Exhibition goes behind scenes of Lancaster factory
Behind The Wall, which runs at Lancaster City Museum from March 4-May 1, explores and reveals the heritage and everyday world of Standfast & Barracks.
Mirador, a new Lancaster-based arts and heritage company, has attracted some of the country’s most creative minds to bring the Caton Road site’s story to life – from its birth as a carriage and wagon works and its role as an internment camp in World War One to its nine decades as an international fabric printing company.
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Hide Ad“Thousands of people pass this site on a main thoroughfare into the city every day yet few know anything about its past,” said George Harris, one of Mirador’s creative producers.
The artwork includes Ghosts in the Machine, a textile exhibit by Michael Brennand-Wood, and crafted panels exploring time, structure and history created by artist Caroline Bartlett.
There’ll also be a family friendly ‘time machine’ inspired by the Standfast & Barracks clock tower, representing stories in miniature produced by Lancashire-based Bonker*s & Clutterbucks.
Lancaster photographer, Darren Andrews, has produced ‘camera-less’ photogram images printed onto fabrics of objects discovered around Standfast and Katie Duxbury has created a crinoline reflecting its history. Young people can also use Minecraft in the exhibition.