Guided tour
Curators' Tour of Beyond the Visual
13:00–14:00 & 18:00–19:00
Henry Moore Institute, Leeds
About this event
Join the curators of Beyond the Visual – Dr Aaron McPeake, Dr Clare O’Dowd and Professor Ken Wilder – for an in-depth tour of the exhibition with those who created it.
The tour will run twice, at 13:00 and again at 18:00, and will last an hour. The content of both tours is the same.
Dr Aaron McPeake
In 2002, McPeake had to abandon a long career in stage lighting design due to the loss of most of his eyesight and returned to arts education and practice on a full-time basis. He has exhibited extensively internationally, including a number of prestigious group exhibitions engaging themes from critical disability studies.
His PhD thesis, at Chelsea College of Arts, UAL Nibbling at Clouds – The Visual Artist Encounters Adventitious Blindness, is a holistic study of the impacts vision loss has on the visual artist. The thesis draws on the experiences of a panel of artists (who lost eyesight in later life) and includes his own experience as well as how he has developed his own practice.
Dr Clare O’Dowd
Dr Clare O’Dowd is Research Curator at Henry Moore Institute, where she leads the Institute’s sculpture research programme of events, fellowships and exhibitions. She received her PhD from the University of Manchester in 2013, where she was Lecturer in Twentieth-Century Art History prior to joining the Institute in 2019.
Her research and curatorial interests focus on the histories of sculpture, particularly sculpture’s relationship to the experience of modernity and the ways in which artistic practices relate to broader issues of social change.
Professor Ken Wilder
Professor Ken Wilder is an academic, artist and writer. He is Professor of Aesthetics at University of the Arts London.
Wilder makes site-responsive sculptural installations and architectural interventions. He has exhibited widely in the UK and internationally. He was artist-in-residence for Coram, the leading children’s charity; in 2016, he installed Skylights, a site-specific installation within the London Foundling mortuary, Bloomsbury. Wilder has been principal investigator on two AHRC funded projects investigating blindness arts.
Wilder has written extensively on the aesthetics of reception. His monograph Beholding: Situated Art and the Aesthetics of Reception was published in 2020 by Bloomsbury. As well as contributing chapters to edited volumes, he has had articles published in the British Journal of Aesthetics, Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism, Aesthetics Investigations, Moving Image Review & Art Journal, Estetika: The European Journal of Aesthetics, Architecture and Culture, Theatre and Performance Design, Image [&] Narrative.
Tickets
Tickets to this event are free, and can be booked online via Eventbrite.
The tour will run twice, at 13:00 and again at 18:00, and will last an hour. The content of both tours is the same.
If you’d prefer to book over the phone, please call us on +44 (0)1132 467 467.
Exhibition and events
Exhibition
Beyond the Visual
Learn more
Opening night
Beyond the Visual opening celebrations
13:00–16:00 & 17:00–20:00
Parent and baby session
Gallery Babies: Beyond the Visual
11:00–12:30 & 13:30–15:00
Join the waitlist
Teacher CPD session
Art Social no. 14: A Sensory Vocabulary
17:00–19:00
Book your free ticket
Artist in conversation
David Johnson and Emilie Louise Gossiaux in conversation
18:00–19:00
Book your free ticket
Guided tour
Curators' Tour of Beyond the Visual
13:00–14:00 & 18:00–19:00
Book your free ticket
Artist in conversation
Jennifer Justice in conversation with Beyond the Visual curators
18:00–19:00
Book your free ticket
Performance
Electronic Music Showcase with Rian Treanor and Rotherham Sight and Sound
13:00–15:00
Book your free ticket
Artist in conversation
Collin Van Uchelen in conversation with Beyond the Visual curators
18:00–19:00
Book your free ticket
Accessibility
If you would like to talk to us about any access concerns before the event, you can email us at institute@henry-moore.org, or call us on 01132 467 467.
Step-free entrance
Our accessible entrance is on Cookridge Street, with a lift (doors 100cm wide) bringing you onto the ground floor of the building.
Internal lift
There is an internal passenger lift (doors 72cm wide) to all floors of the building.
Braille and large print
Braille and large print versions of descriptive text about the exhibition are available at the welcome desk.
Audio guide
Audio guides with descriptions are available for all artworks in the exhibition.
You can pick up a handheld audio player and headphones outside the sculpture galleries, or use your own device by scanning the QR codes next to each artwork.
Induction loops
There are induction loops at the welcome desk on the ground floor, library reception and in the seminar room.
There is a portable induction loop available for visitors to use in the galleries (please ask at the welcome desk).
Seating and quiet space
Seating is available in all of the exhibitions spaces.
There is a quiet space available in a room off from The Studio on the second floor of the building. Please ask a member of staff if you would like to use this space.
Toilets
Outside the seminar room on the basement level we have three gender-neutral superloos (self-contained cubicles with a toilet and sink).
Additionally, there is one gender-neutral, accessible superloo, and one superloo with baby changing facilities.
Changing Places toilet
The closest Changing Places toilet is located in Leeds City Museum, which is approximately a 350m walk from us over a mostly flat and pedestrianised route, with one pelican crossing.
Guide dogs
Guide dogs, hearing dogs and other badged assistance dogs are welcome in our galleries and at this event.
There is a small grassy area just outside the Institute, suitable for spending. The nearest green space is Park Square.
A water bowl for dogs is available, please ask a member of staff at the welcome desk who will fetch it for you.
Getting here
Find us next door to Leeds Art Gallery on Victoria Gardens, in the centre of Leeds. Our step-free entrance is on Cookridge Street.
Henry Moore Institute
74 The Headrow
Leeds
LS1 3AH
United Kingdom
T: 01132 467 467
E: institute@henry-moore.org
Visual Guide: Directions from Leeds Train Station to Henry Moore Institute
A step-by-step guide with photos to help you navigate from Leeds Train Station to Henry Moore Institute.
Walking this route takes around ten minutes. It is mostly flat, with a slight uphill incline in places. Crossing some roads is necessary, but these all have pedestrian crossing in place.