Date : Sat 18th August 2018
Time: 12:00 – 15:00
Location: The Women’s Hall Exhibition
Zines are self-published publications with a history rooted in DIY cultures. Join Numbi for two collaborative zine making sessions which will result in the publication of a digital Numbi Zine at the end of our residency.
Date: August 16
Time: 5:00 pm - 7:30 pm
Location: The Women’s Hall Exhibition Tower Hamlets
Numbi Archive is an ongoing, decade-long living archive. Engaging the Archive invites the public to explore the Numbi Mobile Archive and participate in an arts-based exploration of items in the collection.
Date : Sat 18 August 2018
Time: 10:00 – 14:00
Location: The Women’s Hall Exhibition
This walk will take audiences through and around locations that have been the site of innovative, revolutionary and important actions by women from a wide range of backgrounds, which have subsequently been forgotten or erased.
Date : Thu 23 August 2018
Time: 17:00 – 19:30
Location: The Women’s Hall Exhibition
This workshop is a drop-in portraiture session inspired by Malick Sidibe and Seydou Keïta. It will explore and question the Black image in the West, whilst also creating a dialogue through stories, images of self, places and text that form up identity.
Date : Thurs 23 August 2018
Time: 18:00–19:30
Location: The Women’s Hall Exhibition
This workshop will be exploring dream spaces as sites of resistance through creative engagement.
Participants will be guided through meditative exercises as a way to connect to memory of safe, and captivating sounds and imagery, this will be followed by a creative exercises using art materials to capture the essence of the dreaming exercises.
Date : Tues 28th August 2018
Time: 19:00 – 21:00
Location: Richmix
As we begin our design process for Numbi Village in Gambia for 2020 Project this workshop brings in the perfect opportunity to explore some of our key ideas to our Numbi audience.
Date: August 30th
Time: 17:00 – 19:30
Location: The Women’s Hall Exhibition Tower Hamlets
The names and stories of black women are conspicuously absent from the history of East London. Kathleen Wrasama, is one of the few the archive can provide.