Abstract
Opening 9th May, as part of London Craft Week, London College of Fashion, UAL, presents Footnotes, an exhibition of artist responses to the College’s historic shoe archive hosted throughout Sutton House. The exhibition will, for the first time, reveal objects from London College of Fashion, UAL’s eclectic archive which includes 1930s orthopaedic footwear, silk slippers from the 1800s and even a shoe made for a sheep.
Artists Eelko Moorer, Ellen Sampson, Linda Brothwell and Laila Diallo have produced new works inspired by the remarkable history of the selected shoes revealing new interpretations of historic objects under the guise of five categories – Scale, Balance, Fragility, Singled Out and Common/Uncommon.
The selected shoes will form a trail through the historic east London property, which has 500 years of different period rooms, from 1530s to the 1980s, making it an ideal venue in which to chart the history of the exhibits. Included in the exhibition is a small Victorian girl’s shoe which was found under the floorboards at Sutton House dating back to its time as Eliza Temple’s School of Etiquette for Girls.
The exhibition will be open to the public at Sutton House from 9 May 2018.
Curated by Alison Moloney, from the Centre for Fashion Curation, a research centre based at London College of Fashion, UAL with archive co-curation by Amy de la Haye, and supported using public funding by Arts Council England and sponsored by Kurt Geiger, the exhibition explores the cultural significance of shoes through the artists’ interpretations.
The audience will be encouraged to interact with the exhibition through the responses, which will include a virtual reality experience and the recorded sound of a dance and they will be able to add their own interpretations of the shoes, including a shoe made for a giant.
Alison Moloney, curator and research fellow at London College of Fashion, UAL said: “London College of Fashion’s shoe archive has been compiled to inspire and instruct students in the making and designing of shoes. As objects, the shoes have so many interpretive possibilities for artists because the provenance of each one is unknown.
“Sutton House provides the perfect backdrop to Footnotes because of its own extensive history. Through this exhibition and accompanying programme of workshops and talks, we want to immerse people in the history of the everyday and in shoes as ways to reanimate the past and access personal and shared cultural memories among the audience.”
Christopher Cleeve, House and Gardens Manager at Sutton House, said: “Sutton House is Hackney’s oldest home and it represents a myriad of influences which have made east London such an inspiring place.
“By hosting their ‘Footnotes’ exhibition at Sutton House, London College of Fashion have seamlessly matched their diverse archive of footwear with an equally diverse assortment of democratic, surprising and challenging stories. It has been a joy to see how the universal themes from this collection of shoes interplay with the history of this special place, and we are excited to see how our artists, community groups and visitors respond.”
Neil Clifford, CEO Kurt Geiger said “We’re delighted to continue our partnership with London College of Fashion. At Kurt Geiger we’re committed to giving back through mentoring programs and financial support to develop the next generation of design talent.”
The exhibition will run until September 2018 and will feature an extensive programme of talks and workshops including a dance workshop exploring how shoes inform movement, fairytale readings for children based on shoe stories and archive-based drawing workshops.
Artists Eelko Moorer, Ellen Sampson, Linda Brothwell and Laila Diallo have produced new works inspired by the remarkable history of the selected shoes revealing new interpretations of historic objects under the guise of five categories – Scale, Balance, Fragility, Singled Out and Common/Uncommon.
The selected shoes will form a trail through the historic east London property, which has 500 years of different period rooms, from 1530s to the 1980s, making it an ideal venue in which to chart the history of the exhibits. Included in the exhibition is a small Victorian girl’s shoe which was found under the floorboards at Sutton House dating back to its time as Eliza Temple’s School of Etiquette for Girls.
The exhibition will be open to the public at Sutton House from 9 May 2018.
Curated by Alison Moloney, from the Centre for Fashion Curation, a research centre based at London College of Fashion, UAL with archive co-curation by Amy de la Haye, and supported using public funding by Arts Council England and sponsored by Kurt Geiger, the exhibition explores the cultural significance of shoes through the artists’ interpretations.
The audience will be encouraged to interact with the exhibition through the responses, which will include a virtual reality experience and the recorded sound of a dance and they will be able to add their own interpretations of the shoes, including a shoe made for a giant.
Alison Moloney, curator and research fellow at London College of Fashion, UAL said: “London College of Fashion’s shoe archive has been compiled to inspire and instruct students in the making and designing of shoes. As objects, the shoes have so many interpretive possibilities for artists because the provenance of each one is unknown.
“Sutton House provides the perfect backdrop to Footnotes because of its own extensive history. Through this exhibition and accompanying programme of workshops and talks, we want to immerse people in the history of the everyday and in shoes as ways to reanimate the past and access personal and shared cultural memories among the audience.”
Christopher Cleeve, House and Gardens Manager at Sutton House, said: “Sutton House is Hackney’s oldest home and it represents a myriad of influences which have made east London such an inspiring place.
“By hosting their ‘Footnotes’ exhibition at Sutton House, London College of Fashion have seamlessly matched their diverse archive of footwear with an equally diverse assortment of democratic, surprising and challenging stories. It has been a joy to see how the universal themes from this collection of shoes interplay with the history of this special place, and we are excited to see how our artists, community groups and visitors respond.”
Neil Clifford, CEO Kurt Geiger said “We’re delighted to continue our partnership with London College of Fashion. At Kurt Geiger we’re committed to giving back through mentoring programs and financial support to develop the next generation of design talent.”
The exhibition will run until September 2018 and will feature an extensive programme of talks and workshops including a dance workshop exploring how shoes inform movement, fairytale readings for children based on shoe stories and archive-based drawing workshops.
Original language | English |
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Publication status | Published - 2018 |
Externally published | Yes |