Opening Hours

Monday: Closed
Tuesday: 11am – 5pm
Wednesday: 11am – 5pm
Thursday: 11am – 5pm
Friday: 11am – 5pm
Saturday: 11am – 5pm
Sunday: 11am – 5pm

Please note the House opens at 12pm, with last entry to the House at 4pm. To visit the House you will need to pre-book a ticket. Click here to book now.

Access Information & Contact Us

Find access information here. 

+44 (0)1223 748 100
mail@kettlesyard.cam.ac.uk

 

Kettle’s Yard News

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For our latest blogs click here

Find out What’s On at Kettle’s Yard here.

 

We are delighted to announce our 2023 exhibitions at Kettle’s Yard. Read the blog post to find out more about forthcoming exhibitions.

Andrew Nairne, Director, says:

We have some very special exhibitions for you in 2023. We hope you will be inspired by the variety of outstanding artworks (including painting, pottery and embroidery) and by enriching creative and cultural stories.

All our temporary exhibitions are free. Please become a Friend or Patron of Kettle’s Yard so we can continue to make original and exciting exhibitions. You can find out more here about the ways you can help us, including our work with local schools and communities, and the difference your support makes. Thank you.

Lucie Rie: The Adventure of Pottery

4 March – 25 June 2023

Celebrating one of the most significant potters of the twentieth century, this major new exhibition is a rare opportunity to experience Lucie Rie’s (1902-1995) ground- breaking practice across six decades. Lucie Rie: The Adventure of Pottery will feature more than 100 works, considering afresh the singular nature of Rie’s achievement, from functional tableware to elegant bowls and vases decorated with sgraffito lines and expressive glazes.

Find out more about the exhibition here

Lucie Rie, Bowl, 1977, thrown porcelain with manganese glaze and sgraffito decoration, Middlesbrough Collection. Purchased with assistance from the V&A Purchase Grant Fund.

Material Power: Palestinian Embroidery

8 July – 29 October 2023

Ancient, intimate and political, embroidery is arguably the foremost cultural material of Palestine. Practised for centuries, politicised in national struggle and critically addressed by contemporary artists, embroidery in Palestine has been intimately connected to shifting social and political realities in the Middle East over the last 100 years. The garments on display in this new exhibition will span the 20th century, embodying female labour and resilience, and making manifest pivotal moments in Palestine’s recent history, such as the impact of the 1948 Nakba and the First Intifada (1987–1993). The exhibition will include work by contemporary artists who use thread to explore labour, gender and displacement, and to reflect the experiences of Palestinian people today. The exhibition also includes political posters, archival photographs and commissioned films by artist Maeve Brennan who interviews Palestinian women who practise embroidery.

Find out more about the exhibition here

Dress from Hebron, 1900-1915, The Palestinian Heritage Museum/Dar al-Tifel al-Arabi, Jerusalem. © The Palestinian Museum, Birzeit, Palestine

Making New Worlds: Li Yuan-chia and Friends

11 November 2023 – 18 February 2024

Li Yuan-chia (1929-1994) has had a profound impact on the history of British art and conceptual practices, yet his contribution to the art world and the networks he created – from his emigration to London in 1965, to his experiments with museum-as-artwork in the 1970s and ‘80s – have yet to be explored widely. This exhibition will draw parallels between Li’s LYC Museum and Art Gallery in Cumbria, and Kettle’s Yard, both places motivated by a shared belief in the inseparability of art, friendship and home.

Artists across generational and geographical borders, many of whom exhibited at the LYC and Kettle’s Yard, will be brought together, including Barbara Hepworth, Ben Nicholson and Winifred Nicholson.

Find out more about the exhibition here

Li Yuan-chia Untitled, 1993, Unique hand-coloured photographic print. 24.6 x 20 cm. Image courtesy of the Li Yuan-chia Foundation © Li Yuan-chia Foundation

Open Now: Paint Like the Swallow Sings Calypso

12 November 2022 – 19 February 2023

Paint Like the Swallow Sings Calypso is a new exhibition curated in dialogue with artists Paul Dash (b. 1946, Barbados), Errol Lloyd (b. 1943, Jamaica) and John Lyons (b. 1933, Trinidad). Alongside a selection of their own works, the artists have brought together the collections of Kettle’s Yard and The Fitzwilliam Museum for the first time, assembling paintings and works on paper that reflect the rich history and themes of Carnival, from street parades and dance, to folklore, flora and fauna. The work of 28 artists spans five centuries and reflects elements from Carnival’s rituals and celebrations, including Jean-Michel Moreau, Albrecht Dürer, Helen Frankenthaler, Avinash Chandra, David Bomberg, Graham Sutherland, Barbara Hepworth and Pieter Brueghel, the younger.

Find out more about the exhibition here

Errol Lloyd, Notting Hill Carnival – Aztec, 1997, oil on canvas.