Programme

The Arc Quartet (String Quartet) Reinventing the past: Purcell Chacony in G minor, Britten “Chacony” (String Quartet No. 2 Mvt. 3), Bartok String Quartet No. 1.

Important information for your visit

Due to conservation and security reasons, no bags, including handbags, or large coats are allowed in the House.

With Jennifer Powell (Head of Collection and Programme), Kyle Percy (Researcher) and Alessandro Rubin (Researcher), chaired by Donal Cooper (History of Art). In association with Jesus College on the occasion of their exhibition ‘Congdon: An American Modernist Abroad’, West Court Gallery (15 January–3 March).

Programme

Sophie Westbrooke explores Recorders across centuries: virtuosity from Medieval Europe to Present Day Japan, including works by Castello and Yoshimini.

About Sophie Westbrooke

Sophie is in her second year reading Music at Emmanuel College, Cambridge. She has been studying the recorder with Anna Stegmann at the Royal Academy of Music in London as part of the CAMRAM scheme. She also currently holds an instrumental award on the violin.

Programme

Piano recital of music by female composers past and present including Clara Schumann, Germaine Tailleferre and Amy Beach.
Part of the Cambridge Female Composers Festival.

Important information for your visit

Due to conservation and security reasons, no bags, including handbags, or large coats are allowed in the House.

Find out more about the project and hear from our curator about how and why Tobin brought it to Kettle’s Yard.

Made in 1986 during a performance in which Rose Garrard transformed a corner shop into a plaster casting studio, these sculptures juxtapose images of historic women artists and page three girls from the Sun newspaper. They are both a document of the gender politics of the 1980s, and a protest at the exclusion of women artists from the history of art and the objectification of women in the British press. This is the first time the works have been exhibited since 1994.

Programme

‘The journey of the Trombone’ with Max McCleish, from classical concert solos to the jazz era and contemporary works.

Accompaniment including Natalie Jobbins on piano, bass and percussion.

No booking required.

Meet in the galleries 5 minutes before the talk.

About Dr Amy Tobin

Amy Tobin is a Lecturer in the History of Art at the University of Cambridge, Curator of Exhibitions, Events and Research at Kettle’s Yard and Director of Studies in History of Art: Newnham College and Homerton College.

Talk in the Clore Learning Studio: 6.30-7pm
Performance in the House: 7-7.30pm
Opening event: 7.30-8.30pM

FREE, booking required for the talk and performance.

See a new performance in the Kettle’s Yard House inspired by the work of collection artist Alfred Wallis.

From 6.30pm Anthea Hamilton will join us to talk about her new installation in the Kettle’s Yard House.

See the House before regular opening hours, find out more about artists and highlights from the Kettle’s Yard collection and get a brief history of the House and Jim and Helen Ede, creators of Kettle’s Yard.

Tours will begin at 11.15am at the information desk and end at 12noon in the House. When the tour is finished you are welcome to stay in the House and explore our collection and the spaces further at your own pace.

Tickets should be booked in advance online or in person. Online booking will close the day before each tour.

This exhibition, which focuses on researchers from the Department of Earth Sciences, University of Cambridge, looks at the way in which sediments from the sea floor have been used over the last fifty years to discover more about the history of the planet. The exhibition explores the Ice Ages that have dominated climate change over the last one million years and looks at how drilling engineering, mass spectrometry, and the Earth's orbit are all ingredients of this remarkable story.

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