After a year in which many have experienced the challenging effects of social isolation, The Portico Library is inviting the public to a programme celebrating games and recreation through the ages. From Jane Austen’s depictions of the card-playing Georgian middle classes to Dickens’ festivals and dances, 19th-century literature describes the roles that pastimes play in our cultural lives, and the social, moral and intellectual aspects of game-playing
Films, paintings and objects by contemporary artists will complement books and illustrations from the Library’s unique 19th-century collection that explore the origins of popular games and the contexts in which they evolved.
Books in the Library’s collection on display will include Joseph Strutt’s Glig Gamena Angel Deod or The Sports & Pastimes of the People of England (1801); Matilda Chaplin Ayrton’s Child-life in Japan (1888); Samuel Weller Singer’s History of Playing Cards (1816); Lilly Grove’s Dancing (1895); and John Northbrooke’s Treatise Against Dicing, Dancing, Plays and Interludes, with Other Idle Pastimes (1843, first published 1577). Artworks will include Hope Strickland’s tender short film Home Soon Come, Bob Bicknell-Knight’s video game-inspired paintings, Danielle Brathwaite-Shirley’s archiving of Black Trans experience through digital technologies and Birungi Kawooya’s mixed-media collages of card and African batik depicting Kiganda and Hiplet dancers.
The exhibition Fun & Games: Playtime, past & present opens with an interactive web version on Friday 20th November, preceded by an online preview event from 7pm to 8pm on Thursday 19th November, and then in the Library on 3rd December where it will provide the setting for interactive activities throughout winter 2020 and spring 2021.
James Moss