A collaboration between London College of Communication, the UAL Photography and the Archive Research Centre (PARC) and the Museum of British Folklore, Figures of Folk, curated by Val Williams, explores ongoing traditions through a series of large format photographs by Graham Goldwater of objects associated with British folklore, alongside letterpress posters created by LCC students, inspired by ancient phrases and words. In 2009, Simon Costin, the Director of the Museum of British Folklore, put out a call to the nation’s Morris sides to replicate their team kit in miniature, as handmade dolls. The response has been overwhelming, with nearly three hundred sides participating in the creation of a physical archive. Together with the Mo...
Goldweights of the 19th Century Australian Colonists is a collection of miniature sculptural artefac...
These images are a selection from an ongoing body of work re-visiting a major project documenting En...
Carleen Gabrys, Fashion and Textile TechnologyFaculty Mentor(s): Professor Arlesa Shephard, Fashion ...
A Folk Art revival is quietly inspiring artists and illustrators, but as De s McCannon discovers, Fo...
The Golden Thread Project UK-USA took its inspiration from Cecil Sharp and Maud Karpeles' song - Col...
Research on folk culture in twentieth-century Britain has focused on elite and transgressive politic...
Folk art, the aesthetic material culture created by everyday artists working outside of the mainstre...
The morris dance revival of the early twentieth century was one manifestation of a nationwide resurg...
This practice-led research is about contemporary folk performance in the Northwest of England. It d...
The exhibition catalogue Guys and Dolls Art, Science, Fashion and Relationships 2005 Brighton Museum...
This study investigates the history of Morris Dancing in the twentieth century through w...
This lecture draws attention to research into children’s folklore in Britain from the last century, ...
For this project I have developed a body of work that investigates the relationships between objects...
Group exhibition at Compton Verney This exhibition will explore the theme of myths through the m...
Established in 2003, Classic Textiles, a subsidiary of the Centre for Advanced Textiles (CAT) at the...
Goldweights of the 19th Century Australian Colonists is a collection of miniature sculptural artefac...
These images are a selection from an ongoing body of work re-visiting a major project documenting En...
Carleen Gabrys, Fashion and Textile TechnologyFaculty Mentor(s): Professor Arlesa Shephard, Fashion ...
A Folk Art revival is quietly inspiring artists and illustrators, but as De s McCannon discovers, Fo...
The Golden Thread Project UK-USA took its inspiration from Cecil Sharp and Maud Karpeles' song - Col...
Research on folk culture in twentieth-century Britain has focused on elite and transgressive politic...
Folk art, the aesthetic material culture created by everyday artists working outside of the mainstre...
The morris dance revival of the early twentieth century was one manifestation of a nationwide resurg...
This practice-led research is about contemporary folk performance in the Northwest of England. It d...
The exhibition catalogue Guys and Dolls Art, Science, Fashion and Relationships 2005 Brighton Museum...
This study investigates the history of Morris Dancing in the twentieth century through w...
This lecture draws attention to research into children’s folklore in Britain from the last century, ...
For this project I have developed a body of work that investigates the relationships between objects...
Group exhibition at Compton Verney This exhibition will explore the theme of myths through the m...
Established in 2003, Classic Textiles, a subsidiary of the Centre for Advanced Textiles (CAT) at the...
Goldweights of the 19th Century Australian Colonists is a collection of miniature sculptural artefac...
These images are a selection from an ongoing body of work re-visiting a major project documenting En...
Carleen Gabrys, Fashion and Textile TechnologyFaculty Mentor(s): Professor Arlesa Shephard, Fashion ...