Community - Rugby Art Gallery & Museum
Community Exhibition Space
A dedicated platform that features community arts projects by community groups, charities, schools, and our regular arts groups throughout the year. Exhibitions are displayed in 2 week slots which are bookable and free to our communities.
If you belong to or know of a local community group who would interested in working with us or showing their creations in our Community Space please get in touch with Phoebe.Hilton@rugby.gov.uk
Exhibitions 2024
A D-Day 80 commemoration: Bilton and Paddox primary schools.
Refugee Week
Express Colour
Asylum Seekers Womens Group
Heritage Open Days
Harris School Eco Exhibition
Green Pledges
Good Times Rememberance Day
Albert Street Hoardings
Rugby Borough Council commissioned a new co-produced community artwork to be digitally printed and installed on hoardings on Albert Street, Rugby.
Responding to the theme Routes and Connections, the artwork adds spark of colour, creativity, and local joy along the fastest walking route from Rugby Train Station into the Town Centre.
Led by artist Clare Pentlow, this train has been co-designed with local schools and community groups across the borough who were asked to imagine their favourite views of Rugby. Those involved include 100 children from Northlands School, Rugby Free School, Riverside Academy and Brooke School, as well as adults from the Express Art Group at the Benn Partnership Centre, Asylum Seekers and visitors of Rugby Art Gallery and Museum.
This project was funded by the UK Government through the UK Shared Prosperity Fund.
Rugby Collection
Rugby Collection Selected by Chris Orr RA
10 February – 8 June
All art is important, whether it is the art of children figuring out the order and meaning of their expanding worlds, or the professionals treading in the footsteps of giants at the same time as trying to do something new. Art permeates our lives, and no better example can be found than in the art of Quentin Blake. Generations of people have grown up with his witty and incisive drawings leading them through stories old and new. Thanks to Quentin the Twits will never die and we know one when we see one.
Art resonates long after its creation and after its creators had gone. Public collections that have been trawled out over time from the vast sea of art give us a glimpse into past achievements and expressions. Collections have been in progress since the dawn of art reflecting both the politics and fashions of their times. But once created they will be added to. They are part of the wealth of everybody’s history.
Nowadays some of these collections are in trouble. Both the grand affairs in major cities and the smaller local establishments are competing for funds. So, it is great to come across a collection that is in rude health here in Rugby. Not a big collection, only 241 works, but a very interesting one. Begun in 1946, like all collections it is varied ranging from the obscure to the exquisite and profound. I was honoured to be asked to make a choice.
I approached the job of selecting a show using the magpie part of my brain. First, I chose many works by old friends encountered in a career in teaching at art schools and through the Royal Academy. This is a bit like organising a fantasy dinner party with your favourite guests. Here I put Carel Weight, John Bellany, Terry Setch, David Tindle, Craigie Aitchinson, Leon Kossoff. Then there are those works that surprise and intrigue me. I love finding art that has perhaps languished in the vault’s unseen for a while. Fashion and taste change. I found a drawing by Richard Sheppard made in 1943 (the year I was born) of women working in a factory. It’s immediacy and energy hooked me. Then there are the truly breathtaking works that have their place because they are very special. In this category I put the lovely pencil drawing by Barbara Hepworth, the terrific etching by Paula Rego and the beautiful print by John Hoyland.
When I was 9 years old my mother took me to the Tate Gallery (now Tate Britain), and I remember 2 paintings that lodged in my mind were The Order of the Release by John Everett Millais and a painting by Fernand Leger. I commented to my mother that I thought there were 2 types of art. —- “traditional” and “modern” and that I liked both. I put that visit down as one of the reasons I became an artist, the literal stories in the pre-Raphaelite paintings and the vigorous modernism of Leger have been strands of influence throughout my career.
When you look at this selection don’t be afraid of your own opinion. Don’t judge too quickly, let the images live in your mind for a little while. I hope that my choice will spark something positive but reject and dislike it if you like. There are as many kinds of art and artists as there are people. Seeing the real thing in a Gallery is still the very best thing, but in this fantastic new world of communication, taking an interest further is so easy. So, start googling, visit other collections, buy the books. Do some art yourself.