Tyne & Wear Archives & Museums

Calendar

January 2010

January 2010

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All events for this month

Exhibition

Names Set in Stone: the Builders of Hadrian's Wall

Who built Hadrian's Wall? How did they overcome the challenges of this massive undertaking? This exhibition pieces together information from surviving inscriptions recording basic details of the workforce and the supervising centurions involved. In doing so, it takes us closer to an understanding of the origins and skills of the soldiers who built the largest Roman structure in the world.

16 May 09 - 1 Mar 10.

Segedunum Roman Fort, Baths & Museum

Exhibition

POSITIONS: The Primitives

POSITIONS: The Primitives is the first part of an exciting new project curated by the Laing Art Gallery together with artists CullinanRichards, called POSITIONS.

Significant pieces of modern and contemporary British sculpture will be on show in the Laing's Marble Hall, starting with Sir Anthony Caro's Early One Morning, 1962 (on show from August 2009). CullinanRichards will respond with newly commissioned artworks.

Their installation, Savage School Window Gallery Sculpture No.2 Position 4, announces the imminent arrival of Caro's work.

Free event:

Artists CullinanRichards will host a free event at the Laing Art Gallery on Friday 30 October, 6-9pm, including a one-off film screening. No booking required.

7 Jun 09 - 7 Feb 10.

Laing Art Gallery

Exhibition

Reinventing Newcastle: Views Over the Ages

Newcastle got its name from the castle built by the army of William the Conqueror in 1080. The previous Anglo-Saxon town had been known as Monkchester. This followed on from the Roman fort of Pont Aelius.

Newcastle’s prosperity was built on shipping, particularly the coal trade, and riverside industries. The Quayside was the commercial heart of the town for many centuries.
 
The town walls were completed in the mid-14th century as protection during border wars with Scotland. Originally, Newcastle was built on a series of hills separated by steep deans. From the late-18th century, the deans started to be filled in. At the same time, parts of the walls were knocked down as the town expanded.
 
In the 1830s, Newcastle gained a fine new centre when the grand stone buildings of Grey Street and Grainger Street were built. The High Level Bridge and the railway helped bring a new burst of industrialisation and growth to the town from the mid-19th century. Newcastle finally became a city in 1882, when the medieval Church of St Nicholas was made a cathedral.
 
In the 20th century, buildings such as the Tyne Bridge and the Civic Centre created new landmarks. Today, the Quayside has overcome decline and is again a lively centre of Newcastle life.

19 Sep 09 - 26 Sep 10.

Laing Art Gallery

Exhibition

No Such Thing As Society

An exhibition of work by documentary photographers recording Britain's state of transition and unrest between the 1960s and 1980s.

No Such Thing As Society brings together 150 photographs by photographers including Martin Parr, Keith Arnatt and Victor Burgin. The exhibition takes its name from Margaret Thatcher's famous statement, 'society? There is no such thing. There are individual men and women and there are families.'

The exhibition includes a shot by Tish Murtha, taken in the 1980s, of teenagers in Newcastle’s West end which originally included the caption, 'they see no real future for themselves.'

A Hayward Touring exhibition from the Arts Council Collection, on behalf of Southbank Centre, London.

 

31 Oct 09 - 7 Feb 10.

Laing Art Gallery

Exhibition

Stories of Southwick

The story of Southwick is continually being recorded by Southwick History and Preservation Society. This latest exhibition by the Society offers an opportunity to learn more about the fascinating history of this old and once separate quarter of Sunderland. You can also make your own contribution to the record in this, the centenary year of the Queen Alexandra Bridge.

Related books available online and Monkwearmouth Station Museum Shop
 

 

14 Nov 09 - 28 Feb 10.

Monkwearmouth Station Museum

Exhibition

SPOILED

Elaine Wilson's work explores received ideas about women and femininity and the perpetuation of romantic and stereotypical ideals most recently through the language and tradition of ornament and figurines. Having worked with clay and ceramic processes for many years Wilson has chosen during her recent research post as Norma Lipman Fellow in Ceramic Sculpture to critically revisit the subtle politics of ceramic ornament and the wider contexts of vanity and masquerade.


The double action of looking and the relationship between self and otherness is explored in Seeing myself Seeing, two large ceramic figures/figurines which form the centre piece of her exhibition SPOILED at the Hatton Gallery , the collage works which relate to the ceramic sculpture are also concurrently on show until 12 December at The Globe Gallery http://www.globegallery.org

27 Nov 09 - 21 Feb 10.

Hatton Gallery

Exhibition

The Long Dark

Curated by Michelle Cotton, takes a text by John Ruskin, The Nature of Gothic as its starting point for an exploration of 'medievalism' in contemporary art.

Bringing together an international group of artists based in Britain and Germany, the exhibition examines a revival of interest in pre-modern techniques and methods of artistic production, along with the ideals and aspirations they bring with them.

The exhibition features work by Eva Berendes, Simon Bill, Alexandra Bircken, Nicholas Byrne, Raphael Danke, Peter Linde Busk, Kalin Lindena, Maria Loboda, and Bernd Ribbeck.

5 Dec 09 - 20 Feb 10.

Hatton Gallery

Exhibition

North East Beat: Venues, Bands & Fans

A new exhibition exploring the North East's popular music scene from the 1940s to the present day. The exhibition features a range of memorabilia loaned by bands, musicians and fans, including a scarf thrown into the crowd by The Police at a gig in Gateshead and demo tapes from local bands like Maximo Park.

12 Dec 09 - 6 Feb 10.

South Shields Museum & Art Gallery

Exhibition

Swans of the Tyne

Swan Hunter was responsible for some of the greatest ships of the 20th century and this new exhibition will explore the history of one of the best known shipbuilding companies in the UK.

The exhibition has been created by a variety of individuals and community groups in the North East, who have worked with Tyne & Wear Archives & Museums outreach team.

On display in the exhibition are a range of photographs, technical drawings, film and video footage of Swan Hunter, as well as recorded memories of people who either worked at or were in some way connected with the shipyard.

BALTIC is holding a free event on 10 June to complement this exhibition, and BALTIC's own exhibition, The Things That Happen When Falling in Love. Click here to find out more about the event at BALTIC.

Click here for more information on the Swan Hunter Shipyard and the people who once worked there.

15 Dec 09 - 30 May 10.

Discovery Museum