Conversations: racial justice and faith through contemporary art

£0.00

Free event

In partnership with the Diocese of Liverpool, Liverpool Cathedral and the Walker Art Gallery

Join us for a 1 hr reflective event online in the evening following the afternoon in-person session in the gallery. To familiarise yourself with the exhibition, you can view all of the works and read about the artists here:

liverpool-museums.shorthandstories.com/conversations

The exhibition ‘Conversations’ brings together work by 40 leading Black women and non-binary artists. This is an opportunity to elicit dialogue and conversations around the issues of racial justice with participants drawn from faith communities in the north west and beyond.

The events will ask questions about

  • how we can be more inclusive in our use of images in churches and cathedrals;

  • how images produced by Black women and non-binary artists speak to values and beliefs in today’s society;

  • why and how contemporary art can be used in the process of re-framing the dominant narratives implicit in our colonial past, as it pertains to both secular and faith communities.

The event will be hosted and led by Laura Moffatt (Director of Art and Christianity), Rev’d Dr Ayla Lepine (trustee of A+C and member of the Archbishop’s Council‘s Contested Heritage committee), Jennie Taylor (Diocese of Liverpool, Racial Justice Officer), Canon Dr Ellen Loudon (Liverpool Cathedral).

Funded by the Racial Justice Unit of the Church of England

Image: Lakwena Maciver, Nothing Can Separate Us, 2022. Photo © Pete Carr

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Free event

In partnership with the Diocese of Liverpool, Liverpool Cathedral and the Walker Art Gallery

Join us for a 1 hr reflective event online in the evening following the afternoon in-person session in the gallery. To familiarise yourself with the exhibition, you can view all of the works and read about the artists here:

liverpool-museums.shorthandstories.com/conversations

The exhibition ‘Conversations’ brings together work by 40 leading Black women and non-binary artists. This is an opportunity to elicit dialogue and conversations around the issues of racial justice with participants drawn from faith communities in the north west and beyond.

The events will ask questions about

  • how we can be more inclusive in our use of images in churches and cathedrals;

  • how images produced by Black women and non-binary artists speak to values and beliefs in today’s society;

  • why and how contemporary art can be used in the process of re-framing the dominant narratives implicit in our colonial past, as it pertains to both secular and faith communities.

The event will be hosted and led by Laura Moffatt (Director of Art and Christianity), Rev’d Dr Ayla Lepine (trustee of A+C and member of the Archbishop’s Council‘s Contested Heritage committee), Jennie Taylor (Diocese of Liverpool, Racial Justice Officer), Canon Dr Ellen Loudon (Liverpool Cathedral).

Funded by the Racial Justice Unit of the Church of England

Image: Lakwena Maciver, Nothing Can Separate Us, 2022. Photo © Pete Carr

Free event

In partnership with the Diocese of Liverpool, Liverpool Cathedral and the Walker Art Gallery

Join us for a 1 hr reflective event online in the evening following the afternoon in-person session in the gallery. To familiarise yourself with the exhibition, you can view all of the works and read about the artists here:

liverpool-museums.shorthandstories.com/conversations

The exhibition ‘Conversations’ brings together work by 40 leading Black women and non-binary artists. This is an opportunity to elicit dialogue and conversations around the issues of racial justice with participants drawn from faith communities in the north west and beyond.

The events will ask questions about

  • how we can be more inclusive in our use of images in churches and cathedrals;

  • how images produced by Black women and non-binary artists speak to values and beliefs in today’s society;

  • why and how contemporary art can be used in the process of re-framing the dominant narratives implicit in our colonial past, as it pertains to both secular and faith communities.

The event will be hosted and led by Laura Moffatt (Director of Art and Christianity), Rev’d Dr Ayla Lepine (trustee of A+C and member of the Archbishop’s Council‘s Contested Heritage committee), Jennie Taylor (Diocese of Liverpool, Racial Justice Officer), Canon Dr Ellen Loudon (Liverpool Cathedral).

Funded by the Racial Justice Unit of the Church of England

Image: Lakwena Maciver, Nothing Can Separate Us, 2022. Photo © Pete Carr

Picture: Nothing Can Separate Us by Lakwena Maciver. Courtesy of the artist

Cotton and screenprint patchwork and appliqué, 2022

Maciver is known for her kaleidoscopic text-based paintings and public realm works. ‘Nothing can separate us’ is a recurring phrase in her work, appearing in a 2021 rooftop mural at Temple Underground station, London, as well as prints and paintings.

The artist says: ‘I made the original painting for my home just before the first COVID lockdown. The phrase, which comes from the Book of Romans, appealed to me as I was thinking about connections between people and not wanting to be separated from others, but also about a deeper, more solid connection with a higher power.’

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