Tuesday, 23 June 2020
Monday, 1 June 2020
Happy June
Inspired by the Emery Walker Trust, we have also made a rainbow in celebration of Pride month, and in solidarity with Black Lives Matter.
Can you name each Morris pattern?
"...what I mean by Socialism is a condition of society in which there should be neither rich nor poor, neither master nor master's man, neither idle nor overworked, neither brainslack brain workers, nor heartsick hand workers, in a word, in which all men would be living in equality of condition, and would manage their affairs unwastefully, and with the full consciousness that harm to one would mean harm to all—the realisation at last of the meaning of the word commonwealth."
-Why I Am A Socialist (1884)
Wednesday, 15 April 2020
Tuesday, 31 March 2020
ONLINE Zoom Lecture April 1, 2020, 7am
Tune in 7:15 am Toronto time (12:15 UK time) WEDNESDAY APRIL 1, for a lecture by William Morris Gallery senior curator Rowan Bain as she discusses her new book William Morris’s Flowers, published by Thames & Hudson in collaboration with the Victoria and Albert Museum.
William Morris’s sensitivity to the natural world combined with his innate talent as a designer enabled him to create patterns with endless combinations of flower forms. His ability to adapt, distort and combine them into harmonious patterns means a field guide to all his flowers remains frustratingly elusive. Yet through a deeper understanding of his early influences, his gardens, understanding of colour, favourite flowers and approach to their uses in his pattern, the visual language of William Morris’s flowers can be better revealed.
Joining instructions:
PURCHASE A TICKET BY DONATION: https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/william-morriss-flowers-a-talk-by-rowan-bain-tickets-101621578878
This is a live talk on Zoom, a video conferencing platform.
You can join the talk on a mobile device (smartphone or tablet) or a computer.
When you purchase a ticket by donation, you will be given a link, which will also be sent to your email address.
Follow this link shortly before the talk. Please allow a few minutes to set up Zoom on your device, if you haven't already.
If you're joining on a computer
When entering a Zoom meeting for the first time from a computer you will need to download a small application file. If you can't download the application, or don't want to, you can also join from your web browser.
If you're joining on a mobile device
If you are joining from a mobile device then you will be prompted to download the Zoom Cloud Meetings app from the App or Play Store.
Thursday, 5 March 2020
POSTPONED: Morris' 186th Birthday Lecture and Party
POSTPONED UNTIL THE FALL
Join the WMSC THIS FALL for a lecture and birthday celebration (with cake!)
Join the WMSC THIS FALL for a lecture and birthday celebration (with cake!)
1 Devonshire Place, Toronto, ON
Munk School of Global Affairs, Campbell Conference Facility
(St George Subway Station)
(St George Subway Station)
Author Mark Osbaldeston (Unbuilt Toronto, Unbuilt Toronto 2) explores two centuries of never-realized building and planning proposals for Queen’s Park and the neighbouring University of Toronto campus. Using dozens of images drawn from provincial, municipal, and university archives, Osbaldeston discusses the fascinating origins and fates of Toronto landmarks that might have been.
What will be the cake pattern this year? Stay tuned!
Mark Osbaldeston is the author of three books on architectural and planning history. His first book, Unbuilt Toronto (2008), was a finalist for the Toronto Book Awards and was shortlisted for the inaugural Speaker’s Book Award. Both Unbuilt Toronto and its sequel, Unbuilt Toronto 2 (2012), received an Award of Merit from Heritage Toronto. His most recent book, Unbuilt Hamilton, was published in 2016. It was shortlisted for the Kerry Schooley Award.
Mark has curated exhibitions based on his research for the Royal Ontario Museum, the Art Gallery of Hamilton, the Toronto Archives, and the Hamilton Museum of Steam and Technology.
What will be the cake pattern this year? Stay tuned!
Monday, 2 March 2020
The Art of Kehinde Wiley
Naomi and Her Daughters, 2013.
Best known for his portrait of Barack Obama, the artist’s first solo London show is inspired by a tale of insanity and the women of Dalston
While growing up in South Central Los Angeles in the 1980s, the Nigerian-American artist Kehinde Wiley, 42, discovered the work of the 19th-century British textile designer, writer and social reformer William Morris.
“He’s not so well known in the US,” he says. “But my mom was what you might call a junk dealer. [Her store] wasn’t really an antique store, but it sold second-hand furniture, oftentimes from old estates. So as a kid, I grew up seeing a lot of floral patterns, some Morris-inspired, some actual Morris pieces, among the stuff she was selling. And from very early in my life, there was this ornate sensibility inscribed.”
...
Over the past decade he’s included literal representations of several familiar Morris designs – Honeysuckle, Iris, Blackthorn and Granada among them – in his portraits, though in Wiley’s hands the colours can be clashingly vibrant. “And it was only after working with that sort of decorative style that I began to take the DNA of Morris and build upon it to create hybrids of my own, these kind of all-over patterns that feel random and chaotic as opposed to that very rational order you see in traditional Morris prints.”
It’s appropriate, then, that his first solo show in a UK museum, a survey of portraits of women, will be at the William Morris Gallery in Walthamstow, northeast London.
Read the full article here.
Monday, 3 February 2020
Members Only February 19th Tour: Crossing the Line: Political Satire from 1800 to Today
Crossing the Line: Political Satire from 1800 to Today
Wednesday February 19th, 2020. 6:30pmMEMBERS ONLY EVENT
Art Gallery of Ontario
383 Huron St, Toronto
(St Patrick Subway Station)
Political satire delighted Morris and his circle. Humour can be a powerful weapon to fight hypocrisy and corruption. As political cartoons critique the antics of people in high places, they inspire debate and provoke a range of responses from amusement to outrage. While playful and witty, visual humour can also be biting and cruel.
Our tour will be led by the exhibition’s curator, Brenda Rix, Manager of the AGO’s Print & Drawing Study Centre. She holds a Master of Arts degree in art history from U. of T. Ms Rix has curated numerous exhibitions including Painting with Light, British Watercolours from JMW Turner to Beatrix Potter.
There is limited capacity for this tour, so we will have to restrict participation to 2020 members only, no guests please, and ask you to register with us at this e-mail address indicating how many members are coming. First-come-first-served. We will keep a waiting list once we’ve reached capacity. Please note, Wednesday evening AGO admission is free after 6 pm. There may be a bit of a line up outside to get in.
There is limited room so please keep an eye on your email to confirm your place!
PLEASE NOTE ALL SPOTS ARE FULL. WE ARE ACCEPTING NAMES FOR THE WAITLIST. THANK YOU.
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