The Harris Open Art Exhibition 2019

Between 14th December 2019 and into the new decade 26th January 2020 is the Open Art Exhibition at the Harris in Preston city centre for artists living in the PR post code.

Three big rooms of local art.  Not to forget the 3 other big rooms of Fine Art and the landings full of art, pottery and glassware, and Discover Preston and more.

This year has another big turn out of interesting work in the materials of paint, thread, cloth, wood, pot, metal, and more, a good catch all phrase ‘and more’.

Most of it is on sale, some are NFS or Not For Sale.  Each purchase includes an amount to help The Harris.

The Harris Open Exhibition 2019, Preston

The Harris Open Exhibition 2019, Preston

The Last Iceberg:

The Harris Open Exhibition 2019, Preston

 

The Harris Open Exhibition 2019, Preston

NFSThe Harris Open Exhibition 2019, Preston

 

This looks like a photo but it’s a drawing, brilliant, something to crow about:The Harris Open Exhibition 2019, Preston

Another great sketch:The Harris Open Exhibition 2019, Preston

 

Community Work:

The Harris Open Exhibition 2019, Preston

 

The Harris Open Exhibition 2019, Preston

 

The Harris Open Exhibition 2019, Preston

 

Harris 125th and Triple Exhibition

The 26th October 2018 is the 125th birthday of the Harris Museum and Art Gallery in Preston.  Congratulations!

Three exhibitions are on and these are Whittingham Hidden Lives,  Windrush Generation and Preston Indoor Market. All end on 25th November 2018.

Whittingham Asylum was built in 1873, closed in the 1990s and demolished in 2016.  This exhibition explores the lives of the patients and their treatment including the special railway line.   Whittingham was at one time the biggest mental hospital in Britain.

 

To complement the national event celebrating the arrival of the SS Windrush 70 years ago bringing people from the Caribbean the Harris has ‘Windrush Generation’ about the lives of the black community in Preston.  The exhibition has a 1960’s living room and experiences of the black community in Preston.  Plus 6 artworks by Anita George.

The painting below is one of six by Anita George on display celebrating black British artists who broke through in the 1980s.  The central portrait is Lubaina Himid, Professor of Contemporary Art at UCLan in Preston who in 2017 was the first black female artist to win the Turner Prize:

Preston Indoor Market Photographic Display by Joseph Gudgeon:

Preston Indoor Market was built in 1972 and closed in 2018.  A new indoor market with a modern design has been built under the canopy of the outdoor Victorian Covered Market.  In this exhibition Joseph Gudgeon recorded detailed and characterful features and people of the old indoor market before it closed.