Illustrations of birds, fishes and other natural objects captured as if flying

Kirsten Schmidt

Green spaces in Waltham Forest

EXHIBITION

Saturday 19 October 2019 - Sunday 26 January 2020

Local printmaker Kirsten Schmidt is inspired by our connection to nature, and the urban spaces where we can make these connections.

This exhibition celebrates the artist’s respondes to Lloyd Park, home of William Morris Gallery, and other green spaces in the borough.

Madge Gill is pictured outside in front of her work. A figure leans over the artwork above her

Madge Gill

Myrninerest

EXHIBITION

Saturday 22 June - Sunday 22 September 2019

Madge Gill was born in Walthamstow and spent most of her years living in East London.

A self-taught, visionary artist, she created meticulous artworks, many of which she attributed to Myrninerest, her spirit-guide that she came to embody.

This landmark exhibition in her home town brings together drawings, newly uncovered large-scale embroideries, textiles and archival objects, many of which have never been exhibited before.

Accompanying Madge Gill is an exhibition by the celebrated French “outsider” artist Marie-Rose Lortet, whose work has been greatly influenced by Gill’s. On display will be Lortet’s distinctive embroidered masks and fabric sculptures.

Illustration showing workers and figures dressed in military uniform surrounded by pink and red flowers with industrial landscapes behind

Cultural Revolution

State graphics in China from the 1960s to the 1970s

EXHIBITION

Saturday 23 February - Monday 27 May 2019

In 1942, Chairman Mao Zedong declared that all art should serve the worker, peasant and soldier. During the Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution (1966-76) this policy was vigorously implemented.

Images of the leader appeared everywhere: bold, colourful posters combined text and image to promote political messages. The predominant colour was red – colour of the revolution – and when Mao was shown, it was always amid a glowing light.

Traditional landscape styles were reimagined and now incorporated symbols of modern and industrial achievement. Even the traditional folk art of the delicate papercut, used to decorate windows at home, promoted ‘Mao Zedong Thought’.

This exhibition displays a selection of Cultural Revolution propaganda posters, revolutionary landscapes, images of the leader and intricate papercuts all of which were collected in China during the 1970s.

This is a touring exhibition organised by the Ashmolean Museum, University of Oxford.

A traditional Japanese block showing the image of a wave, next to a tablet screen showing the same image

Haiku Adventure

The Craft of Games

EXHIBITION

Tuesday 26 February - Sunday 15 September 2019

Haiku Adventure: The Craft of Games explores the intersection between traditional Japanese woodblock prints and videogames – two different media separated by centuries and yet linked by a common sensibility.

Small Island Games present the development of their ‘indie’ title Haiku Adventure, juxtaposing its creative process with its artistic influence: the ukiyo-e prints of Edo-era Japan. The display follows on from the Gallery’s 2017 exhibition, Sheer Pleasure: Frank Brangwyn and the Art of Japan, which was formative to the game’s conception.

This exhibition showcases original Japanese prints alongside interactive game displays and an overview of the development process, allowing visitors to experience a modern adaptation of an ancient craft.

Two brightly coloured portraits of solo females are mounted on dark blue walls

Kehinde Wiley

The Yellow Wallpaper

EXHIBITION

Tuesday 22 February - Tuesday 12 July 2022

The Yellow Wallpaper is an exhibition of new portraits by American artist, Kehinde Wiley. This is the first solo exhibition of new work shown by Wiley at a UK museum and also the first to feature exclusively female portraits. The works feature women that the artist met on the streets of Dalston and offer a visual response to American novelist Charlotte Perkins Gilman’s acclaimed feminist text, The Yellow Wallpaper (1892).

The Yellow Wallpaper is a work of literary fiction that explores the contours of femininity and insanity. This exhibition seeks to use the language of the decorative to reconcile blackness, gender, and a beautiful and terrible past.’ — Kehinde Wiley

Gilman’s text is a semi-autobiographical tale which sees her narrator confined to her bedroom after being diagnosed with hysteria and explores the disastrous consequences of denying women independence. In Wiley’s new portraits, each woman is positioned as autonomous, as powerful, as open to individual interpretation and as an emblem of strength within a society of complicated social networks. They wholly embody myriad positions with regard to social class, status, religion, colonialism and the negotiation of gender.

For over fifteen years Wiley has sourced William Morris’s iconic floral designs for his paintings. Building on his interest in the relationship between the human body and the decorative, Wiley’s models are depicted in reimagined fields inspired by the William Morris oeuvre. Wiley’s portraits offer a rubric through which to engage with the beautiful yet fraught histories and traditions that black women — and all women — are heir to.

Jane Morris poses with her young daughter, Jenny Morris

Light and Shade

Portrait Photography from the Collection

EXHIBITION

Tuesday 22 February - Wednesday 25 May 2022

This exhibition in the Story Lounge highlights the lives led by the women of William Morris’s social circle alongside portrait photographs of them from our collection. In the nineteenth century individuals might only be photographed a few times in their lives so many photographers specifically designed images to capture the essential character of their sitters.

William Morris’s mother, the stately Emma Morris, is seen leaning on an ornate urn while his industrious sister, Isabella Gilmore, embroiders in her deaconess uniform. Images of Jane Morris, captured as a gentle mother or a languid muse, throw light on the varied aspects of her personality.

However, portrait photographs of women could also shade parts of their lives from view. Simple seated portraits of Rosalind Howard reveal nothing of her radical politics, where a male sitter in her position may have been captured at a writing desk or next to a collection of political books.

Pattern with large floral motif

Within The Reach Of All: The Century Guild

EXHIBITION

Tuesday 18 May - Tuesday 31 August 2021

Within The Reach of All: The Century Guild is the first exhibition in 20 years to explore the pioneering aesthetics and lasting legacy of this influential association of artists, designers and craftspeople.

The Century Guild was established by the architect and designer Arthur Heygate Mackmurdo (1851 – 1942), who later helped found the William Morris Gallery, and his assistant, Herbert Percy Horne (1864 – 1916), in close collaboration with designer Selwyn Image (1849 – 1930). They aspired to elevate crafts to the status of art, integrate both art and crafts in domestic interiors, and democratise good design. Within The Reach of All: The Century Guild will explore the group’s key figures, along with its influence on Art Nouveau, 20th-century design and modern publishing, through works from the William Morris Gallery, which holds the world’s largest and most comprehensive collection of Century Guild works.

The exhibition coincides with the publication of a new book on the subject by Stuart Evans and Jean Liddiard. Arts and Crafts Pioneers: The Hobby Horse Men and their Century Guild is published in the UK by Lund Humphries on 28 January 2021.

A three-pronged altarpiece decorated with figures and landscapes in gold and pastel colours

Pioneers

William Morris and the Bauhaus

EXHIBITION

Saturday 19 October 2019 - Sunday 26 January 2020

Pioneers: William Morris and the Bauhaus is the first exhibition in the UK to fully explore the relationship between the English Arts and Crafts movement and the Bauhaus, the ground-breaking German art school established by Walter Gropius. Timed to coincide with the centenary of the founding of the Bauhaus in 1919, it brings together over 60 objects from nine international and domestic lenders, some of which have never been displayed in the UK before.

The exhibition uses Morris’s key principles of Unity, Craft, Simplicity and Community as a lens to explore the early years of the Bauhaus, from its establishment as a radical new school in the conservative city of Weimar, to its move to a purpose-built campus in Dessau. Along the way, the Bauhauslers embraced a diverse range of ideas and aesthetics as they adopted and adapted the messages of the Arts and Crafts movement in their quest to design a better world. In showing objects made at the Bauhaus alongside Morris’s own pioneering designs, the exhibition invites visitors to explore alternative perspectives on the Bauhaus, as well as see Morris’s legacy in a new light.

Alongside the exhibition is a display of three pieces by acclaimed London-based fashion designer Mary Katrantzou, who is lending garments from her Autumn/Winter 2018 collection, which combines Bauhaus prints with patterns inspired by William Morris. There is also an installation by Bauhaus Artist in Residence, Nicholas Pankhurst.

Pioneers: William Morris and the Bauhaus has been funded through Art Happens, the Art Fund’s crowdfunding platform.

Winter Late

at William Morris Gallery

SPECIAL EVENTS

Thursday 21 November 2024

Join us on Thursday 21 November, for a special Winter Late event as we keep the Gallery open after hours to celebrate the season. We’re excited to welcome local charity PL84U AL-SUFFA, who will be hosting a food bank donation station at the Gallery throughout the evening. Bring your friends, family, and food donations to support this important cause and enjoy a festive night with us.

Our evening programme includes festive music throughout the evening and late night shopping at the William Morris Gallery Shop. 

You can also join us for:

Crafts

  • Create a Victorian Yuletide pomander
  • Make your own gift bag using Morris wrapping paper
  • Drop-in activities available on the first-floor landing, starting at 5pm and running until 8pm
  • Suitable for children (aged 5+)

Singing from the Little Choir of Joy, part of the Waltham Forest Music Service.

Curator-led tours – Join tours of William Morris & Art from the Islamic World exhibition:

  • 6pm, 7pm
  • Sign up at the front desk to participate

Deeney’s Cafe at William Morris Gallery – Sip on mulled wine and  a variety of seasonal treats

PL84U AL-SUFFA Food Bank – You’ll find the PL84U AL-SUFFA team in our ground floor cafe throughout the evening. The following items are currently most needed by the food bank: tuna, chickpeas, tinned fruit, tinned tomatoes, oil, sugar, teabags, coffee, sardines, corned beef, pasta, lentils/legumes.

Read more about PL84U AL-SUFFA.

Admission is FREE.

Image: Medway, 1885, designed by William Morris for Morris & Co., cotton, indigo discharge and block-printed © William Morris Gallery 

Supporters and partners

Family Day

The Magic of Storytelling

WORKSHOPS

Saturday 16 November 2024

November’s Family Day will be taking inspiration from the new exhibition William Morris and Art from the Islamic World.

Join us on a colourful journey across borders, countries, and time. Encountering mythical creatures and fairy tale characters along the way. Celebrating art, culture and the magic of storytelling. Facilitated by Elias Mattar a Palestinian play specialist, drama therapist, director and storyteller.

Activities will take place on the Gallery’s first floor Landing. These free, drop-in sessions are open to all. Stories will be most appropriate for ages 5+

All children must be accompanied by an adult.  

 

About Elias Matar

Elias Matar is a Palestinian play specialist, drama therapist, workshop facilitator, performer, director, and founder of the El Bayet Centre for Performing Arts & Drama Therapy. Elias holds an MA in Drama and Movement Therapy from the Royal Central School of Speech and Drama in London. And has a BA in Social Theatre and Education.

Image: ‘Isfandiyar Relaxes a While on his Way to Zabul’, 1620, illustration from the Shahnameh (Book of Kings) by Ferdowsi, Gorgan, Iran (Safavid). ©The Fitzwilliam Museum, University of Cambridge

Back to Top