An exhibition by Alberta Whittle at Grand Union, from 2 September to 2 December 2022. Commissioned by Birmingham 2022 Festival.
Commissioned by Birmingham 2022 Festival, this long-term visual project seeks to ask questions about our commonality and the effectiveness of grassroots community building, direct community action and positive healing gardening practices, whilst addressing the wider issues of poverty and inclusion. With Birmingham being the second most culturally diverse city in the UK, we see a need, now more than ever, for art to anchor itself in sustenance, healing, witness, and critique. As the location of the 2022 Commonwealth Games, Birmingham is an ideal scenario to examine the significance of its colonial history, especially as it relates to the Commonwealth Immigrants Act.
Designed by fabrication studio MJM Bespoke (Birmingham), Grand Union’s gallery will be transformed into an active apothecary that holds space for healing and restoration through a programme of events and weekly gatherings. The exhibition will bring together Alberta Whittle’s two newly commissioned films – a culmination of 18 months of research, conversations & interviews, existing as an inquiry into cultural amnesia that considers lived conditions and experiences under a hostile environment.
Public Programme Events
Book Launch: Learning & Growing by Mrs McGhie-BelgraveOpen accordion
Wednesday, 23 November 2022. The official launch of Mrs McGhie-Belgrave’s autobiographical publication Learning & Growing: A Lifetime of Service by God’s Grace.
Find out more about this event here.
Who's gonna clean the mess in/of your garden?Open accordion
A performative workshop by melissandre varin for black and global majority beings taking place at Grand Union on Saturday 5 November 2022, 12-3 pm.
Thomas Abercromby and Invited Guests: School of AbolitionOpen accordion
School of Abolition curator Thomas Abercromby delivered a weekend-long public programme at Grand Union in November 2022. The School draws on contemporary art and activist practices to challenge the UK’s prison industrial complex while providing a support structure that recontextualises and opposes the very idea of carceral logics towards community-based models of safety, support, and prevention.
Art & Ecology Recorded Stories Open accordion
A new episode of our Art & Ecology podcast focusing upon land justice produced by Zoe Wakeling and featuring contributions by Helen Knott (Indigenous poet-writer, grassroots activist, leader, and social worker from the Prophet River First Nation) Bill Trip (a member of the Karuk Tribe Department of Natural Resources) and Laura Hackett (member of the active Wellbeing Society).