
Workshops & Courses
Text and Image: Creative Workshop with Artist and Activist, Rudy Loewe
Through mark making and collage, explore how text and image can work together to make art. With Rudy Loewe, artist and activist.
During the session, visual artist Rudy Loewe invites participants to use drawing and collage to think about how text and image can work together to make art. Through a series of prompts, we will make space for playfulness and visual storytelling, seeing what happens when words and pictures come together.
£3 covers cost of materials.
Image credit: Lo River Lööf
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This workshop is part of a wider project in Devon produced by Ella S. Mills of talking on corners focused on the work of Ingrid Pollard with a varied programme of activity, including Three Drops of Blood, an exhibition of new work at THG (Thelma Hubert Gallery). For full details of the programme, please visit THG website.
In addition to Libraries Unlimited, project partners include Devon and Exeter Institution, The University of Exeter, Natural England, South Devon College and the University of Plymouth. In addition to the partners and funding from Arts Council England, the project is generously supported by the University of Exeter’s Geography Department, the Association for Art History, the Paul Mellon Centre, LewisDavey, and Kaleider.
£3 covers cost of materials.
Image credit: Lo River Lööf
---
This workshop is part of a wider project in Devon produced by Ella S. Mills of talking on corners focused on the work of Ingrid Pollard with a varied programme of activity, including Three Drops of Blood, an exhibition of new work at THG (Thelma Hubert Gallery). For full details of the programme, please visit THG website.
In addition to Libraries Unlimited, project partners include Devon and Exeter Institution, The University of Exeter, Natural England, South Devon College and the University of Plymouth. In addition to the partners and funding from Arts Council England, the project is generously supported by the University of Exeter’s Geography Department, the Association for Art History, the Paul Mellon Centre, LewisDavey, and Kaleider.

CREDIT