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X-WR-CALDESC:Events for CAMPLE LINE
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20200910T193000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20200910T203000
DTSTAMP:20260517T152208
CREATED:20200829T073259Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200908T212908Z
UID:7786-1599766200-1599769800@campleline.org.uk
SUMMARY:David Borthwick on walking\, access and accessibility
DESCRIPTION:Join us for a talk by David Borthwick on walking\, access and accessibility\nWalking as practice\nDr David Borthwick\n7.30pm\nOnline\, free\nBook here \n \nReflecting on Helen Mirra’s Acts for placing woollen and linen\, Dr David Borthwick discusses walking as a practice and draws on wider recent writing.  He also discusses the assumptions that can lie behind walking practices\, and the questions these raise concerning access and accessibility. \nDr David Borthwick is a Lecturer in the School of Interdisciplinary Studies\, University of Glasgow. David’s research concerns modern and contemporary literary responses to the environment\, at present focusing on poetic responses to landscape and place. David is interested in the ecopoetic strategies of a range of contemporary UK poets including John Burnside\, Kathleen Jamie\, Alice Oswald and Robin Robertson. \nThis event will take place on Zoom. Details will be emailed on confirmation of booking.
URL:https://campleline.org.uk/event/david-borthwick-on-walking-access-and-accessibility/
CATEGORIES:Summer 2020
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20200828T183000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20200830T183000
DTSTAMP:20260517T152208
CREATED:20200820T121157Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200820T121306Z
UID:7753-1598639400-1598812200@campleline.org.uk
SUMMARY:Talking about trees - available to screen at home
DESCRIPTION:2019\, Sudan / France / Germany / Chad / Qatar \n\n\n\n\nDirected by Suhaib Gasmelbari\n94mins\, English\, Cert PG\, Arabic with English subtitles\nSDH subtitles available \n\n\n\n\n\nTickets – Free | £2 | £3.50 | £5 \nBook here\nSee our ticket scale here \n28 – 30 August: available to watch online (UK only)\nFriday 28 August\, 6.30pm: communal viewing\nFriday 28 August\, 8:30pm: live online discussion \n\n\n\n\n \nIbrahim\, Manar\, Suleiman and Altayeb are the members of the Sudanese Film Club founded in 1989. Unable to make films for years\, they have decided to revive an old cinema. They are united by their love of cinema\, their passionate desire to restore old films and draw attention to Sudanese film history\, and also by the fact that they all experienced a film education outside Sudan. \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nTheir plans to renovate the outdoor cinema come up against bureaucracy\, lack of cash and a general fear of upsetting the government. \nIn the meantime\, they sit together and talk about the past and the history of Sudanese cinema\, including their experiences of persecution as oppositional artists. They recall their times of exile and dream of a Sudan in which art and intellectual thought can be free. \n\nThis screening of Talking About Trees is part of Film FeelsConnected\, a UK-wide cinema season\, supported by the National Lottery and BFI Film Audience Network.  Explore all films and events at filmfeels.co.uk
URL:https://campleline.org.uk/event/available-to-screen-talking-about-trees/
CATEGORIES:Summer 2020
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20200826T190000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20200826T203000
DTSTAMP:20260517T152208
CREATED:20200717T074400Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200717T074400Z
UID:7237-1598468400-1598473800@campleline.org.uk
SUMMARY:Our Next Read #19
DESCRIPTION:Our Book Group has moved online for the time being! \nOur next catch-up:\nWeds 26 August\, 7-8.30pm\non Zoom \n \n  \nOur next read: Jenny Offill\, Weather (2020\, Granta\, 224pp) \nLizzie Benson slid into her job as a librarian without a traditional degree. But this gives her a vantage point from which to practise her other calling: as an unofficial shrink. For years\, she has supported her God-haunted mother and her recovering addict brother. They have both stabilized for the moment\, but then her old mentor\, Sylvia Liller\, makes a proposal. Sylvia has become famous for her prescient podcast\, Hell and High Water\, and wants to hire Lizzie to answer the mail she receives: from left-wingers worried about climate change and right wingers worried about the decline of western civilisation. As she dives into this polarized world\, she begins to wonder what it means to keep tending your own garden once you’ve seen the flames beyond its walls. When her brother becomes a father and Sylvia a recluse\, Lizzie is forced to acknowledge the limits of what she can do. But if she can’t save others\, then what\, or who\, might save her? \nIf you would like to participate\, but Wednesday 26 August is not possible for you\, then please also be in touch – info@campleline.org.uk
URL:https://campleline.org.uk/event/our-next-read-19/
CATEGORIES:Summer 2020
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20200818T183000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20200818T200000
DTSTAMP:20260517T152208
CREATED:20200804T095918Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200811T094914Z
UID:7548-1597775400-1597780800@campleline.org.uk
SUMMARY:Open Book Session  Creative Writing with Marjorie Lotfi Gill
DESCRIPTION:Creative Writing with Marjorie Lotfi Gill\nFree online workshop\n10 places available\nBook here \n \nThis August we are delighted to be partnering with Open Book for a shared reading and creative writing workshop led by poet Marjorie Lotfi Gill. \nTogether you will read and discuss passages of fiction and poetry thematically linked to Helen Mirra’s exhibition Acts for placing woollen and linen at CAMPLE LINE\, then try your hand at creative writing in response. \nNo prior reading\, experience or expertise necessary. \nMarjorie Lotfi Gill is a poet and a facilitator of creative writing. She founded and runs Open Book\, which promotes reading groups for the vulnerable and for adults in the community and is the current Chair of Trustees for the Wigtown Book Festival.
URL:https://campleline.org.uk/event/open-book-session-creative-writing-with-marjorie-lotfi-gill/
LOCATION:Cample Line\, Thornhill\, DG3 4XX\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:Summer 2020
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20200731T183000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20200802T183000
DTSTAMP:20260517T152208
CREATED:20200716T153552Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200722T140212Z
UID:7227-1596220200-1596393000@campleline.org.uk
SUMMARY:Available to screen - Sleep Furiously
DESCRIPTION:2008\, UK\,  1hr  34mins\, English\, Cert U\nDirected by Gideon Koppel\nSDH subtitles available \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n  \nTickets – Free | £2 | £3.50 | £5\nPre-book here\nSee our ticket scale here \n31 July – 2 August: available to watch online\nFriday 31 July\, 6.30pm: communal viewing\nFriday 31 July\, 8:30pm: live Q&A with director Gideon Koppel\, hosted by filmmaker Margaret Salmon \n\n\n\nGideon Koppel’s documentary offers a meditative study of the rhythms of life in a small farming community in mid-Wales\, one to which Koppel has a long and personal connection. \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nOf the film Koppel has said ‘In a farming community\, seasonal change and cyclical movements are very much part of life\, in quite a visceral and practical way – much more so than measurements of time. So while filming\, ritual\, rhythm and cyclical movements were important to me and it was then a question of finding ways to translate those sensitivities to pictures and sounds.’ \nThe film also depicts a way of life that is changing — the local school is about to close\, bus services have been withdrawn\, mechanisation is replacing the old ways\, congregations are dwindling. Wider patterns of change point to uncertain futures for remote communities such as Trefeurig\, but at no point does the film lose sight of the quiet power of individual encounters and routines\, as we follow John Jones\, for instance\, patiently driving his mobile library through the village lanes. \nPlease join us for a live Q&A with Gideon\, hosted by filmmaker Margaret Salmon\, on Friday 31 July at 8:30pm.
URL:https://campleline.org.uk/event/available-to-stream-sleep-furiously/
CATEGORIES:Summer 2020
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20200715T190000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20200715T203000
DTSTAMP:20260517T152208
CREATED:20200614T095812Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200628T125419Z
UID:6632-1594839600-1594845000@campleline.org.uk
SUMMARY:Our Next Read #18
DESCRIPTION:Our Book Group has moved online for the time being!\n\nOur next catch-up:\nWeds 15 July\, 7-8.30pm\non Zoom \nOur next read:\nElin Willows Inlands (2020\, Nordisk Books\, 240 pages\, paperback\, translated by Duncan J Lewis from Swedish) \nA young woman from Stockholm moves to her boyfriend and his home town\, a small village in the inlands far north. The relationship has ended by the time they arrive there. Nevertheless she starts working at the local store\, and finds herself staying in the village for reasons she cannot quite understand. Slowly she works her way into this new place\, and the place works its way into her. The new community has different\, unwritten codes. You leave your door unlocked\, get drunk at the Hotel on Saturdays\, drive on the ice in your car. \nInlands is a radiant story about loss and change\, written in a stripped-down\, precise language. Willows examines the tangible mechanics of everyday life in a small community and the relationship between freedom and loneliness. The surroundings and wilderness remains a constant presence\, reflecting the inner landscape of the characters. \nIf you would like to participate\, but Wednesday 15 July is not possible for you\, then please also be in touch – info@campleline.org.uk
URL:https://campleline.org.uk/event/our-next-readelin-willows-inlands-2020-240-pages/
CATEGORIES:Summer 2020
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20200705T183000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20200712T183000
DTSTAMP:20260517T152208
CREATED:20200611T210718Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200611T210745Z
UID:6520-1593973800-1594578600@campleline.org.uk
SUMMARY:Available to stream - A Magical Substance Flows Into Me (2016)
DESCRIPTION:Available for streaming from our website is Jumana Manna\, A Magical Substance Flows Into Me (2016\, Israel/Palestine\, 66mins\, Arabic with English subtitles & SDH subtitles for d/Deaf and Hard of Hearing) \n\n– 5-12 July: available for streaming\n– Sunday 5 July\, 6.30pm: communal viewing\n– Sunday 5 July\, 8pm: live online discussion via Crowdcast\n– Sliding Scale ticket price – please click for details\n– Password to access the film and discussion will be emailed to you\n– Due to licensing limitations\, this film is available to stream in the UK only \nProceeds from this screening will be donated to Stephen Lawrence Charitable Trust and Show Racism the Red Card Scotland \nA Magical Substance Flows Into Me weaves through musical traditions of various communities living in and around Jerusalem. Jumana Manna took as her starting point German-Jewish ethnomusicologist Robert Lachmann’s field recordings of ‘Oriental’ groups in Palestine in the 1930s and his Oriental Music radio series made for the Palestinian Broadcasting Service (1920-1948). In the film we follow Manna as she revisits the communities that Lachmann studied – including Kurdish\, Moroccan\, and Yemenite Jews\, Samaritans\, members of urban and rural Palestinian communities\, Bedouins and Coptic Christians. Over the course of her travels she visits homes\, offices\, recording studios\, and places of worship\, replaying Lachmann’s recordings and makes new recordings of her own. Interspersed with these are scenes from her own family home in East Jerusalem. \nVideo still from A Magical Substance Flows into Me\, 2016\, HD video\, 66 min. Co-commissioned by the Sharjah Art Foundation and Chisenhale Gallery with Malmö Konsthall and the Biennale of Sydney. Courtesy of Jumana Manna.
URL:https://campleline.org.uk/event/available-to-stream-a-magical-substance-flows-into-me-2016/
CATEGORIES:Summer 2020
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20200510T183000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20200510T203000
DTSTAMP:20260517T152208
CREATED:20200417T134032Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200417T134032Z
UID:5805-1589135400-1589142600@campleline.org.uk
SUMMARY:Online screening and discussion  Willow and Wind (2000)
DESCRIPTION:Willow and Wind (2000\, Iran\, 1hr 21 mins\, Persian with English subtitles) cert PG\nDirected by Mohammad Ali Talebi\n10-17 May: available for streaming\nSunday 10 May\, 6.30pm: communal viewing\nSunday 10 May\, 8.30pm: live online discussion via Crowdcast\n£4 per household | You can book through Eventbrite or with us directly\nFull details on how to access the film and discussion will be made available closer to the time. \n \nWe are delighted to be able to make Mohammed-Ali Talebi’s beautiful film Willow and Wind available online for one week\, beginning Sunday 10 May.  Written by Abbas Kiarostami\, a fellow Iranian filmmaker\, Willow and Wind is a hypnotic and evanescent film directed by Talebi (b. 1958)\,  and one of a number of films he has made that focus on children and their worlds. This film begins in a maths class; one of the classroom windows is broken and the children cannot concentrate because the rain is getting in. The culprit is not allowed to return to class until he mends the window\, so he embarks on a painstaking journey to transport a pane of glass across the countryside through a howling gale.
URL:https://campleline.org.uk/event/online-screening-and-discussion-willow-and-wind-2000/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20200430
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20200501
DTSTAMP:20260517T152208
CREATED:20200417T133622Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200417T140332Z
UID:5784-1588204800-1588291199@campleline.org.uk
SUMMARY:Online writing project and workshop  with Victoria Miguel
DESCRIPTION:After John Cage: ‘Writing through’ Carlyle and Emerson\nA writing project and workshop with writer Victoria Miguel \nJohn Cage\, excerpt from Writings through the Essay\, On the Duty of Civil Disobedience\, courtesy of the John Cage Trust\nThursday 30 April (online workshop) and throughout May\nWorkshop timing to be confirmed with participants\nFree | Please be in touch with us directly to book \nThis spring\, we invite you to participate in a writing project and workshop with Victoria Miguel\, a writer and specialist in the work of artist and composer John Cage\, which explores Cage’s method of ‘writing through\,’ drawing on letters exchanged between the celebrated Scottish author and essayist Thomas Carlyle and the American writer Ralph Waldo Emerson. \nTheir life-long correspondence began following a visit Emerson made to Carlyle’s home in Craigenputtock\, Dunscore\, Dumfriesshire in August 1833\, and it influenced fellow writer Henry David Thoreau\, who wrote about Carlyle (and briefly about the Dumfriesshire landscape) whilst famously staying on Walden Pond on land owned by Emerson. \nJohn Cage returned repeatedly to the writings of Henry David Thoreau as a source for his practice of ‘writing through\,’ and Helen Mirra has in turn drawn on Cage’s indeterminate approach and his focus on the everyday in her own work. \nBeginning with an online workshop led by Victoria\, you will explore some of John Cage’s writing techniques\, focusing in particular on his use of chance and ‘writing through.’ After developing the technique in the first half of the workshop\, you will have time within the session to begin your own process of ‘writing through’ drawing on letters exchanged by Carlyle and Emerson. \nYou will then be able to finish your process of ‘writing through’ over a four-week period following the workshop. Victoria will be available throughout this time for additional help and queries and there will be the opportunity to share writing-in-progress. The finished writings will be gathered together in a pamphlet that will bring the writing of each participant into a collective form and contribute to a final outcome at CAMPLE LINE in late summer. \nThe workshop will take place on Crowdcast. (Please note this is free to use and easily available online. It does not require to be installed on a device.) \nVictoria Miguel is a writer. Her work has been published and presented by Triple Canopy\, Summerhall\, and Glasgow International. She worked for the John Cage Trust (2001-2007) and has been a specialist in Cage’s work\, creating unique performances\, for more than a decade. In 2019\, she produced ‘Mewantemooseicday’ 2019\, a day-long celebration of Cage and Merce Cunningham developed in collaboration with the University of Glasgow\, The Glasgow School of Art\, and Dance Studio Scotland at Clyde College.
URL:https://campleline.org.uk/event/online-writing-project-and-workshop-with-victoria-miguel/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20200411T183000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20200411T183000
DTSTAMP:20260517T152208
CREATED:20200302T215429Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200303T123404Z
UID:5291-1586629800-1586629800@campleline.org.uk
SUMMARY:Screening  Jean de Florette (1986)
DESCRIPTION:Sat 11 April | 6.30pm\nScreening\nClaude Berri Jean de Florette (1986)\nFrance\, 2hrs French\, English subtitles\, cert PG\n£3 (£2) | Booking advised via Eventbrite \nCo-adapted by director Claude Berri from a novel by Marcel Pagnol\, this hugely successful French historical drama concerns a fateful battle of wits over a valuable natural spring in a remote village in Provence. A disreputable old man and his nephew plot to trick their neighbour\, a newcomer from the city\, out of his newly inherited property. They use every available trick in an attempt to force him from his land\, but the novice farmer stands firm.
URL:https://campleline.org.uk/event/screening-jean-de-florette-1986/
LOCATION:Cample Line\, Thornhill\, DG3 4XX\, United Kingdom
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20200411T103000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20200411T123000
DTSTAMP:20260517T152208
CREATED:20200302T232827Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200303T124108Z
UID:5359-1586601000-1586608200@campleline.org.uk
SUMMARY:Drop-in session  Paper weaving for children
DESCRIPTION:Sat 11 April | 10.30am–12.30pm\nPaper weaving for children\nFree drop-in session for ages 4–8 years \nCome and try some creative paper weaving inspired by our current exhibition of weavings during the Easter holidays. You can create your own colourful weavings using a variety of different papers and recycled materials.
URL:https://campleline.org.uk/event/drop-in-session-paper-weaving-for-children/
LOCATION:Cample Line\, Thornhill\, DG3 4XX\, United Kingdom
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20200411T100000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20200411T110000
DTSTAMP:20260517T152208
CREATED:20200302T232559Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200315T093413Z
UID:5355-1586599200-1586602800@campleline.org.uk
SUMMARY:Read With Us!  Cynthia Harnett The Wool-pack
DESCRIPTION:Read with us!\nEvery Saturday (except Sat 18 April)\, 10-11am\nRecommended for children ages 8-10 years\nJoin us for a read of The Wool-pack by Cynthia Harnett (Methuen\, 1951) \nSet in 1493\, The Wool Pack tells the story of 12-year-old Nicholas Fetterlock\, son of a Cotswold wool merchant\, who gets caught up in the intrigues of the wool trade\, that include smuggling and efforts to ruin his father’s business. \nA classic children’s novel\, it contains some wonderful illustrations as well as a fair amount of historical detail that it doesn’t wear too heavily. Author Cynthia Harnett won the Carnegie Medal for this book.
URL:https://campleline.org.uk/event/read-with-us-cynthia-harnett-the-wool-pack/
LOCATION:Cample Line\, Thornhill\, DG3 4XX\, United Kingdom
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20200404T103000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20200404T160000
DTSTAMP:20260517T152208
CREATED:20200302T233036Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200315T093653Z
UID:5287-1585996200-1586016000@campleline.org.uk
SUMMARY:Postponed - Workshop  Weaving with Katie Russell
DESCRIPTION:This workshop is now postponed. We will reschedule and announce a new date in due course. We will be in touch with those who have already booked tickets. Thank you for your understanding! \nSat 4 April | 10.30am–4pm\nWorkshop\nWeaving workshop with Katie Russell\n£8 | Booking essential via Eventbrite or contact us directly | 6 places available \nTapestry weaver Katie Russell will lead a practical weaving workshop\, enabling participants to draw on the natural environment as well as Standard Incomparable\, a temporary collection of 65 weavings produced by weavers in 16 countries and brought together by artist Helen Mirra. Katie will discuss her own work and will demonstrate a number of techniques during the day. She will lead a relaxed workshop in which participants can explore processes and ideas. \nYarns and frames are provided. If participants wish to bring their own frames or materials they can do so. Suitable for all abilities.
URL:https://campleline.org.uk/event/workshop-weaving-with-katie-russell/
LOCATION:Cample Line\, Thornhill\, DG3 4XX\, United Kingdom
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20200328T183000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20200328T183000
DTSTAMP:20260517T152208
CREATED:20200302T233339Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200315T093713Z
UID:5284-1585420200-1585420200@campleline.org.uk
SUMMARY:Postponed - Screening  The Lunchbox (2013)
DESCRIPTION:This screening is now postponed. We will reschedule and announce a new screening date in due course. We will be in touch with those who have already booked tickets. Thank you for your understanding! \nSat 28 March | 6.30pm\nScreening\nRitesh Batra The Lunchbox (2013)\nIndia\, 1hr 44mins\, Hindi and English\, English subtitles\, cert PG\n£3 (£2) | Booking advised via Eventbrite \nThe first of two films selected by Helen Mirra to coincide with Acts for placing woollen and linen at CAMPLE LINE this spring. A rare mix-up in Mumbai’s famously efficient ‘dabbawala’ lunchbox delivery system connects Saajan\, a lonely widower close to retirement\, and Ila\, an unhappy housewife who prepares elaborate meals intended to win back her estranged husband’s affection. Saajan and Ila build an emotional connection through food and then notes exchanged in the daily lunchbox.
URL:https://campleline.org.uk/event/screening-the-lunchbox-2013/
LOCATION:Cample Line\, Thornhill\, DG3 4XX\, United Kingdom
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20191206T190000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20191206T210000
DTSTAMP:20260517T152208
CREATED:20191003T213849Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20191003T213849Z
UID:4679-1575658800-1575666000@campleline.org.uk
SUMMARY:Little Miss Sunshine  Screening
DESCRIPTION:  \n(2006) Jonathan Dayton and Valerie Faris\, 1hr 41mins\, cert 15 \nLittle Miss Sunshine offers a humorous and at times bittersweet reflection on the expansive capacity of the family unit\, and on familial bonds and the tensions these can be put under when directed towards a pursuit or purpose. At what point does a family begin to function like a crew\, and what about those who wish only to be passengers? \nRemarkable performances from Abigail Breslin\, Paul Dano\, Steve Carrell and Alan Arkin elevate this story of a family of individuals who ultimately restore common purpose and pride to themselves. \n  \nYou can book directly | info@campleline.org.uk | 01848 331 000 | or via Eventbrite
URL:https://campleline.org.uk/event/little-miss-sunshine-screening/
LOCATION:Cample Line\, Thornhill\, DG3 4XX\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:autumn programme
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20191130T153000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20191130T163000
DTSTAMP:20260517T152208
CREATED:20191003T213420Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20191126T135730Z
UID:4676-1575127800-1575131400@campleline.org.uk
SUMMARY:Rhona Warwick Paterson  Reading and Making
DESCRIPTION:  \nFree | Booking advised \nRhona Warwick Paterson will read Elizabeth Bishop’s poem The Moose\, published in 1976\, in dialogue with recordings of Bishop herself reading the poem and discussing her daily routine. The audience will be invited to make small clay forms with her as the reading progresses. \nThe title of CAMPLE LINE’s autumn exhibition From narrow provinces is taken from the poem’s first line. \nWarwick Paterson has said: ‘The clay forms I make are a result of writers block; my frustration in finding the right word is worked out through clay\, sometimes thrown in desperation\, sometimes coaxed out slowly. I listen to PennSound and put on a reading\, hoping the combination between hearing words and working the clay will help. Often it does and I dedicate whatever is made to the poet I’ve listened to. [This] is the first public performance of this very private activity.’ \nRhona Warwick Paterson studied at The Glasgow School of Art where writing emerged as her practice\, particularly in response to sculpture. She has since been commissioned by many established artists to write poems in dialogue with their own creative process and practice. These include: Edmund de Waal\, David Ward\, Clare Woods\, Tessa Lynch and Corin Sworn. She won the Scottish Book Trust award for Poetry in 2018 and is currently working on her first collection. \nYou can book directly | info@campleline.org.uk | 01848 331 000 | or via Eventbrite
URL:https://campleline.org.uk/event/rhona-warwick-paterson-reading-and-making/
LOCATION:Cample Line\, Thornhill\, DG3 4XX\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:autumn programme
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20191123T180000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20191123T203000
DTSTAMP:20260517T152208
CREATED:20191003T212711Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20191120T204908Z
UID:4672-1574532000-1574541000@campleline.org.uk
SUMMARY:Chantal Akerman  Screening and Reading
DESCRIPTION:  \nChantal Akerman\, No Home Movie\n(2015) Belgium\, 1hr 55mins\, French\, English subtitles\, cert PG\n£5 (£3) | Booking advised \nWith a reading from Akerman’s My Mother Laughs (Silver Press\, 2019) \nNo Home Movie\, Akerman’s final film\, is a poignant documentary study of her elderly mother\, Nelly Akerman\, a Holocaust survivor born in Poland. The film features conversations between them\, in person or over Skype\, often concerning her mother’s declining health and her wartime experiences\, with long static shots of her mother pottering from room to room in her Brussels apartment. In My Mother Laughs\, a literary counterpart to the film (first published in 2013)\, Akerman writes about her mother and of her deteriorating physical state\, but also of her own life and apprehension for a future without her mother’s presence. Written in the Brussels apartment\, this ‘interior notebook’ shares deeply personal thoughts with uncompromising honesty. In different ways\, through both word and image\, Akerman presents us with a story of loss and a version of the ‘simplest and most complicated love story of all: that between a mother and a daughter.’ \nTo introduce the film\, JoAnne McKay will read excerpts from My Mother Laughs\, and include poems written about her own mother. \nJoAnne McKay has lived in Dumfriesshire for the past two decades and her work has been widely published and anthologised\, most recently in ‘If you find my mother buy her flowers’ (The Poets’ Republic Press\, 2019). Her most recent project\, ‘We Fire the Dark’\, was a series of readings at CAMPLE LINE exploring the collection of Dr Grierson’s museum in Thornhill. \nYou can book with us directly | info@campleline.org.uk | 01848 331 000 | or via Eventbrite
URL:https://campleline.org.uk/event/chantal-akerman-screening-and-reading/
LOCATION:Cample Line\, Thornhill\, DG3 4XX\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:autumn programme
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20191116T140000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20191116T170000
DTSTAMP:20260517T152208
CREATED:20191003T212202Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20191113T182927Z
UID:4669-1573912800-1573923600@campleline.org.uk
SUMMARY:Rosalind NashashibiScreening event
DESCRIPTION:Free | Booking advised \nSorcha Carey\, Director of Edinburgh Art Festival\, will introduce a special screening of Rosalind Nashashibi’s latest two-part film\, commissioned by Edinburgh Art Festival and shown and presented at Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art in summer 2019\, alongside two of Nashashibi’s earlier film works – Electrical Gaza (2015) and Vivian’s Garden (2017). A rare opportunity to view Nashashibi’s recent films together\, the screening will also include readings of material by Atef Abu Saif\, Michael Hugentobler and Ursula K Le Guin. \nYou can book directly with us | info@campleline.org.uk | 01848 331 000 | or via Eventbrite
URL:https://campleline.org.uk/event/rosalind-nashashibiscreening-event/
LOCATION:Cample Line\, Thornhill\, DG3 4XX\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:autumn programme
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20191109T180000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20191109T194500
DTSTAMP:20260517T152208
CREATED:20191003T211501Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20191003T212746Z
UID:4664-1573322400-1573328700@campleline.org.uk
SUMMARY:L'Atalante  Screening
DESCRIPTION:  \n(1934) Jean Vigo\, France\, 89mins\,\nFrench\, English subtitles\, cert PG\n£3 (£2) | Booking advised \n85 years on from its original release\, Jean Vigo’s 1934 film L’Atalante remains as beautiful and poetic as ever. \nThe story is an apparently simple one: Three men work a barge (named L’Atalante) on the waterways of northern France: Jean\, the skipper is young and hopeful (Jean Dasté)\, le père Jules\, a tattooed veteran of the world’s oceans (Michel Simon) and a cabin boy. They stop at a small town. Jean meets a girl\, Juliette (Dita Parlo)\, and they are married\, while hardly knowing each other. It is not an easy transition for the married couple\, and the barge itself becomes a lens for a captivating exploration of relationships and bonds. \nThe film is enhanced by Maurice Jaubert’s musical score and by Boris Kaufman’s extraordinary cinematography. \nYou can book directly | info@campleline.org.uk | 01848 331 000 | or via Eventbrite
URL:https://campleline.org.uk/event/latalante-br-screening/
LOCATION:Cample Line\, Thornhill\, DG3 4XX\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:autumn programme
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20191102T100000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20191102T160000
DTSTAMP:20260517T152208
CREATED:20191003T210630Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20191003T211611Z
UID:4660-1572688800-1572710400@campleline.org.uk
SUMMARY:Linocut Workshop  with Clare Melinsky
DESCRIPTION:Linocut Workshop with Clare Melinsky\nWorkshop for age 16 years+\nSat 2 November\, 10am–4pm\n5 places available | £8 to cover cost of materials and refreshments \nJoin us for a linocut workshop with printmaker and leading linocut illustrator Clare Melinsky in the context of our autumn programme. You will have the opportunity to hear from Clare about some of her latest projects\, and then develop your own prints with Easycut lino\, inks and rollers\, as well as Clare’s small wooden press. \nClare Melinsky lives and works in Dumfriesshire. She has a highly regarded career as an illustrator and linocut printmaker\, building up a wide-ranging practice over more than 30 years that has seen her illustrate signature editions of all seven Harry Potter volumes (2010)\, a new Penguin edition of Shakespeare volumes\, and poetry by Julia Donaldson (2014). \nBeginners are welcome\, as well as more experienced students.\nIncludes a 30 min lunch break at 1pm. \nYou can book directly with us | info@campleline.org.uk | 01848 331 000 | or via Eventbrite
URL:https://campleline.org.uk/event/linocut-workshop-with-clare-melinsky/
LOCATION:Cample Line\, Thornhill\, DG3 4XX\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:autumn programme
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20191102T100000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20191102T110000
DTSTAMP:20260517T152209
CREATED:20191003T214255Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20191003T214634Z
UID:4683-1572688800-1572692400@campleline.org.uk
SUMMARY:Read With Us!  John Ruskin\, The King of the Golden River (1851)
DESCRIPTION:  \nSat 2\, 9\, 16\, 23\, 30 November\n10–11am | Free\nRecommended for ages 9–11 years \nJohn Ruskin\, The King of the Golden River (1851)\, illustrated by Quentin Blake for a new 2019 edition \n  \nJoin us over five Saturdays in November for a chapter a week of John Ruskin’s The King of The Golden River. Written in 1841 and then published ten years later\, Ruskin’s story tells of Treasure Valley\, the natural resources and beauty of which are diminished by the greed of two brothers Hans and Schwarz. Written as a fable\, Ruskin’s story might seem more relevant than ever in its understanding of how the actions of man impact upon the earth and its resources\, and that these are powerful ideas for children and young people to grasp. \nA copy of this book was owned by local doctor Thomas B Grierson\, and listed as #502 in the index made of his museum library in 1965.
URL:https://campleline.org.uk/event/read-with-us-john-ruskin-the-king-of-the-golden-river-1851/
LOCATION:Cample Line\, Thornhill\, DG3 4XX\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:autumn programme
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20191026T180000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20191026T200000
DTSTAMP:20260517T152209
CREATED:20191003T210007Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20191003T210211Z
UID:4655-1572112800-1572120000@campleline.org.uk
SUMMARY:Manakamana  Screening
DESCRIPTION:Manakanmana\n(2013) Stephanie Pray and Pacho Velez\nUS\, Nepal\, 1hr 58mins\, English subtitles\n£3 (£2) | Booking advised \nHumane and mesmerising\, Manakamana is a documentary shot entirely inside the narrow confines of a cable car\, high above a jungle in Nepal\, as it transports villagers and tourists to an ancient mountaintop temple. Filmed in 16mm and comprising 11 rides (each single take corresponds to the length of a roll of film)\, Manakamana is a gentle\, ephemeral character study of its passengers and a window onto the lush\, rolling landscape of a country in transition from ancient tradition to modernity. \nYou can book directly with us |info@campleline.org.uk | 01848 331 000| or via Eventbrite
URL:https://campleline.org.uk/event/manakamana-screening/
LOCATION:Cample Line\, Thornhill\, DG3 4XX\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:autumn programme
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20191013T180000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20191013T200000
DTSTAMP:20260517T152209
CREATED:20190916T115931Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190916T121049Z
UID:4476-1570989600-1570996800@campleline.org.uk
SUMMARY:Screening  Sameblod\, 2016
DESCRIPTION:Sameblod\nDir. Amanda Kernell (Sweden)\n2016\n1hr 50mins\, Swedish and Sami\, English subtitles\n£3 \ £2 \n \n\nJoin us for this screening of Swedish director Amanda Kernell’s 2016 film Sameblod (Sami Blood)  \nSameblod tells the story of 14-year-old Elle Marja\, a reindeer-breeding Sámi girl. Exposed to the racism of the 1930s and eugenics experiments at her boarding school she starts dreaming of another life. To achieve this other life she has to become someone else and break all ties with her family and culture. \nKernell has Sami heritage through her father\, and has said: ‘This film is a declaration of love to the elders in my family and their generation.’ \nScreening as part of Scotland and the Arctic: A Conversation \nYou can book with us directly: info@campleline.org.uk | 01848 331 000\nOr you can book through Eventbrite here
URL:https://campleline.org.uk/event/screening-sameblod-2016/
LOCATION:Cample Line\, Thornhill\, DG3 4XX\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:autumn programme
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20190914T140000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20190914T160000
DTSTAMP:20260517T152209
CREATED:20190825T170032Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190825T170032Z
UID:4452-1568469600-1568476800@campleline.org.uk
SUMMARY:Laughter in Literature
DESCRIPTION:  \nSummer closing event\nReading Workshop\nLaughter in Literature with Dr Andrew Dean \nIn this two-hour workshop\, we will discuss laughter in literature\, from Miguel de Cervantes to Thomas Carlyle to contemporary New Zealand poet Hera Lindsay Bird. \nAndrew Dean will select a number of short extracts\, which will provide the starting point for the session. Together\, we will ask: how might a literary history of laughter help us to understand the value of art? What is the place of pleasure in literary appreciation? And how might laughter relate to politics and morality? \n8 places | Free\nBooking essential\nReadings available to those who book \nDr Andrew Dean is currently a Junior Research Fellow in the Institute for Advanced Research at University College London. He has studied at the University of Canterbury in New Zealand and at the University of Oxford. Some of Andrew’s work has explored how humour may disturb serious-minded claims about historical experience and appropriate kinds of remembering. As part of his current fellowship\, Andrew has been organising seminars and events that explore the institutions\, cultures\, histories\, and psychologies of laughter.
URL:https://campleline.org.uk/event/laughter-in-literature/
LOCATION:Cample Line\, Thornhill\, DG3 4XX\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:Summer Edition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20190907T173000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20190907T190000
DTSTAMP:20260517T152209
CREATED:20190625T223015Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190709T101710Z
UID:4240-1567877400-1567882800@campleline.org.uk
SUMMARY:Artist Film Screening  Nervous Translation (2018)
DESCRIPTION:Shireen Seno\nNervous Translation\n£4 | Booking advised via Eventbrite or contact us: info@campleline.org.uk | +44 (0) 1848 331000\n(2018) Philippines\, 91mins\, English subtitles \nIntroduced by Dr Phillipa Lovatt \nEight year-old Yael\, shy to a fault\, lives in her own private world of invented rituals and obsessions. Nervous Translation captures the innocence\, magic and strangeness of childhood\, unfolding against the backdrop of late 1980s post-dictatorship Philippines. Specialising in Southeast Asian cinema\, Dr Philippa Lovatt from the University of St Andrews will introduce the film.
URL:https://campleline.org.uk/event/artist-film-screening-nervous-translation-2018/
LOCATION:Cample Line\, Thornhill\, DG3 4XX\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:Summer Edition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20190831T173000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20190831T193000
DTSTAMP:20260517T152209
CREATED:20190626T165458Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190825T105249Z
UID:4288-1567272600-1567279800@campleline.org.uk
SUMMARY:Screening and Q&A  Ittarikitari - To & Fro
DESCRIPTION:Ittarikitari – To & Fro: A programme of artists’ films\n(Japan / UK)\n£4 | Booking advised via Eventbrite or contact us: info@campleline.org.uk | +44 (0) 1848 331000 \nIndependent curator Susan Christie will introduce artist Neville Gabie and present a special programme of artists’ films\, featuring recent work by Gabie and short performance films by a number of experimental artists’ collectives from Japan. \n‘Japan has endured major events – the great earthquake\, the sarin gas attack\, the tsunami and nuclear disaster of 2011. The devastating and deeply felt impacts of the tsunami\, in particular\, have had a fundamental impact on Japanese society and how artists see themselves and their role within community. New artists collectives have been emerging whose work is experimental\, radical\, surprising and who are making their voices heard through action and performance. It has been incredibly inspiring to witness this and to be able to share with audiences in Scotland.’ \nThroughout the selected work there is a strong emphasis on improvisational performance and extreme physicality in what may appear to be\, on occasion\, absurd or inherently dangerous situations. The artists’ approaches will intrigue dance audiences\, as well as appeal to people who are passionate about our place and relationship with the environment. \nFollowing the screenings artist Neville Gabie and Susan Christie will be in conversation. \n  \nAbout the artists \nWith a background in sculpture\, Neville Gabie’s practice has always been driven by specific locations or situations caught in a moment of change. Highly urbanized or distantly remote\, his work is a response to the vulnerability of place. Gabie’s interest is in establishing a working relationship within a particular community as a means of considering its physical\, cultural or emotional geography. Neville was born in Johannesburg\, South Africa and studied an MA in Sculpture at the Royal College of Art\, London 1986/88. He is represented by Danielle Arnaud Gallery\, London. \nExperiments in Black and White XXV is a filmed artist performance involving chopping domestic furniture. The work is one of a series of performance films under the title of Experiments in Black and White. Initiated whilst artist in residence at Bristol University work with climate change scientists\, the work is a response to our need for certainties in an uncertain world. \nPainting was made for Croxteth Hall Liverpool in response to Robert Tressell’s book ‘The Ragged trousered Philanthropist’. The book is a critical text in the formation of the Labour movement and Trade Unions. Robert Tressell was a painter/decorator who died in poverty in Liverpool and is buried in a pauper’s grave. The book was published posthumously. \nFounded in 2006\, contact Gonzo is an improvisational performance group based in Osaka\, Japan. The collective has developed a specific mode of contact improvisation that borrows from various sources including martial arts. Their practice involves physical strength and agility\, and relies upon the trusting relationships within the group. contact Gonzo balances elements of contemporary dance and performance\, and creates highly experimental and unexpected work that surprises and amazes audiences. \nhyslom is a three-member collective consisiting of Itaru Kato\, Fuminori Hoshino\, Yuu Yoshida\, formed in 2009. hyslom turns “field-play”\, their method for physically and playfully experiencing a given environment\, into video\, photography\, and performative artwork. The group further develops the memories of “field-play” into a wide array of other media\, including sculpture\, theatre\, and film. \nhyslom has spent the last 10 years regularly exploring a particular landscape\, which has become a large-scale housing site\, to document and interact with the changes that have been taking place. Their work is highly physical and often surprising; they use their bodies in unexpected locations and in challenging ways to maintain a deep connection with the land. At the end of 2018 a large survey show spanning a decade of their practice was exhibited for the first time in Japan. \nChim↑Pom is an artist collective formed in 2005 in Tokyo with members Ryuta Ushiro\, Yasutaka Hayashi\, Ellie\, Masataka Okada\, Motomu Inaoka\, and Toshinori Mizuno. Several weeks after the tsunami of 2011\, members of Chim↑Pom travelled to Fukushima. With young fishermen from the local community\, they made an improvised performance KI-AI 100 (100 Cheers). Ki-ai is a martial arts term for a shout that is used to focus energy and breath before an attack. This filmed action symbolises the way Chim↑Pom respond to situations with urgency\, humour and warmth.
URL:https://campleline.org.uk/event/screening-and-qa-ittarikari-to-fro/
LOCATION:Cample Line\, Thornhill\, DG3 4XX\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:Summer Edition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20190824T170000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20190824T183000
DTSTAMP:20260517T152209
CREATED:20190626T171348Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190729T205527Z
UID:4298-1566666000-1566671400@campleline.org.uk
SUMMARY:Live Performance  Florian Kaplick
DESCRIPTION:Kurt Schwitters’ Ursonate Performed by Florian Kaplick \nLive performance\nFree | Booking advised via Eventbrite or contact us: info@campleline.org.uk | +44 (0) 1848 331000 \nFlorian Kaplick will perform Kurt Schwitters’ sound poem Ursonate\, a vocal piece consisting of four movements\, an overture and finale. Schwitters began writing Ursonate in 1922 and first performed it in 1925 before publishing it in 1932 as ‘Sonate in Urlauten’ (Sonata in Primordial Sounds). Comprising repeated abstract sounds that involve physical vocal performance\, Schwitters noted: ‘The fourth movement\,long-running and quick\, comes as a good exercise for the reader’s lungs.’ Kaplick will also read some shorter Schwitters poems in English/German\, including a new interpretation of Schwitters’ famous poem An Anna Blume (1919). A musician and performance artist as well as a psychiatrist and lecturer\, Florian Kaplick has a special interest in Schwitters’ sound poetry. \nThis event is also part of both  Insiders/Outsiders\, a nationwide arts festival taking place from March 2019 to March 2020 to celebrate refugees from Nazi Europe and their contribution to British culture.
URL:https://campleline.org.uk/event/live-performance-florian-kaplick/
LOCATION:Cample Line\, Thornhill\, DG3 4XX\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:Summer Edition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20190817T110000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20190817T123000
DTSTAMP:20260517T152209
CREATED:20190620T223835Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190709T101212Z
UID:4182-1566039600-1566045000@campleline.org.uk
SUMMARY:Movement SessionsFor ages 5-8 years
DESCRIPTION:Dancing Art and Words: Creative Movement with Sara Lockwood \nPhoto: Peter Roberts\n12 places available per session \nBooking essential via Eventbrite or contact us: info@campleline.org.uk | +44 (0) 1848 331000 \n£4 per session\, including refreshments \nJoin dancer Sara Lockwood for a dancing story session inspired by our current exhibitions\, exploring pictures and words through movement\, mime\, imagination\, rhythm and sound. You will create your own movement shapes and develop your own characters as you move through the story space. To finish we’ll be making our own headdresses inspired by the story. Each stand-alone session will follow the same format. \nSara Lockwood is a Dumfriesshire-based dancer and choreographer using Margaret Morris Movement ideas and methods (MMM). A pioneer of modern dance\, MMM brings together costume\, colour\, art and design with the creative movement of the body.  \nNB. We will dance barefoot\, just wear comfortable clothing
URL:https://campleline.org.uk/event/movement-sessionsfor-ages-5-8-years-2/
LOCATION:Cample Line\, Thornhill\, DG3 4XX\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:Summer Edition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20190816T110000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20190816T123000
DTSTAMP:20260517T152209
CREATED:20190703T105557Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190703T105557Z
UID:4306-1565953200-1565958600@campleline.org.uk
SUMMARY:Read With Us!  We Found a Hat (2016)
DESCRIPTION:Story session for ages 4–7 years\nWe Found a Hat (2016\, 56 pages) \nJoin us for a fun reading of the final book in Jon Klassen’s celebrated hat trilogy\, and enjoy its gentle deadpan humour. Featuring a classic double act of its own\, We Found a Hat is about two turtles who find a hat. The hat looks good on both of them. But there are two turtles. And there is only one hat…Evoking hilarity and sympathy\, the shifting eyes tell the tale in this brilliantly paced story\, highlighting Jon Klassen’s visual comedy and deceptive simplicity.
URL:https://campleline.org.uk/event/read-with-us-we-found-a-hat-2016/
LOCATION:Cample Line\, Thornhill\, DG3 4XX\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:Summer Edition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20190815T120000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20190815T160000
DTSTAMP:20260517T152209
CREATED:20190812T085521Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190812T090023Z
UID:4428-1565870400-1565884800@campleline.org.uk
SUMMARY:Mono-printing with Charlie Hammond  For ages 13 +
DESCRIPTION:  \nMono-printing with artist Charlie Hammond\nWorkshop for age 13 years+ \n10 places available | Booking essential\n£4 to cover cost of materials \nJoin us for this introductory mono-printing workshop\, led by one of our summer artists\, Charlie Hammond. \nLearn about different forms of mono-printing using water-based printing inks\, perspex and rollers as we explore its creative possibilities to make our own posters. Drawing on Charlie’s use of the poster format in his practice\, we will use text and image and explore ‘chance’ through the unpredictability of the printing process. \nRefreshments included. \nNB. Please wear appropriate messy clothing
URL:https://campleline.org.uk/event/mono-printing-with-charlie-hammond-for-ages-13/
LOCATION:Cample Line\, Thornhill\, DG3 4XX\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:Summer Edition
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR