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The Whitechapel Gallery is committed to making all of our events as accessible as possible for every audience member. Please contact community@whitechapelgallery.org if you would like to discuss any requests or requirements, and we will gladly help to accommodate. Further information about access at the Gallery is available here.
About This Event
– This event takes place online only, and you need a Zoom account to participate. This is free, and you can sign up here: https://zoom.us/freesignup/
– This event is suitable for those over the age of 16.
– The text is available in Large Print format, and we can also provide an audio version with sufficient notice. If you require this, please contact us one week in advance.
– We can provide British Sign Language interpretation or live closed captioning for this event with sufficient notice – if you require interpretation, please contact us as soon as possible, and no later than two weeks before the event so that we can hire an interpreter.
– If you use a screen reader, we can send visual material to you in advance with sufficient notice. If you require this, please contact us one week in advance.
– This event will last 2 hours, and we will schedule a comfort break in the middle.
This information will be updated where required.
Led by Idil Hassan, this session looks at the practice of journaling and its role in making sense of our place in the world. Through structured discussion and some practical exercises, the workshop will present ideas for starting or maintaining a journal. We will explore the radical potential of journaling as a method for documentation during times of social upheaval, as a tool for radical self-acceptance, and as a means for unblocking other creative practices.
This event is free, but spaces are limited and booking is required. This event will take place on Zoom; attendees will be sent a link, text and guidelines ahead of the event.
Whitechapel Gallery with NUMBI: Postcards from the Diaspora
A series of readings and workshops curated by Kinsi Abdulleh, artist and co-director of NUMBI, a Somali-originated African-centred arts and heritage organisation. Sessions are led by black womxn and gender non-conforming artists, writers and thinkers engaging with language, decolonisation, intersectionality and diasporic thinking.
People of all genders, sexualities, faiths and ethnicities are welcome.
Texts are provided in advance, with large-print versions available. An audio recording of each text is available upon request. If you have questions or requirements concerning access and inclusivity during these events, contact us on community@whitechapelgallery.org.
Idil Hassan is the Project Co-ordinator for Numbi Arts and a member of the Somali Museum team. Her artistic practice encompasses hair dressing and poetry, the only criteria being that she is making work she feels called to create.