Artist Lauren Craig leads this online restorative writing circle that explores where the desire lines of our practices meet. Taking a reparative approach, we will create a shared gaze for the archives our bodies hold. What are our stories? What are their formations? How do we listen and share? An invitation, a call to action, to gather in a way where rendering our collective experience creates ethical, cultural memory. The circle offers 'microacts’ artworks such as collages and slide walks to create writing provocations.
A space to remember and make-believe, make sense of things, not understand, and not be understood. Demarcating the space, you are drawn to being within.
Expression of Interest
Spaces for this online workshop will be limited to maintain a mood of intimacy and exchange. If you would like to take part, please send a short Expression of Interest by Thursday 8th July to feministduration@gmail.com. We will let you know within one week if you have been selected, and provide further details of the session.
Lauren Craig
Lauren Craig is a London-born artist of Jamaican heritage and a founding member of X Marks the Spot collective. Her practice encompasses her lived experience and auto-ethnographic approach as a cultural researcher, full-spectrum doula and celebrant, living and working in London and Central Italy. Through photography, video, text, installation, performance and writing, she explores equally broad themes of ecofeminism, spirituality, health, memory and the propositional. Craig's current research/practice incorporates restorative writing circles with photographic, moving image and therapeutic and reparative archival methods to create and document the creative genealogies of contemporary celebration, rituals and commemoration within the practices of womxn of colour artists and their allies.
Feminist Duration
This workshop is part of the Feminist Duration series which explores under-known texts, ideas, and movements associated with earlier periods of feminist activity in the UK. Originally designed as part of a year-long residency at the South London Gallery, and rescheduled online in the wake of the COVID pandemic, the programme juxtaposes earlier moments of feminist with current urgencies and struggles.
By restoring material texture to overlooked political and cultural movements, it seeks to resist versions of the past that reduce feminist struggle to one-dimensional stereotypes. Looking to the past to activate its nascent potential, the programme aims to identify tools that can inspire and enrich further collective action, promoting the intergenerational exchange of knowledge and experience. While honouring earlier feminisms, the series also highlights how collaboration, difference, and dissent have characterised previous feminist movements, and how feminists have both negotiated, and failed to significantly attend to, differences between themselves.
Feminist Duration is generously supported by the CHASE Doctoral Training Partnership.