Join us for the first of two workshop sessions, using words, images and music to build and grow a collective almanac, drawing on imagination and memory.
Venue: Firstsite, Lewis Gardens, High Street, Colchester, CO1 1JH
Tickets: Free, booking required
Box Office: Book tickets via our eventbrite page
Date and time: Sunday 3rd July, 12.00 – 4.00pm
This is the second of two workshops. The first workshop takes place on Saturday 4th June. We encourage participants to attend both workshops. Both workshops take place 12.00 – 4.00pm at Firstsite and are free to attend but booking is essential.
Almanacs were the most popular form of printed publication for centuries, so much so that they were read to bits and not many survive. But the tradition goes on – eg Old Moore’s Almanac is still in circulation every year.
Almanacs come packed with knowledge and foreknowledge – of important dates, of beliefs and stories, portents and charms. They are like calendars, but they offer an alternative form of time-keeping, local and personal.
During the past two years, while we were all – or most of us – suspended in the anxiety of the pandemic, cut off from friends and strangers alike, almost everyone experienced time behaving strangely.
An almanac is a calendar but with a difference: it looks forward to the coming time and fills it with hopes and dreams. A living almanac, which we are proposing, will gather us all kinds of lore that is important for us now and in the near future. Days can be marked by such lore as local weather, tides, migrations of birds and other creatures, dates propitious for planting, important days such as birthdays.
Fantastical and prophetic material is also typical of an almanac – horoscopes, wonders, miracles, superstitions, the folkloric and the surreal. A fresh, original almanac – a Living Almanac – can make time’s wayward passing our own story, our own calendar.
This living almanac will belong to us who are making it, as we look forward and express what we hope for and want to remember and would like to happen. And also what we want to forestall or deflect. We live in the imaginary mapped out by long generations in the past (our days of the week still carry the names of Thor and Freya), so let’s make our own imaginary now, for the future!
We invite participants from the area to attend two workshop sessions, where we build and grow a collective almanac drawing on imagination and memory and using art, literature and music.
This Living Almanac would be liberating and enabling – a source of the joy that comes from assembling and creating together: effervescent collectivity. It also encourages individuals to view each day differently, breaking monotony, bringing new rituals or practices to life.
A Living Almanac is kindly funded by Colchester Borough Council
Artists and writers involved in The Living Almanac include Marina Warner, Philip Terry, Adrian May and Sophie Herxheimer.
Marina Warner is a writer known for her work on fairy tales and storytelling, who has coordinated the workshops Stories in Transit.
Philip Terry is a poet and professor of creative writing, with his own research and creative projects focusing on Oulipian writing and methods, with word games and playfulness at the heart of his work.
Adrian May is a writer, songwriter and performer who has recently published Tradition in Creative Writing, a practical book that draws on literary and historical traditions, folk and song traditions, place and nature, and tradition and community.
Sophie Herxheimer is a poet and visual artist, currently teaching at the Royal Drawing School, who has immense experience of drawing people’s stories with communities and groups as they tell them to her.