Wikio - Top Blogs - Religion and belief
Showing posts with label maps. Show all posts
Showing posts with label maps. Show all posts

Sunday, 2 May 2021

St Martin-in-the-Fields: App and Exhibitions





If you are looking for things to do this Bank holiday weekend, then why not come into town and explore the parish – guided by our newly launched 'Beating the Bounds' app for St Martin-in-the-Fields.

Beating the bounds is an ancient custom, still observed in parts of the country, in which the clergy lead their parishioners on a walk around the boundary of their parish to instil in them the knowledge of its reach. St Martin’s has records from as early as the 1500s describing the annual beating the bounds procession here, led by the clergy, with the children of the parish in tow. The tradition died out in the twentieth century but with London now easing out of lockdown, beating the bounds of St Martin’s is a great way to re explore this most central and historic part of London. The app guides the walker on a tour of the parish boundary, stopping at key points to listen to some of the stories of the parish as well as some of the music inspired by this most central part of London.

The walk will take you about an hour and forty minutes, starting and finishing at St Martin’s. It leads you along the Embankment, through St James’s Park and Green Park, past Buckingham Palace and St James’s Palace as well as the site of the old Palace of Whitehall and guides you through areas as contrasting as Covent Garden and St James’s.

The app guides you back to St Martin’s, where you can pop into the foyer to see a new map of the parish, created by the artist Adam Dant to mark the 300th anniversary of James Gibb’s design for the current church building. Dant’s 'Novel Map of the Parish of St Martin-in-the-Fields' forms the centre piece of an exhibition of his drawings and original prints celebrating Central London with all its quirks and foibles.

The Courtyard Café will be open all weekend for refreshments as well as the shop, which will be stocking a new range of gifts created by Adam Dant using his 'Novel Map of St Martin-in-the-Fields'.

You can download the app from our website, or you can use the QR code in the foyer.

From 1 - 8 May, the Adam Dant Exhibition and Courtyard Café will be open everyday from 12 – 5 pm. Click here to visit our website. (After 8 May, please double check website for opening times)

Also in the Foyer is ‘With the Heart of a Child’ by Nicola Ravenscroft which sees seven life-size bronze children, one from every continent on Earth, simply dressed in soft silk tulle, hesitate in time, leaning forward, hopeful, poised to dive, eyes closed, dreaming into their future, anticipating things unseen.

Nicola Ravenscroft writes that, ‘As an artist, I am visionary, sculptor, mother to many, and grandmother to even more’, she breathes life into life taking ‘clay, dirt and stardust, shaped and twisted torn smoothed and broken lost, found and moulded wax and singing molten bronze through white-hot crucible-refining fire, Earth’s own core breathing life into revealing-truth, a giving-birth to energy.’

The result is this installation of eco-earthling-warrior-mudcubs – children intimately connected to the earth – reminding us of our duty of care to life, to love, to planet Earth.

Nicola has recently been commissioned to create a memorial to honour the bravery of front-line NHS and care workers in the fight against Covid. The project has the backing of Health and Social Care Secretary Matt Hancock and members of the public are currently being asked to propose a fitting name for the memorial. Her work has consistently inspired musicians, including her husband saxophonist Raphael Ravenscroft (‘A little child shall lead them’) and, most recently, Tim Watts, assistant director of music at St. John’s College Cambridge, who is composing a piece in response to bas sculpture reliefs on paper titled ‘Among the Words of Trees’. Examples of work from each of these projects are included in this exhibition in addition to ‘With the Heart of a Child’.

The ‘fifth plinth’, in the Courtyard at St Martin’s, currently features an exhibition that has featured on the BBC News, Evening Standard, Metro, and in several publications internationally. 'Out of Home' is a project telling a story of what life was like for a group of people without a home, during the time we were all told to stay at home.

The photographs were taken by Carly, Darren Fairbrass, Craig, Joe Pengelly, Andre and Kelly, using disposable cameras.

Loose guidelines were agreed with each, to allow them creative control:
  • Try to take photographs in the day if possible, when there is light, but if not possible night is fine
  • Take photographs of things you find interesting, or would like to photograph
  • For each camera, you’ll be paid £20, with ideally a maximum of 1 camera per day, but flexible where it could help
  • Try to spend less than 1 hour 45 taking photos in any given day, meaning that the work was paid at London Living Wage
The photographers retain copyright of the images, and any book and print sale profits go to them, with a smaller percentage to St Martin-in-the-Fields. Over lockdown, the project resulted in thousands of photographs, showing the ‘capital of the world’, at a unique time in its life, and from the unique perspective of some of those who were out of home, during the time we were all told to stay at home.

The Out of Home exhibition is also running in memory of Kelly Francis, one of the photographers, who sadly died during the project. The exhibition is open each day in the Courtyard, with its own outdoor café. Outdoors, and free, to be as accessible as possible.

The exhibition is supported by the National Lottery Heritage Cultural Recovery Fund, St Martin-in-the-Fields and by Panos Pictures.

Further information on the exhibition is available on our website. Further information on the project, and its participants, including sales of books and limited edition prints, is available at: www.outofhome.org.uk.

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Friday, 23 April 2021

Exhibitions at St Martin-in-the-Fields

We are very happy to have reopened our Shop and Courtyard Café at St Martin-in-the-Fields. Our outdoor café is celebrating the best of British with delicious new soups, new sandwiches and – you guessed it – a new selection of drinks both hot and cold. Going with the theme of all things new, the St Martin's shop also has something fresh to offer. Whether you are looking for greetings cards, gifts, or something to treat yourself we have you covered. We are open Thursday-Saturday 12pm-6pm and Sunday 11am-5pm.

As the Courtyard Cafe and Shop reopen there are also several excellent exhibitions that can be seen straightaway or very soon:

‘With the Heart of a Child’: A sculpture installation and exhibition by Nicola Ravenscroft

Thursday 15 April 2021
Sunday 25 July 2021



‘With the Heart of a Child’ sees seven life-size bronze children, one from every continent on Earth, simply dressed in soft silk tulle, hesitate in time, leaning forward, hopeful, poised to dive, eyes closed, dreaming into their future, anticipating things unseen.

Nicola Ravenscroft writes that, ‘As an artist, I am visionary, sculptor, mother to many, and grandmother to even more’, she breathes life into life taking ‘clay, dirt and stardust, shaped and twisted torn smoothed and broken lost, found and moulded wax and singing molten bronze through white-hot crucible-refining fire, Earth’s own core breathing life into revealing-truth, a giving-birth to energy.’

The result is this installation of eco-earthling-warrior-mudcubs – children intimately connected to the earth – reminding us of our duty of care to life, to love, to planet Earth.

Nicola has recently been commissioned to create a memorial to honour the bravery of front-line NHS and care workers in the fight against Covid. The project has the backing of Health and Social Care Secretary Matt Hancock and members of the public are currently being asked to propose a fitting name for the memorial. Her work has consistently inspired musicians, including her husband saxophonist Raphael Ravenscroft (‘A little child shall lead them’) and, most recently, Tim Watts, assistant director of music at St. John’s College Cambridge, who is composing a piece in response to bas sculpture reliefs on paper titled ‘Among the Words of Trees’. Examples of work from each of these projects are included in this exhibition in addition to ‘With the Heart of a Child’.


Out of Home Exhibition

Friday 23 April 2021
Saturday 31 July 2021

What would the Covid-19 Pandemic have been like if you had no home?

Out of Home tells a story of Central London, by a group of people – Carly, Darren, Kelly, Craig, Joe, and Andre – for whom that was the case.

During a time when we were all told to ‘stay at home’, lockdowns have presented unique challenges for homeless people.
Even if selling The Big Issue was allowed, few regular customers were on the streets.
Even if a stranger wanted to give you £5, there have been few strangers on the streets.
And even if you had money, particularly in Central London, there were few places to spend it, and often only in shops where costs were higher.

Over lockdown, Dan Barker & Lucy Wood paid homeless people to take photographs each day, using disposable cameras.

Loose guidelines were agreed with each of the people in the project.
Try to take photographs in the day if possible, when there is light, but if not possible night is fine
Take photographs of things you find interesting, or would like to photograph
For each camera you’ll be paid £20, with ideally a maximum of 1 camera per day, but flexible where it could help
Try to spend less than 1 hour 45 taking photos in any given day, meaning that the work was paid at London Living Wage

Many others ebbed and flowed in and out of the project, some stayed with it throughout. During the project, some have filled a few disposable cameras, some have filled a camera with photographs every day.

This exhibition features the work of six of them: Carly, Darren, Kelly, Craig, Joe, and Andre.

Kelly Francis died during the project, age 39, and this exhibition is also in her memory.

Credits:

The Out of Home exhibition is funded by the National Lottery Heritage Fund, St Martin-in-the-Fields Trust, and supported by Panos Pictures. The book Out of Home is available at www.outofhome.org.uk. Proceeds from the exhibition go toward the positive works of St Martin-in-the-Fields, and to the photographers.

The Out of Home project was funded and organised by Dan Barker & Lucy Wood. Other kind people offered assistance. Full acknowledgements can be found at www.outofhome.org.uk.

Visit www.panos.co.uk for more information on Panos Pictures

Visit www.outofhome.org.uk for more information on the Out of Home project, to buy prints, or to buy the book, to further support St-Martin-in-the-Fields or the photographers


Adam Dant – The Return of London at St Martin-in-the-Fields Exhibition

Saturday 01 May 2021
Saturday 31 July 2021

We are delighted to announce Adam Dant‘s solo exhibition – The Return of London at the Crypt of St Martin-in-the-Fields. A collection of limited edition prints and original drawings including maps that salute London’s Theatres, Lost Rivers and bustling London Squares.

Adam has created a brand new commemorative map to mark the 300th anniversary of the first foundation stone being laid at the Church of St Martin-in-the-Fields.

Unveiled for all to enjoy for the first time at The St-Martin-in-the-Fields Crypt Gallery ‘The Novel Map of the Parish of St Martin in the Fields’ forms the exciting centrepiece for an exhibition of the artist’s lively depictions of London public spaces. Using Dant’s novel map, visitors are encouraged to revive the tradition of ‘beating the bounds’ of The Parish of St-Martin in the Fields, walking its perimeter so to reaffirm their memory of the streets and sights that have lain unvisited through a year of lockdown.

Visitors to the exhibition will also be able to enjoy large scale prints from Dant’s series of depictions of ‘London Squares’ including, on show for the first time, his depiction of the vibrant tumult and turmoil of nearby Leicester Square. The exhibition is the perfect way to celebrate a return to our extraordinary capital after twelve long months and salute St Martin-in-the-Fields’ significant 300th anniversary.

Adam Dant – The Return of London at the Crypt of St Martin-in-the-Fields, Trafalgar Square, London WC2N 4JH Open daily 12 – 5pm
For further information and images please contact Hobby Limon info@tagfinearts.com
t + 44 (0)20 7688 8446
m + 44 (0)7968 099 945

About artist, Adam Dant:

Adam is an international renowned artist whose large-scale narrative drawings and prints can be found in the collections of the Victoria & Albert Museum, Tate, the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) and the Musée d’Art Contemporain de Lyon as well as many leading private collections including that of HRH The Prince of Wales
Adam was the recipient of a prestigious Rome Scholarship in etching and engraving, is a winner of the Jerwood Drawing Prize and in 2015 was appointed by the UK Parliament as official artist of the General Election
Dant’s ‘Maps of London and Beyond’ book was awarded the gold award at the 2018 International Creative Media Awards and First prize in the travel category at the 2019 Catholic Herald book awards
Limited edition prints are published by TAG Fine Arts and available at www.tagfinearts.com

Exhibition details:

‘The Return of London’ exhibition will be on view in the Crypt at St Martin-in-the-Fields, from 12pm to 5pm, from May 1st, and will run throughout Summer at St Martin’s (Entrance via the glass Pavilion on St Martin’s Path)
The church’s famous Courtyard will be open for food and refreshments during exhibition hours
The St Martin’s Shop will be stocked with several new, bespoke ‘beating the bounds’ gifts
Nearest London Underground stations; Charing Cross, Embankment and Leicester Square

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Sunday, 14 April 2019

Artlyst - Visionary Cities: Michael Takeo Magruder – British Library

My latest review for Artlyst is of Michael Takeo Magruder's Imaginary Cities at the British Library:

'Magruder translates his source material – which are precious entities in their own right – into either digitally immersive or physically tangible artefacts that re-present their source in alternative forms. These enthrall and convince in and of themselves, while also enhancing our appreciation for the source itself. To do so requires the paying of attention both to the source map and to the properties of the form in which the re-presentation occurs. The creation of these installations is, therefore, a labour of love.'

My other Artlyst articles and interviews are:
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Bill Fay - City Of Dreams.

Saturday, 1 December 2012

Christmas in London


I've just got a copy of the latest Step Outside Guide which is the seasonal Christmas in London - a family adventure day. The Step Outside Guides are little books that give you a BIG day out! With clear maps and instructions which let your kids lead the day out, they are guides to fantastic free-to see days exploring London which begin and end at tube stations!

In Christmas in London Jennie and Christopher Wren escort you on a detective trail, discovering elements from the story of the First Christmas, which you can stick on the stable scene. Which London Square is home to a shepherd and his sheep? Where can you find real gold, frankincense and myrrh? Let Jennie and Christopher show you!

As you travel, little wrens point out some of the beautiful golden ornaments on London’s buildings. They have stickers too, to decorate a Christmas tree in the book.

Then as darkness falls, you arrive at Trafalgar Square and enjoy the tree, the crib scene and a very special painting, before taking a sparkly bus ride along some of London’s most beautiful Christmas streets.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

The Pogues - Lullaby Of London.