Dedicated to the arts in the Eastern Region
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Winter 2022
Stunning Gainsborough’s House Reopens Cromer Pier Christmas Show
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TICKETS
Visual Arts l Theatre & Film l Music l What’s On
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MARISAARNA DESIGNER & GOLDSMITH
VISITING US : The studio & gallery are usually open Tuesdays to Saturdays, 10am-5pm. Also Tuesdays to Thursdays 5pm-7.30pm by appointment only.
The jewellery gallery specialises in showcasing beautiful jewellery by UK-based designer-makers like Marisa. Generallly, to discuss a commission with Marisa it is advisable to book an appointment. To be the first to hear our news and take advantage of exclusive offers please sign up to our newsletter on our website.
Celebrating 25 years of contemporary design on the High Street Marisa Arna designs and makes her jewellery at her studio in Thorpe-le-Soken, near Frinton-on-Sea, in Essex. She originally set up her ceramic studio in 1997, making fine, thrown porcelain but since 2007 she has been working exclusively as a jeweller and goldsmith. Marisa uses traditional goldsmithing techniques, combined with some modern technology, to make her jewellery by hand and then also set the gemstones. Silver, gold or platinum, her work is long lasting and comfortable enough to enjoy wearing every day. There is a contemporary feel about Marisa’s designs, with different textures and contrasting finishes on the surface but also a timelessness. It can be a ready-to-wear, inexpensive necklace or a bespoke engagement ring, for a variety of budgets. Everyone is welcome to discuss a design with Marisa as a commission or just to treat themselves to something already made, from a changing selection of jewellery, displayed in the gallery. When possible, Marisa can also melt and remodel old or heirloom gold jewellery into new, more wearable pieces. Her new creations may themselves become heirlooms of the future, to be enjoyed for many more years to come... High Street, Thorpe-le-Soken, near Frinton-on-Sea, Essex, CO160EA, Tel:01255-862355, email:studio@marisaarna.com
www.marisaarna.com
Winter 2022
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Arts & Crafts
Part of Christmas at Blackthorpe Barn Come and meet the makers 12-13 19-20 26-27 November 3-4 10-11 17-18 December, 10am-5pm Advance tickets are available from our website plus SCAN HERE SHOP | TREES | WREATHS | WORKSHOPS | CAFE
www.blackthorpebarn.com J45 A14. Rougham, 3 miles from Bury St Edmunds, Suffolk IP30 9HZ
“LET IT SNOW” STEPHANIE LACEY 14th-20th November
VICTORIA FORD 21st-27th November
VARIOUS ARTISTS 28th November-11th December
Open Monday – Saturday 10am – 4pm Sunday 11am – 4pm
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Editor’s Welcome
ARTSeast Magazine Units 10a & 11, Red House Yard Gislingham Road, Thornham Magna Eye, Suffolk IP23 SHH www.artseast.co.uk Welcome to the Winter edition of www.falconpublications.co.uk ARTSeast Magazine. follow usfalconpublications@artseastmag In this issue we take a look at some of the Publishers most exciting new exhibitions, shows and Gary Enderby & Sarah Veness performances in our area. In the heart Editorial of Sudbury, Gainsborough’s House has Sarah Veness sarah@artseast.co.uk reopened to the public with a stunning 01379 773348 transformation to showcase their collection. 07803 328258 We also profile the Landscape Rebels Advertising exhibition at Christchurch Mansion, Treasure Gary Enderby gary@artseast.co.uk Hoards at Lynn Museum, Retro Games at 01379 773347 Great Yarmouth’t Time and Tide Exhibition 07722 163703 and the beautiful Spectacle of Light at Web Design Haughley Park. David Last info@profileweb.co.uk Our artist profile features talented Paula Accounts Hallam who is constantly inspired by the Julia Aitken accounts@artseast.co.uk Norfolk landscape. For our coffee and a 01379 831158 chat feature, we caught up with singer Design & Artwork Nick Oldham nickoldham@gmail.com 07941 189509 Distribution Melvyn Veness Andrea Snowden Published by Stunning Falcon Publications Gainsborough’s Dedicated to the arts in the Eastern Region
YOURS FREE
and X-Factor winner Matt Cardle ahead of his performance to celebrate the 10th anniversary of his platinum-selling debut album at The Apex, Bury St Edmunds. In our news pages, we round up some of the best exhibitions, shows, concerts and events across the region. As ever, we love to hear from you so please get in touch if there’s anything you’d like us to cover in our next issue. In the meantime, we hope you venture out to discover some of the amazing events in our little corner of the country.
Sarah Veness
Editor
Competition winner from the previous issue: Tickets to see Gary Avis at The Corn Hall, Diss on November 4th - Kay Durrant of Pulham Market
Winter 2022
House Reopens
Cromer Pier Christmas Show
WIN FREE
TICKETS
Visual Arts l Theatre & Films l Music l What’s On
Peaky Blinders by Rambert Dance comes to Norwich Theatre Royal from Jan 17th-21st Pic credit: Johan Persson
Winter 2022
Contents 6 Visual Arts News 9 Artist Profile: Paula Hallam 12 Arts & Crafts Directory 13 Landscape Rebels 17 The Making of Masters and Monarchs
18 Gainsborough’s House Reopens 20 Coffee & a Chat:
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Matt Cardle
23 Art Books Round-Up 24 Theatre & Film News 27 Competition:
Girl from the North Country
29 Cromer Pier Christmas Show 31 Christmas at Norwich Cathedral 32 Competition: The South 33 Music News 35 What’s On News 36 Treasure Hoards at Lynn Museum 37 Retro Games at Time & Tide Museum
38 Haughley Park’s Spectacle of Light
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Visual Arts News ............................
Major Contemporary Art Society Acquisition for Norwich Castle Eight photographic C-prints by Ibrahim Mahama that consider the internal migration of workers in Ghana and the extractive mining industry in the south of the country have been acquired by the Contemporary Art Society’s Collections Fund at Frieze; the suite of photographs will enter the collection at Norwich Castle Museum & Art Gallery. Ibrahim Mahama explores themes of commodity, migration,
Anglian Potters Christmas Exhibition
and globalisation. The
Anglian Potters are back in Cambridge for their famous Christmas
photographic C-prints, all from 2019, depict the
Exhibition from November 19th to December 11th offering handmade work – ideal for a unique Christmas present (or for indulging
tattooed arms of long-term collaborators Mahama has worked
yourself in these difficult times!) Whether you’re looking for studio
with in Ghana. Some are overlaid on historic colonial maps of
pottery, handmade tableware, sculpture, or a work of art, you’ll find
key locations, cities, and villages across the country. Others are
it here. Visitors can see all the pieces on display at All Saints Church
photographed against decaying leather train seats, salvaged
on Jesus Lane. The potters are continuing their annual charity
from the Gold Coast Railway. Tattooing family names or
tradition by donating unique handmade decorations for the charity
locations of birth on forearms is a common practice throughout
Christmas tree. This year, all proceeds will go to the Motor Neurone
rural Ghana, due to a lack of basic identification papers like
Disease Association in memory of Peter Warren, long-time Anglian
birth certificates or driver licences.
Potters member and editor of the Newsletter.
www.museums.norfolk.gov.uk
www.anglianpotters.org.uk
Dale Devereux Barker: 100 Prints. 100 Days 100 Prints. 100 Days is a new show of work by printmaker Dale Devereux Barker on display at Bircham Gallery, Holt from January 7th - February 1st. Dale’s work is a celebration of colour and form with warmly engaging subject matter. The events of everyday life are transformed into colourful images loaded with humour and feeling. This new suite of linocuts comes off the back of another body of prints titled, ‘100 Prints of Solitude’ made during the covid lockdown in January 2021. Both series of work were deliberately constrained to a given size format of a 12x12cm linoblock. 100 days allowed more time for deliberation, introspection, and experimentation. ‘But what of ideas and themes?’ says Dale. ‘A year in anyone’s life is filled with events large and small and a million thoughts are mulled over. I look back at this sequence now and see the passing of my father, a world post Covid ‘normality’, the embrace of new artists influencing me (particularly Keith Vaughn), a delight in the colour possibilities of ‘offset‘ printing, a revisit to the anarchy of Chine Collé and a reminder to surprise myself by printing blocks upside down upon themselves and risk ruining everything.’ www.birchamgallery.co.uk
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Art in Exile Firstsite, Colchester presents a special year-long exhibition by Iranian rug maker, Mehdi Jalalaghdamian. Art in Exile is the start of an ongoing programme funded by the gallery’s Art Fund Museum of the Year 2021 award. Currently living in temporary accommodation in Bournemouth after being recently moved from Colchester, Mehdi is seeking asylum in the UK. Art in Exile features three rugs, made during Mehdi’s time as a refugee in Stockholm, Sweden. Each rug illustrates a part of his journey from Iran to the UK. Displayed in Firstsite’s Mosaic Gallery, the largest of the three rugs (150cm x 174cm) is titled Tragedy of Refugees and took 18-months to make,
The World of Graham Clarke
with Mehdi working alone for eight hours a day to complete
The Royal Academy Summer Exhibition, 1973: Graham Clarke’s
it, whilst living in temporary accommodation. The rug includes
etching ‘Dance by the Light of the Moon’ was exhibited and
woven depictions of high-profile images featured in the media,
the edition of 50 copies sold out, launching his career as
alongside depictions of Mehdi’s lived experience as an asylum
one of Britain’s most popular and best- selling printmakers.
seeker. Accompanying the exhibition are several films showing
Responding to the comedy of everyday life, Clarke’s images
the creation of the Tragedy of Refugees, along with the
bring his own brand of humour and romance, past and
detailed hand-drawn design Mehdi used to make the rug, plus
present, viewed through the eyes of the common man. From
various tools used in traditional rug making. firstsite.uk
November 12th-January 7th, the exhibition at The Corn Hall, Diss will display a selection from the five hundred images he has made over the years, with subjects ranging from his love of boats and the sea, an affectionate view of Europe and beyond, comic misinterpretations of British history and domestic scenes of Kentish and Cornish life. Graham Clarke says; ‘My work is to entertain - I love to see a smile. I am quite content to be old-fashioned both in ideas and working methods. My knowledge of technology is that of 200 years ago, just like my
Photo:Frankie Shaftain-Fenner
etching presses.’ www.thecornhall.co.uk
Picture Books For All The Hold’s autumn exhibition, Picture Books For All, explores the history of Ipswich-based printers W.S. Cowell Ltd. Running until January 8th, a visually rich selection of books, prints, original artwork and journals will chart the local, national and international importance of W.S. Cowell. The free Suffolk Archives exhibition on Ipswich Waterfront will also look at where Cowell sits in the history of modernism in Britain and examines their
W.S. Cowell archive including Eric Ravilious’ original drawings
significant contribution to literature and society through design.
and prints from the Royal Museums Greenwich collections,
Founded in 1818, W.S. Cowell were general printers that
Edward Ardizonne’s original illustrations from the Tim and Lucy
reinvented themselves as progressive art printers during the late
book series and first editions of many favourite titles such as
1930s and 1940s. Picture Books For All features rare books and
Orlando the Marmalade Cat, Barbar the Elephant and the Puffin
artwork from specialist collections, and hidden gems from the
Picture Book series. www.suffolkarchives.co.uk
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ISI O NS F NCI NT EGYPT SUPPORTED BY
TI CKETS O N SALE NOW sainsburycentre.ac.uk
SC_VAE_PressAd_ArtsEast_65x95 vF.indd 1
01603 593199
Awol Erizku, Nefertiti (Black Power), 2018. Courtesy of Ben Brown Fine Arts
NEW EXHIBITION FROM 3 SEPTEMBER
03/08/2022 16:33
The new national centre for Thomas Gainsborough opens 21 November 2022 www.gainsborough.org
Winter 2022
Artist Profile: Paula Hallam
Contemporary painter Paula Hallam is drawn by the magic of Norfolk
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Top Right: Marshland Light Bottom Left: Far Horizons Bottom Right: Waiting to Return
Norfolk has, for centuries, inspired artists with its big skies,
‘I love the North Norfolk coast heading from the east towards
sweeping beaches and beautiful views.
Hunstanton,’ says Paula. ‘The Wash is just majestic and
For artist Paula Hallam it was love at first sight.
I’ve also recently discovered the Brecklands area which is
‘Ten years ago, I came on holiday to Norfolk looking for inspiration for my painting,’ says Paula. ‘We arrived late in the day and I could smell the fresh air almost as soon as we crossed into the county. I remember standing on the seafront at Cromer. The moon was rising behind the Pier and it was
beguiling. I also love the area around Cley-next-the-Sea. I love to visit an hour or so before dusk when the changing light is so beautiful. One thing I love the most is the sound that the sea makes as the waves wash over the flints on the beach. It’s a very distinctive sound.’
just magical.’
The connection to nature is very important to Paula.
Since that first visit, Paula has returned many times and has
‘In today’s modern world, our connection to the planet
many favourite spots across the county.
is becoming lost,’ says Paula. ‘Painting the landscape is
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Top Left: Glaven Indigo Bottom Left: Norfolk Nocturne No 1 Bottom Right: Paula on location
something that helps you forge that connection with it. I’m
with abstraction. Now I paint both abstracts and landscapes
interested in the use of art as a vehicle for expressing emotions
with some paintings crossing between the two genres.’
and how the line between the pictorial and abstract can be blurred. Working mainly in acrylics, I construct complex layers of translucent paint to arrive at a desired destination.’ Lockdown proved a pivotal time for Paula. ‘Used to sketching on location, I found myself trapped in the house like everyone else,’ she says. ‘I don’t enjoy working from pictures so I started trying something new - experimenting
Paula is hoping to move to Norfolk permanently in 2023. ‘I’m looking to build relationships with local galleries to show my work,’ says Paula. ‘I’ve just had an exhibition at the Westacre Gallery and would love to show there again.’ To view Paula’s work go to :
www.paulahallam.co.uk
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Winter 2022
Landscape Rebels
This new exhibition at Christchurch Mansion explores the effects of climate change
Photo: Tom Owens, Welcome to the Funny Farm
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‘Walton Bridges’, JMW Turner, oil on canvas, 1806, 92.7 x 123.8cm © Norfolk Museums
Decorated pearl shell © Colchester + Ipswich Museums
Claude Monet, Flood Waters © The National Gallery A new exhibition at Ipswich’s Christchurch Mansion
plus a private donor, this nationally important painting was
connecting art and culture with the climate crisis will explore
saved for East Anglia in 2019 to be enjoyed by all.
how human impacts are changing our landscape.
Turner’s renowned piece will be joined by Claude Monet’s
Landscape Rebels runs until April 16th thanks to support
The Thames below Westminster and Flood Waters on loan
from the National Lottery Heritage Fund, Arts Council
from the National Gallery, along with many artworks from
England, Friends of Ipswich Museums, Kerseys Solicitors and
the Ipswich Collection, including new acquisition Shingle
Suffolk County Council.
Street Legend by Julia Heseltine in 2022 thanks to funding
The centrepiece of this exhibition will be Turner’s masterpiece Walton Bridges, saved by Norfolk Museums Service with the support of Colchester and Ipswich Museums. Thanks to major grants obtained from the National Lottery Heritage Fund, Art Fund, the Friends of Ipswich Museums
from the Friends of Ipswich Museum. Other artists on display includes works by Anna Airy and Connie Winn. Local stories are also being told through contemporary works as part of the exhibition, including a series of black and white photographs by Ipswich-based photographer Tom Owen as
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Julia Heseltine Shingle Street Legend oil on board, 2004 656 x 805mm © Colchester + Ipswich Museums
Needle case depicting caribou © Colchester + Ipswich Museums
Green turtle © Colchester + Ipswich Museums
a collection entitled ‘Welcome to the Funny Farm’, depicting people enjoying their allotments around Ipswich. From Suffolk to Alaska and Australia, objects from the Ipswich collection will highlight the impact of climate change and encourage visitors to consider what changes they can make to help the environment and create positive change for the future.
‘Bringing together Constable, Turner and Monet with contemporary works from local photographers and artists is a
Councillor Carole Jones, Ipswich Borough Council’s Portfolio
wonderful mix of interpretations of our changing landscape –
Holder for Planning and Museums, says:
an exhibition that is not to be missed.’
‘Following the success of our award-winning Power of Stories,
There is free admission for the duration of the exhibition at
Landscape Rebels is the next exhibition on display for all to
Christchurch Mansion. Find out more at:
enjoy at Christchurch Mansion’s Wolsey Art Gallery.
www.landscape-rebels.co.uk
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Runes, Moons and Sorcery
Exhibition opens Saturday 19th November 12 noon to 5pm continues to 31st December, 2022 Wednesday to Sunday 10am to 5pm or by appointment (closed 25th, 26th, 27th December) Paintings and drawings: Mark Burrell, Peter Rodulfo, Paul Rumsey Ceramics: Ursula Ströh-Rubens Sculpture: Mark Goldsworthy
*Saturday 12 noon 10th December meet Neil Devlin, Magical Entertainer at Chappel Galleries
Mark Burrell The Puppet Maestro Oil on canvas panel 2018 60x50cm Peter Rodulfo Looking for a Crown Acrylic on canvas 2016-22 81x101cm
Paul Rumsey Tree of Figures Charcoal 1997 75x57cm
Ursula Ströh-Rubens Smoked ceramics
Mark Goldsworthy Moongazer Ancaster 2017 68x18x19cm
Chappel Galleries, Colchester Road, Chappel, Essex CO6 2DE T: 01206 240326 E: info@chappelgalleries.co.uk www.chappelgalleries.co.uk
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Top Left: The Thames at Windsor by John Constable © Brandler Galleries Bottom Left: Annie MacDonald’s Mother by Queen Victoria © Brandler Galleries Bottom Centre: Alabaster Angel from the Altar Surround in St Paul’s Cathedral © Brandler Galleries Bottom Right: Portrait of Sarah Langston by Thomas Gainsborough © Brandler Galleries
The National Horseracing Museum brings masterpieces to Newmarket. The Making of Masters and Monarchs exhibition is a
by master forgers. This exhibition, in the Thompson Gallery
unique opportunity to explore ‘making’ in new ways.
at the National Horseracing Museum, runs from Saturday
The exhibition, in collaboration with Brandler Galleries,
November 19th to Sunday February 26th.
brings together an eclectic mix of artworks to look at the relationships between art, originality, wealth, patronage and the monarchy.
Entrance to the exhibition is included in general admission, giving you access to all areas including the National Horseracing Museum, Palace House, and the Rothschild
The exhibition is a whirlwind tour through time and talent;
Yard where you can meet retired racehorses embarking on
from the worlds of Turner and Constable to Hockney and
a new career.
Warhol. Portraits by Gainsborough and Reynolds will hang next to rarely-seen paintings by King Charles III and Queen Victoria. Highlights include treasures rescued from a bomb- damaged St Paul’s Cathedral and intriguing works
www.nhrm.co.uk
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John Theodore Heins (1697-1756) Thomas Gainsborough, c. 1731. Oil paint on canvas. © Gainsborough’s House, Sudbury, Suffolk.
Thomas Gainsborough (1727-1788) The Descent from the Cross. After Peter Paul Rubens, 1766-1770. Oil on canvas. © National Portrait Gallery, London.
Gainsborough’s House Reopens to the Public
Following a transformational redevelopment, Thomas Gainsborough’s childhood home is ready to welcome us back to something quite special... Gainsborough’s house, the childhood home of one of Britain’s
create a new vision that encompasses the re-interpretation
most important artists, will reopen to the public on November
of its collections and re-invigoration of its exhibition and
21st following a transformational development to create an
activity programme. The scheme, designed by the acclaimed
international centre for Thomas Gainsborough, and the largest
architectural firm ZMMA, comprises a new three-storey
gallery in Suffolk.
building, designed in locally made brick and flint, housing
Located in the heart of Sudbury, a market town and Britain’s centre for the silk weaving industry, the museum and its site have been expanded and entirely reconfigured to open up access to the world’s most comprehensive collection of Thomas Gainsborough (1727-1788), comprising over 40 oil paintings and 400 prints and drawings, made throughout his career.
a new entrance, three innovative galleries and spaces for learning and an events programme. A Landscape Studio gives spectacular views across Sudbury to the surrounding landscape that Gainsborough painted and features a Camera Obscura. The museum site includes the existing Weavers Lane Cottages, which have been reorganised to highlight the historical print workshop to be used by artists. An open, glass-faced cafe and terrace overlook the walled garden with
The £10 million project with lead support from The National
its new serpentine crinkle-crankle boundary wall at the centre
Lottery Heritage Fund has allowed Gainsborough’s House to
of which resides a 400-year-old mulberry tree.
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View of the Gainsborough Gallery at Gainsborough’s House, Sudbury, Suffolk © David Levene / Gainsborough’s House
For the first time, the museum will be able to tell the
To celebrate the artistic heritage of the surrounding
full story of Gainsborough’s life and work, alongside his
landscape, the permanent displays will also portray
family and social context, as well as hosting international
Gainsborough’s influence on landscape artists, particularly
exhibitions that showcase the widespread influence of
John Constable (1776-1837). With works on long term loan
the artist’s work on his contemporaries and succeeding
from the Constable family’s collection, Gainsborough’s House
generations.
will provide the only gallery setting where visitors can see the
At the centre of the site, a Sudbury-woven, silk-lined gallery devoted to the masterworks of Gainsborough, will act as a bridge leading visitors from the contemporary architecture of the new building through the garden to the original townhouse, where the permanent displays will present works
landscapes of Constable in the vicinity of ‘Constable Country’. Meanwhile, highlights from the largest collection of Cedric Morris (1889-1982), gifted to Gainsborough’s House by Maggi Hambling and Robert Davey 2017, will reinforce the artist and plantsman’s connection to Suffolk.
by Gainsborough drawn from the inspirational collection
Opening times, as of November 21st, will be 10am-5pm
including portraits, landscapes, works on paper, rare books,
Monday to Saturday and 11am-5pm on Sunday.
letters, manuscripts, a printing press and his paint bladders.
www.gainsborough.org
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Singer and X-Factor winner Matt Cardle is celebrating the 10th anniversary of his platinum-selling debut album at The Apex in Bury St Edmunds.
Winter 2022
After winning X-Factor in 2010, Matt Cardle’s BRIT-nominated debut album ‘Letters’ met with critical acclaim upon its release in 2011. It includes the Gary Barlow penned ‘Run For Your Life’, the singles ‘Amazing’ and ‘Starlight’ plus the No.1 million-selling single ‘When We Collide’, which he first performed to over 19 million people on The X Factor. Now Matt is celebrating the 10th anniversary of this album (a year late due to the pandemic) with a special show at The Apex in Bury St Edmunds on December 19th. This anniversary show will see the debut album performed in full for the very first time with a full live band. Additionally, there will be songs from Matt’s three other studio albums and some festive treats thrown in for good measure!
Q. How important is fame to you? Do you enjoy being recognised? It’s a by-product of doing something that I want to do. Sometimes it can be stressful, particularly if something personal is going on in my own life. People I meet on those days still expect me to be Mr Nice Guy and it’s not always possible. We all have bad days. We all have days when it’s hard to have a laugh and a joke. However, I wouldn’t change it for the world. I’m having the time of my life.
Q. Do you have a local connection? I grew up nearby in Colchester, although I was born in Southampton. I’ve done shows at The Apex before. The atmosphere and the sound inside that place are mind-blowing. The ‘Intimate & Live Tour’ - which included a show in Bury – is the most fun I’ve ever had on tour. I love both the smaller theatres and the big arenas for different reasons, but you adjust the show you’re doing accordingly. Q. Did you always want to be a performer? I grew up wanting to be a marine biologist! I loved the sea, particularly sharks. I also wanted to be a professional skateboarder but I couldn’t commit to it as I was in and out of bands. Then, eventually, I found myself on The X Factor and I’ve been very lucky not to have had to think about a career change since. Q. Which artists inspired and influenced you? Growing up, I would listen to a lot of Kate Bush, Peter Gabriel, Elton John and Michael Jackson as a young kid. By ten or eleven, I used to go out and play touch rugby and I was listening to Rage Against The Machine and Pearl Jam by that stage! I’m lucky that my music tastes are so varied. Q. Who would you love to do a musical collaboration with? I’ve had the incredible fortune of collaborating with Melanie C and I’m happy to class her as a friend. I’m a huge fan of Hannah Reid from London Grammar. It would be awesome to work with her in any capacity.
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Matt Cardle is at The Apex, Bury St Edmunds on December 19th. See www.theapex.co.uk or call 01284 758000 for tickets or more information.
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The Visual Arts Guide 2023 The annual guide to the visual arts across Norfolk & Suffolk
If you would like to feature your art gallery, art shop or exhibition in the new 2023 guide, then please contact Gary at ARTSeast on
01379 773347 or email
gary@artseast.co.uk
www.artseast.co.uk
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Here we take a look at some of the best newly-released art books out there for you to enjoy… by the time of day or the time of night, becoming a strong image long remembered and one that I wish to illustrate. I hope you enjoy this journey through 24 hours of my collected memories of the nature that surrounds me.”
patchwork of travel, history, memoir and culture - an unforgettable look into how we have made fabric, and how it has made us.
Publisher: Little, Brown Book Group RRP: £25
Looking to Sea by Lily Le Brun
Wild Light by Angela Harding With over 70 original illustrations, printmaker Angela Harding invites you to look at how the light changes the world around us, and how that changes us in its turn. “I, like many other people, find great inspiration in the way mornings, evenings or bright midday light changes the way we see the things around us. The bouncing light of a cloud-filled storm sky can change a seascape through a palette of blues, greys, and turquoises. The cool summer moonlight that crosses my back garden sends long shadows that change the mood of the garden from homely to unfamiliar. And whether it’s the low light of an English February afternoon or the sharp, bright mid-morning light of the Cornish seaside, the light and dark we experience affects our moods. “But life is busy, and I am guilty as anyone of being too preoccupied by daily life to just stop and look. This book is a collection of illustrations from those moments when I have stopped and looked; when a particular encounter with nature has been highlighted
Fabric: The Hidden History of the Material World by Victoria Finlay A magnificent work of original research, unwinding history through cloth - how we make it, use it and what it means to us. Bestselling author Victoria Finlay spins us round the globe in a vibrant exploration of cloth through the ages. She beats the inner bark of trees into cloth in Papua New Guinea, fails to handspin cotton in Guatemala, visits tweed weavers at their homes in Harris, and has lessons in patchwork-making in Gee’s Bend, Alabama. And through it all she uncovers the hidden histories of fabric: how and why people have made it, worn it, invented it and made symbols of it. Interlaced with Victoria’s own story of grief and recovery, Fabric is a lush
Publisher: Profile Books RRP: £10.99
Looking to Sea considers ten pivotal artworks, from Vanessa Bell’s Studland Beach, one of the first modernist paintings in Britain, to Paul Nash’s work bearing the scars of his experience in the trenches and Martin Parr’s photographs of seaside resorts in the 1980s, which raised controversial questions of class. Each of the startlingly different pieces, created between 1912 and 2015, opens a window onto big ideas, from modernism and the sublime, the impact of the world wars and colonialism, to issues crucial to our world today like the environment and nationhood. In this astonishingly perceptive portrait of the twentieth century, art critic Lily Le Brun brings a fresh eye to a vast idea, offering readers an imaginative new way of seeing our island nation. Publisher: Hodder & Stoughton RRP: £25
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Theatre & Film News ...............................
Photo: Raymond Gubbay Ltd.
Peaky Blinders come to Norwich
From January 17th-21st Rambert Dance present Peaky Blinders: The Redemption of Thomas Shelby at Norwich Theatre Royal. Written by the creator of the global hit television series Steven Knight, with choreography by Benoit Swan Pouffer, this new dance event delves into the story of Tommy Shelby and the Peaky Blinders. Dazzling, athletic dance and stunning dramatisation with an iconic eclectic Peaky soundtrack and a live on-stage band.
Strictly Stars perform Firedance
Tommy and the Peakys fought together at Flanders and the show
Strictly Stars Karen Hauer, Gorka Marquez and their scintillating
opens in the trenches. Bound by this experience, a truly personal
cast light up the stage at the Ipswich Regent on March 9th
story unfolds as the Shelby family navigate the decisions that
with FIREDANCE, featuring fresh flavours and super-charged
determine their fate and Tommy is intoxicated by the mysterious
choreography. Join both stars, sizzling dancers and mesmerising
Grace. This production is in association with the Birmingham
fire specialists in a captivating dance-off inspired by the timeless
Hippodrome and co-produced with The Lowry.
movie blockbusters Romeo and Juliet, Moulin Rouge, Carmen
www.norwichtheatre.org
and West Side Story. Soundtracked by a sensational live band, expect to hear an eclectic mix of Latin, Rock and Pop music from
Photo: Johan Persson
artists such as Camilla Cabello, Jason Derulo, Gregory Porter, Gypsy Kings, J.Lo, Marc Anthony and many more. Born in Venezuela and having grown up in New York from the age of 10, Karen Hauer is the longest serving professional dancer on BBC’s Strictly Come Dancing. Gorka’s flair for dancing started from a very young age. Most famously known for his appearance on BBC’s Strictly Come Dancing, Gorka Marquez has continuously displayed outstanding talent and charisma since first gracing the Strictly dancefloor in 2016. ipswichtheatres.co.uk
Bowjangles Presents: Dracula in Space Forget everything you think you know about string quartets; Bowjangles is an irreverent, anarchic group of genre spanners, bringing music, theatre and comedy together in a way you’ve never seen before; they dance whilst they play, they sing whilst they play, they leap, tumble, juggle and joke whilst they play. Drac returns to the Westacre Theatre stage on January 28th as the intrepid foursome are blasting off into outer space to meet a mysterious benefactor whose proposition seems a little too good to be true. But what happens when their lead violinist starts to act a little strangely? The award winning, internationally acclaimed quartet - who seem to have taken ‘hands, face, space’ a little too literally - proudly present their new sci-fi horror musical comedy. (WARNING: Contains scenes of graphic violins) www.westacretheatre.com
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Rags to Riches at Norwich Puppet Theatre Experience some true festive magic at Norwich Puppet Theatre this Christmas, with their spectacular new puppet pantomime, Cinderella. The show promises original music and songs, stunning marionette puppetry, and a heart-warming story of strength overcoming adversity. This sparkling new multimedia production is an ideal treat for all the family, although you definitely don’t need to have a child in tow, and there are morning, afternoon and evening performances to choose from. The show also boasts a star-studded production team and the puppetry talents of performers who have worked on The Muppets, Rainbow, Star Wars and more. Expect glittering costumes, dynamic puppetry and mischievous storytelling. Performances December 17-31st. Tickets just £10.
www.puppettheatre.co.uk
Common Ground presents A Murder at St Muttley’s While on a Christmas visit to his cousin, Sister Immaculata Biggles, in the secluded convent of St Muttley’s, renowned detective Hercule Poudrot meets Bishop Humbedee, who has arrived to celebrate mass. Next day, he is nowhere to be found, and with no-one to lead their carol service, the desperate sisters of St Muttley engage the services of Poudrot and his intrepid sidekick Hustings to find the missing cleric. What dark secrets will they uncover in the neighbouring village of Ditcham? What is the macabre history shared by it’s inhabitants? What other goings
Luke Wright returns to Sudbury On February 9th The Quay Theatre, Sudbury plays host to acclaimed poet Luke Wright as he presents his show The Remains of Logan Dankworth. Logan Dankworth, columnist and Twitter warrior, grew up romanticising the political turmoil of the 1980s. Now, as the EU Referendum looms he is determined to be in the fray of the biggest political battle for years. Meanwhile, Logan’s wife Megan wants to leave London to better raise their daughter. As tensions rise at home and across the nation, something is set to be lost forever. The third of Luke Wright’s trilogy of political verse plays looks at trust, fatherhood and family in the age of Brexit. The show was a big hit with audiences and reviewers at the 2022 Edinburgh Fringe. The second half of the show will see Luke perform some favourites, full of wit and extraordinary poignancy.
www.quaysudbury.com
on - are going on? Another classic festive comedy thriller, brought to you by Suffolk-based Common Ground Theatre Company, the team behind many genre spoof Xmas shows, most recently last year’s Sherlock Holmes Meets Count Dracula! Head to Diss Corn Hall on January 7th to solve the mystery!
www.thecornhall.co.uk
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Ticket £10
www.puppettheatre.co.uk @NorwichPuppetTheatre
Tel: 01603 629921 | Norwich Puppet Theatre,
Whitefriars, Norwich, NR3 1TN | Reg. Charity 271041
Winter 2022
Award-winning West End Smash Hit comes to Norwich Double Olivier award-winning West End and Broadway
‘piercingly beautiful’ (Independent) production brought
smash hit Girl from The North Country comes to Norwich
vividly to life by an extraordinary company of actors and
Theatre Royal from February 28th-March 4th as part of a
musicians.
major international tour.
www.norwichtheatre.org
It’s 1934 in the heartland of America and we meet a group of wayward souls who cross paths in a time-weathered guesthouse. Standing at a turning point in their lives, they realise nothing is what it seems. But as they search for a future, and hide from the past, they find themselves facing unspoken truths about the present. Celebrated playwright Conor McPherson (The Weir, The Seafarer) boldly reimagines the legendary songs of Bob Dylan, like you’ve never heard them before. A heart-breaking and universal story about family and love, brought vividly to life by an extraordinary company of actors and musicians. Now audiences in Norwich have the chance to experience this ‘magnificent’ (Standard), ‘astonishing’ (Guardian) and
Competition
W I N TI C K ETS ARTSeast has teamed up with Norwich Theatre Royal to offer one lucky reader the chance to win four tickets to Girl from the North Country on February 28th. To be in with a chance of winning, please email your name, address and telephone number to sarah@artseast.co.uk. Closing date: February 10th.
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Christmas Cromer Pier Show Recently the subject of acclaimed documentary Seaside
pandemic. Described as spectacular and unbelievable,
Special, the Cromer Pier Show is the only End of the Pier
expect mind-blowing illusions, breath-taking escapes and
show of its kind in the world.
stunts, magic, mentalism, and escapology.
Running from November 26th-December 30th, The
Musician and Actor Chloe Edwards-Wood whose professional
Cromer Pier Christmas Show will warm your hearts and
credits include Dream Coats & Petticoats and Cilla The
get you well and truly in the Christmas spirit with a heap
Musical, takes to the stage. Her love of vintage music
of festive fun. Expect all the usual West End production
inspired the start of her band Peachy Beat who now play UK
values including their jaw-dropping eight-metre video
wide. Norfolk soprano singing sensation Hayley Moss is
wall delivering sensational special effects to a whole new
back with her incredible vocal range and versatility. Hayley
level, alongside their much-loved traditional scene sets and
is partnered with Singer and Actor Ben Killingback. Ben
dazzling bespoke costumes.
graduated from the London College of Music in 2017
Cast members already confirmed are good old Norfolk boy Olly Day returning for his 13th year at the helm. Olly is firmly
and has been sailing the seven seas performing onboard Silversea Cruises.
established as one of East Anglia’s finest and best-loved
Of course, expect all the usual glitz, sequins, and sparkle
performers, renowned for his unmistakeable warm humour
from the Cromer Pier Show ensemble.
with a local twist. Be prepared to be amazed by the masters of illusion, Amethyst. You may remember them performing in the Nigel Hogg production of Strictly Christmas during the
www.cromerpier.co.uk
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COMING THIS
CHRISTMAS
You know the story two kids, a gingerbread house, a talking tree, a witch that eats people... Wait, what?! This year, join us for a hilarious local twist on the classic fairytale. You’ll laugh. You’ll cry. You’ll never look at Gummy Bears the same way again.
fEAST Theatre and Wells Maltings present...
AGE 5+
HANSEL & GRETEL
16 - 28 Dec 2022 BOOK NOW
01328 710885 wellsmaltings.org.uk
Staithe Street, Wells-Next-The-Sea
The Puppini Sisters Thu 8 Dec
The Easy Rollers Sun 11 Dec
Le Gateau Chocolat & Jonny Woo: A Night at the Musicals Fri 16 & Sat 17 Dec
01603 630 000 norwichtheatre.org
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Photos: Bill Smith/Norwich Cathedral
Christmas at Norwich Cathedral
Christmas is a special time at Norwich Cathedral with a series
Join Norwich Cathedral Choir, Norwich Baroque and a cast of
of events. On December 2nd, celebrate the beginning of
internationally acclaimed soloists for the annual performance
Advent at a free open evening. There will be a short service
of Handel’s much-loved oratorio, in the beautiful candlelit
featuring farm animals to bless the outdoor crib and carols
surroundings of the Cathedral’s nave on December 10th at
with Norwich Cathedral Choir. There will be festive activities
7pm. Tickets available from the website.
for children plus the gift shop will be open with lots of ideas for the perfect presents and you will also be able to enjoy some tasty festive treats in The Refectory. From December 2nd-January 5th, remember a loved one by placing a star on the Tree of Remembrance beside the Cathedral’s outdoor crib outside the Hostry. Donations will go to Norwich-based homelessness charity St Martins.
On December 16th, join Norwich Cathedral Choir for a feast of festive music, both sacred and secular, with carols for choir and audience, not forgetting the great 12 Days of Christmas sing-along!
www.cathedral.org.uk
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Win tickets to see The South at The Apex Calling all fans of The Beautiful South! When this great British pop institution split in 2007, some members of the band didn’t feel ready to hang up their microphones or instruments just yet. And so The South was born. This impressive 9-piece band featuring former members of The Beautiful South, including singer Alison Wheeler and lifelong sax player Gaz Birtles - comes to the Apex, Bury St Edmunds on February 19th. With Gaz now on vocal duties along with Alison they play the songs made famous by The Beautiful South – ‘A Little Time’, ‘Perfect 10’, ‘Rotterdam’, ‘Old Red Eyes Is Back’, ‘Good as Gold’, ‘Don’t Marry Her’, plus many more, along with a few choice South originals. All performed live, these songs span an impressive 20 year career starting way back in 1989!
Competition
WIN TICK ETS ARTSeast has teamed up with The Apex, Bury St Edmunds to offer one lucky reader the chance to win a pair of tickets to see The South at The Apex on February 19th. To be in with a chance of winning, please email your name, address and telephone number to sarah@artseast.co.uk. Closing date: February 3rd.
Winter 2022
Music News ...............................
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National Brass Band Champions in Norwich
The East Anglian Brass Band Association is delighted to announce that its 84th Annual Spring Concert will be performed by the 2022 National Brass Band Champion Band, Foden’s Band at St Andrew’s Hall, Norwich on May 7th 2023 at 3pm. Foden’s Band from Cheshire recently retained the title they had also won in 2021.
Celebrate the New Year at Saffron Hall Join the BBC Concert Orchestra for a sparkling New Year’s concert at Saffron Hall to round off the festive period on January 2nd. A programme of Viennese exuberance and elegance, it begins with the sublime clarinet concerto Mozart wrote in Vienna and concludes with a second half packed with the music forever associated with that city, the refined waltzes, whirling The concert, the day after the Coronation of HM King Charles III,
dances and vivacious operettas of the Strauss family and their
will celebrate the Coronation and feature music suitable for the
contemporaries. A joyous start to the New Year, and a celebration
occasion. The concert is part of the Association’s ‘Brass To The Fore
of one of the world’s great musical cities.
Project’ promoting brass bands, their music and encouraging brass
www.saffronhall.com
musicians of all ages in the region. The project is supported by Norwich Freemen’s Charity and the Geoffrey Watling Charity.
www.eabba.org.uk
Experience Masters of Chant Heading to the Maddermarket Theatre, Norwich on January 27th, Masters Of Chant perform some of the greatest songs of all time from artists such as Queen, The Beatles, AC/DC and Michael Jackson. Hand-picked professional musicians and choristers cleverly take the traditional monophonic ‘gregorian’ sound and combine it with contemporary rock and pop. Experience these hits as you have never heard ’em before, with this critically-acclaimed audio/visual show.
www.maddermarket.co.uk
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East Anglian Brass Band Association presents a
Celebration Concert for the Coronation of HM Charles lll Performed by
SO MUCH MORE THAN A MUSEUM! NHRM occupies a 5-acre site in the heart of Newmarket and provides a wonderful day out for all ages.
National Champions 2021 and 2022 Sunday 7th May 2023 St Andrew’s Hall, Norwich, 3.00pm Box office 07934 169721 Email administration@eabba.org.uk Charity number 1062760
Using the latest interactive and audio-visual displays you can find out about the history of horseracing, enjoy some of the country’s best examples of sporting art, meet former racehorses, have a go on the racehorse simulator and watch the sparks fly as a farrier works in the forge.
National Horseracing Museum
Palace Street, Newmarket, Suffolk, CB8 8EP
COME & EXPLORE OUR GREAT EXHIBITIONS, GIFT SHOP & BOOKSTORE DISCOVER THE RESTAURANT AND BAKERY AT NHRM
@NHRMuseum
Online Booking: www.nhrm.co.uk
Online Booking: www.nhrm.co.uk
What’s On News ...............................
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30 Years of a Blackthorpe Barn Christmas
New Festival EA Sustain promotes localism EA Sustain is the first festival of its kind - an environmental
festival bringing together policy experts, entrepreneurs and artists in order to maintain climate consciousness. Taking place at Firstsite, Colchester on January 14th-15th, its programming falls under three
Snuggled in the heart of Rougham Estate, just outside Bury
main categories;
St Edmunds, historic Blackthorpe Barn is home to a Christmas
Environment, Culture and Entrepreneurship, all tentpoles of rural sustainability. The festival is the brainchild of environmentalist and founder of EA Festival Joanne Ooi. ‘EA Sustain is not just about environmental facts, science and policy but content and events that can nurture the preconditions of a flourishing and self-sufficient economy in East Anglia.’ The Festival
event that ignites the Christmas spirit for thousands. The beautiful Country Christmas shop is full of stunning decorations and gifts and is also home to craft weekends running in November and December until December 12th. Celebrating 30 years this year, the Christmas craft weekends are always much anticipated. They showcase some of the country’s most talented artists and craft-makers. One strict rule is that the craft makers must be present at the event to chat with the visitors to share their inspiration. There are woven and knitwear designs and textiles, ceramics, glassware, metalware, wood creations, natural beauty products, leather items, jewellery, books, baskets and so much more. Many exhibitors change each weekend so there
also hosts workshops and welcomes an esteemed line up of guest
are new crafts to be explored each visit. You could also pick up a
speakers. It also celebrates music, art and literature as these art
famous Rougham Estate Christmas Tree - they have taken pride
forms celebrate and bring home the beauty of nature.
of place outside 10 Downing Street in recent years.
www.easustain.com
www.blackthorpebarn.com
Christmas Magic at Stapleford Granary Over five festive days from Saturday December 10th to Wednesday December 14th, Stapleford Granary will be filled with candlelit concerts, market stalls, mulled wine and seasonal treats in their beautiful cafe. They’ve got glorious Yuletide music from the Middle Ages (GreenMatthews’ Gaudete!), Bach, Handel and Purcell performed by some of Europe’s finest early music practitioners plus festive favourites and classy arrangements from Onyx Brass. For their youngest audiences, Theatre of Widdershins Rapunzel and the Tower of Doom combines exquisite puppetry and storytelling and there’s plenty to inspire at their Christmas Market in the magical setting of the Granary’s courtyard on December 10th.
www.staplefordgranary.org.uk
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The Sedgeford Hoard, 32 gold Iron-Age coins found inside a cow bone at Sedgeford, Norfolk, About 50 BC. © Norfolk Museums Service
Celebrating Norfolk’s Buried Treasure Running until June 11th next year, a selection of stunning
The coins may have been placed inside the bone and buried
archaeological hoards, all discovered in West Norfolk, will be
as an offering to the gods. Or they may have been hidden and
displayed at Lynn Museum.
buried, to be retrieved in the future.
The exhibition entitled Hoards: Archaeological Treasures from
The Fincham Coin Hoard dates back to the Anglo-Saxon and
West Norfolk places a significant number of objects on view
Viking period, around 1300 years ago. Struck about 150 miles
for the first time including a group of Bronze Age artefacts from
away in Frisia, modern-day Holland, these small silver coins
the beach at Holme-next-the-Sea found close to the site of the
known as sceattas (pronounced “shatters”) are the earliest form
remarkably preserved timber monument known as Seahenge.
of penny and circulated in England from around 710-750AD.
Also going on display for the first time are some very rare early
The coins are in good condition, suggesting they hadn’t been in
coins from Fincham.
circulation long before they were hidden.
Hoards – a store of money or valued objects – have long
The exhibition also includes the Dersingham Hoard, a large
fascinated experts and the public alike with the intriguing
collection of silver shillings found in a silver cup. Discovered
questions they raise: why were these objects buried; and did
in July 1984, this hoard was likely buried in 1643 when King’s
their owners ever mean to retrieve these precious items? West
Lynn was under siege, during the English Civil War.
Norfolk is particularly rich in hoards, making this exhibition a
Oliver Bone, Curator of the Lynn Museum said; ‘This has been
perfect opportunity to discover more about the theories behind
a wonderful opportunity to bring together some spectacular
these spectacular discoveries.
groups of archaeological discoveries from our part of Norfolk,
One of the star exhibits is the Sedgeford Hoard, a collection
many on show for the first time. The finds offer a sweep of
of 32 gold coins, found in August 2003 at Sedgeford, Norfolk
history from back in the Bronze Age right through to the time of
during an archaeological dig. What’s truly fascinating about
the English Civil War.
these coins is that 20 were discovered inside a cow bone.
www.museums.norfolk.gov.uk/lynn-museum
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Retro Games - A Gaming Journey from Arcade to ZX Spectrum Gaming has been a feature of our lives for over forty years
Students, East Coast College Media Studies Students and the
– now a new exhibition at Great Yarmouth’s Time and Tide
curatorial team at Great Yarmouth Museums.
Museum, curated by young people, takes a fascinating look at this rich history in a show full of the sights and sounds of gaming life.
The exhibition is a journey through time, starting off in a retro arcade with games like Pac Man and Space Invaders. Visitors then travel through to a 1970s living room with playable
Retro Games charts the rise of computer gaming through the
Pong on a black and white TV set. Other room recreations
boom of the 1980s to the present day. Starting with the early
include a 1980s living room and a 1990s children’s bedroom
days of games arcades in the 70s, just like those found on
complete with a PlayStation, SNES and MegaDrive, both with
the seafront of Great Yarmouth, the show moves through the
a playable TV. Moving through to the 2000s visitors will have
decades of gaming development taking in the consoles and
the chance to play an Xbox, Wii, Gamecube and dancemat.
characters which have become household names.
Alongside the interactive areas, displays feature classic
Visitors will get to see key pieces of vintage hardware set
hardware such as the Atari VCS ‘Woody’ and 1980s home
in retro room interiors, including the chance to play games
consoles and computers such as NES, Master System, the BBC
using vintage and contemporary technology to create an
Micro, Commodore 64 and Amiga 500. With other displays
immersive experience.
looking at the development of removable media, controllers,
The show is the result of a creative collaboration between young people involved in the museum’s Kick the Dust youth engagement programme – funded by The National Lottery Heritage Fund –East Norfolk Sixth Form level 4 Games Design
game magazines and the top selling analogue games of the decades, Retro Games will appeal to gamers across the generations.
www.museums.norfolk.gov.uk/time-tide
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Spectacle of Light returns to Haughley Park! Following two successful years The Spectacle of Light is
mention Carpet of Colour, Light Beams, Moroccan Lanterns
back again for its third year from February 3rd- 26th with its
and more.
fabulous new light installations and Alice in Wonderland theme. Set in 250 acres of beautiful Suffolk parkland, Haughley Park is a privately owned country estate with a sweeping driveway, landscaped gardens and stunning Jacobean manor house at its heart, a beautiful environment all lit up under the stars. Discover the night-time wonder of these glorious gardens brought to life as you follow a beautiful new Spectacle of Light and sound around the magical trail. This year’s theme is based around Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland. Follow
Sip delicious mulled wine and hot chocolate as you meander along this beautiful trail. Stop in the Barn Courtyard and tuck into some scrumptious hot food and bitesize desserts. Nic Beeby, the Spectacle’s designer and producer said ‘This beautiful after-dark experience is for all the family from Grandparents to the youngest members, even the dog if brought on a short lead!’ Take advantage of the EarlyBird ticket offer and book now, saving 20% off full price tickets.
the White Rabbit through the keyhole and around the trail
Go to to www.haughleypark.co.uk or call the booking
meeting some of the magical characters like the Queen of
line on 01242 705555 between 10.00am and 6.00pm,
Hearts, the Mad Hatter and the Cheshire Cat.
Monday-Saturday. Offer closes January 3rd.
See the amazing new art installations of Pixel Rods, Surreal Croquet with Flamingos and the amazing Field of Fire! Not to
Winter 2022
KD Theatre Productions Ltd
proudly supported by
present
PANTOMIME RETURNS
TO SAFFRON HALL THIS CHRISTMAS
22 – 29 DECEMBER 2022
www.saffronhall.com | 0845 548 7650 (7p per minute plus access charge)
SHOW PARTNERS
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BOOK EARLY! Save up to
20%
♥♥♥♥♥ ‘...A breathtaking trail through light, colour and fantasy...’
The Magical After-Dark Adventure For All The Family!
Follow the White Rabbit along the new illuminated trail around Haughley Park’s stunning grounds and meet some of the characters from Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland. Book tickets online or by phone on 01242 705 555 HaughleyPark.co.uk/Spectacle
3 – 26 February 2023