Digital Window Gallery: Postcards from us x
10 June - 20 June 2021
OPEN WEDNESDAY – SUNDAY, 11 – 4. DIGITAL WINDOW GALLERY
SEE DISTANCING GUIDELINES HERE
Postcards from us x is a visual art project which reflects on our collective experience of 2020. Led by artist facilitator Michelle Pratt, the project connected Liverpool locals of all ages through an exploration of photography, collage and writing, offering a chance to consider how we can better understand each other and ourselves after Covid-19.
The project engaged with collaborators from Liverpool based charities Mary Seacole House, The Brain Charity and Toxteth Fire Fit Hub, focusing on utilising waste materials and overlooked objects, encouraging participants to rethink how they create art.
Weekly online sessions took place dedicated to creating postcards using weaving, printing and collage techniques, with materials necessary to take part being posted to participants. The result is a series of anonymous postcards, addressed to others and to the participants themselves, which capture the transitory essence of the year 2020.
Image: Michelle Pratt
OPEN WEDNESDAY – SUNDAY, 11 – 4. DIGITAL WINDOW GALLERY
SEE DISTANCING GUIDELINES HERE
Postcards from us x is a visual art project which reflects on our collective experience of 2020. Led by artist facilitator Michelle Pratt, the project connected Liverpool locals of all ages through an exploration of photography, collage and writing, offering a chance to consider how we can better understand each other and ourselves after Covid-19.
The project engaged with collaborators from Liverpool based charities Mary Seacole House, The Brain Charity and Toxteth Fire Fit Hub, focusing on utilising waste materials and overlooked objects, encouraging participants to rethink how they create art.
Weekly online sessions took place dedicated to creating postcards using weaving, printing and collage techniques, with materials necessary to take part being posted to participants. The result is a series of anonymous postcards, addressed to others and to the participants themselves, which capture the transitory essence of the year 2020.
Image: Michelle Pratt