing and making your Protest Banner.

Saturday 5 October – 12noon to 2pm. Free and open to all
COMMUNITY MANIFESTO writing workshop with The Feminist Library (Peckham) for local residents of all ages. Together, we will think, converse, and map the intersections of our diverse stories and feminisms, exploring how the personal is political, and visualising what our collective power holds. Participants will explore intersections of feminist theory and how they relate to our everyday lives, and will collaboratively produce a collective manifesto that outlines their desires for imagining otherwise. By the end of the workshop, participants will have created individual manifestos and one communal one.
The workshop will include examples of Feminist Manifestos including:
SCUM Manifesto (Valerie Solanas)
The Black Women’s Manifesto
The Woman Identified Woman (Radicalesbians)
The Combahee River Collective Statement
Redstockings Manifesto
Sojourner Truth’s “Ain’t I A Woman?”

Both workshops tale place in hARTslane Gallery (17 Harts Lane, SE14 5UP – Nearest tube: New Cross Gate). For more info & signing up, please email tisna.westerhof@gmail.com

THE OPEN DOOR is a collaborative exhibition about belonging and displacement across time and space by Aude Hérail Jäger and TisnaWesterhof. The project evolved from a series of conversations during the 2020 pandemic, when the two artists started exchanging thoughts and creative ideas about notions of home, the significance of childhood memories and family ties, especially during times of separation.

The result is a collection of intimate works based on personal experience interlaced with critical observations of contemporary life, in particular the role of women in society both past and present, expressed in works on paper, textiles and sculpture.

An integral part of the project is the Women’s Quilt of Pride, a collaborative piece of textile art created in workshops with members of the local communities in France and London. Participants were invited to dedicate a textile square to an inspirational woman, family member, friend or public figure. The experience of personal expression through an ancient craft forming a cathartic bond between the participants while the resulting quilts serve as testaments of togetherness and hope.

First shown in the vast vaults of a former vineyard in rural France this Spring, the exhibition has been adapted to the urban setting of a converted motorbike garage. For the London iteration, the artists have worked closely with members of The Feminist Library who will present a selection of their large archive collection of feminist literature to complement the displays.

The exhibition opens with a conversation chaired by The Feminist Library between the two artists and Nazira Mehmari, Operational Manager at IKWRO, the Women’s Rights Organisation whose members contributed to the Women’s Quilt of Pride, as well as Dr. Farhana Hoque, Social and Medical Anthropologist, University College London who contributed to THE OPEN DOOR catalogue, and Cristiana Bottigella, co-founder and director of hARTslane.

Originally known as the Women’s Research and Resources Centre (WRRC), The Feminist Library was set up in 1975, at the height of the Women’s Liberation Movement (WLM) and a time of intense political campaigning and lively collective organising.

Based in Peckham, The Feminist Library supports research, activist and community projects in this field. The Feminist Library is trans-inclusive, welcomes visitors of any gender, does not require registration or membership, and provides an intersectional space for the exploration of feminism.

Images: Above: The Women’s Quit of Pride created in co-operation with community groups in Britain (top) and France (bottom). 
Below: THE OPEN DOOR at L.A.C. Lieu d’Art Contemporaine (Narbonne, France)

Partners:

LAC-Lieu d’Art Contemporain, Narbonne, France
hARTslane, London
IKWRO, Women’s Rights Organisation, London
The Feminist Library in Peckham, London
Atelier Couture et Patchwork A.C.A.D. (Académie du Temps Libre, Narbonne), France
Ecole des Beaux-Arts de Sète, France
Maison de Retraite EHPAD, Narbonne France
Institut L’Amandier, Section Internationale, Lézignan-Corbières, France

Film Remke Westerhof
PR support Meike Brunkhorst

Press: Souvenirs Sans Frontières, Trebuchet

Publication
Texts:  Aude Hérail Jäger, Bernard Tenon De Noilles, Marie Stefan Salgas, Dr Farhana Hoque, Miri de Villers>
Translations: Laura Bennett, Nathalie Reis
Graphic design: Bastien Candille
Photography: David Huguenin, Bastien Candille

Aude Hérail Jäger is a French artist who lives and

works in London. She holds a BA (Hons) in Sculpture from Central Saint Martin’s (UCL) and continued her post-graduate studies at the Slade School of Fine Art (UCL) and The Royal Drawing School in London where she currently teaches.

Her work has been widely exhibited, including solo shows in the UK, France and Japan. She is recipient of grants by the British Council, the Henry Moore Foundation and the Arts Council England.


Born in the Netherlands, Tisna Westerhof lives and works between London and Amsterdam. She studied Printmaking at the Royal Academy of Art in The Hague and holds an MA in Scenography from Central St Martins (UCL).

Her work has been exhibited at the Venice Biennale, Rijksmuseum Amsterdam and London’s The Royal Academy, The Dutch Centre and Whitechapel Gallery.

She is co-founder and director of hARTslane Gallery, London.




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Invisible Visible – Exhibition

ARTISTS

Kelvin Atmadibrata
Gem Bryant
Ros Cairns
Freya Clayton-Harding
Vivienne Cohen
El Colman
Laura Crosbie
Theo Dunne
Aisling Gallagher
Lola Gillies-Creasey
Margaux Halloran
Sally Hernández (Yaiza)
Caitlin Howe
Anna lll
Usva Inei
Theo Jackson
Katrina Lyne-Watt
Roux Malherbe
Jaime Martinez Lopez
Robbie McKinstry
Eva Merendes
Efrat Merin
Saffron Mustafa (Saf)
Charlie Oppenheim
Alessandro Paiano 
E.M. Parry
Sol Santana
Eva Sbaraini
Artur Siudem
Siao-Chen Wang (Sam)
Raffi Williamson
Yufeng Wu
Lianjiang Zhu
Xinyu XuXX

 

‘Invisible Visible’
A Celebration of LGBQT+ Bodies and Identities

EXHIBITION
15 – 24 MARCH, 2024

Open daily, 2-6pm / Sat & Sun, 12-6pm

Opening night, Friday 15th, 5-8pm
Family Drop in, Sunday 24th, 12noon-2pm (art workshop suitable for all ages)
Performances, Sunday 24th, 3-5pm

 Part of The Telegraph Hill Festival 2024

‘Invisible Visible’ is a group exhibition hosted at hARTslane that celebrates LGBTQ+ identities and bodies, as well as the freedom of expression and identification in terms of one’s gender and sexuality. The aim is to bring together LGBTQ+ artists that live in New Cross and surrounding areas in order to support the community and its creativity. The exhibition is curated by queer visual artist Usva Inei.

List of Works List of Works

Programme of Performances:

Friday 15th:
5-7pm, E.M. Parry
5:30pm,
Jaime Martinez Lopez
6pm, Freya Clayton-Harding
6:30pm, Caitlin Howe

Sunday 24th:
3pm, Jaime Martinez Lopez
3:30, Caitlin Howe
3:45, Freya Clayton-Harding
4pm, E.M. Parry

Family Drop in, Sunday 24th, 12-2pm: 
Led by artist and curator Usva Inei.
Free art workshops to explore themes of inclusion, acceptance, and self-expression through thought-provoking artworks.
Suitable for all ages. 

Supported by:

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The Dinner Art Project

The Dinner Art Project

A series of events for sharing food and stories

Saturday 23rd September, 1-4pm
Free entry, all welcome!

Intimate ingesting;
ingesting intimacy
by artists Fatima Alaiwat & Barney Pau

Creating three different dishes all using the same ingredients, exploring the variety that can be found in repetition.

A project by hARTslane.

In collaboration with:
Deptford RoyalNaval Place Allotments and GS Wines
Supported by Bold Vision  

Rather than focussing on the novelty of an array of different foods, this event will focus on repetition as a means of care and intimacy. The artists will explore ways of activating food/eating as practise for relearning, reinvesting and rewilding things we care for. Over the course of the event, Fatima and Barney will create 3 different foods, all using the same ingredients, to focus on the variability that can be found in repetition. These could take place on the hour.
One part will be about the physicality of eating; one about provenance; one about a poetic intervention. The intention is to explore how these three separate approaches invite modes of intimacy in ingesting.

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Come Dine in Blue

COME DINE IN BLUE

Inspired by the work of Tisna Westerhof.  

Created and produced by artist Tisna Westerhof & Cristiana Bottigella. 

Participatory art project bringing together more than 100 Lewisham residents with a migrant background creating a Blue-and-White dining room installation that tells personal and collective stories of identity and belonging, redefining heritage, celebrating different cultures and the journey to Lewisham.

Please read more about Come Dine in Blue project: An article by Miri de Villers for Eastlononlines and an interview by Ayokunle Oluwalana, community reporter for My London News.

Please visit our Come Dine in Blue Shop.

‘Blue Borough’ – Illustration by Tisna Westerhof
Buy it here 

Supported by





‘Redefining heritage’ – Illustration by Tisna Westerhof

Artists and art facilitators: Tisna Westerhof, Amanda Holiday, Rain Wu, Clive Burton, Nadina Ali, Kai Christodulou-lee, Mary McInerney, Carla Thomas, Tang Victoria Hoi Yi, Amelia Yang and WhittyGordon Projects.

Participants:
Ainhoa Oleas, Al S. Family, Alan Chong, Alex & Lavinia Bajko, Anaya Hyde, Angeline Espinosa, April Lam, Asmahan, Aylin, Bella Alexandrova, Bernard, Biheri, Channan Warmington Lewis Moore, Dana, Deborah Thomas, Dulce, Edward, Elisabeth Grace Enriquez, Fabiola Jimenez, Fanyi Zhang, Farozan Saleemi, Farhnaz Saleemi, Faten, Fr. Grant Bolton-Debbage, Fiona Quadri, Flynn Richards, Fox Thomas Butler, Franklin Jackduring, Fransesca Telling, Freya Ye, Georgiana Hyde, Gustavo Barboza, Hanadi, Lloyd Richards, Hang Luc, Harris family, Iyamide Thomas, Jada Perry, James Attwood, Jane Dolores, Jessenia Parrez, Jinying Gao, Joshua, Julia and Jim Wells, Julia, Julia Deng, Julia Scoble, Kai Christodulou-lee, Ke Bao, Kiki Wong, Kyrah Warmington-Lewis, Leyre, Lia Ayuino, Lilyana Karavacheva, Limah, Linda, Lueillia Joseph, Luisa Chicaiza y Salvador Herrera, Maliha, Marianela, Marie Wotay Kamara, Marilyn Alfaro, Martha, Mary Shephard, Mateo Espinoza, Melvasquez, Mia Olaya, Mia Scoble, Mong Lang, Mutiat Oyesile, Nadina Ali, Naiala, Najm, Nicolas Saez, Petia Pakozdi, Pokuaa, Qianhui Sun – Alice, Quan Cao, Randolph Andy, Remmie Akibo-Betts, Rihanna Daño Cali, Ruby Seasy, Sabah, Sachi Slate, Sally Shao, Sanaya Havaldar, Sena Appeah, Serafina Min, Shoko Sakuma, Silvia, Sweeta jan, Tania Patiño Ariana Ruiz, Tolu Elusadé, Tom V., Vaura & Noah Viner, Veronica Ashley, Violeta Luna Enriquez, Waeed, Wiliam, Wagma, Woman from Syria living in Lewisham with her family, Xuemei Hwang, Yalda, Yen Trieu, Yiyun Li, Zainab, Zhuoyuan Zhang, Zoila y Luis Lema. 

Part of We Are Lewisham, Lewisham London Borough of Culture 2022

Exhibition opening:
Saturday 24th of September, 3-7pm         
Exhibition open, Sunday 25th – Thursday 6th of October. Weekdays, 3-7pm, Saturday & Sunday, 2-6pm.

Programme of the opening day:
Launch of the Come Dine in Blue film created by WhittyGordon Project and the Come Dine in Blue publication.
Free creative family workshops available throughout the opening day.
Food and drinks made by the participating community groups.
Come Dine in Blue artworks, publication and gadgets available to purchase.

Partner community organisations:
Refugee Council – Lewisham 
Migration Museum 
The Confucius Institute at Goldsmiths, University of London
JOY & The Tai-Chi community at All Saints Community Centre
All Saints Church, New Cross
Be Seen Be Heard Youth Forum – Young black artists in Lewisham/SE London aged 16-25
The Latin-American community of Lewisham & SE London
The community of La Placita Mall 

Funded by:
The Arts Council England
The Heritage Fund 
Lewisham Council


The programme of 30 creative workshops was led by artist Tisna Westerhof and curated by Cristiana Bottigella, in collaboration with South East London based artists and art facilitators: Amanda Holiday, Rain Wu, Mary McInerney and Carla Thomas. The 100 participants engaged in various craft-based activities and learned new creative skills whilst sharing their personal and collective stories and memories of family rituals around food, domestic and national celebrations as well as the challenges of migration and building their home in a new country. The creative workshops varied from creating clay pots, decorating vintage crockery using onglaze enamels and decal transfers, embroidering and textile screen printing, spoken word and collaging extra-large cut outs, quilting, decorating tiles and kiln firing. All the artworks made during the workshops are featured in the Come Dine in Blue Exhibition. The gallery is divided in a dining room and a kitchen presenting The Table of Be-Longing, Two-Towels, The Story Tile of Joy, Messages to Blue, The Women’s Quilt of Pride, The Wish Dish Collection, Lewisham Toile and The Melting Pots.

Originated in China, the Blue-and-White ceramic technique has travelled the world. From Dutch Delftware to Portuguese Azulejos, from the Italian Maiolica to the English Willow Patterns and the tin-glazed earthenware from the British Isles. Often intended for the Middle Eastern market, the Blue-and-White ceramic was exported to Japan, Korea, South East Asia, Europe and as far as Africa and South America. The Blue-and-White is the unifying language through which the Come Dine in Blue participants tell their personal stories and recollect their memories, domestic traditions and ancestral words of wisdom.

Come Dine in Blue publication:
Buy it here
Editor: Frederica Agbah;  
Design: Matteo Grotto (OpenEDU);
Contributors: Massimiliano Mollona, Amanda Holiday, Rachel Kanev & Chenjin Ying (Confucius Institute), Fr. Grant Bolton-Debbage, Jada Perry & Fiona Quadri (Be Seen Be Heard Youth Forum), Shoko Sakuma, Alice Qianhui Sun, Amelia Yang, Tang Victoria Hoi Yi, Fabiola Jimenez.
Supported by The Heritage Fund

Special Thanks to:
Frederica Agbah, Bella Alexandrova, Massimiliano Mollona, Amanda Holiday, Father Grant Bolton-Debbage, Mia-Violet Leech, Liberty Melly, Eve Maia Annesley, Lois Nutt, Jane Keane, Yen Trieu, Mong Lang, Rachel Kanev, Jada Perry, Francesco Strocchi and Matteo Grotto, Renie Westerhof-Pot, Sigrun Sverrisdottir, Rachel Lonsdale, Max Melvin and the Refugee Cafe.

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Moving Harts

  • About

Moving Harts

Outdoor screening programme to celebrate art together again

A programme of Covid safe, walk-through art video projections to enjoy the arts and get together again. 

Every Friday evening Moving Harts brings you a different collection of short films from artists from around the world. 

Screenings start at dusk, around 9pm, and last roughly 1 hour.

On from Friday 7th of May – 15th October 2021 (except August).

An informal set up outside hARTslane gallery, projected onto the back of TKMaxx in New Cross Gate.

Curated by:
Nikos Akritidis
Rachel Lonsdale &
hARTslane

In collaboration with:
VideoWords  

Follow us on Instagram @ h.artslane for latest updates: some screenings will include an artist talk or other special features. 

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Screenings

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RETINA – hARTslane’s first ever permanent artwork



Retina

Intervention by Clive Burton

hARTslane’s first ever permanent artwork!

‘Retina’ is an intervention for the façade of hARTslane; an installation that is integral and totally integrated as part of the building as not to look added or alien.

A window reflecting both physically and metaphorically the environment that hARTslane as an Experimental Art Project Space inhabits, serves and inspires.

A visually mysterious, magical and kinetically interactive experience that symbolically mirrors the artistic, social and community work that is the beating heart of hARTslane.

Clive Burton Instagram: @clive_burton

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Mini Clay Club

  • About

Mini Clay Club
at
hARTslane

A mini gathering to make mini clay things!

The first edition of the Mini Clay Club took place during summer 2021. 

Thanks to Rain Wu & Whynn Chandra we learned a lot of clay pottery tips and produced so many fantastic mini ceramic objects.

Are you interested in taking part in the next edition of the Mini Clay Club at hARTslane? Watch this space for news and upcoming opportunities.

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Participatory, Workshop

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Greetings From New Cross Gate

ROOM 6.4

Artists and Mental Health
September 2018 – February 2019

“Madness is a gift from the gods.” Plato”We of the craft are all crazy.”- Lord Byron

Is mental health a problem or a gift? One in four adults lives with a mental health condition yet this illness often remains shrouded. hARTslane is offering a platform to examine mental health through the experience of artists and their work, to raise awareness and to advocate for the arts as a tool to wellbeing. 


Programme:
”Control”, 20- 23 September 2018, also part of DeptfordX Fringe

”INTRUSIONS”, 11-14 October 2018, Exhibition

”A Place for Friends”, 12-19 November 2018, Exhibition

“In Need of Space”, 20 November, An evening of talks focusing on practical and possible methods to work through the problem of space in London.

”PASSAGGIATINA“, 6-8 December 2018, Exhibition featuring Passaggiatina Residency artists

”No Wall Space”, 17-19 December 2018, Exhibition

”Love on the Isle of Dogs and other Intimate Stories”, 18-21 January 2019, Exhibition

”Rubble”, 28 February 2019, site specific installation, Camberwell College of Arts


ROOM 6.0 – ONGOING EXHIBITION PROPOSALS – Temporary suspended. 
With an aim to break down barriers and to provide affordable and accessible opportunities to produce, exhibit and inspire, hARTslane has introduced ROOM 6.0, an ongoing submission platform, inviting artists, curators and creative practitioners to contribute with an exhibition or art event, regardless of experience level, curriculum or background. 
ROOM 6.0 focuses on a relevant contemporary issue every 6 months and provides a forum for exploration and cultural engagement on current affairs. 
The specific topic can be addressed through collaborative and site specific projects, exhibitions, workshops, talks and screenings. The programme welcomes proposals from UK based as well as international art practitioners. Please note hARTslane doesn’t accept solo show presentations, nor is this a call out for individual artists to be part of a show. Proposals should describe focused, idea-driven, original group exhibitions and projects.

For guidelines and application form, please send an email to info@hartslane.org.
For a floorplan of hARTslane, please click 
here.

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Bags of Love

BAGS OF LOVE

Making a difference while making good news!

Supported by

Children from Lewisham have explored their local community creating connections through acts of kindness and exchange, finding and sharing common ground.

The current digital landscape has put growing pressure on children due to the easy access to frightening and upsetting news as well as becoming victims of a selfie-culture, that scientists have linked to narcissism, addiction and mental illness.

Four local groups of children aged between 10-12, were paired up with four local charities to create and donate a gift carrying a positive and uplifting message of love.

Through 15 creative workshops facilitated by artists and social workers, over 100 children experienced the joy and power of making and giving together. It was challenging! Kids have learned new skills: how to work from a brief, sewing & hand sewing, to cut fabrics and combine colours, to pin and how to make an image with textile materials.

From being powerlessly exposed to the problems in the world, the children involved in “Bags of Love” sprinkled magic and hope in the community of Lewisham.

Partners:
Childeric Primary School, Lewisham & Greenhive Carehome, Peckham
Hatcham Temple Grove Primary School, Lewisham & St Mungo’s Charity for Homeless People
SIGNAL, Autism in Lewisham + & 999 Club, Deptford Syrian Vulnerable People Resettlement Scheme (Lewisham Council) & Telegraph Hill Festival

With thanks to:
Telegraph Hill Centre
SHP Single Homeless Project
 

Produced by hARTslane (Cristiana Bottigella & Tisna Westehof)
Coordinated by Cristiana Bottigella
Workshops led by: Tisna Westerhof, artist & Mary McInerney, social worker and art facilitator
Volunteers: Cadi Freud, Jazz McInerney, Matilde Strocchi, Flynn Richards
Film: Alex Abdolwahabi

“I really liked the conversation with the children, and love the picture of my daughter, I can look at it every day and smile.” – Moe, resident at Greenhive

“I felt nervous and then I felt happy that I made someone else happy!” – pupil

“They were so happy that someone that isn’t paid to look after them is actually thinking about them.”. – El Thomson, Service Manager, St Mungo’s.

“What a great project! Very friendly and accommodating. For once the focus was not on the Autism and their needs but on making and creating for someone else. We’d love to see more of this.” – Parent at Signal

“The workshops were lovely in that they allowed our families to socialise and mingle with local families over an activity that in itself was enjoyable and therapeutic too.” ‘This allowed them to genuinely be a part of local community events, not by virtue of their situation but as Londoners.” – Werisha Husaini, Support Assistant, Refugee Resettlement Lewisham





In collaboration with









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Art Education, Participatory

Post! Mail Art

Post! Mail Art

Part of EAST – OOST – OST
International Art Exchange Project 
(2018- 2021)

In collaboration with

“In current political challenging times, it is refreshing, humbling and hopeful to spread a message of collaboration and exchange across borders celebrating unity and diversity through creative expression by our next generation.”

Zoe Howe, Head teacher, Hermitage Primary School

East – Oost – Ost is an exchange programme in the field of art education for children from neighbourhoods from three European Capitals: East London, Amsterdam Oost and Ost Berlin. The creative programme of “share, connect and exchange” will last for 2 years and will culminate in the Amsterdam Kinder Biennale 2020.

Post! Mail Art was the kick off project!
In January 2019, hARTslane facilitated a series of creative workshops at the Hermitage Primary School in East London, where 25 pupils received Mail Art from Barbara School and Nelson Mandela School in Amsterdam and were invited to respond and make their very own Mail Art to send back. They learnt about the history of Mail and Mail Art, about life in Holland, some Dutch words and replied to their art pen-pals sharing common ground: school and family life in the urban city.
The children were challenged: they learnt about screen-printing, collage, decorating and illustrating. Experimentation and artistic freedom were encouraged to communicate via artistic post!



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