Photo of the Art Without Heroes exhibition.

Art Without Heroes: A Conversation on Mingei

At Japan House London

OFF SITE

Wednesday 17 July 2024

William Morris Gallery’s Róisín Inglesby will be joined in conversation by Sam Thorne, Director General & CEO of Japan House London, who has contributed to the major new publication ‘Mingei: Art without Heroes’ by Yale University Press accompanying the exhibition, to explore Mingei’s origins, interpretations and contemporary implications. The conversation will also touch upon the groundbreaking Mingei Film Archive project by filmmaker and producer Marty Gross, which restored and digitized archival film on Japanese craft. Footage from this project is part of the exhibition at William Morris Gallery, and a selection of the Archive’s short films will be shown at Japan House London in July.

After the event, guests are encouraged to visit the Design Discoveries exhibition in the Gallery at Japan House London, which will remain open until 8.30pm. Here, visitors can view Yanagi Sori’s Mingei cutlery on display alongside further contemporary design concepts.

Please note that filming and photography may take place at this event.

Mini Morris

Flower Crowns

WORKSHOPS

Thursday 18 July 2024

Be inspired by nature and join us for a day of outdoor fun and creativity! Little ones will explore nature and make their own flower crowns.

Mini Morris sessions are now DROP IN ONLY. FREE. Donations welcome.

Choose from:

  • 10:00am to 11:00am.
  • 11:45am to 12:45pm.

As this can be a messy session, please wear or bring old clothes. Aprons are available.

All sessions include the craft activity, singing and a snack to take away.

Drop in with limited capacity. Please arrive on time and sign up at the front desk. A minimum of one adult per 2 children.

Image: Paula Corberan

Storyteller speaking. Sitting with a group on the floor.

Family Day

Interactive Storytelling: Heart of Pride

WORKSHOPS

Saturday 27 July 2024

Join us for an enchanting journey where music, storytelling, movement, and colours come together to celebrate our very own superpower – our individuality. Experience the magic of pride as we share the inspiring tale of Gilbert Baker and the Pride flag. Through interactive storytelling, sensory creations and movement, we will embrace self-love and express our unique brilliance.

We welcome all LBGTQIA+ families, friends, and allies.

Numbers are limited for each of the storytelling sessions and we do expect this event to be busy, so please arrive in plenty of time to sign up for a session at our front desk.

The activity is aimed at children aged 5-12 years but the whole family is welcome!

Activities will take place in Gallery on the First Floor Landing.

Session start times:

  • 1pm
  • 1.45pm
  • 2.30pm
  • 3.15pm

All children must be accompanied by an adult. 

Waltham Forest Pride 2024 takes place at Fellowship Square from 12pm to 8pm and is a short walk from the Gallery on Forest Road. With activities and entertainment for everyone, there will be stalls, food and drink, queer performances and more. Waltham Forest Pride is presented by local charity elop.

 

 

Family Day at William Morris Gallery

Volunteer Open Day

Join our volunteering team

SPECIAL EVENTS

Sunday 23 June 2024

Whether you want to learn a new skill, gain experience to add to your CV or take part in something valuable for the community in your spare time, volunteering could be for you. The Gallery’s volunteering programme caters for everyone from beginners to experts (aged 18 and over). You do not need to have any experience of museums and galleries to become part of the volunteer team

Come along on Sunday 23 June for the Gallery’s Volunteer Open Day. An opportunity to meet the William Morris Gallery team and find out more about the different volunteer opportunities available. There are currently roles within Learning, Marketing, Events and Front of House.   

Drop in from 10am to 1pm. No need to register or pre-book.

If you are interested in volunteering but are unable to attend the open day, please register your interest by emailing: sarah.vallois@walthamforest.gov.uk  

Read more about the Gallery’s volunteering programme.

Portrait of Olivia Laing

In Conversation

With Olivia Laing & Jeremy Deller

TALKS AND DISCUSSIONS

Saturday 6 July 2024

“If Morris saw in the industrialised, stratified and exploitative world of the Victorians ‘sordid, aimless, ugly confusion . . . the dull squalor of civilisation’, imagine what he’d make of the present day. Ecological catastrophe, species collapse, and still the unstoppable obsession with growth, the blind faith in technology as a get-out card. The metaverse, colonies on Mars, microplastics, coups carried out on Twitter: how Morris would have raged and grieved.” Olivia Laing, The Garden Against Time, 2024

Both Olivia Laing and Jeremy Deller are deeply influenced by the utopian socialism of the artist, writer and activist William Morris. In 2015, Deller curated an exhibition about Morris’s work, Love is Enough which brought together his work alongside Andy Warhol’s. In her new book, The Garden Against Time, Laing explores the fertile vision of a common Eden propagated by Morris.

In this special talk at William Morris Gallery, Olivia Laing will be in conversation with Jeremy Deller to discuss Morris’s utopian vision and what it means in our own century of late capitalism and ecological catastrophe.

The event will be chaired by Hadrian Garrard, Director, William Morris Gallery.

  • 6.00pm: Doors open
  • 6.30pm – 7.30pm: Talk and Q&A
  • 7.30pm – 7.45pm: Book signing
  • 7.45pm – 9pm: Drinks and Private View

Olivia Laing is a widely acclaimed writer and critic. She’s the author of seven books, including To the River (2011), The Trip to Echo Spring (2013), The Lonely City (2016) and Everybody (2021). She’s a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature and in 2018 was awarded the Windham-Campbell Prize for non-fiction. Her books have been translated into twenty-one languages. Laing writes on art and culture for the Guardian, Financial Times and New York Times, among many other publications. She’s written catalogue essays on a variety of contemporary artists, including Andy Warhol, Agnes Martin, Derek Jarman, Wolfgang Tillmans and Chantal Joffe. Her collected essays on art, Funny Weather: Art in an Emergency, were published in 2020.

Portrait: Sandra Mickiewicz

Jeremy Deller studied Art History at the Courtauld Institute and at Sussex University. He won the Turner Prize in 2004 for his work Memory Bucket and represented Britain in the 55th Venice Biennale in 2013. His projects over the past two decades, such as Battle of Orgreave (2001),We’re Here Because We’re Here (2016) as well as the documentary Everybody in the Place: An Incomplete History of Britain 1984-1992( 2019) have influenced the conventional map of contemporary art. In 2015 he curated the exhibition Love is Enough: William Morris & Andy Warhol at Modern Art Oxford bringing together iconic and rarely seen works by two giants of the 19th and 20th centuries.

Portrait of Jeremy Deller

Portrait: David Clack

Yes! Art Fair

E17 Art Trail

LATE EVENT

Thursday 13 June 2024

The Yes! Art Fair is a celebration of local emerging and established artists from this year’s E17 Art Trail. Hosted by William Morris Gallery.

Yes! Art is more than just an art fair. Selected artists are showcasing seminal pieces of work, with some demonstrating the processes behind its making. You’ll be able to connect with artists and their work, enjoy discovering the stories and the processes behind the artworks, and have the opportunity to become direct supporters of each artist’s creative practice.

Read more about the event on the E17 Art Trail programme.

This is a launch event for Yes! Art, a new initiative from the E17 Art Trail team.

Part of the Gallery’s Open Nights programme on selected Thursdays throughout the summer, you can also explore the permanent collection, see the Art Without Heroes: Mingei exhibition, buy from the Gallery shop and enjoy a drink at Deeney’s.

Digital Art by Compiler

What is the value of public digital art and digital making with local people?

E17 Art Trail

LATE EVENT

Thursday 6 June 2024

Together with invited artists and producers, this event explores how digital art and hands-on digital making can help us connect with local places and culture, and engage with each other in meaningful ways. Discussion will delve into how artist-led digital activities can be uniquely supported in the context of art trails and festival models. The panel will also explore the potential of innovative and interactive public art installations to inspire and connect new audiences.

Read more about the event on the E17 Art Trail programme.

About the speakers

Yinka Danmole is a cultural producer interested in cultivating meaningful connections between people and places. He is currently the Creative Director of Abandon Normal Devices and has previously worked for notable cultural organisations such as Mediale, the Manchester International Festival and Creative Black Country.

Jazmin Morris is a Creative Computing Artist and Educator based in Leeds. Her practice interrogates the historical trajectories of modern technology and critically speculates on the evolving landscape of human-computer interaction. Using free and open-source tools, Jazmin crafts participatory digital experiences that challenge power dynamics and hierarchies within cyberspace, with a particular emphasis on the nuanced processes of simulating culture and identity. Despite her critical approach, she retains a fond nostalgia for the early days of the internet and the classic gaming icon, Super Mario 64.

Kristina Pulejkova is a visual artist based in London. Her interdisciplinary practice is informed by science and technology. Kristina’s work explores how the use of technology might lead to greater forms of sustainability in human-nature relationships.

Compiler is a digital art and curation collective based in Walthamstow E17. It is led by Tanya Boyarkina and Oscar Cass-Darweish. They aim to create accessible works and events through which audiences with different levels of technical awareness can delve deeper into digital technologies that shape day-to-day experience.

Doors open at 6.30pm for a 6.45pm start.

Adult and child participating in craft activities.

Mini Morris

Mini Potters! Nature inspired clay fun

WORKSHOPS

Thursday 20 June 2024

Get ready for a hands-on adventure into the world of pottery inspired by the beauty of nature! Join us for Mini Morris in June and dive into some Mingei-inspired clay art.

Mini Morris sessions are now DROP IN ONLY and please note that the times of our sessions have changed.

As this can be a messy session, please wear or bring old clothes. Aprons are available.

All sessions include a tour of the Gallery, the craft activity, singing and snack time.

Drop in with limited capacity. Please arrive on time and sign up at the front desk. A minimum of one adult per 2 children.

Amnesty International UK x Refugee Week

A collaborative art show celebrating home.

LATE EVENT

Thursday 20 June 2024

Join Amnesty International UK for an evening of shared art and celebration at the Gallery.

What does home mean to you? Get involved in a collaborative workshop exploring home, journeys and solidarity, facilitated by artist Tasnim Mahdy.

The whole Gallery will be open late, to explore the collections, Art Without Heroes exhibition and to enjoy a drink at Deeney’s Café (bar). All welcome.

Presented as part of Refugee Week: The world’s largest arts and culture festival celebrating the contributions, creativity and resilience of refugees. www.refugeeweek.org.uk

The theme for Refugee Week 2024 is “Our Home”. From the places we gather to share meals to our collective home, planet earth: everyone is invited to celebrate what our Our Home means to them.

A group of people working on embroidery.

Making Home

A collaborative embroidery for Refugee Week

WORKSHOPS

Saturday 22 June 2024

Celebrate Refugee Week and contribute to a collaborative embroidery on the theme of home. Add a word, an image or just a stitch to help us reimagine what home means. Plus, enjoy pop-up poetry readings while you sew.

This is a chance to get to know the Stories & Supper community of refugees, people seeking asylum and local residents, currently in residence at the William Morris Gallery.

All materials will be provided. Suitable for all ages (children must be supervised). No previous experience of embroidery necessary. All stitches, no matter how simple, are welcome!

Taking place on the Gallery’s first floor Landing.

Read more about our community groups in residency.

Presented as part of Refugee Week: The world’s largest arts and culture festival celebrating the contributions, creativity and resilience of refugees. www.refugeeweek.org.uk

The theme for Refugee Week 2024 is “Our Home”. From the places we gather to share meals to our collective home, planet earth: everyone is invited to celebrate what our Our Home means to them.

If you’re visiting to participate in this event, you can also drop in to Winn’s Gallery (in Lloyd Park) to see Home: An exhibition. Including new work from the Stories & Supper community of refugees and asylum seekers, photo portraits by Laura Martinez, plus work from students at Leyton Sixth Form College. You can visit from 11am to 5pm from 21 to 23 June.

Back to Top