Open Up Your Eyes : September 2021
In 2020 Stroud Against Racism commissioned Gloucestershire based artists to produce artwork based on their life experiences with injustice. We showcased these works at Studio 18 in Brimscombe as part of Site Festival 2021, as both prints in an exhibition and as banners along the canal path to showcase the poetry that was submitted.
The project was made possible through generous donations from individual supporters and also from a generous contribution from the Subscription Rooms.
The exhibition was made possible through the support of Studio 18 and a grant from Brimscombe and Thrupp Parish Council.
The exhibition was accompanied with a live poetry event “Meeting of Voices” on the 18th September 6.30pm.
the Exhibition
The exhibition was shown 18th + 19th September and 25th + 26th September 2021 as part of the Site Festival Open Studios weekends at Studio 18 : Hope Mills Business Centre, Brimscombe, Stroud GL5 2SE.
You can find the full Festival Programme on the Site Festival website : sitefestival.org.uk/festival-programme-2021.
Poetry : 18th September 2021
One performing poet, Ronnie McGrath explored notions of ‘blackness’ through his work to both challenge racism and dissolve the constraining nature of the category of race, which above all else is not a biological fact but predicated on myth. He said, “I am pleased to have been invited by Stroud Against Racism to read some of my poems and hopefully further the understanding of what it means to be black in a time of hope and growing tension between various groups of people, ethnic or otherwise.”
Halima Malek, performed her poetry and showed her talents as a makeup artist who uses makeup as well as her hijab, to showcase her art. She is the co producer of Shespoke, a project working with women of all faiths, colour, diversity, ageing from 18 to 70. “I’m also a poet, and I help other women and give them a voice through words and Art."
Also that night Tish Camp shared her brilliant words : London born Trinidadian / Irish feminist, published poet, artist and theatre maker. Nominated for the 2019 Gloucestershire Poet Laureate, Tish Camp also won a Paper Nations 2020 Award as a Marginalised Writer for South West England. In 2020 she has been compared to UK spoken word artist Kae Tempest and most recently to Black US ‘Harlem Renaissance’ poet Langston Hughes. She performs internationally and consciously and brings a modern lick to her take on fighting against racism and oppression. She has been involved in and supportive of Stroud Against Racism from the start.