This exhibition from Tom Poultney explores the humanising aspect of the meme as folk-art object in building and defining online communities and in doing so, countering automation in the digital space.
Join us for presentations from artists and researchers to explore the ways in which contemporary art engages with the heritage experience.
Three online events looking at how communities can find ways to keep wealth circulating and to make money work for local people.
If Not Now, When? opens at The Hepworth Wakefield this March o explore the lives of women sculptors in Britain during a significant period of social and artistic change.
Dr Helen Graham and Dr Arran Rees are panellists in this seminar organised as part of a series looking at reframing failure within the digital humanities. Most of us recognise that failure is an unavoidable part of any scholarly endeavour — let alone life — especially for people who work across disciplines. Yet, for something so central...
Postgraduate Researcher Dominic Bilton will be speaking about his research at this year's Queer Heritage and Collections Network Symposium.
This exhibition co-curated by Postgraduate Researcher Dominic Bilton delves into the Whitworth’s collection to examine how we can use a queer lens to define what the term 'queer' means.
This workshop is aimed at anyone who’d like the chance to think about their writing and consider the kinds of discussion and dialogue they’d like to create around their work.
This talk by Dr Kerry Bristol explores James Wyatt’s Pantheon Assembly Rooms and the watercolours executed by JMW Turner after its destruction by fire in 1792.
In this online talk, art historian Professor David Jackson discusses the role of the visual arts in Denmark during the first half of the 19th century, a period of exceptional creative production.