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ArchiveExhibition

Chris Alton & Emily Simpson: Grief must be Love with Nowhere to Go

22 Mar-4 May 2024
PV 21 Mar 2024, 6-8pm

Bloc Projects
Sheffield S1 4RB

Overview

Grief must be Love with Nowhere to Go is a collaboration between Chris Alton and Emily Simpson.

In their own words:

Over the past 6 months we’ve been holding spaces for people to come together and share their experiences of living with loss. We’ve held shared dinners; where people are invited to bring a dish associated with the person they’ve lost. We’ve spent afternoons sewing with others; making wearable patches that communicate our grief (loosely influenced by Victorian mourning customs). We’ve invited people to sit together and share music that reminds them of the person who’s died or their broader experience of grief. With each gathering, the activity has acted as a ‘softener’ for difficult conversations, where the acts of sharing food, sewing, or listening to music create a space that words are invited to fill.

Through a large textile installation and seating made of reclaimed materials, the exhibition brings together some of these words, transforming the gallery space into an environment for reflection. Visitors can spend time within the space, where language becomes a shelter. The hope is that by going public with what living with loss looks like, we can better support each other collectively through the inevitable.
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Emily Simpson is an artist, curator and workshop facilitator. Their work looks at love, lols and loss; explored through textiles, writing, zines, events, print-making and curation amongst other things. The work often questions how experiences (of loss, life, language) are shaped by the non-binary perspective and the political implications of this. Emily founded oh kay gall, an artist-led gallery which ran from 2018-2019 in York. Emily lives in Manchester and has a cat named Tofu.

Chris Alton is an artist, based in Manchester. His practice spans a range of media and approaches, including; socially engaged projects, video essays, textile banners, and publications. Each of his projects addresses an array of interconnected social, political, economic and environmental concerns.