Quarry Bank’s new season of contemporary art exploring themes of work, leisure and the legacies of industrialisation, seems particularly prescient in today’s world of rapidly advancing technology.
Free entry
Quarry Bank’s new season of contemporary art exploring themes of work, leisure and the legacies of industrialisation, seems particularly prescient in today’s world of rapidly advancing technology.
Free entry
An exhibition that sets out to ‘unravel worlds, make questions, haunt memorials, and follow the tangled threads of how histories of emancipation intersect.’
Free entry
With Holden Gallery’s exterior soon to be enclosed in a shroud of construction hoardings, Material Remains takes its initial idea from the processes of change occurring around it.
Free entry
A new exhibition at Warrington Museum & Art Gallery explores shoes as evocative objects loaded with meanings and memories; from magical shoes in fairy-tales to abandoned and empty shoes resonant with loss.
Free entry
LAST CHANCE. The UK’s oldest arts centre – fittingly housed in one of Liverpool’s oldest buildings – is drawing its 300-year birthday celebrations to a close with a very special exhibition.
Free entry
A major programme of exhibitions and events reflecting on the shared heritage and historic connections between South Asia and the North of England opens across the city.
Free entry
The BCB FRESH exhibition showcases the work of some of the best new talent emerging fresh out of ceramic-based higher education courses across the UK.
Free entry
From 3D printing to new areas of design and education, Shaping the Future considers what tomorrow may hold for one of the world’s oldest disciplines.
Free entry
Keith Harrison has worked with over 200 people from Stoke-on-Trent to replicate the city’s local history archives in clay. The collection will be presented in a series of vast kiln-like library shelving units, fired in accordance with library lending figures.
Free entry
Celebrate the opening of BCB 2017 with a performance by Korean artist Juree Kim reflecting on the invisible sites of former ceramic production in The Potteries.
Free entry
How can we preserve the endangered skills and knowledge of pre-industrial ceramic production for future generations? Neil Brownsword explores.
Free entry
An exhibition that reflects on the shift in attitudes towards public features, and the potential role they could play in the future.
Free entry