Inside out – infinity worlds!

Inside out – infinity worlds!

By SPACE Studios

Join artist Emily Tracy to create a mirrored infinity box filled with your collages and drawings

Date and time

Location

SPACE Ilford

10 Oakfield Road Ilford IG1 1ZJ United Kingdom

Good to know

Highlights

  • 4 hours
  • In person

About this event

Imagine the world inside out. Inspired by the upcoming exhibition by Robert Cervera, create a visualisation of all the messy pipes, cables and wires which flow behind the walls and under the streets and through the technology we use.

Come along to make collage and drawings to put inside a box lined with mirrors. See your artwork multiplied one hundred times in an infinity landscape. Take some photos on your phone to turn your artwork into a digital one.

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Emily Tracy has created socially engaged projects which invite collaboration over many years – including the Ilford Directory billboard commission for SPACE in 2022. Using collage, objects and collaborative research, often inspired by museum or archive ordering systems, she works to create participatory installation, small sculptural pieces, collage and artist books. These often reflect upon our relationship with our surroundings and our changing environment.

She has invited audiences to collect and sort clutter, help reunite lost property, create collage to reflect our roller coaster lives of the last two years, and ask the question ‘What do we hold dear?’ Recent projects have been driven to explore the human desire to know, to find and to collect, and how this relates to our lives and the places we live in.

Emily has created projects for B-Side Festival, University of Leeds, Metal (Peterborough), The Museum of London (Docklands), The British Museum, The Bloomsbury Festival and Up Projects. She likes to create artwork for unusual places. This year she has exhibited her work at That House On Mare Street and at The Portland Bird Observatory.

Organized by

SPACE is London's leading visual arts organisation, supporting artists in a changing urban context since 1968.

Free
Sep 13 · 11:00 AM GMT+1