Arts Articles

Quaker silhouettes

FREE 28 July 2011 | by Joanna Clark

Sylvanus Fox of Wilmington (1791-1851) by Metford | Courtesy of Friends House Library

Portraits of early Quakers are extremely rare. One of the reasons for this was strictly practical – most Friends did not come from the social class that could afford painted portraits. However, there were also serious religious objections to images of all kinds. Early Quakers shared with other nonconformist religious groups...

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Whither Next?

14 July 2011 | by Margaret Davis | 1 comment

We train them to fire bullets that we have sold them And wonder why they kill the rioting crowd.

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Art in the Society

07 July 2011 | by Harriet Hart

'Heathermoor' | Judith Bromley

A woman turns, her arms flung high, her body twisting in the movement of the dance. She is vulnerable, naked to the light, and energized. She seems to move with the power of the moment, and yet she does not move at all. She is frozen in time, a sculpture...

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The Word

13 October 2010 | by Rowena Loverance

The Quaker Theatre Company at Sutton Meeting House | Gordon Steele

The most famous recent example of a ‘miracle’ play was Dennis Potter’s Brimstone and Treacle; it was so distasteful that the BBC kept it under wraps for twenty years. A young girl, comatose as a result of a road accident, was apparently cured by an act of rape performed...

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The ministry of play

FREE 13 July 2010 | by Philip Gross | 1 comment

The illustration for the poem 'Stone Says' | Jonathan Gross

Think of this as a note of introduction, tucked in the flyleaf of a book. The book is Off Road To Everywhere, a collection of poetry for children, which ideally I would leave lying round your Meeting house, for the young people in your Children’s Meeting and for anyone...

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Uneven geographies, Nottingham Contemporary,  8 May to 4 July 2010.

15 June 2010 | by Judith Jenner

Mladen Stilinovic: Nobody Wants to See, 2009. Printed sheets, drawings. | Photo by Andy Keate/Nottingham Contemporary.

At Yearly Meeting both Roy Hattersley and Paul Lacey inspired me as I listened to their lectures about aspects of our unequal world. The following day I went to see Uneven Geographies, an exhibition in which artists from five continents explore experimental ways of depicting globalisation and its human consequences....

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The Pump

09 June 2010 | by Peter Daniels

What is the background to the poem? The poem was triggered by a photo I took of the pump in the yard at Bridport Meeting House. However, the poem isn’t particularly about Bridport: it’s some imagined location with a pump like that. There have been other pumps Iâ€...

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Spirit Rising

FREE 24 February 2010 | by Friend web

In 2008 Quakers Uniting in Publications gathered an editorial board of ten young people from different branches of Quakerism and different countries. The board spent a year gathering contributions from around the Quaker world. Then they met in 2009 to select and edit the pieces. Now titled Spirit Rising: Young Quakers Speak,...

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Leighton Park arts - The Crucible by Arthur Miller

24 February 2010 | by Geraint Thomas

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In February Leighton Park staged its senior production, The Crucible. The language is challenging; the narrative gripping; the location atmospheric; the characters beautifully drawn. At Leighton Park, we wanted to concentrate on the emotional content of the play. Student actors often find it difficult to come to terms with the...

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Ackworth drama - Hairspray

24 February 2010 | by Friend web

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‘Last term we performed the musical comedy Hairspray. The story explores prejudice against size and race in 1960s America. I played the role of Penny Pingleton, the main character’s best friend. Penny, a quirky, geeky, ‘in-her-own-little-world’ girl, brings with her the majority of the comedy in this play. Her...

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