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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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Exhibitions, Participatory, Shop, Workshop

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Artist Residencies Unwrapped – Informal talk on Saturday 10th of September, 11-1pm

Are you an artist interested in ART RESIDENCIES but you have questions or you are not sure how to start?

Join us in hARTslane on
Saturday 10th of September 2022, 11-1pm

A unique and informal opportunity to get inspired and discover everything you need to know about Artist in Residence programmes.

WHY YOU SHOULD GO

WHAT THEY ARE

WHERE TO FIND THEM

HOW TO APPLY

Run by Cristiana Bottigella (hARTslane director & head of UNIDEE Artist in Residence,  2000-2009) & Rain Wu (Artist & Associate Lecturer at UAL and Goldsmiths).

Book your place

PART OF: Find the LANE to your ART!

An informal artist development programme run by hARTslane to advance your practice and fulfil your creative dreams!

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Opportunities, Workshop

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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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Mini Clay Club – the joy of making together! The results





Mini Clay Club

20 places available!

Clay is fascinating and it will lend itself to your skill level, whatever it may be.
Led by artists Rain Wu and Wynn Chandra
– Session 1, Hand build: Tuesday 15 OR Wednesday 16 of June, 6:30-8pm
– Session 2, Glazing: Tuesday 29 of June, 6-7pm OR 7-8pm
– Session 3, Collection: Thursday 8th of July, 6pm

£20 P/P inclusive of materials, tools and firing
To book please email info@hartslane.org
First come first serve, limited spaces available!

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Workshop

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The 100 Wishes of Hatcham

The 100 Wishes of Hatcham

A Delft blue ceramic public art wall made by and for the residents of Hatcham


Between May and July 2019, 100 residents of Hatcham, New Cross Gate, have participated in Delft Blue ceramic decorating workshops to visualise their wish and words of wisdom. Led by hARTslane and Dutch artist Tisna Westerhof, the residents have mixed onglaze enamels, transferred imaginary, painted and fired 100 tiles. The 2 by 2 metre ceramic tile installation will send daily positive messages of hope and joy into the world for generations to come.

The creative workshops brought together different parts of the community working on the same brief and enjoying the process of making and learning new skills together while sharing common ground. Participants as young as 3 and their families, scouts, artists, young people and the older residents of Hatcham all committed to the challenges of the limitations of the materials as well as the visualisation of their wishes, which results into a magical yet powerful collective contribution.

The workshops were organised in collaboration with local organisations and charities:
All Saints Community Centre,
The Ageing Well Fun Club of New Cross,
32nd Deptford Scouts,
Somerville Adventure Playground and
The Five Bells Pub.


Funded by


Selected Press


Film by

Rath Chun

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 earthenwares from the British Isles: the Blue and White represents cultural diversity and celebrates them coming together.

Now more than any other time, the world is in need of unity, positivity and kindness. The 100 Wishes of Hatcham celebrate diversity and unity within the area, whilst their messages reach out far and beyond the perimeters of the community.

THE 100 WISHES WERE MADE BY:

“Seeing the work launched was very exciting for everyone involved, and other residents that joined the celebration. However for me what I have loved most has been seeing reactions to the work now

that it is up. I walk by it daily and often see people stopping to look at it. This has included teenagers taking selfes in front of the wall, young children excitedly showing off their work, and adults stopping to admire each individual tile.

Everyone has a look of joy as they look at this, and as others stop and join them there’s a sense of community that develops – far beyond those that contributed”. – Kristina Leonnet, participant and local resident.

Fred Agbah | Amy | Cristiana Bottigella | Bjarki Brennan | Clive Burton | Imogene Burton | Chelsea | Bradley Cummings | Keyci Cummings | Millie Cummings | Daniel | Danica Dekker | Thomas Dekker | Sheree Dervish | Faye Doolan | Salma Doolan | Steve Doolan | Clive Dunham | Mervenil Emiroglu | Billy Fornacre | Luca Fornacre | Livia Francomb | Alma Garnier-Mills | James Harvey | Amiah Henry | David Holloway | Constance Howe | Patricia Howe | Shereener Hudson | Marie-Claire James | Esme Jones | Robin Jones | Louis Jopp | Catherine Josesi | Ellie Kebell | Annabelle Kendrick | Lily Kendrick | Alison Lambert | Kathy Lambert | Kristina Leonnet | Noah Leonnet Greasey | Noah Lovett | Robin Marcus | Max Maxwell | Anthony McAndrew | Joni McDougall | Esther Okotie | Jada Perry | Gabriel Pritchard | Harry Pye | Ms Dorine Reid | Amy Richards | Bowie Richards | Flynn Richards | Lloyd Richards | Santi Schowlin | Archana Singh | Vivek Singh | Hyacinth Smith | Sara Stenbaek | Matilda Strickland | Jacopo Strocchi | Matilde Strocchi | Sigrun Sverrisdottir & Kevin Brennan | Prince Wilson | Taran | Paul Taylor | Telliah | Annie Wasdell | Tisna Westerhof | Teri-Ann Wilson | Ms Muriel White | Carol Wyss

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Participatory, Workshop

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