Wood Engraving Inspired by Hokusai

With Waltham Forest Adult Learning Service

WORKSHOPS

Friday 2 August 2024

Join the Waltham Forest Adult Learning Service for an inspiring morning at William Morris Gallery, beginning with a short tour of the Art without Heroes: Mingei exhibition, showcasing exquisite Japanese art and crafts. Following the tour, immerse yourself in a hands-on wood engraving workshop inspired by the iconic works of artist Hokusai, (whose work is on display in the gallery) known for his famous print – The Great Wave.

What you will learn:

  • The history of wood engraving
  • The use and maintenance of essential tools
  • How to transfer a drawing to a block
  • Techniques for rolling ink and printing a proof from a block
  • Making marks with engraving tools
  • Choosing and preparing paper
  • Selecting a subject for inspiration

Please bring:

  • An apron or an old shirt to protect your clothing

Times:

  • 10.00am – Arrive
  • 10.15 – 10.45am – Tour by gallery staff
  • 10.45am – 1.15pm – Wood engraving workshop

This workshop is a collaborative partnership between the Waltham Forest Adult Learning Service and the William Morris Gallery. Don’t miss this unique opportunity to explore traditional Japanese art and learn the beautiful craft of wood engraving.

Image: Tago Beach, (near) Ejiri on the Tōkaidō Highway, Katsushika. Hokusai (1750-1849), coloured woodblock print, 1830-33

Mingei on the Move Late

Tours, live art performance & making demo

SPECIAL EVENTS

Thursday 29 August 2024

An evening exploring and expanding on the themes of Art Without Heroes: Mingei. 

6.30pm & 7.30pm – Exhibition tours: Korea and the Mingei Movement, by Dasom Sung

Join us for a special tour of the exhibition, examining Korea’s influence on the Mingei movement. Korea and its crafts played a crucial role in the early development of Mingei theory, as key figures in the movement sought an alternative aesthetic to counter the modernisation and Westernisation of Japanese crafts. This tour explores the activities of Mingei theorists and artists in collecting and researching Korean crafts and establishing the Korean Folk Arts Gallery in 1924 in Seoul. It takes visitors beyond the objects on display to understand the relationship between the Mingei movement and Korea within the historical context of Japan’s colonisation of Korea from 1910 to 1945.

This tour has been specially commissioned by the Gallery and written by Dasom Sung, Assistant Curator at the V&A and contributor to the book Mingei: Art Without Heroes that accompanies the exhibition.

7pm  – Live art performance with Moe Asari

Moe Asari’s Auto Exotic – Japanning explores the perception of Japanese identity in Britain and cultural hybridity through the craft of japanning, a British and European imitation of East Asian lacquerware. Reacting and engaging with Art Without Heroes: Mingei, Asari critically examines the principles of beauty in everyday things by Yanagi Sōetsu. The performance involves a video essay reflecting the process of interpretation of the artist’s version of japanning, alongside a demonstration of the action of japanning an object. 

8pm – Making demonstration with Kaori Hirano

A unique opportunity to witness Kaori Hirano demonstrate how to create traditional Japanese Tatsuke trousers. Hirano and her brand Itoshiro Yohin specialises in natural dyeing and pattern making passed down by the community of Itoshiro and is fascinated by the shape of Japanese textiles. For Hirano, the pattern and its shapes hold the historic wisdom of Japanese artisans. The demonstration will explain in detail how to pattern cut the Tatsuke trousers on display in the exhibition. In Japanese with in-person English translation.

6pm – 9pm Make Your Own Self-led Mingei CraftsCafé

Take part in some simple self-led Mingei crafting activities whilst you have a drink and relax in our Café:

Twine Woven Cups – Weaving with natural materials is one of the many crafts associated with the Mingei movement. Collect a paper cup and twine from one of our baskets and follow the instructions provided to weave your own cup.

Sashiko bookmark – Using a simple running and back stitch, embroider your own bookmark using traditional Japanese sashiko patterns. All materials provided, along with some instructions and patterns ideas to inspire you.

Doors open at 6pm and Deeney’s Café will be open for organic beers, wines, snacks and other refreshments.

This event forms part of the Mingei on the Move public programme, designed in response to the William Morris Gallery’s Art Without Heroes: Mingei exhibition. The programme spotlights the diasporic nature of Mingei and why artists from all cultures and backgrounds are continually inspired by the movement’s ethos. Through this, we hope to inspire our audiences to engage reflexively with Mingei and apply its ideas of harmonious balance between people, objects and their surroundings to their own daily lives. 

Artist biographies

Dasom Sung is Assistant Curator of Korean Arts at the Victoria and Albert Museum. She was a lecturer at Seoul National University from 2020 to 2021 and is currently a doctoral candidate there, researching the design and material culture of factory-made porcelains in Korea. Her research interests lie in the history of materials, the government’s craft export policies of Korea and Japan, and East Asian modern design history. Sung’s recent publications include Chilbo: Korean Traditional Enamelling (Korea Craft & Design Foundation, 2022). 

Moe Asari is a visual artist with a research-based practice often using the process of making as a medium. Her work consists of site responsive, experiential installations and performances which explore the material quality of connection between place and multi-cultural identity alongside ideas of  belonging. Her background in product and spatial design with her positionality of being a second generation British Japanese person, is reflected in physical making, craft processes and domestic objects used as tools to research and investigate plural narratives alongside existing popularised narratives of identity and place.

Kaori Hirano is the founder of sustainable fashion brand Itoshiro Yohin. Her work is profiled by Yoshizawa Tomo in the exhibtion’s accompanying book Mingei: Art Without Heroes:

“Itoshiro village is a community of 220 people, high up in the mountains in Gifu prefecture. Over a decade ago, Hirano Kaori (b.1981) and her husband Akihide moved to Itoshiro and founded Itoshiro Yohin Ten, an indigo dye studio, workshop and gallery, with the aim of learning and preserving the region’s textile craft traditions.”

 

Brewery image - making beer

In Conversation with Pete Brown

With Hadrian Garrard

OFF SITE

Wednesday 18 September 2024

DUE TO UNFORESEEN CIRCUMSTANCES, THIS EVENT HAS BEEN POSTPONED. MORE INFORMATION WILL BE PROVIDED WHEN A NEW DATE IS CONFIRMED.

Join Hadrian Garrard, Director of William Morris Gallery, for a special conversation with Pete Brown, award-winning food and drink writer and author of Craft: An Argument, winner of Best Beer Book at the North American Guild of Beer Writers Award.  

At this special event – taking place in a craft brewery just down the road from the childhood home of William Morris, founder of the Arts and Crafts movement – they will talk about what might make something ‘craft’ (or not). Also up for grabs are the changing nature of work, to what extent how a thing is made affects the thing itself, the advance of the robots and when is a nice drink just a nice drink.  

The event will take place in Exale Brewery and Taproom – an independent craft brewery in Walthamstow. 

Times:

6-7pm – doors open

7-8pm – talk

About Exale 

Exale is a beloved neighbourhood hub for good vibes. They cultivate a feeling of unity through music, dance and incredible craft beer brewed on-site.

Exale Brewery and Taproom, Unit 2C, Uplands Business Park, E17 5QL

About William Morris Design Line

William Morris Gallery is excited to be part of this year’s William Morris Design Line, which shines a light on the richness of Waltham Forest’s past and present creative community and encourages visitors to discover, learn and interact with an incredible range of design, making and creative activity.

The William Morris Design Line was created by Wood Street Walls in 2020, as part of the Local Trust’s Creative Civic Change Programme in collaboration with William Morris Big Local. It helped establish a community-led design route through Walthamstow as part of London Design Festival.  The 2024 edition, programmed in partnership with Waltham Forest Council, will extend to Lea Bridge for the first time to showcase designers and makers across the Argall Industrial Area. It is a Design District for London Design Festival 2024.

Supporters and partners

Ercol, Walthamstow and a family business

A talk with Henry Tadros

TALKS AND DISCUSSIONS

Saturday 21 September 2024

We are delighted to welcome Henry Tadros, Chairman of Ercol and great grandson of its founder Lucian Ercolani. Henry will speak about the brand’s relationship to Walthamstow and how a furniture company has continued to thrive for over 100 years.

Ercolani’s family emigrated to Walthamstow in the 1890s and Lucian studied furniture making at the Shoreditch Technical Institute before founding Ercol. Henry is the fourth-generation Chairman of this family business. Tadros will speak about running Ercol, a company still based in the UK and committed to skilled craftsmanship and sustainability principles.

With furniture design and manufacturing having something of a renaissance in the local area, this talk will address the challenges and opportunities for the continued production of high-quality furniture in Britain, how this links to the principles of both William Morris and the Gallery’s current exhibition Art Without Heroes: Mingei, and the factors that have contributed to this iconic company’s enduring success.

Hosted by Hadrian Garrard, Director of William Morris Gallery. The talk will be followed by a Q&A and a chance to see Art Without Heroes: Mingei on its closing weekend.

  • 6.30pm: Doors open
  • 7pm – 8pm: Talk
  • 8pm – 9pm: Q&A, drinks & private view

About Henry Tadros

Henry joined Ercol in 2010 and, like his father before him, began on the factory floor working across all departments before working in the office and founding L.Ercolani, the refined modernist design brand from the Ercol family.

About William Morris Design Line

William Morris Gallery is excited to be part of this year’s William Morris Design Line, which shines a light on the richness of Waltham Forest’s past and present creative community and encourages visitors to discover, learn and interact with an incredible range of design, making and creative activity.

The William Morris Design Line was created by Wood Street Walls in 2020, as part of the Local Trust’s Creative Civic Change Programme in collaboration with William Morris Big Local. It helped establish a community-led design route through Walthamstow as part of London Design Festival.  The 2024 edition, programmed in partnership with Waltham Forest Council, will extend to Lea Bridge for the first time to showcase designers and makers across the Argall Industrial Area. It is a Design District for London Design Festival 2024.

Supporters and partners

Open Night: Pearl Home Records

Spoken Vinyl

SPECIAL EVENTS

Thursday 19 September 2024

Drop in to the Gallery for Spoken Vinyl, an Open Night with Pearl Home Records, the record label for DIY experimental music, sound art and spoken word.

Learn about record cutting with a vinyl lathe demo, take part in open mic, create record covers using photo collage, hear spoken word performances by Dominique & Nik, AKA SILKess Demon, Graham Clifford and Ruth Wiggins, and hear a special sound art playlist throughout the evening.

  • 6.45pm – 7.00pm – Vinyl lathe demo
  • 7.00pm – 8.00pm – Poetry open mic (approx. 10 slots – sign up at front door)
  • 8.15pm –8.30pm – Sound art/spoken word by Dom and Nik AKA SILKess Demon
  • 8.30pm – 9.00pm – Poetry sets by Graham Clifford & Ruth Wiggins
  • 6-00pm – 9.00pm –  Special sound art playlist and record cover collage making

Deeney’s Café will be open for organic beers, wines, snacks and other refreshments.

William Morris Gallery is excited to be part of this year’s William Morris Design Line, which shines a light on the richness of Waltham Forest’s past and present creative community and encourages visitors to discover, learn and interact with an incredible range of design, making and creative activity.

The William Morris Design Line was created by Wood Street Walls in 2020, as part of the Local Trust’s Creative Civic Change Programme in collaboration with William Morris Big Local. It helped establish a community-led design route through Walthamstow as part of London Design Festival.  The 2024 edition, programmed in partnership with Waltham Forest Council, will extend to Lea Bridge for the first time to showcase designers and makers across the Argall Industrial Area. It is a Design District for London Design Festival 2024.

Artist biographies

Dominique and Nik co-run Pearl Home Records (founded in 2018), which is a small record label producing vinyl records of spoken word combined with sound art and art house music by various artists. Nik has reconditioned a rare record lathe machine that is able to cut into vinyl and produce a mono quality sound. In addition to hand made vinyl Pearl Home Records broadcast radio shows on Repeater Radio and organise various artist showcase evenings. They also facilitate ‘The Booth of Truth’ which is a portable workshop installation in which participants can record straight to vinyl. Dominique’s visual art is incorporated into the Pearl Home Records aesthetic whilst Nik operates the lathe as well as producing and mastering artists’ works. They are also performers in their own right, currently exploring the intersection of sound art and spoken word. They have previously created folk art in Jesus Licks and country art pop in SILKess Demon. They have worked with The Tate, The Southbank Centre, Blackhorse Road Workshops and Artillery for the Walthamstow Garden Party.

Graham Clifford was born in Portsmouth and grew up in Wiltshire. He studied Fine Art at the Swindon College of Art and Design, then at Middlesex University. At the University of East Anglia, he was awarded a master’s in creative writing. His first, award winning pamphlet collection is Welcome Back to the Country, 2011, published by Seren. Followed by his full-length collection The Hitting Game, in 2014, again by Seren. In January 2017, the Black Light Engine Room published Computer Generated Crash Test Dummies. March 2019, Against the Grain published Well. In Charge of the Gun was the follow up and most recent collection by The Black Light Engine Room in 2021. Graham also produced a poetry single with Pearl Home Records in 2019, featuring selected poems from Well. He currently lives in East London with his partner and two daughters.

Ruth Wiggins is a British poet. She is based in East London but is happiest in the great outdoors, something which deeply informs her work. Her poetry and essays have been published internationally, and her debut collection, The Lost Book of Barkynge was published by Shearsman in 2023 – this lyric history of Barking Abbey is told through the eyes of the women that lived there and has been described as ‘doing for poetry what Wolf Hall did for fiction.’ Ruth also has three pamphlets: Myrtle (Emma Press, 2014); a handful of string (Paekakariki Press, 2020); and Menalhyl (a private letterpress edition of earlier poems, 2023). In 2023 she produced a double single with Pearl Home Records entitled Holy Loaf which included spoken word extracts from The Lost Book of Barkynge.

 

Supporters and partners

Special curator-led tour of Art Without Heroes: Mingei

TOURS

Thursday 22 August 2024

See the exhibition with one of our curators as your guide.

Read more about the exhibition here.

Image: Bowl, Raku type earthenware with clear glaze over decoration painted in enamel colours, Japan, Tokyo, by Tomimoto Kenkichi, 1912. © Victoria and Albert Museum, London

Flow State Sessions

Creativity & Wellbeing

WELLBEING

Sunday 9 June - Sunday 22 September 2024

The William Morris Gallery is running monthly Flow State Sessions from June to September 2024 for those registered with the NHS Social Prescribing and Talking Therapies service, as well as those already accessing community mental health support groups.   

These sessions will run from 2pm to 4pm on Sundays on the following dates: 9 June, 30 June, 21 July, 11 August and 22 September at the Gallery.

Run by art therapist Shan Rixon who is experienced in using the arts for wellbeing, Shan’s aim is to create a calm, accessible and supportive space, where participants feel at ease to learn new skills and inspired to nurture their creativity.     

Each session will include a grounding or mindfulness exercise followed by a crafting activity chosen to activate characteristics of Flow – the mental state in which a person performing an activity is fully immersed in a feeling of energised focus, full involvement, and enjoyment in the process of the activity.

Upcoming dates:

  • Sunday 21 July, 2 – 4pm: Stitching
  • Sunday 11 August, 2 – 4pm: Pottery
  • Sunday 22 September, 2-4pm: Weaving 

These workshops are designed to support those with low to moderate mental health needs such as mild anxiety or low mood. They are also suitable for those feeling isolated, stressed or overwhelmed due to having an ongoing health condition or being a carer, for example. As we are an arts organisation rather than mental health providers, these workshops are not suitable for those with complex mental health needs or for those in crisis. If you are in need of support, please contact the Waltham Forest Single Point of Access. 

If you have any questions, comments or additional access requirements, please do not hesitate to contact Christine Lai, Public Programme Curator: christine.lai@walthamforest.gov.uk 

These sessions are part of a new strand of programming at William Morris Gallery, focused on embedding health and wellbeing through creativity.

Artist biography

Shan is an art psychotherapist with a background in anthropology and documentary photography. Before training as a therapist, she worked in museums and galleries for many years delivering creative programmes for young people. She enjoys hands-on making such as collage, crochet and ceramics. 

Of mixed heritage, Shan is drawn to conversations around identity, community and social justice. Alongside working on community programmes, she manages a service in the NHS for adults with complex needs, using the arts to support wellbeing. 

With an understanding of the fear some have around using art materials, Shan’s aim is to create a calm, accessible and supportive space, where participants feel at ease to learn new skills and inspired to nurture their creativity.  

William Morris & Art from the Islamic World

EXHIBITION

Saturday 9 November 2024 - Sunday 9 March 2025

A principal founder of the Arts and Crafts Movement, William Morris was responsible for producing hundreds of patterns for wallpapers, furnishing fabrics, carpets and embroideries, helping to introduce a new aesthetic into British interiors. While it has long been acknowledged that Morris was inspired by Islamic art, this is the first exhibition to examine this important aspect of his artistic journey in depth.

Alongside his own iconic designs, outstanding examples of Islamic textiles, ceramics, metalwork and manuscripts from Morris’s personal collection – now belonging to major UK institutions including the British Library, Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery and the Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge – are brought together for the first time to reveal the wider impacts of these objects, their designs and impressions on Morris’s creative output.

The umbrella terms “Islamic world” and “Islamic art” are widely used to facilitate the categorisation of art produced in areas where Islam was the dominant religion or the religion of those who ruled. However, they perpetuate the notion that there is a single identity or uniformity within the vast output of production from across huge geographical regions. These ideas will be explored and discussed further in the exhibition and public programme.

Featuring over 90 works, the exhibition demonstrates how some of Morris’s best-known designs such as Flower Garden (1879), Wild Tulip and Granada (1884) were directly inspired by Islamic surface design and its technical application. This exhibition sets out to enrich our appreciation of Morris’s work and broaden our understanding of the underlying influences of this quintessentially British designer. The exhibition is made possible thanks to funding from The National Lottery Heritage Fund and the Garfield Weston Foundation.

The exhibition will be accompanied by a new publication, Tulips and Peacocks: William Morris and Art from the Islamic World (Yale University Press).

William Morris & Art from the Islamic World is curated by Rowan Bain, principal curator of William Morris Gallery, and Qaisra M. Khan, Curator of Islamic Art.

Images:
Peacock, c.1870, Iran, hollow brass with pierced decoration and turquoise. © The Society of Antiquaries of London (Kelmscott Manor)
Wild Tulip, 1884, designed by William Morris for Morris & Co., block-printed wallpaper. © William Morris Gallery

 

Muslims on Morris

A film commissioned by the Gallery to accompany the exhibition. In this short film we hear from three Muslims creatives who share their experience of William Morris and how they relate to his work and legacy today. Featuring Tayybah Tahir: Trainee Curator, William Morris Gallery, Yasim Hyatt: Traditional Artist, Wallpaper and Fabric Designer, Zarah Hussain: Digital Artist.

Directed by Navid Akhtar. Watch the film

 

Object Stories: Young people’s 2024 Curatorial Interpretation course

William Morris Gallery, with support from National Heritage Lottery Fund, offered adults aged 18-25 the opportunity to take part in a curatorial interpretation professional development course, inspired by the temporary exhibition that was opening at the Gallery in November 2024, William Morris & Art from the Islamic World.  During the summer of 2024, 20 young people with an interest in this exhibition were recruited for the course to enhance the interpretation of objects and stories in the exhibition. This five-day professional development opportunity was run by Shaheen Kasmani, artist, curator and educator.

You can read Object Stories produced by participants on this dedicated page.

 

Bayt Al Fann

To celebrate the exhibition William Morris & Art from the Islamic World, William Morris Gallery has collaborated with Bayt Al Fann to present a specially curated, limited-edition digital publication, William Morris & Islamic Art: Women Artists, crafted as a unique dialogue between pioneering women artists whose work is rooted in Islamic art and the legacy of William Morris. You can pick up a copy at the Gallery with a suggested donation of £2 or view it as a digital download. Read more about the project.

 

Picture This

Creatives Unleashed at William Morris Gallery

LATE EVENT

Thursday 25 July 2024

If you, or someone you know, is interested in performance or a career in the creative industries, come along to Picture This on Thursday 25 July.

We are pleased to announce Future Formed’ s first ever public collaboration with William Morris Gallery, Picture This. Future Formed offers young people insight and exposure to the creative industries. This event is designed to showcase the talents of Waltham Forest residents working with Future Formed, as well as artists and facilitators who they have worked with over the last year. Picture This is an opportunity for everyone to meet and connect.  

The night is made up of 4 parts.  

  1. 6pm to 7:30pm – Table top game design workshop led by Mayamada (booking required)
  2. 6pm to 7:30pm – Poetry workshop led by Desree (booking required)
  3. From 7:30pm –  Live musical and circus performances including foot juggling to rap to opera and everything in between. 
  4. 6pm to 9pm – Projections of artwork and short films which have been created by Future Formers. 

It’ll be a relaxed evening with plenty of opportunities to meet and chat to the Future Formed team as well as the artists and residents they work with. Don’t miss it! 

The Gallery’s special exhibition Art Without Heroes: Mingei – is still taking place and the café will be open for refreshments.

Read more about the work of Future Formed here.

Image by James Wood

About the workshop leaders:

Nigel Twumasi is a former software engineer turned creative entrepreneur. He is the co-founder of Mayamada, a storytelling brand that spans comics, video games, and youth engagement. In 2019, Nigel was part of the nationwide 56 Black Men campaign. In 2023, he was appointed as a member of the London Mayor’s Cultural Leadership Board and Children’s Media Conference Advisory Committee. In 2024, Nigel was appointed to the Young BAFTA Advisory Group and continues to be a keen advocate for diversity within creative industries.

Nigel Twumasi photo by Jack Dalton

Nigel Twumasi. Photography by Jack Dalton.

Desree is an award-winning spoken word artist, facilitator, and producer, has held prestigious roles such as Poet in Residence for Glastonbury 2022 and TEDx Speaker. Beyond performances, Desree’s work graces publications like Joy/Us, Wetgrain Poetry, and she has been featured on Life and Rhymes with Benjamin Zephaniah. Desree’s diverse contributions also extend to her role as a commissioned playright, curator of live events, and visual media. Her pamphlet “I Find My Strength In Simple Things” was published by Burning Eye Books in 2021, and her debut collection slated for release in 2025 with Bad Betty Press. Read more.

Desree. Photography by George Lawrence.

 

Crafting 'setta' - traditional Japanese sandals

Seppuku Pistols: Geta Workshop

Make your own!

TALKS AND DISCUSSIONS

Sunday 4 August 2024

Seppuku Pistols are a band who play traditional Japanese instruments such as the taiko drums, the bell, the shamisen and the bamboo flute, with chaotic fervor. Seeing a performance from Seppuku Pistols, in their folk costume and ‘setta’ footwear, is like travelling back in time to the Edo era of 150 years ago. At their guerrilla live performances held throughout Japan, they call out to the public, “We are rebelling against the convenience of modern world and rally for a return to a more simple life.” 

Mr. Suzuki, a member of the Seppuku Pistols, is one of only three ‘setta’ and ‘geta’ footwear craftsmen in Japan today. Following the Seppuku Pistols performance at 12pm, he will host a talk and demonstration on the history of ‘geta’ and ‘setta’ (types of Japanese sandal) and then lead a making workshop.

All materials are provided at this workshop – you’ll learn how to make geta that fit you and keep your feet healthy! This workshop is for adults (age 18+).

About the artists

Seppuku Pistols was started by four ex-punks because of the Great East Japan Earthquake and the nuclear power plant explosion in 2011. Their very first performance was on the line of the no-entry-zone around the nuclear power plant. Since then, they have been “rebelling against the deceptive modernisation in the indigenous Edo style way” and have about 30 members all over Japan. 

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