RM magazine
ropewalk
craft
issue 10 free
Exhibitions Workshops Events April - June 2013 The Ropewalk • Barton upon Humber
The Ropewalk was built in 1801 and as Hall’s Barton Ropery manufactured ropes for the world. It closed as a working factory in 1989 and was brought back to life as an arts centre in April 2000 by an artists’ co-operative who still manage the site today. The Grade II listed building is a cultural quarter of a mile long!
The Ropewalk has 3 temporary exhibition spaces with a rolling exhibition programme that ensures there is always something new to see.
Workshops
The Ropewalk offers a stimulating programme of art and craft workshops that run throughout the year, including regular classes in printmaking and life drawing and day classes in a range of activities.
Events
The Craft Gallery continually displays in excess of 200 makers’ work from throughout the country including jewellery, ceramics, glass, textiles and a wide selection of artist-made greeting cards. The Hall-Mark Room displays a range of contemporary prints and collectables.
Ropery Hall is a small community venue with a capacity of around 120 that offers a programme of film, theatre, music and comedy.
Coffee Shop
Craft
Galleries
The Ropewalk
the ropewalk
Fresh local produce is used to create a wide variety of mainly vegetarian snacks and light lunches. A large selection of delicious freshly made cakes, coffees and organic juices are also available.
The building also houses a small Museum, Artist Studios, meeting rooms for hire and bespoke picture framing service.
Ropewalk Magazine www.the-ropewalk.co.uk
01652 660380
welcome
Looking Forward
A
s I write this in the middle of February the nights are starting to draw out and the sense that spring and new growth is around the corner features strongly in my thoughts. The Ropewalk sculpture garden will be a space worth rediscovering this spring as it is now under the capable management of Lincolnshire artist and gardener Twink Addison. I am looking forward to some unusual growth as Twink has an eye for the weird and wonderful. Seeds and cuttings will be on sale from many of the varieties on show.
As an organisation we have been heartened by the number of people visiting the centre so far this year and especially the take up of places on our creative courses, some of which are being repeated in this programme to keep up with the demand. Please keep it up as without your support for the classes, exhibitions, craft, printmaking, picture framing, coffee shop, films and events we would not be here!
The sculpture event at Hall Farm that we have co-organised for the past three years is having a break in 2013 but we will still be organising a sculpture in the garden event in June – at Utterby near Louth.
Liz
I hope to see you soon
Managing Director Cover image: Mark Steel
Find us on
Admission Free Galleries Open: Monday - Saturday 10am - 5pm Sundays and Bank Holidays 10am - 4pm The Ropewalk is on one level with good wheelchair access; we are a 5 minute walk from the Barton Transport Interchange with half-hourly buses to Hull and Scunthorpe and a 2-hourly rail service to Grimsby and the wider rail network.
April - June 2013
craft
A Handbag?
Self taught Irene’s inspiration can come from anything. She is continually exploring new crafts and techniques and is passionate about design. Her handbags stand out from the crowd. Each handbag is different and combines her love of colour and traditional textile processes into unusual shapes, which are functional and practical but also quirky and fun – “a tactile piece of art on your arm.” The handbags in this collection have been made by transforming a throw-away item into something beautiful and practical. Irene believes that “textiles that hold special memories can be reborn into a new format whilst still retaining their reminders.”
D
uring April in the Box Gallery Irene Campsill will be showing her new venture, upcycled handbags.
The bags are finished to the highest standards and her aim is for them to bring as much pleasure to the owner as she has had in designing and handcrafting them.
Ropewalk Magazine www.the-ropewalk.co.uk
01652 660380
jewellery
Featured Jewellers
April: Xuella Arnold
X
uella’s inspiration comes from song lyrics and poetry. She uses silver, bronze and gold to create wearable imagery. Antique textures are used within her designs to give some of the pieces a vintage feel but with modern designs She is also the author of jewellery books and won The British Bead Award metal clay category 2012
February: Karolina Paszkiewicz March:Clara Smith
K
arolina completed a Jewellery Design degree at Central St Martins University of the Arts, London. Since her graduation she has set up her own jewellery brand, ‘Fly Karoline’. She travels widely to collect naturally-dead insects such as butterflies, bees, and beetles and makes stunning jewellery pieces from them. Each piece of silver used has been etched by hand and constructed using traditional metal working techniques, and will often include precious and semi precious gemstones and pearls.
W
orking from her Perthshire studio, jewellery maker Clara Smith is inspired by nature and the beautiful countryside surrounding her. Her jewellery is produced using a combination of traditional silversmithing techniques, combined with the magical alchemy of precious metal clays. Clara’s work is characterized by delicate patterns and textures, and the warm hues of 24k gold, copper and bronze which embellish many of her designs.
April - June 2013
exhibitions
Chris Harland – ‘The Life of Stuff’
I
n his new exhibition in the Artspace Hull photographer Chris Harland encourages us to discover the ‘Life of Stuff’. His work focuses on how objects change through the processes of use, erosion or decay and develop a new existence. “Nature will fight back and weave patterns where none were intended. Weather will sculpt new forms from precision materials. Sunlight will peel and fade one thing, illuminate another and create new life among the everyday stuff of life.” Many of Chris’ photographs are taken around the Humber foreshore, which provides a rich source of material – things that many of us would overlook such as peeling paint, spalled and water-stained concrete and rusted maritime forms are the basis of numerous of his images.
really knew what I was pursuing - simply because I was fascinated by the ‘hidden pictures’ in my surroundings - the life in stuff (much to the bemusement of my father who bought my camera, paid for the “From my early times as a schoolboy processing and anticipated lovely pictures!).” photographer I saw things and Artspace, April 27 - June 9 photographed them long before I
Humber to The Wash This June both Ropewalk galleries will be once again devoted to our open art competition, Humber to The Wash. The biennial show draws artists from the region including the counties of East Yorkshire (together with Hull), North Lincolnshire, North East Lincolnshire, Lincolnshire and Norfolk. The two guest selectors who have the unenviable task of deciding which works to include are Ann Wallis and Carol Butler. Ann is the former Head of Development, Yorkshire at Arts Council England and now is the director of Cultural Partners, her own cultural research company. Carol is a practising artist and Vice-President of The Lincolnshire Artists’ Society. There are a number of prizes on offer including the Selector’s Prize of £400 and three runner-up awards of £100 each donated by our sponsors, Grimsby Institute, The Proudfoot Group and Cooke Webster & Co. The show runs throughout the summer from June 15 to September 1. Artists wishing to exhibit can download entry details from our website: www.theropewalk.co.uk
Ropewalk Magazine www.the-ropewalk.co.uk
01652 660380
Norman Ackroyd: Harewood in Autumn
exhibitions
A Sense of Place Some of the country’s foremost printmakers will be showing work in a new exhibition this April. A Sense of Place has been curated by The Ropewalk’s print tutor Tim Needham and features Norman Ackroyd, John Duffin, Paul Hawdon, Trevor Price, Clare Halifax and Hakan Ulusman. Gallery One, April 20 - June 2
Box Gallery
Collection – Simon Shaw
S
imon studied at Wirral College of Art and Design and Braintree College in Essex. After working abroad for several years, he returned to his native Merseyside where he established his own workshop in 1997. His work is mainly thrown using stoneware clay with porcelain, raku clay and glass additions. Barium based glazes give a textured, matt finish using a colour palette of blues, greens and lilacs. Simon’s ceramics can be seen in up to 30 galleries in the UK, including Liverpool’s Bluecoat Display Centre. The work for this show is mainly thrown and then distorted, trying to get a balance between control and chance. May 4 - June 2
April - June 2013
talk
Rich Peppiatt – One Rogue Reporter Gamekeeper turned poacher, or poacher turned gamekeeper? Former tabloid journalist Richard Peppiatt exposes what’s really going on at Britain’s red tops and turns the tables on the editorial glitterati. The red-top renegade delivers a merciless dissection of his former trade, testing the public’s right to know to its side-splitting extremity in an evening of a daring mixture of live stand-up and outrageous video content. Following his sell-out run at the Edinburgh Fringe and London’s Soho Theatre, Rich is taking his controversial assault on the Street of Shame’s finest out on tour – taking on the tabloid bully boys themselves and leaving the likes of Kelvin MacKenzie exposed in more ways than one.
Star proprietor Richard Desmond became a viral sensation last year, Rich’s brutal honesty has made him a regular tabloid commentator on TV and radio.
Rich has appeared twice before the Leveson Inquiry with his searing testimonies making headlines around the world. Since his hilariously withering resignation letter to Daily
Described by the Guardian as “Fleet street’s very own angel of vengeance” Rich twists the knife with an inside view on life before Leveson.
Ropewalk Magazine www.the-ropewalk.co.uk
01652 660380
Coming Soon
theatre
Buy tickets for both shows - £15
A
pril sees two lauded theatre companies appearing at Ropery Hall in two very different productions. Halifax based theatre company Hot Ice Theatre Company will be offering a refreshingly different perspective on the much used saying “It’s grim up North” with the play, The Historians, on Thursday, April 25.
Century including two by John Maddison Morton who Kenneth Tynan described as “better than Feydeau.”
There is more than a hint of Monty Python and The Goons in these four one act plays Wanted A Young Lady, Box and Cox, An Unwarrantable Intrusion and Duel in the Dark. It’s 1991 and from the rugged You’ll see duelling pistols, mistaken outpost of Beacon Hill, Chucker and identity, double-crossing, intoxicaMucker survey the place they’re tion, cross dressing, romance and a shot in the dark. This promises to proud to call home – Halifax, the town of a hundred trades which is be a night of raucous laughter and now the best night out in the North. great fun in a lightning-quick, hilariously entertaining night of VictoThe Historians is a hilarious, moving riania, all played in European Arts and honest exploration of female physically imaginative style. friendship. Both shows start at 7.30pm. Tickets The following evening European for The Historians cost £8 in Arts return with what is described advance or £10 on the door while as an evening of pure pleasure - four tickets to see European Arts cost English one act farces from the 19th £10 in advance or £12 on the door.
The South Bank Players are taking buy one get one free to a higher level in April when they perform three one act plays. The three plays, Figments by Alan Griffiths, Aliens at School by Raymond Blakesley and Ghost Night by John Grange and Peter Vincent are being staged on the evenings of Friday, April 19 and Saturday, April 20. Tickets, costing £5 or £4 for concessions, are available from The Ropewalk or by telephoning the group’s chairman, Dennis Bloor on 01469 531003.
April - June 2013
comedy
Food for thought. maybe!
T
his quarter I am delighted to welcome back three very different acts who all fill the main criteria for me when booking a comedian: the comedy must be born out of intelligent creative ideas. Henning Wehn has positioned himself well on the comedy circuit recently following his radio exposure. Although he is now playing larger venues than Ropery Hall he required no persuasion to come and stand up in front of a Barton audience. Mark Steel is no stranger to Barton either and I am looking forward to the observations he makes about the town. Finally Neil Innes needs no introduction: the musician, comedian and legend brings his new show to Ropery Hall at the end of May.
In a new venture with Cooks of New Holland we present a series of three early evening meals coinciding with these acts. The 6.30pm sitting will guarantee you are finished for the 8pm show and if you let us know you have tickets we will even save you a seat. Henning Wehn: HENNING KNOWS BESTEST German Comedy Ambassador Henning Wehn is a fountain of knowledge. There’s no shortcut to success, hard work will eventually pay off and there is no shame in paying tax. But what he knows bestest is that his comedy shows are a guaranteed success. Either he’s funny or he confirms a national stereotype. It’s a win-win situation. Wunderbar!
10 Ropewalk Magazine www.the-ropewalk.co.uk
01652 660380
Comedy Mark Steel - MARK STEEL’S IN TOWN Following his highly acclaimed, Sony Award winning and Writers Guild Award winning Radio 4 comedy show Mark Steel’s In Town and the publication of a book of the same title, writer and stand-up comedian Mark Steel is back on the road and heading for Ropery Hall. Bringing an element of Mark Steel’s In Town to each live performance means Mark will write material shedding light on the quirkiness and interesting aspects of every town and city he visits, allowing each show to be unique - something local audiences up and down the country will devour and enjoy. Mark is committed to performing a routine about the history of every town he’ll perform in. However, he may regret making this promise! Neil Innes: Another Chance to get it Right Neil performs a wry, poignant, humorous and topical one-man show, spiced with anecdotes of his life and times in the worlds of media and show business. Neil is best known for his collaborative work with Monty Python, The Bonzo Dog Doo Dah Band and The Rutles while his TV shows for BBC2, The Innes Book of Records have become cult classics. Neil’s solo shows tickle the emotions with a potent mix of fine musicianship and enlightened lyricism, packed with sharp observations celebrating the absurdities of modern existence. April 13 Henning Wehn 8pm May 4 Mark Steel 8pm May 24 Neil Innes 8pm
£12/£14 £15/£17 £14/£16
April - June 2013 11
Film Guide
film
April 4
5 Broken Cameras (2011) 15 94 min A documentary on a Palestinian farmer’s chronicle of his non-violent resistance to the actions of the Israeli army Directors: Emad Burnat, Guy Davidi Stars: Emad Burnat, Soraya Burnat, Mohammed Burnat
April 11
In Love with Alma Cogan (2011) 12a 99 min Norman has been the manager of the end of the pier theatre at a quaint English seaside town for forty years. As he battles the bureaucrats who seem set on closing the theatre, the past catches up with him in a manner both amusing and life changing. Stars: Roger Lloyd Pack, Niamh Cusack, Gwyneth Strong, and Keith Barron Director: Tony Britten
April 18
Argo (2012)15 120 min A dramatization of the 1980 joint CIACanadian secret operation to extract six fugitive American diplomatic personnel out of revolutionary Iran. Director: Ben Affleck Stars: Ben Affleck, Bryan Cranston, John Goodman
May 2
Anna Karenina (2012)12a 129 min Set in late-19th-century Russia highsociety, the aristocrat Anna Karenina enters into a life-changing affair with the affluent Count Vronsky. Director: Joe Wright Stars: Keira Knightley, Jude Law, Aaron Taylor-Johnson
May 9
Great Expectations (2012)12a 128 min A humble orphan suddenly becomes a gentleman with the help of an unknown benefactor. Director: Mike Newell Stars: Helena Bonham Carter, Ralph Fiennes, Jeremy Irvine
May 16
Les Misérables (2012)12a 158 min In 19th-century France, Jean Valjean, who for decades has been hunted by the ruthless policeman Javert after he breaks parole, agrees to care for factory worker Fantine’s daughter, Cosette. The fateful decision changes their lives forever. Director: Tom Hooper Stars: Hugh Jackman, Russell Crowe, Anne Hathaway
May 23
Zero Dark Thirty (2012)15 157 min A chronicle of the decade-long hunt for alQaeda terrorist leader Osama bin Laden after the September 2001 attacks, and his death at the hands of the Navy S.E.A.L. Team 6 in May 2011. Director: Kathryn Bigelow Stars: Jessica Chastain, Joel Edgerton, Chris Pratt
12 Ropewalk Magazine www.the-ropewalk.co.uk
01652 660380
film
April - June 2013 13
folk
Saturday Folk
T
he partnership between Ropery Hall and Mad Dog Folk continues this quarter with some quality acts on the last Saturday of the month. We have great young acts Faustus in April, Sam Carter and The Young ’uns in May and finally the not so young Vin Garbutt in June. I am never quite sure whether to put Vin in the music or the comedy section! Vin’s stories and jokes (?) are very much part of his heartfelt performances.
Faustus
supported by Odi Nominated in the 2009 BBC Radio 2 Folk Awards, the Faustus triumvirate are three of the leading lights of English folk music of their generation: Saul Rose (Waterson:Carthy, Whapweazel), Benji Kirkpatrick (Seth Lakeman Band, Bellowhead) and Paul Sartin (Bellowhead, Belshazzar’s Feast).
Specialising in powerful delivery, faultless harmonies, inspired arrangements and a sprinkling of some of the bawdiest songs in the folk canon, they are men on a mission to banish all that is pastoral and fey in the delivery of folk music. Their plethora of experience is brought together in a virtuosic display of musicianship and testosterone. Odi is an Irish female singer/guitar player who is joined by Dave Redfearn on guitar and harmonica. Her voice covers a large range and has a powerful but haunting quality, a wonderful mix of gentle Irish tinged vocals with energetic choruses that gets inside of you and draws you in. She was chosen by Emerging Icons as one of the top acts to represent unsigned music at the 2012 Olympics and Paralympics.
14 Ropewalk Magazine www.the-ropewalk.co.uk
01652 660380
folk craft
Sam Carter / The Young ‘Uns Double bill supported by Beverley Folk Festival
Sam Carter The winner of the BBC Folk Award for Best Newcomer, Sam Carter now delivers his second album. Since he released his debut album Keepsakes in 2009, there has been a mounting excitement around this songwriter, guitarist and singer. The Young ‘uns With bags of charm, talent, and an abiding enthusiasm for traditional song, The Young ’uns are making a huge impact on the UK folk scene. Sean Cooney, David Eagle and Michael Hughes bring freshness and dynamism to their arrangements of close harmony songs, both with and without accompaniment. Everything from traditional sea and working songs to more recent compositions is present in their repertoire and is delivered with originality and flair.
Vin Garbutt
April 27 Faustus Supported by Odi 8pm £12/£14 May 25 Sam Carter / The Young ‘Uns 8pm £10/£12 June 29 Vin Garbutt 8pm £13/£15
It’s now 44 years since the young Vincent Paul Garbutt threw in his job at ICI Wilton and spent an idyllic summer busking around the bars of Spain’s Mediterranean coast before drifting, like all good ‘60s singersongwriters, to Morocco and the hippy trail. Returning to England a fully-formed singer-songwriter of rare wit, insight and political zeal Vin’s 1972 debut album The Valley of Tees set the template for a fourdecade career that still shows no signs of slowing down.
April - June 2013 15
music
Americana and Blues
New music from Mark Keable of mtm promotions Angie Palmer Accompanied by Richard Curran, Angie Palmer is back on the road with a new album due for release at the beginning of 2013. Described by Bob Harris as “one of Britain’s greatest singer-songwriters”, and undoubtedly the uncrowned queen of British Americana, Angie has been compared to Bob Dylan, Joni Mitchell and Lucinda Williams, but is actually like no-one else. Angie is very much an original artist pursuing her own musical and lyrical path.
King King featuring Alan Nimmo Winners of the Best Blues Band Best Blues Album in 2012, the meteoric rise to prominence of British bluesbreakers King King has seen them racking up a host of accolades. Since they began touring three years ago, King King’s unique brand of multi-faceted blues rock has won over audiences as diverse as The Great British Rhythm and Blues Festival, the Edinburgh Jazz and Blues Festival, the internationally acclaimed Belgium Rhythm & Blues Festival in Peer and even Glastonbury. April 12 Angie Palmer 8pm £10/£12 May 3 King King 8pm £10/£12
16 Ropewalk Magazine www.the-ropewalk.co.uk
01652 660380
workshops
Spring Sessions
T
he choice for inspiration is yours in this year’s Spring programme of day workshops here at The Ropewalk.
make a lovely gift or why not buy the workshop to give as a present? Chains will be available for purchase on the day.
From printmaking courses through to silversmithing and how to make a traditional portfolio, our workshops cater for all tastes and disciplines.
June 1 sees the return of Yara Sekiguchi with her silk painting workshop. In this beginners course a 40 x 40cm piece will be produced which can be made into a cushion, bag, picture – in fact, you could turn it into whatever you want.
We also welcome back Yara Sekiguchi with her Silk Painting workshop which proved so popular at the beginning of the year. Printmaker Henrietta Corbett returns in mid-April with a workshop which uses plastic plates to make colourful mono-prints while a week later, on April 20, Grimsby’s Mags Bradley will be leading a workshop which shows how to make a traditional portfolio - perfect for presentations and storage to hold a completed work together which makes a lovely gift or just a fun item. On Saturday, May 18, why not make a hammered silver ring or textured heart pendant under the guidance of jewellery maker Diane Higgins-Lee in this introduction to basic silversmithing. Either would
The final workshop of the current programme is Alice Fox’s Painting with Rust on June 22. In it you will learn about the potential for using rusty objects for printing on paper. Using found items a series of unique prints and marks on paper will be produced. Bring along a small rusty object as a starting point and see what its possibilities are (e.g. washers, nails, a rusty tin can are all ideal). All workshops run from 10.30am to 4.30pm and cost £35 or £32 if you are a Ropewalk member. More details, including the cost of any additional materials which might be required, can be found at www.the-ropewalk. co.uk/workshops
April - June 2013 17
A
D
iary April to June 2013
pril
Until April 14 • Gallery One • 20:20 Print Exchange Until April 21 • Artspace • ERA: Twists and Turns April 20 – June 2 • Gallery One • A Sense of Place
April 27 – June 9 • Artspace • Chris Harland: The Life of Stuff 4
5 Broken Cameras
7.30pm
£4
5
Rich Peppiatt
8pm
£10/£12
11
In Love With Alma Cogan
7.30pm
£4
12
The Three Billy Pigs
11am & 2pm
£4/£3 U16
12
Angie Palmer
8pm
£10/£12
13
Monoprint & Acetate Drawing with Henrietta Corbett
10.30am - 4.30pm
£35/£32
13
Cooks at The Ropewalk
6.30pm & 7pm
£18
13
Henning Wehn
8pm
£12/£14
18
Argo
7.30pm
£4
19 & 20
SBP - 3 Plays in One Night
7.30pm
£5/£4 conc
20
Traditional Portfolio with Mags Bradley
10.30am - 4.30pm
£35/£32
25
The Historians
7.30pm
£8/£10
26
Greek Cuisine @ The Coffee Shop 6.30pm & 7pm
£18
26
Four Farces
7.30pm
£10/£12
27
Faustus
8pm
12/£14
M
ay
Until June 2 • Gallery One • A sense of Place Until June 9 • Artspace • Chris Harland• The Life of Stuff May 4 - June 2 • Box Gallery • Simon Shaw
2
Anna Karenina
7.30pm
£4
Cooks at The Ropewalk
6.30pm & 7pm
£18
3
King King
4
Mark Steel
4 9
Great Expectations
16
Les Misérables
23
Zero Dark Thirty
11
Red Hair Mountain Devils
18
Introduction to Silversmithing with Diane Higgins-Lee
8pm 8pm
7.30pm 8pm
7.30pm
10.30am - 4.30pm
7.30pm
18 Ropewalk Magazine www.the-ropewalk.co.uk
01652 660380
£10/£12 £15/£17 £4
£7.50 £4
£35/£32
£4
craft
M
ay
24
Cooks at The Ropewalk
6.30pm & 7pm
£18
25
Sam Carter/The Young ‘uns
8pm
£10/£12
24
J
Neil Innes
8pm
£14/£16
une
Until June 2 • Box Gallery • Simon Shaw Until June 2• Gallery One • A Sense of Place Until June 9 • Artspace • Chris Harland: The Life of Stuff June 15 - September 1 • All Galleries • Humber to The Wash 1
Silk Painting with Yara Sekiguchi
10.30am - 4.30pm
£35/£32
1
Random Willow Birds with Alison Walling
10.30am - 4.30pm
£35/£32
6
Cooks Pudding Club
7.30pm
£20
8
Glass Lightcatchers with Gill Hobson
10.30am - 4.30pm
£35/£32
15
Drypoint Printmaking with Lindy Norton
10.30am - 4.30pm
£35/£32
22
Printing with Rust with Alice Fox
10.30am - 4.30pm
£35/£32
29
Vin Garbutt
8pm
£13/£15
Key Exhibitions
Workshops
Music
Film
Theatre/Comedy
April - June 2013 19
the ropewalk Directions
We are well signposted from the A15. Just follow the brown signs... Exit the A15 at J.3 and take the A1077 into Barton (Ferriby Road). Turn left at mini roundabout at the bottom of the hill and follow the road round to the next mini roundabout and turn left again. Follow the one-way system through Castledyke West and get in the lefthand lane. Turn left at the junction opposite the railway station, then take the first right off Waterside Road onto Maltkiln Road. For The Ropewalk Galleries turn left into Tesco’s car park where you will find us in the far left corner. There is ample free car parking adjacent to the building. For Ropery Hall, follow the road round to the Waters’ Edge park gates and then left into the car park. Please park at the end of the car park nearest Ropery Hall then walk to the first set of doors at the side of the building. For Sat Nav users please input DN18 5JR which will lead you straight to Waters’ Edge Car Park.
Ropery Hall
The Venue is a small community venue with a capacity of around 120. For small music nights seating is cabaret-style; for all other performances it is theatre-style and seating is not numbered. Please ensure that you arrive in good time if you wish to be seated together. There is a fully licenced bar at all performances. Doors open half an hour before the start of performances.
How To Book
Tickets are available: In Person at The Ropewalk. Open 7 days a week 10am - 5pm (4pm Sundays). By Telephone. Reserve your tickets for 5 days before collection or pay by credit or debit card. (An additional charge of £1 is applied) Online at www.roperyhall.co.uk
The Ropewalk•Maltkiln Road•Barton upon Humber.•North Lincolnshire•DN18 5JT t: 01652 660380•f: 01652 637495•e: info@the-ropewalk.co.uk•www.the-ropewalk.co.uk
The Ropewalk is the trading name for the Waterside Artists’ Co-operative Limited reg no 3820744