Horace Lindezey + The Making Rooms

We Are Gathered Here Together, 2024

We Are Gathered Here Together is rooted in occasion and ceremony; from the dates we were born and the celebration of marriage, to the day we die. The exhibition, which presents brand new work alongside some of the artist’s most popular pieces, takes visitors on a journey through these “special occasional days”.

Lindezey has explored the use of digital technologies at The Making Rooms, allowing him to create work on a larger scale and at greater speed. Though aided by machinery, the work remains highly personal and hand-making features throughout, with elements also worked by hand at the Venture Arts studio.

Conversation forms a central part of Lindezey’s practice, and has remained so throughout this residency. From those he’s chatted with passing through The Making Rooms, to his journeys from Manchester to Blackburn on the train, the people he’s met have shaped the work.

Split into three parts, one area of the exhibition focuses on ‘births’, with a list of the names of people he has interacted with, the year they were born, and an iconic song released that year – specific knowledge Lindezey holds. In ‘marriages’, a huge wedding table is set for 24 iconic guests, inspired by Lindezey’s fond memories of watching TV. Finally, in a space representing the experience of a funeral ceremony, approximately 60 of the artist’s iconic blue plaques can be found in a reflective space – whilst in stark contrast to the rest of the show, the pieces remain witty and engaging.

You are invited to enter Lindezey’s world, through music, personal expressions, and his unique perspective on connecting people, time and place.

This residency has been supported by Caroline Tattersall, Venture Arts Ceramics Facilitator and Artist Support and Kim Stuttard, Creative Alliance Intern at The Making Rooms.

With thanks to: Jacenta Sellars, Ali Ellis, Laura Nathan and Louisa Hammond from Venture Arts; Clay Studios for donating studio and kiln hire; Mollies contemporary art collection for loaning 8 blue plaques; Wedgewood Ceramics for donating bisque fired plates; Torrecid for donating glazes and everyone who took part in porcelain flower making workshops.

“I enjoyed meeting Kim, she’s a lovely lady, I enjoyed getting the train and working with Caroline Tattersall and talking about weddings. I talked to Emma, she was born the same year as Miley Cyrus… Smiley Miley.”

Horace Lindezey

“We cherish opportunities to see our facility through a different perspective and Art In Manufacturing has been a great lens to reflect on our practice. Participating in the programme this year has renewed our efforts to bring creative technologies to as diverse an audience as possible.”

Thomas Macpherson-Pope, Director, The Making Rooms

Artist

Horace Lindezey has been a practising artist and maker at Venture Arts in Manchester for over 30 years, working predominantly in ceramics and textiles. After exhibiting in the 2023 National Festival of Making in the group show, YESS LAD, Lindezey, was commissioned to return this year with his first solo exhibition.

Manufacturer

​​The Making Rooms is a place where creativity, technology and advanced manufacturing come together in a community facility for use by artists, inventors, students, children and just about everyone else to design and make anything from high-tech products and gadgets to toys, artworks, home decorations and accessibility devices.

Venture Arts

Venture Arts is an award-winning visual arts organisation in Manchester, working with learning disabled artists. Through their studio programmes, exhibitions and collaborative projects, they remove barriers to the arts. They put artists in the lead; they champion neurodiversity and provide pathways for every individual to develop their creative identity.

Website

 

“Working in The Making Rooms was very different to working in the studio at Venture Arts. There was lots more space and opportunity to create work on mass and larger scale work. Using the machinery meant that Horace could produce work at speed thus creating more impact in the show. Horace was able to try most of the machinery and with some guidance create personal work using a font created using his handwriting.”

Venture Arts

 

Photography by Emma Colbert-Mooring, Jack Bolton,  Jules Lister and Robin Zahler.

Art in Manufacturing is supported by

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