Towpath Talk

The Wet Web

Helen Gazeley looks forward to being able to enjoy museum and exhibition visits again.

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WITH the promise of lifted restrictio­ns and the summer holidays in our sights, many of us are looking for places to visit. In fact, the prospect of actually visiting something indoors that isn’t a shop seems an adventure all on its own.

In a delightful sign that life is returning to normal, museums and galleries are now eagerly welcoming visitors all over the country. Where better to find one than right next to a waterway? Here are a few suggestion­s selected from around the country.

Art and Life, at Hepworth, Wakefield (hepworthwa­kefield. org), is the largest exhibition of sculptor Barbara Hepworth’s work since her death in 1975 and well worth a trip along the River Calder. Filling 10 rooms, it displays some of her most celebrated pieces, from abstract carving of her early career, the strung sculptures which are so recognisab­le from the 1940s and 50s, to the large-scale works of her later career.

At the same time, you can take in the now completed Hepworth Wakefield Garden. Transformi­ng an unused space alongside the gallery with a design by the award- winning Tom StuartSmit­h, it opened in 2019 but the second phase, shielding the garden from the busy A61, was only completed last year.

It contains oaks, cherry trees, amelanchie­rs and 2500 shrubs and perennials, evoking the margins of woodland. The garden also plays a part in the exhibition, for here Hepworth’s first public commission­s – for the Festival of Britain in 1951 – are reunited for the first time in 70 years.

The exhibition runs until February 27 next year but, if you’re unable to visit, you might like to browse the digital exhibition and virtual tour ( artsandcul­ture.google.com/ project/barbara-hepworth)

Meanwhile, The Light Box, next to the Basingstok­e Canal in Woking, Surrey, has a wide variety of exhibition­s rolling out this summer. Mad Mods and a Camera: Our Generation, running July 31 until August 22, illustrate­s photograph­er Duncan James’ involvemen­t with today’s Mod scene, so strongly associated with the 60s but still thriving.

He’s been riding with them since 2015 and the result is a unique record of how original Mods and a younger generation are keeping the scene alive. Among forthcomin­g exhibition­s, Bridget Riley: Pleasures of Sight, in December, drawing from every decade of the artist’s work to celebrate her 90th birthday, is bound to be a particular draw. (www.thelightbo­x.org.uk).

The Imperial War Museum North, in Trafford, Manchester, overlooks the Manchester Ship Canal and is an artwork all in itself, designed by Daniel Libeskind, who attaches a wealth of meaning to its architectu­re (www.iwm.org. uk/ history/ 8- things- youdidnt-know-about-the-iwmnorth-building ).

The museum explores the impact of modern conflicts and, until September 26, Aid Workers: Ethics under Fire looks at the challenges that workers face, the decisions they have to make on whom to help, and whether their presence can do more harm than good. (www.iwm.org.uk/visits/iwm-north).

For a trip down memory lane, Banbury Museum, on the Oxford Canal, is offering I Grew Up in the 80s, an exhibition guaranteed to make some of us feel like museum pieces, when we realise that things which we remember from about half an hour ago now qualify as educationa­l displays for grandchild­ren.

It runs until October 3 and will include objects, toys, technology, fashion, food and media in a nostalgia-fest for some. (www. banburymus­eum.org/events/igrew-up-in-the-80s). It should be a stimulatin­g starter for crossgener­ational conversati­ons.

Wherever you decide to visit, do check their website before visiting, as many exhibition­s, even if free, still require visitors to book in advance.

Do you have a favourite blog or website? Email Helen at helengazel­ey@aol.com

 ?? PHOTO: IWAN BAAN ?? The Hepworth Wakefield.
PHOTO: IWAN BAAN The Hepworth Wakefield.
 ?? PHOTO: JASON INGRAM ?? The Hepworth Wakefield garden in summer colours, with Pitchfork (Yellow) by Sir Michael Craig-Martin.
PHOTO: JASON INGRAM The Hepworth Wakefield garden in summer colours, with Pitchfork (Yellow) by Sir Michael Craig-Martin.
 ?? PHOTO: NICK SINGLETON ?? Art and Life fills 10rooms of the Hepworth
Wakefield until February next year.
PHOTO: NICK SINGLETON Art and Life fills 10rooms of the Hepworth Wakefield until February next year.
 ?? PHOTO: JONTY WILDE ?? Barbara Hepworth, Contrapunt­al Forms, 1950-1 installed in The Hepworth Wakefield Garden, May 2021.
PHOTO: JONTY WILDE Barbara Hepworth, Contrapunt­al Forms, 1950-1 installed in The Hepworth Wakefield Garden, May 2021.

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