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X-WR-CALDESC:Events for CAMPLE LINE
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DTSTART:20170326T010000
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20190810T153000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20190810T170000
DTSTAMP:20260517T175913
CREATED:20190620T224104Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190709T101316Z
UID:4184-1565451000-1565456400@campleline.org.uk
SUMMARY:ScreeningInvention for Destruction (1958)
DESCRIPTION:Karel Zeman \nInvention for Destruction  \n£2 | Booking advised via Eventbrite or contact us: info@campleline.org.uk | +44 (0) 1848 331000 \n(1958) 79mins\, sound\, Czech\, English subtitles\, U \nDescribed as the ‘Czech Méliès’\, Karel Zeman (1910–1989) has had a profound influence on filmmakers such as Terry Gilliam. Invention for Destruction\, based on the writings of Jules Verne\, is his most beloved work and is still the most commercially successful Czech film ever produced. Wildly inventive\, and breaking new ground in its combination of live-action\, animation and design\, it created a ‘steampunk’ aesthetic decades ahead of its time.  \nZeman’s film is both a heartfelt homage and love letter to Jules Verne’s wonderful tales of science and adventure\, and a powerful statement against man’s propensity for self-destruction. \nNB. Informal seating\, including beanbags
URL:https://campleline.org.uk/event/screeninginvention-for-destruction-1958/
LOCATION:Cample Line\, Thornhill\, DG3 4XX\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:Summer Edition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20190809T110000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20190809T123000
DTSTAMP:20260517T175913
CREATED:20190620T223715Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190709T101039Z
UID:4179-1565348400-1565353800@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/
LOCATION:Cample Line\, Thornhill\, DG3 4XX\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:Summer Edition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20190806T110000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20190806T123000
DTSTAMP:20260517T175913
CREATED:20190620T223335Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190709T100911Z
UID:4174-1565089200-1565094600@campleline.org.uk
SUMMARY:Movement SessionFor ages 5-8 years
DESCRIPTION:  \nDancing 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 \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-sessionfor-ages-5-8-years/
LOCATION:Cample Line\, Thornhill\, DG3 4XX\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:Summer Edition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20190803T153000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20190803T163000
DTSTAMP:20260517T175913
CREATED:20190620T222946Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190709T100516Z
UID:4170-1564846200-1564849800@campleline.org.uk
SUMMARY:ScreeningSherlock Jnr (1924)
DESCRIPTION:  \n \n\nBuster Keaton\, Sherlock Jr\n \n£2 | Booking advised via Eventbrite or contact us: info@campleline.org.uk | +44 (0) 1848 331000 \n(1924) US\, 45mins\, silent\, U \nJoin us for the first of our summer Saturday Screenings in the context of Charlie Hammond’s exhibition FARM WEEDS. Sherlock Jr is one of Buster Keaton’s funniest and most technically innovative features. He plays the floor sweeper and projectionist of a small-town movie theatre who in his free time studies to be a detective. \nIn 1991\, Sherlock Jr was selected for preservation in the US National Film Registry by the Library of Congress\, as being ‘culturally\, historically or aesthetically significant’. In 2000\, the American Film Institute ranked the film #62 in its list of the funniest films of all time. \nNB. Informal seating\, including beanbags
URL:https://campleline.org.uk/event/screeningsherlock-jnr-1924/
LOCATION:Cample Line\, Thornhill\, DG3 4XX\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:Summer Edition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20190720T110000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20190720T160000
DTSTAMP:20260517T175913
CREATED:20190620T222503Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190709T102101Z
UID:4167-1563620400-1563638400@campleline.org.uk
SUMMARY:Letterpress Workshop
DESCRIPTION:Letterpress Introduction \nWith The Passenger Press \n \n7 places available | Booking essential via Eventbrite or contact us: info@campleline.org.uk |+44 (0)1848 331000\n£8 to cover cost of materials \nJoin us for this taster workshop led by Rhian Nicholas\, founder of The Passenger Press\, which will give you an introduction to letterpress printing\, working a press and a range of type. \nThis session will draw on the current exhibitions and wider summer programme at CAMPLE LINE\, and take inspiration from Roaul Hausmann’s ‘poster poems’ from 1918–1920 and the chance lining up of letters. \nIncludes a 30min lunch break at 1pm. Refreshments are provided\, but please bring your own lunch.
URL:https://campleline.org.uk/event/letterpress-workshop/
LOCATION:Cample Line\, Thornhill\, DG3 4XX\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:Summer Edition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20190713T140000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20190713T170000
DTSTAMP:20260517T175913
CREATED:20190620T221714Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190620T221919Z
UID:4158-1563026400-1563037200@campleline.org.uk
SUMMARY:Summer exhibition preview
DESCRIPTION:Charlie Hammond | FARM WEEDS\nDavid Osbaldeston | DOUBLE ACT\n  \nPLEASE JOIN US FOR OUR SUMMER Exhibition Preview\n  \n\nExhibitions run from Sat 13 July to Sat 14 Sept 2019 \nThursday-Saturday\, 11am-5pm or by appointment \nAdmission free \nAt the centre of our summer 2019 edition are two exhibitions – David Osbaldeston’s DOUBLE ACT and Charlie Hammond’s FARM WEEDS – which comprise new bodies of work made for CAMPLE LINE.  \nIn response to the theme of laughter\, David Osbaldeston has produced a new series of printed works for our upstairs space – UNTITLED (Generalised Laughter Series) – which feature propped abstract forms alongside descriptors that allude to the dynamics of the comedic duo or double act. At two metres in height\, these works have been made in parallel with Somewhere Between My Finger and Thumb\, a new sequence of small gouache paintings the artist has made using pages from the 1875 book The Philosophy of Laughter by George Vasey. Osbaldeston has said: ‘the works come from my interest in how language operates and how a meaning can be produced through different forms of labels or names … I have always worked thematically in relation to how language operates and its associative power’. \nCharlie Hammond’s FARM WEEDS is the first exhibition to feature in our downstairs space\, comprising a new group of paintings on paper\, described by the artist as ‘an imaginary proposal for an imaginary mural’. Hammond draws loosely on a range of sources\, from Illinois farmer James W. Cadle’s 1970s design for a ‘Flag of Earth’ to a small book published by Shell in 1958 entitled Farm Weeds: An Aid to Their Recognition\, as well as the everyday things that populate his studio and the wider setting of Cample itself. Featuring flags\, logos\, hands\, newspapers and fungi to name but a few elements: ‘all of these things start to become the ingredients and then somehow by transforming them into large-scale paintings\, they take on different meanings’. \n  \n 
URL:https://campleline.org.uk/event/summer-exhibitions-preview/
LOCATION:Cample Line\, Thornhill\, DG3 4XX\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:Summer Edition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20190525T110000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20190525T170000
DTSTAMP:20260517T175913
CREATED:20190515T085539Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190515T085539Z
UID:3856-1558782000-1558803600@campleline.org.uk
SUMMARY:Closing Day
DESCRIPTION:Please join us on the closing day of our spring programme \n \n\n\n3pm onwards\nEnd ReadingS\nPlease join Tina Fiske and Young Assistant Penny Gonlag at 3pm for a series of open readings that will reflect back on our spring programme. Tina and Penny will lead the reading\, but all are welcome to drop in and to participate. No preparation needed. \nIncluding extracts from Rose George’s Deep Sea and Foreign Going (2013)\, Anne Michaels’ The Winter Vault (2009) and Allan Sekula’s Ship of Fools / The Docker’s Museum (2015)\, as well as short passages from Charles Darwin’s On the Origin of Species (1859) and Giovanni Belzoni’s Narrative of Operations (1822) \nIf you’d like a copy of the readings\, please be in touch. \n  \n\n \n \nThroughout the day\nCome and enjoy short minute-long films made by Eleanor\, Emily and Freya (Wallace Hall S6) in response to different aspects of Giovanni Belzoni’s Narrative of Operations (1822).  \nPart of our Reading Griersons Library project.\n(Image: still from footage recorded by Freya\, April 2019) \nWe’ll also have on loan a collection of canopic jars made by P1-P4 pupils at Penpont Primary\, complete with stories of their excavation and transport. Come and see their display and read the fascinating tales!  \n 
URL:https://campleline.org.uk/event/closing-day/
LOCATION:Cample Line\, Thornhill\, DG3 4XX\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:Spring Edition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20190523T190000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20190523T204500
DTSTAMP:20260517T175913
CREATED:20190227T205158Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190227T205158Z
UID:3742-1558638000-1558644300@campleline.org.uk
SUMMARY:SCREENING  Jumana Manna  Wild Relatives (2018)
DESCRIPTION:  \nJumana Manna\, Wild Relatives (2018\, 70mins\, Arabic\, Norwegian\, English)\n£3 | £2 | booking advised |info@campleline.org.uk | Eventbrite | 01848 331 000 \nIn 2012 an international agricultural research centre was forced to relocate from Aleppo to Lebanon due to the Syrian civil war and then began a laborious process of planting and restoring its seed collection from back-ups recalled from the Global seedbank located in Svalbard. Following the path of those seeds between the Arctic and Lebanon\, Jumana Manna’s beautiful film unfolds a matrix of human and non-human lives across those two remote places\, following a large-scale international initiative and its local implementation in the Bekaa Valley of Lebanon\, carried out primarily by young migrant women. \nManna has said: ‘As someone raised in Jerusalem\, educated in Norway this geographic connection and the symbolic resonances of the story caught my attention. It inspired me to build a narrative…which takes these two tiny spots on the earth\, connected by a transaction of seeds\, as a starting point.’  \n  \n 
URL:https://campleline.org.uk/event/screening-jumana-manna-wild-relatives-2018/
LOCATION:Cample Line\, Thornhill\, DG3 4XX\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:Spring Edition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20190518T170000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20190518T183000
DTSTAMP:20260517T175913
CREATED:20190225T144226Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190225T144745Z
UID:3636-1558198800-1558204200@campleline.org.uk
SUMMARY:We Fire The Dark 3  JoAnne McKay
DESCRIPTION:The THIRD of three readings\nSee also: 23 March; 30 April\nFree | Booking advised \nJoin us back at CAMPLE LINE for the third in this series of three readings by poet JoAnne MacKay\, which will focus on the display and presentation of Dr Grierson’s collection and his ambitions for the museum to educate and open minds. Although the museum no longer stands\, many objects remain as permanent memorial to his ‘persistent\, indefatigable endeavour’. \nJoAnne McKay was born in Essex and served as a police officer in the south-west of England before moving to Dumfriesshire two decades ago. She has published four poetry pamphlets and has appeared at Literary Festivals throughout the UK. Her work has been prize-winning\, widely published and anthologised. She currently works at Dumfries Museum \nWith grateful thanks to the staff of Dumfries Museum for their support and access to Grierson’s papers
URL:https://campleline.org.uk/event/we-fire-the-dark-joanne-mckay-3/
LOCATION:Cample Line\, Thornhill\, DG3 4XX\, United Kingdom
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20190511T170000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20190511T183000
DTSTAMP:20260517T175913
CREATED:20190225T162048Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190501T152334Z
UID:3676-1557594000-1557599400@campleline.org.uk
SUMMARY:Now *postponed*  ARTIST TALK  Maeve Brennan
DESCRIPTION:  \n \n  \n*POSTPONED TIL FURTHER NOTICE*\nArtist Q&A | Maeve Brennan\nFree\nBooking advised | info@campleline.org.uk | Eventbrite | 01848 331 000 \nWe are delighted to welcome Maeve Brennan back to CAMPLE LINE this May. Maeve will be in conversation about her film The Drift and about recent and developing work that draws on research into the networks that illicitly trade in antiquities. \nA screening of The Drift will begin at 3.30pm ahead of Maeve’s talk \nMaeve Brennan lives and works in London. Her practice looks at the historical and political resonance of sites and materials\, culminating in moving image and installation works. She carries out long-term investigative research and seeks out proximity and intimacy with people and places. Forming personal relationships allows for a particular kind of documentary encounter – one extended by familiarity and complicated by subjectivity. Brennan was a fellow of the arts study programme\, Home Workspace Program at Ashkal Alwan in Beirut (2013 -14).
URL:https://campleline.org.uk/event/artist-talk-maeve-brennan/
LOCATION:Cample Line\, Thornhill\, DG3 4XX\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:Spring Edition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20190504T173000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20190504T190000
DTSTAMP:20260517T175913
CREATED:20190225T155818Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190225T160007Z
UID:3662-1556991000-1556996400@campleline.org.uk
SUMMARY:SCREENING  Peter Nester  Tod und Teufel (2009)
DESCRIPTION:  \nDeath and Devil\n(2009\, GR\, 54mins\, German\, Swedish\, English subtitles) \n£3 | £2\nBooking advised | info@campleline.org.uk | Eventbrite | 01848 331 000 \nEthnologist\, explorer\, hunter and adventurer – Count Eric von Rosen led a chequered life\, characterised by profound contradictions: genuine interest in the native population of Africa on the one hand and colonial racism on the other hand. Filmmaker Peter Nestler embarked on a historical journey in search of traces of his grandfather. Tod und Teufel is a video essay about the expeditions of Eric von Rosen ( a subject of Jacqueline Hoang Nguyen’s Black Atlas)\, and illustrated with photographs he took alongside texts from diaries\, publications and letters he wrote. \n‘Nestler has said that he was reluctant to make a film about his grandfather (‘his path along the abyss gave me an eerie feeling’)\, but the weight and power of the existing materials convinced him. Von Rosen not only wrote scientific books and anthropological studies\, but also documented all his trips with photographs and diary annotations. He made amateur movies\, collected objects and utensils\, and wrote political commentaries for the press’ – Cristina Álvarez López
URL:https://campleline.org.uk/event/screening-peter-nester-tod-und-teufel-2009/
LOCATION:Cample Line\, Thornhill\, DG3 4XX\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:Spring Edition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20190430T190000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20190430T203000
DTSTAMP:20260517T175913
CREATED:20190225T143135Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190430T130126Z
UID:3633-1556650800-1556656200@campleline.org.uk
SUMMARY:We Fire the Dark 2  JoAnne McKay
DESCRIPTION:The SECOND of three readings\nSee also: 23 March; 18 May\nFree | Booking advised \nJoin us at Thornhill Friendship Club for the second of part of JoAnne McKay’s We Fire The Dark. For this event\, JoAnne will trace\, through archival material and poetry\, the history of Dr Grierson’s collection\, from its origins in a single room on North Drumlanrig Street\, to the laying of the foundation stone of the new museum in 1869\, and to its eventual dispersal in 1965. There will be the opportunity to share memories and thoughts so to gather further material on this fascinating chapter of local history. \nVenue: Thornhill Friendship Club\, 15 West Morton Street\, Thornhill\, Dumfriesshire DG3 5ND \nJoAnne McKay was born in Essex and served as a police officer in the south-west of England before moving to Dumfriesshire two decades ago. She has published four poetry pamphlets and has appeared at Literary Festivals throughout the UK. Her work has been prize-winning\, widely published and anthologised. She currently works at Dumfries Museum \nWith grateful thanks to the staff of Dumfries Museum for their support and access to Grierson’s papers
URL:https://campleline.org.uk/event/we-fire-the-dark-joanne-mckay-2/
LOCATION:Thornhill Friendship Club\, 15 West Morton St\, Thornhill\, Dumfriesshire\, DG3 5ND\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:Spring Edition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20190424T183000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20190424T200000
DTSTAMP:20260517T175913
CREATED:20190225T161637Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190225T162305Z
UID:3673-1556130600-1556136000@campleline.org.uk
SUMMARY:ARTIST IN CONVERSATION  Jacqueline Hoang Nguyen
DESCRIPTION:Jacqueline Hoang Nguyen The Administration\, 2016 Part of Black Atlas\n  \nTALK | IN CONVERSATION | Jacqueline Hoang Nguyen\nFree\nBooking advised | info@campleline.org.uk | Eventbrite | 01848 331000 \nWe are pleased to welcome Jacqueline Hoang Nguyen back to CAMPLE LINE for this event. Jacqueline will be talking in conversation about Black Atlas and working with the archives of the Museum of Ethnography in Stockholm. She will also discuss her forthcoming anthology Crating the World (2019). Co-edited by Rado Ištok and published by Athénée Press (Mexico City)\, it will include contributions from Ariella Azoulay\, Åsa Bharathi Larsson and Gabrielle Moser amongst others. \nIn 1888 Russian explorer Wilhelm Junker told members of the Swedish Society for Anthropology and Geography\, ‘certainly more than 20\,000 people carried [his] burdens’ as he traveled central Africa.’ \nJacqueline Hoang Nguyen is an artist who uses archives and a broad range of media to investigate issues of historicity\, collectivity\, utopian politics and multiculturalism. Nguyen completed the Whitney Independent Study Program\, New York\, in 2011\, having obtained her MFA and a post-graduate diploma in Critical Studies from the Malmö Art Academy\, Sweden\, in 2005\, and a BFA from Concordia University\, Montreal\, in 2003. Born in Côte-des-Neiges in Montreal\, Canada\, she is currently based in Stockholm. Nguyen has an extensive exhibition history both in Canada and internationally.
URL:https://campleline.org.uk/event/artist-in-conversation-jacqueline-hoang-nguyen/
LOCATION:Cample Line\, Thornhill\, DG3 4XX\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:Spring Edition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20190420T173000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20190420T193000
DTSTAMP:20260517T175913
CREATED:20190225T154522Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190225T154926Z
UID:3657-1555781400-1555788600@campleline.org.uk
SUMMARY:SCREENING  Allan Sekula and Noel Burch  The Forgotten Space (2010)
DESCRIPTION:  \n(2010\, NL | Austria\, 112mins\, some English subtitles) \n£3 | £2\nBooking advised | info@campleline.org.uk | Eventbrite | 01848 331 000 \nAt the heart of this film essay is the shipping container\, now one of the most important mechanisms for the global spread of capitalism. Crossing oceans and visiting numerous major ports\, the film follows the shipping container along the international supply chain\, mapping the complex networks that connect producers to consumers\, and increasingly\, producing nations to consuming ones. We meet the invisible labourers who staff the cargo ships\, steer the barges\, drive the trucks\, and migrate to the factories\, and those who this system’s efficiency has marginalised. \n‘Far from being the repository of romantic visions of yore\, of great voyages of discovery and adventure\, the sea – thanks to containerisation – is now the prime facilitator of globalised trade\, with all the exploitation\, upheavals and displacements that entails. This new reality is nailed by Burch and Sekula’s film with measured\, eloquent rage’ – Kieron Corless
URL:https://campleline.org.uk/event/screening-allan-sekula-and-noel-burch-the-forgotten-space-2010/
LOCATION:Cample Line\, Thornhill\, DG3 4XX\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:Spring Edition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20190413T110000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20190413T121500
DTSTAMP:20260517T175913
CREATED:20190225T160430Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190225T160545Z
UID:3668-1555153200-1555157700@campleline.org.uk
SUMMARY:READ WITH US!  Jessie Hartland  How the Sphinx Got to the Museum (2015)
DESCRIPTION:For age 4-9\nFREE \nJoin us for a fun reading of author and illustrator Jessie Hartland’s wonderful picture book How the Sphinx Got to the Museum: enjoy the story of how one particular Egyptian sculpture ended up in the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York. We learn how Hatshepsut\, a female pharaoh in ancient Egypt\, ordered the creation of a sphinx in her own honour. The sculptor secures the granite\, the priests admire it\, the stepson destroys it\, and then the real fun begins after an archaeologist discovers it 3000 years later in a pit. \nRead by Tina Fiske \n  \nDid you know that in his museum in Thornhill\, Dr Grierson had a bronze statuette of Osiris\, the chief God of the ancient Egyptians?
URL:https://campleline.org.uk/event/read-with-us/
LOCATION:Cample Line\, Thornhill\, DG3 4XX\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:Spring Edition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20190406T173000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20190406T190000
DTSTAMP:20260517T175913
CREATED:20190225T153652Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190225T153845Z
UID:3652-1554571800-1554577200@campleline.org.uk
SUMMARY:SCREENING  Nicholas Philibert  La Ville Louvre (1990)
DESCRIPTION:  \n(1990\, FR\, English subtitles\, 84mins)\n£3 | £2\nBooking advised | info@campleline.org.uk | Eventbrite | 01848 331 000 \nIn 1988\, the Louvre Museum let a film crew\, led by director Nicolas Philibert\, behind the scenes to follow the museum workers as they went about re-installing the collection. Miles of underground passages\, reserves containing thousands of priceless treasures\, and chambers previously off-limits to visitors were filmed over a five-month period\, revealing with great immediacy the hidden inner workings of a world-famous institution. \n‘The works of art\, revealed in a new context\, come alive as fragile and exotic creatures captured in a web of human labour’ – Leslie Camhi\, The New York Times
URL:https://campleline.org.uk/event/screening-nicholas-philibert-la-ville-louvre-1990-fr-84mins-subtitles/
LOCATION:Cample Line\, Thornhill\, DG3 4XX\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:Spring Edition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20190323T170000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20190323T183000
DTSTAMP:20260517T175913
CREATED:20190225T142712Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190227T225102Z
UID:3627-1553360400-1553365800@campleline.org.uk
SUMMARY:We Fire the Dark 1 JoAnne McKay
DESCRIPTION:Dr Grierson’s Museum\, Thornhill c. 1965 Image: James Williams\, courtesy of Dumfries Museum\nThe first of three readings\nSee also: 30 April; 18 May\nFree | Booking advised \nIn this series of three readings\, poet JoAnne McKay will draw on the Running Catalogue of Dr Grierson’s Museum in Thornhill. Grierson lived in Thornhill for nearly fifty years\, opening his museum to the public in 1872 and in his catalogue recording its 1252 objects and detailing from where and from whom they were acquired. Combining readings from the catalogue itself\, along with a fascinating mix of archival material and her own poetry\, these different strands will be woven together to give us a unique insight in to this remarkable document\, its author and their legacy. \nJoAnne McKay was born in Essex and served as a police officer in the south-west of England before moving to Dumfriesshire two decades ago. She has published four poetry pamphlets and has appeared at Literary Festivals throughout the UK. Her work has been prize-winning\, widely published and anthologised. She currently works at Dumfries Museum \nWith grateful thanks to the staff of Dumfries Museum for their support and access to Grierson’s papers
URL:https://campleline.org.uk/event/we-fire-the-dark-joanne-mckay/
LOCATION:Cample Line\, Thornhill\, DG3 4XX\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:Spring Edition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20190320T190000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20190320T210000
DTSTAMP:20260517T175913
CREATED:20190220T130725Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190220T130725Z
UID:3559-1553108400-1553115600@campleline.org.uk
SUMMARY:READING GROUP
DESCRIPTION:  \n \n  \nRoy Jacobsen\, The Unseen \n(2016\, Paperback\, MacLehose\, 269pp) \nJoin us for our 10th read: Norwegian writer Roy Jacobsen’s book The Unseen has been described by Justine Jordan as ‘a profound interrogation of freedom and fate.’ \nIngrid Barrøy is born on the island that bears her family name. Her father dreams of building a jetty that will connect them to the mainland\, but closer ties to the wider world come at a price. Island life is hard\, so when Ingrid comes of age\, she is sent to the mainland to work for one of the wealthy families on the coast. But Norway too is waking up to a wider world. Tragedy strikes\, and Ingrid must fight to protect the home she thought she had left behind. \nPlease bring your own copy of the book.
URL:https://campleline.org.uk/event/reading-group/
LOCATION:Cample Line\, Thornhill\, DG3 4XX\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:Spring Edition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20190316T143000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20190316T170000
DTSTAMP:20260517T175913
CREATED:20190220T125831Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190220T125831Z
UID:3553-1552746600-1552755600@campleline.org.uk
SUMMARY:EXHIBITION OPENING Jacqueline Hoang Nguyen Maeve Brennan Laura Waddington
DESCRIPTION:  \nSAT 16 MARCH – SAT 25 MAY 2019\nEXHIBITION\nJacqueline Hoàng Nguyen | Maeve Brennan | Laura Waddington \nThursdays 12.30-7pm | Fridays 10am-4pm | Saturdays 11am-5pm | Or by appointment\nFree \nWe are delighted to present Black Atlas (2016)\, a five-part installation by Stockholm-based Canadian artist Jacqueline Hoàng Nguyen. Based on photographs that Nguyen found in the archives of the Museum of Ethnography in Stockholm\, Black Atlas reflects upon the nameless porters and workers who were used to transport an array of material from distant countries to the museum’s storage on behalf of some of its prominent benefactors. \nScreening daily alongside Black Atlas are two films that explore these threads in our contemporary world. Laura Waddington’s film CARGO (2001\, 29 mins) evokes the contradictions of a global freight network that services the movement of goods at the expense of the freedoms of its crew. Based on a six-week journey she made on a container ship with Rumanian and Filipino sailors\, Waddington has said of CARGO‘it falls between reality and fiction. It was a way of showing the limbo these men were living in.’ \nMaeve Brennan’s The Drift (2017\, 50mins) traces the shifting economies of objects in contemporary Lebanon through three individuals: Fakhry\, Mohammed and Hashem. It draws out their embodied knowledge of materials and things –  Fakhry guarding the Roman temple he rebuilt\, Mohammed replacing salvaged car parts as he talks\, Hashem silently repairing ceramic fragments –  in contrast to the exploitative practices we glimpse at the sharper edge of conflict. \n  \nMaeve Brennan\, The Drift (2017\, 50mins\, HD video)\, produced by Spike Island\, Bristol and Chisenhale\, London\, and commissioned by those venues along with The Whitworth\, Manchester\, and Lismore Castle Arts \n Laura Waddington CARGO (2001\, 29mins\, Digibeta)\, commissioned by International Film Festival Rotterdam
URL:https://campleline.org.uk/event/exhibition-opening-jacqueline-hoang-nguyen-maeve-brennan-laura-waddington/
LOCATION:Cample Line\, Thornhill\, DG3 4XX\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:Spring Edition
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20190206T190000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20190206T210000
DTSTAMP:20260517T175913
CREATED:20190107T215520Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190107T215619Z
UID:3477-1549479600-1549486800@campleline.org.uk
SUMMARY:Reading Group #9  Madeleine Thien\, Do Not Say We Have Nothing
DESCRIPTION:  \nCAMPLE LINE Reading Group\nWednesday 6 February\, 7-9pm\nJoin us for tea\, coffee (decaff!) and conversation about our ninth read – Madeleine Thien’s Do Not Say We have Nothing (2016\, Granta\, 480 pages) \nIn Canada in 1990\, ten-year-old Marie and her mother invite a guest into their home: a young woman who has fled China in the aftermath of the Tiananmen Square protests. Her name is Ai-ming. \nAs her relationship with Marie deepens. Ai-ming tells the story of her family in revolutionary China\, from the crowded teahouses in the first days of Chairman Mao’s ascent\, to the Shanghai Conservatory in the 1960s and the events leading to the Beijing demonstrations of 1989. It is a history of revolutionary idealism\, music and silence\, in which three musicians\, the shy and brilliant composer Sparrow\, the violin prodigy Zhuli\, and the enigmatic pianist Kai struggle during China’s relentless Cultural Revolution to remain loyal to one another and to the music they have devoted their lives to. Forced to re-imagine their artistic and private selves\, their fates reverberate through the years\, with deep and lasting consequences for Ai-ming – and for Marie. \nMadeleine Thien is the author of the story collection Simple Recipes (2001) and the novels Certainty (2006) and Dogs at the Perimeter (Granta\, 2012). Her books and stories have been translated into 23 languages. The daughter of Malaysian-Chinese immigrants to Canada\, she lives in Montreal.
URL:https://campleline.org.uk/event/reading-group-9-madeleine-thien-do-not-say-we-have-nothing/
CATEGORIES:May You Live
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20190127T174500
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20190127T194500
DTSTAMP:20260517T175913
CREATED:20190107T215229Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190107T215245Z
UID:3473-1548611100-1548618300@campleline.org.uk
SUMMARY:Screening  Tampopo (1985)
DESCRIPTION:  \nTampopo [15]\n(1985\, Japan\, Director Jûzô Itami\, 1hr 54mins\, English subtitles) \nCast: Tsutomu Yamazaki\, Nobuko Miyamoto\, Kōji Yakusho\, Ken Watanabe \nTickets: £3 | £2\nYou can book directly with us: info@campleline.org.uk | 01848 331 000 \nWe are really pleased to be screening the wonderful ‘Tampopo’ as part of the BFI’s Comedy Genius season\, with support from Driftwood Cinema. \nHow far would you go for the perfect ramen? ‘Tampopo’ is a brilliant underdog story of a roadside ramen shop vying to create the best ramen noodles around. Trucking stranger Goro drives into town and takes shelter in the failing\, out-of-the-way ramen bar. He takes pity on its owner Tampopo\, and with a diverse team of local noodle\, broth and topping experts\, he sets out to turn it into the finest noodle bar in Tokyo. Along the way\, ‘Tampopo’ riffs on Japanese corporate culture\, internationalism\, domestic relations\, cinema and sex. One of the best Japanese films of the 1980s\, it is often referred to as a ‘ramen western’ and has only recently been re-released. Director Juzo Itami has said: \n‘I made this movie entirely out of things I like. Ramen noodles\, Westerns\, some parts of Tokyo\, and these actors. A long time ago\, I had this idea of making a film concerning human behavior about food\, because a sensual movie could be made from such a theme. I began collecting episodes\, but thought there would be no way to string them all into a workable film. Then I considered doing something about a noodle shop\, and doing it as a Western. But I still wanted to fit those episodes in. So I thought of the Buñuel film The Phantom of Liberty\, the kind of film where the last thing of the scene before leads to the next event — that kind of quick-change thing.’ \nComedy Genius is a nationwide celebration of comedy on screen\, led by BFI\, the Independent Cinema Office and BFI Film Audience network\, supported by funds from the National Lottery.
URL:https://campleline.org.uk/event/screening-tampopo-1985/
LOCATION:Cample Line\, Thornhill\, DG3 4XX\, United Kingdom
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20190119T100000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20190119T160000
DTSTAMP:20260517T175913
CREATED:20190107T214747Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190107T214820Z
UID:3467-1547892000-1547913600@campleline.org.uk
SUMMARY:Pop-Up Exhibition  Wallace Hall Academy Higher Photography Class
DESCRIPTION:  \nFriday 18 January 2019\, 5-7pm\nSaturday 19 January 2019\, 10am-4pm\nFree \nWe are delighted to be hosting a pop-up exhibition of work-in-progress by Wallace Hall Academy’s Higher Photography Class on Friday 18th and Saturday 19th January 2019! \nCome and see the fantastic work that the Higher Photography pupils have been producing as part of their course. \nJanuary is typically our quiet month – during which we catch up with all our admin. So we have really enjoyed working with the class and their teacher Vickie Simpson to plan this brief takeover of our upstairs gallery. \nImage by Calum!
URL:https://campleline.org.uk/event/pop-up-exhibition-wallace-hall-academy-higher-photography-class-2/
LOCATION:Cample Line\, Thornhill\, DG3 4XX\, United Kingdom
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20190118T170000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20190118T190000
DTSTAMP:20260517T175913
CREATED:20190107T214618Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190107T214946Z
UID:3464-1547830800-1547838000@campleline.org.uk
SUMMARY:Pop Up Exhibition  Wallace Hall Academy Higher Photography class
DESCRIPTION:  \nFriday 18 January 2019\, 5-7pm\nSaturday 19 January 2019\, 10am-4pm\nFree \nWe are delighted to be hosting a pop-up exhibition of work-in-progress by Wallace Hall Academy’s Higher Photography Class on Friday 18th and Saturday 19th January 2019! \nCome and see the fantastic work that the Higher Photography pupils have been producing as part of their course. \nJanuary is typically our quiet month – during which we catch up with all our admin. So we have really enjoyed working with the class and their teacher Vickie Simpson to plan this brief takeover of our upstairs gallery! \nImage by Calum!
URL:https://campleline.org.uk/event/pop-up-exhibition-wallace-hall-academy-higher-photography-class/
LOCATION:Cample Line\, Thornhill\, DG3 4XX\, United Kingdom
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20181208T130000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20181208T160000
DTSTAMP:20260517T175913
CREATED:20181005T135023Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20181201T142954Z
UID:3383-1544274000-1544284800@campleline.org.uk
SUMMARY:A catalogue page\, a piece of folded paper\, a building or an environment...  Creative workshop by My Bookcase
DESCRIPTION:A catalogue page\, a piece of folded paper\, a building or an environment…\nCreative workshop by My Bookcase \nMy Bookcase invites you to take part in a creative workshop and in doing so explore your own experience of Flying Fox through short texts selected by Hopkins and CAMPLE LINE. We will look at the relationship between text and work and transform them into new forms\,  generating a collective publication that offers a new reading of Flying Fox.\n\nFlying Fox exhibition is a dynamic encounter with colour\, abstraction\, grid and place. Through abstraction\, artist Louise Hopkin’s connects us vitally and emotionally to our surroundings. During the workshop\, and through the use of reading\, writing and shape making we will explore our individual and collective relationship to the exhibition and CAMPLE LINE’s unique setting.\n\nMy Bookcase is a social enterprise founded in 2014 by artist Cristina Garriga. Now based in Glasgow\, Barcelona and Amsterdam\, it creatively explores the role of the book and its reader in today’s society. \n10 places available | £3 (to cover material costs)\nBook a place via eventbrite or contact us directly\ninfo@campleline.or.uk | 01848 331 000
URL:https://campleline.org.uk/event/a-catalogue-page-a-piece-of-folded-paper-a-building-or-an-environment-reading-workshop-by-my-bookcase/
LOCATION:Cample Line\, Thornhill\, DG3 4XX\, United Kingdom
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20181201T170000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20181201T170000
DTSTAMP:20260517T175913
CREATED:20180922T100951Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20180922T102037Z
UID:3371-1543683600-1543683600@campleline.org.uk
SUMMARY:Screening: An American in Paris (1951\, U)
DESCRIPTION:image: still from An American in Paris (US\, Vincente Minelli\, 1951\, 115mins) courtesy of Warner Bros Distributors\nThe second of our technicolour films this autumn: highly successful in its own time and the winner of eight academy awards\, An American in Paris (1951) was inspired by the 1928 orchestral composition of the same name by George Gershwin. \nStarring Gene Kelly as Jerry Mulligan and Leslie Caron as Lise Bouvier and set in Paris\, the choreography and art direction are outstanding\, aided by the colour saturation achieved through the technicolour process. Featuring the wonderful I got Rhythm with Gene Kelly at his best...C’est le shim-sham… \n  \n£3 (£2) | booking advised\nBook a seat via eventbrite or contact us directly\ninfo@campleline.org.uk | 01848 331 000 \n 
URL:https://campleline.org.uk/event/screening-an-american-in-paris-1951-u/
LOCATION:Cample Line\, Thornhill\, DG3 4XX\, United Kingdom
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20181128T190000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20181128T210000
DTSTAMP:20260517T175913
CREATED:20181009T113228Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20181009T113438Z
UID:3400-1543431600-1543438800@campleline.org.uk
SUMMARY:Reading Group #8  Aminatta Forna  The Memory of Love
DESCRIPTION:  \nIf you like the sound of Forna’s book\, then why not join us on 28 November for (decaff) coffee (or tea) and conversation – it’s our eighth read! \nFreetown\, Sierra Leone\, 1969. On a hot January evening that he will remember for decades\, Elias Cole first catches sight of Saffia Kamara\, the wife of a charismatic colleague. He is transfixed. Thirty years later\, lying in the capital’s hospital\, he recalls the desire that drove him to acts of betrayal he has tried to justify ever since. \nElsewhere in the hospital\, Kai\, a gifted young surgeon\, is desperately trying to forget the pain of a lost love that torments him as much as the mental scars he still bears from the civil war. It falls to a British psychologist\, Adrian Lockheart\, to help the two survivors\, but when he too falls in love\, past and present collide with devastating consequences. \nAminatta Forna was born in Scotland\, raised in Sierra Leone and Great Britain and spent periods of her childhood in Iran\, Thailand and Zambia. She is the award-winning author of the novels Happiness\, The Hired Man\, The Memory of Love and a memoir The Devil that Danced on the Water. She is currently Lannan Visiting Chair of Poetics at Georgetown University and Professor of Creative Writing at Bath Spa University. \nPlease bring your own copy of the book.
URL:https://campleline.org.uk/event/reading-group-8-aminatta-forna-the-memory-of-love/
LOCATION:Cample Line\, Thornhill\, DG3 4XX\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:May You Live
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20181124T150000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20181124T150000
DTSTAMP:20260517T175913
CREATED:20180921T131518Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20180921T131518Z
UID:3354-1543071600-1543071600@campleline.org.uk
SUMMARY:Dr Jane Goldman reading Gertrude Stein
DESCRIPTION:image: cover of Tender Buttons\, 1914\, published by Uniformbooks\, 2012\nWe are delighted that Dr Jane Goldman\, Reader at the University of Glasgow\, will read extracts of both ‘Objects’ and ‘Rooms’\, from Gertrude Stein’s 1914 abstract poetry anthology Tender Buttons. \n  \nFree | booking advised\nBook a seat via eventbrite or contact us directly\ninfo@campleline.org.uk | 01848 331 000
URL:https://campleline.org.uk/event/dr-jane-goldman-reading-gertrude-stein/
LOCATION:Cample Line\, Thornhill\, DG3 4XX\, United Kingdom
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20181117T140000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20181117T140000
DTSTAMP:20260517T175913
CREATED:20180921T142840Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20180921T142840Z
UID:3348-1542463200-1542463200@campleline.org.uk
SUMMARY:In conversation: Louise Hopkins
DESCRIPTION:Louise Hopkins\, Bridge and Crown\, 2018 (detail)\, copyright 2018\, Louise Hopkins\, photo: Tina Fiske\nWe look forward to welcoming Louise Hopkins back to Cample to talk about the development of her new commission and exhibition Flying Fox in the context of her wider practice. Chaired by Tina Fiske. \n  \nFree | booking advised\nBook a seat via eventbrite or contact us directly\ninfo@campleline.org.uk | 01848 331 000
URL:https://campleline.org.uk/event/in-conversation-louise-hopkins/
LOCATION:Cample Line\, Thornhill\, DG3 4XX\, United Kingdom
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20181115T183000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20181115T203000
DTSTAMP:20260517T175913
CREATED:20181009T115840Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20181009T115840Z
UID:3404-1542306600-1542313800@campleline.org.uk
SUMMARY:Artist Film Group  Spell Reel\, 2017
DESCRIPTION:A collective film assembled by Portuguese artist Filipa César\nWith Anita Fernandez\, Flora Gomes\, Sana na N’Hada et al\n96mins\, with English subtitles\n£3 \n \n  \nPlease join us for this first screening in our Artist Film series. Throughout our programme to date\, we have showed a number of extraordinary long-form films by artists and experimental filmmakers\, some lasting over two hours. We invite you to join us for screenings and low-key discussion about unique films drawn from across the world. \nSpell Reel centres upon the story of an archive of film and audio material in Guinea-Bissau in West Africa\, which was originally commissioned in the 1960s as part of the decolonising vision of Amílcar Cabral\, the liberation leader who was assassinated in 1973. Following a military coup in 2012\, filmmakers Sana na N’Hada and Flora Gomes took the footage to Berlin for digitization. Two years later\, inspired by Chris Marker’s visit to Guinea-Bissau (and during which he screened his own films in villages)\, N’Hada and Gomes then returned to present the digitized films in the places where the footage was originally shot. \nWith great poignancy\, César’s film draws together excerpts of the original footage now digitised alongside her own footage of the screenings that took place first in Guinea-Bissau and then in Berlin\, and the discussions that followed them. As Ela Bittencourt has said: ‘…the images gain new urgency by being reinserted into a public discourse. Spell Reel is about the importance of sharing images.’  \nFilipa César was born in 1975 in Porto in Portugal. She lives and works in Berlin. Her films films are concerned with the relationship between history\, memory\, image and narrative. \nPart of our May You Live screening programme
URL:https://campleline.org.uk/event/artist-film-group-spell-reel-2017/
LOCATION:Cample Line\, Thornhill\, DG3 4XX\, United Kingdom
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20181110T170000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20181110T170000
DTSTAMP:20260517T175913
CREATED:20180921T113643Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20180921T115657Z
UID:3344-1541869200-1541869200@campleline.org.uk
SUMMARY:Screening: Singin' in the Rain (1952\, U)
DESCRIPTION:image: still from Singin’ in the Rain (US\, Gene Kelly and Stanley Donan\, 1952\, 103mins)\, courtesy of Warner Bros Distributors\nThe first of two technicolour films we are screening this autumn: Singin’ in the Rain (1952) is an extraordinary feat of story-telling and choreography combined with three-colour technology. Set during the rise of the ‘talkies’ in Hollywood in the 1920s\, Don Lockwood and Lina Lamont\, two stars of the silent-film era of Hollywood\, must adapt. However\, Lina has a shrill voice\, and young studio singer Kathy Selden is is initially recruited to voice her parts. \nFeaturing some dazzling choreography and dance performance\, including Moses Supposes\, Make’em Laugh\, Good Morning and Singin’ in the Rain\, it remains a singular achievement of musical cinema. \n  \n£3 (£2) | booking advised\nBook a seat via eventbrite or contact us directly\ninfo@campleline.org.uk | 01848 331 000
URL:https://campleline.org.uk/event/screening-singin-in-the-rain-1952-u/
LOCATION:Cample Line\, Thornhill\, DG3 4XX\, United Kingdom
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR