We are proud to announce will be the first showing of art and poetry from the project Armour at The Festival of Change, which takes place at the Museums Association (MA) Annual Conference and Exhibition in Manchester. 16th and 17th November,
This body of
armour that
is the weight and
size
of my heart...
(Eliot Hallisey)
Poems,
embroideries and other texts made in self-defence
Armour is a project
that uses words and stitches to explore the ways we protect ourselves. It is a
collaboration with veterans of armed conflict and with people who have lived
experience of homelessness. We asked people to describe their personal
"armour", physical and mental. Artworks were inspired by gambesons,
the quilted jackets worn under suits of armour, were made out of rust dyed
fabric and embroidered with poems, and other writings.
Poem Danny Collins, embroidery Peggy Prestley |
Many people we met
were veterans who have also experienced homelessness. We asked people to
describe their personal "armour", physical and mental. And to imagine
what might happen if was taken off. That spark of imagining is what gave
life to these poems. Out of much heart-searching, during the art and poetry
workshops, came many pieces of writing. Some were embroidered, or inscribed on
suits of armour made of cloth.
Although we all need
protection, sometimes protection becomes the problem. Armour can be extremely
heavy, it limits sight, sound, touch - and emotions. In the poem Sir Galahad by
Tennyson, the crucial moment comes
when the famous warrior realises if he is to let in love, he must remove his armour.
But to do so is fearful as well as freeing.
Defences fail and
life falls into a dark disarray
Observe yourself
when the mind is viciously dismantled...
(Anon)
Imagining the absence
of armour was a difficult sometimes frightening exercise. For some, it took
tremendous courage to write about it. For others, it brought relief. And for
others again, many questions.
"I wonder where
it will lead me, this writing...?" (Gavin)
"Poetry,
I've never got it before. This is the first time I've even written a poem.
Never before. I've enjoyed it, it's been special." (Elliot Hallisey)
How can people who've
experienced physical and psychological violence live peacefully with their
memories? In our workshops we
discussed how we protect our deeper selves and how we heal.
This project was devised
to allow emotional/artistic exploration of difficult areas of personal history.
The poems come out of the experience of conflict - but our hope is that they
might help people to find some peace.
...friends
friends linked linked together hand
hands
safe safe.
(Peter S)
Embroidery Lois Blackburn, inspired by anon artwork |
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