Audio Described Tour: Making New Worlds: Li Yuan-chia & Friends
Thursday 1 February 2024, 10–11.30am
Join us for an audio described tour of Making New Worlds: Li Yuan-chia & Friends. This tour is suitable for blind and visually impaired visitors. The tour is delivered in person, by members of the Kettle’s Yard Learning team and will include time within the exhibition spaces.
Discover the pioneering vision of artist Li Yuan-Chia (1929 – 1994) and the LYC Museum & Art Gallery which he founded and ran between 1972 and 1983 in the Cumbrian Village of Banks, alongside Hadrian’s Wall. Explore the profound impact he had on British art in this gathering of local and international artists, working across art forms.
To find out more or to book, call the University of Cambridge Museums team on 01223 761067 or email info@museums.cam.ac.uk.
About the Tour
- On arrival, please go to the Kettle’s Yard welcome desk for 10am.
- The welcome desk is immediately after the main entrance, located off Castle Street, by the café and shop, seating is available.
- The audio-described tour will begin at 10am and will last approximately 1 hour 30 minutes.
- Following the tour you are welcome to visit the café, located in the welcome area at Kettle’s Yard.
- Guide and assistance dogs are welcome. Please let us know in advance if you plan to bring one.
- There are 6 places available per tour, plus a space for one companion each if you would like someone to come along with you.
- If you require any other support, or have any other access requirements for this tour, please contact Helen Creber on schoolbookings@kettlesyard.cam.ac.uk or call 01223 748 703.
About Making New Worlds: Li Yuan-chia & Friends
The exhibition retraces Li’s commitment to fostering creativity, his interest in play and his investment in new ways of being in the world. Through the LYC, Li showcased Roman artefacts, works by major figures of British modernism, local artists and contemporary practices including kineticism, land art and video. The LYC’s children’s room provided a place for young people to experiment with art making, while craft workshops played host to communities of making. Much like Kettle’s Yard, the LYC also had a library, a garden, and spaces to socialise, transforming how we encounter art.
The exhibition puts the LYC into conversation with Kettle’s Yard. Both projects evolved over time, with collections (in the case of Kettle’s Yard) and exhibitions (in the case of the LYC) being shaped through friendships and personal affiliations, including with the artist Winifred Nicholson, who was an important presence at both the LYC and Kettle’s Yard.
Li’s practice – as both artist and organiser – is at the centre of the exhibition, along with those artists he exhibited at the LYC and those who were part of the cosmopolitan networks he enabled and enriched. Making New Worlds will also include works by contemporary artists reflecting on the afterlives of Li’s work in the present.
Making New Worlds: Li Yuan-chia and Friends has developed in partnership between Kettle’s Yard, University of Cambridge and the Paul Mellon Centre for Studies in British Art as part of its ‘London, Asia’ project, and is accompanied by a new publication produced by Kettle’s Yard and supported by Paul Mellon Centre.
It is co-curated by Hammad Nasar (Curator, Strategic advisor and Senior Research Fellow at the Paul Mellon Centre), Sarah Victoria Turner (Director of the Paul Mellon Centre) and Amy Tobin (Curator, contemporary programmes, Kettle’s Yard).
Find out more about Making New Worlds: Li Yuan-chia & Friends
Access
- The galleries, where exhibitions are shown, and all areas of the Clore Learning Studio (level -1), the Research Space (level 1) and the Ede Room (level 2) are fully accessible.
- We have wheelchair accessible toilets on the lower ground (level -1), ground and first floor (level 1).
- There is a lift giving access to all floors located past the galleries, just beside the Clore Learning Studio on the ground floor.
- Kettle’s Yard welcomes assistance and service dogs in all areas.
- We have large-print versions of the wall text available.
- We can lend visitors small folding seats for taking around exhibitions or using at non-seated events. Please ask a Visitor Assistant for help finding a seat.