Art in Manufacturing: Penelope Payne + Haworth Art Gallery

Event Details

Saturday

11am – 5pm

Sunday

11am – 5pm

Age

All ages

Venue

Coming soon

How to Attend

Drop in

Price

Free

Penelope Payne’s artistic practice explores social history, with a focus on female narratives and the often overlooked or unrecorded histories of the working-class and ‘women’s work’.

From her studio in Cullercoats, North Tyneside, she creates sculptural works, site-specific installations, and performative moments, often situated in non-gallery settings where the history of place becomes integral to the work. ⁠For this Art in Manufacturing Co-Commission, Payne is in residence with Haworth Art Gallery in Accrington. A Grade II listed building and a country style Arts and Crafts house, Haworth Art Gallery is itself a place of making, with a history connected to cotton manufacturing and a unique connection to Tiffany Glass. ⁠

In response to time spent with the Gallery, and in conversation with its team, volunteers, and Youth Panel, Payne is developing a new work exploring the historic domestic setting as a lens for examining how personal stories, social structures, and inherited values shape one another over time. The work will be presented at the National Festival of Making in July and at Haworth Art Gallery in August.⁠

This Project is a Co-Commission with Haworth Art Gallery⁠.⁠

Read more about Art in Manufacturing Season 8 here.

About Penelope Payne

Penelope Payne’s artistic practice is rooted in the exploration of social history. She explores female narratives, particularly the often overlooked and unrecorded stories of the working class and ‘women’s work’. From her studio in Cullercoats, North Tyneside, she creates sculptural pieces, site-specific installations, and performative moments. Works are often situated within non-gallery settings using the history of place to layer the work with significance. She has been the curator of the North East Open Call since 2023. 

Payne’s Horizons Performance (2022) explored the female condition through the lens of place with a historical representation of the fish wife community. Filmed on Cullercoats Beach, the work features over 60 volunteers who, at sunrise, obscure the horizon with hand-sewn banners. The performance became a significant moment in the history of Cullercoats. It was covered by the BBC and went on to be featured on Bloomberg Connects and as part of the National Gallery lecture programme. The banners were integrated into Sonia’s Boyce’s work In The Castle of My Skin, MIMA and at The Factory, Iceland.

About Haworth Art Gallery

A Grade II listed building, Haworth Art Gallery is a country style Arts and Crafts house. The gallery is best known for its collection of Tiffany Glass, and also houses a permanent collection of fine art and hosts a range of temporary exhibitions throughout the year. Located in Accrington, Haworth Art Gallery is itself a place of making, with a history connected to cotton manufacturing as well as its unique connection to Tiffany Glass.