• Schwitters Spoken Loud and Softly: Florian Kaplick live performance

    Cample Line Cample Mill, Cample, Dumfriesshire Scotland, United Kingdom

    In a special event to mark the closing of Heather Ross’ installation The Loud and the Soft Speakers, musician and performer Florian Kaplick (the main protagonist in Ross’s installation) will give a live performance of Kurt Schwitter’s two most iconic works. This will include a performance of Schwitters’ seminal sound poem The Ursonate (approx 40 mins) and a new interpretation of his famous poem An Anna Blume.

    Free
  • Dorothy Bohm: Colour Photographs

    Avivson Gallery 49 Highgate High Street, London, United Kingdom

    The Avivson Gallery is pleased to announce its next exhibition, a selection of small and exquisite colour prints, many of them images never seen in public before, by doyenne of British photography Dorothy Bohm

  • In conversation: Artist Heather Ross and Performer/Musician Florian Kaplick

    Cample Line Cample Mill, Cample, Dumfriesshire Scotland, United Kingdom

    As part of a closing event to mark the end of Heather Ross’s solo show The Loud and the Soft Speakers the artist will be in conversation with the performer Florian Kaplick. They will discuss how they collaborated on the performance within The Loud and the Soft Speakers, the process undertaken in the development and formation of this work and share their thoughts on how this can be contextualised with respect to the work of Kurt Schwitters.

    Free
  • What Does Woman Want?

    Freud Museum London 20 Maresfield Gardens, London, United Kingdom

    The relation of psychoanalysis, sexuality, and femininity is complex and laden with controversy. From its inception, psychoanalytic thought about female development was largely defined by men. Sabina Spielrein, Anna Freud, Lou Andreas-Salome, and Marie Bonaparte were among the intimate circle of Freud’s Women who challenged the main pillars of the 19th/early 20th century patriarchal social order.

    £8 – £12
  • Great British Jews: A Celebration – Curator talk

    Jewish Museum London Raymond Burton House 129-131 Albert Street, London, United Kingdom

    This playful exhibition celebrates the huge contribution that Jews have made to this country across a variety of cultural, scientific and commercial fields.

    Free
  • The Experience of the Kindertransport – Film Screening & Panel Discussion

    The Laboratory, Dulwich College Dulwich Common, London, United Kingdom

    80 years ago 10,000 children came to Britain as unaccompanied refugees on the Kindertransport from Germany, Austria and Czechoslovakia, escaping Nazi Europe. Following a screening of some extracts of interviews, the panel discussion with two former Kinder, chaired by Dr Bea Lewkowicz, Director of the AJR Refugee Voices Testimony Archive, will explore how the Kinder adapted in Britain and how they dealt with being separated from their families and their homes

    Free – £12
  • Modernist Hampstead Walk

    Hampstead Tube Station Hampstead High Street, London, London, United Kingdom

    Discover the revolutionary Modernist homes and idealistic architecture built in Hampstead in the 1930s

    £9 – £12
  • Insiders/Outsiders

    Charleston Firle, Lewes, East Sussex, United Kingdom

    Monica Bohm-Duchen will discuss the importance of cultural cross-fertilisation with eminent art historian and curator, Norman Rosenthal and novelist Esther Freud

    £16
  • Showcasing Art History: Britain ∩ Europe

    Courtauld Institute of Art, Vernon Square Campus Penton Rise, London, Kings Cross, United Kingdom

    Encounters in Art: Women Émigré Artists: Marie-Louise von Motesiczky, Milein Cosman, Else Meidne

  • Refugees, Newcomers, Citizens: Migration Stories from Picture Post, 1938-56

    Peltz Gallery 43, Gordon Square, London, United Kingdom

    This exhibition brings together for the first time over sixty original prints by renowned émigré photographers Gerti Deutsch and Kurt Hutton, together with Bert Hardy and Haywood Magee, revealing Picture Post magazine’s stories of refugees and immigrants to Britain from the 1930s to the 1950s. 

  • Elman Poole Concert: Egon Wellesz and other Emigrés in 1930s Britain

    Lincoln College, Oxford Turl St, Oxford, United Kingdom

    This concert will feature some of Egon Wellesz’ works, written before and after his emigration, alongside those of fellow emigrées Ferdinand Rauter, Karl Rankl, Hans Gál and Robert Kahn, who all have recently featured in the research and performance project ‘Singing a Song in a Foreign Land’ at the Royal College of Music.

    Free
  • Book Talk: A Small Dark Quiet

    Wiener Library 29 Russell Square, London, United Kingdom

    Miranda Gold​ will be discussing her haunting novel, A Small Dark Quiet​, with ​writer, critic and former deputy director of English PEN​, Catherine Taylor​.

    Free
  • Insiders/Outsiders Talk: Monica Bohm-Duchen

    Five Leaves Bookshop 14a Long Row, Nottingham, United Kingdom

    Refugees from the Nazis and their contribution to British visual culture: a talk by art historian, Monica Bohm-Duchen, the creative director of the Insiders Outsiders Festival

    £3
  • Edith Tudor-Hart, the Bauhaus and Isokon

    Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art 75 Belford Road, Edinburgh, Scotland, United Kingdom

    Leyla Daybelge and Magnus Englund, authors of new publication ‘Isokon and the Bauhaus in Britain’ will speak about Bauhaus graduate Edith Tudor-Hart, her photography of the Isokon building and the émigré community in 1930s London.

  • Celebrating Jewish Architecture – Routemaster Bus Tour

    Jewish Museum London Raymond Burton House 129-131 Albert Street, London, United Kingdom

    Jump on board a classic Routemaster! In this tour with architecture expert Joe Kerr, you will have the chance to see buildings designed by famous Jewish architects whose work was crucial to the rebuilding of twentieth century London

    £30
  • The Social Eye of Picture Post

    Birkbeck Cinema 43 Gordon Square, London, United Kingdom

    Picture Post magazine was the publishing sensation of the 1940s and early 1950s. Founded by anti-Nazi refugee journalists and photographers it blended continental large format photography with British social documentary to produce moving, funny, hard-hiting stories about Britain in times of war and peace. This event will hear from the two co-curators, Professor Amanda Hopkinson and Mike Berlin, about the themes they have explored in the current exhibtion at the Peltz gallery: Refugees, Incomers, Citizens: Migration Stories from Picture Post (4 June-5 July) with Professor Lynda Nead and Professor Steve Edwards in discussion.

    Free