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PREVIEW: Towner Art Gallery: ‘Recording Britain’

The excitement is in the little noticed buildings that have been looked at with an unprejudiced eye and recorded with a sensibility that shows. John Piper, 1944.

Finding Britain
Barbara Jones, Savage’s Yard, Kings Lynn, Norfolk 1942, Watercolour and bodycolour, Given by the Pilgrim Trust; Image courtesy V&A Museum

Towner presents Recording Britain, an exhibition of nearly fifty watercolour paintings of the changing landscape of Britain during the Second World War.

Set up by Sir Kenneth Clark at the outbreak of war in 1939, Recording Britain was a scheme intended to boost national morale by celebrating the country’s natural beauty and architectural heritage, as well as a memorial to the war effort.

Selected from a collection of 1500 paintings, now held by the Victoria and Albert Museum, the show features artists such as John Piper, Kenneth Rowntree and Barbara Jones, and emerging artists of the time. They were commissioned to paint ‘places and buildings of characteristic national interest’, and to document rural and urban environments and precious buildings under threat from bombs and the effects of ‘progress’ and development. Clark considered Recording Britain to be an extension of the Official War Art scheme.

Spanning the length and breadth of the country from Yorkshire to Cornwall, Caernarvonshire to Norfolk, Recording Britain documents the rich diversity of buildings in England and Wales in the late 1930s and early 1940s; from old cottages, farms, pubs, hospitals and churches to naval relics, stables, stately homes, condemned domestic dwellings, industrial canals, mills, mines and quarries and a temperance hall.

Clark was more interested in paintings that gave a sense of the continuity of the English town or village rather than of buildings of outstanding architectural merit. He also wanted paintings of parish churches that ‘were in a bad state of repair and will either fall down or be ruined by restoration’, and country houses and parks that might be abandoned after the war.

In addition to works from the original collection, Recording Britain features contemporary paintings and photographs by Conrad Atkinson, Keith Arnatt, Jeremy Deller and Alan Kane, Richard Long, David Nash, Laura Oldfield Ford, Jem Southam and others. Though more modern responses to recording location, the artists are similarly seeking the unfamiliar and unexpected remains of the past, the transient and threatened.

Recording Britain follows other exhibitions at Towner such as The Lyons Teashops Lithographs: Art in a Time of Austerity, and Designing the Everyday: from Bloomsbury and Ravilious to the present day which explored the role of artists and art during periods of major political and economic upheaval in twentieth century Britain.

Recording Britain is organised by the Victoria and Albert Museum, London.


Event: Recording Britain

Where: Towner Art Gallery, Devonshire Park, College Rd, Eastbourne, BN21 4JJ

When: February 6 – May 2, 2016

Times: Tuesday – Sunday, 10:00am – 5:00pm and Bank Holiday Mondays, 10:00am – 5:00pm

Entry: Free

For more information, click here: 

PREVIEW: Women of Troy

New Venture Theatre’s production of Women of Troy runs in the Theatre Upstairs from February 26 – March 5, 2016.

Women of Troy

In Troy, the war is over and the city is burning. The Gods shift their allegiances. The city’s once rich and powerful women have been herded together to await their fates at the hands of the victorious Greeks.

Who can steer that fate?

♦ Hecuba, once queen, has lost everything.

♦ Her only remaining child – Cassandra – is running through the city with burning torches, a crazed prophetess.

♦ Helen, the catalyst, awaits judgement from the husband she left, friendless in both camps.

♦ The luckless Talthybius, Greek messenger, must close his heart to the women whose destiny he comes to tell, even when the orders he bring sicken him.

Director Ella Turk-Thompson said: “Women of Troy is something I have approached with equal joy and trepidation. There are certain challenges: A huge cast, many emotionally and verbally testing roles, seamlessly incorporated song and dance and an awful lot of fire in the stage directions. I am proud to be continuing such an ancient tradition of theatre in such a beautiful space. I am thrilled to be working with such a great and expansive cast and crew and looking forward to the challenge of bringing all the elements together in rehearsal.”


Event: Women of Troy by Euripides

Where: New Venture Theatre, Theatre Upstairs, Bedford Pl, Hove, BN1 2PT

When: Friday 26 – March 5

Entry: £9 (Final Friday/Saturday £10) Tuesday all tickets £7. Disabled access is limited for the Theatre Upstairs.

To book tickets online, click here:

Or telephone: 01273 746118

 

Actually Gay Men’s Chorus at the Brighton Dome

David Raven, Miss Jason and soprano Samantha Howard join an impressive line-up of performers in the splendour of the Brighton Dome tonight, Sunday, January 10.

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The concert will be raising funds for the national anti-bullying charity, Inclusion for All.

Actually Gay Men’s Chorus will be performing highlights from the classic Gilbert & Sullivan comic opera HMS Pinafore accompanied by the London Gay Symphony Orchestra (LGSO), who will also be performing Camille Saint-Saëns’ musical suite Carnival of the Animals.

Coady Green and Christopher Wayne Smith
Coady Green and Christopher Wayne Smith

Poulenc’s Concerto for Two Pianos and Orchestra will feature international concert pianists Coady Green and Christopher Wayne Smith who will also join the LGSO in a performance of Carnival of the Animals narrated by Miss Jason fresh from his rave reviews “Best Panto Dame I have ever seen” in Panto with X Factor winner Sam Bailey in Aylesbury.

The stunning Laura Wolk-Lewanowicz Mullinger will sing arias from Tosca and Tristan and Isolde, there will be some big band numbers and cabaret legends Jason Sutton (Miss Jason) and David Raven (Maisie Trollette) and soprano, Samantha Howard will be spicing up the evening in their own special way.


Event: Actually Gay Men’s Chorus the London Gay Symphony Orchestra & guests

Where: The Dome, Church Street, Brighton

When: Sunday, January 10

Time: 7.30pm

Tickets: £8 to £25

To book online, click here:

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