Exhibition
Ed Hadfield - Pleasures of the Body
11 Sep 2020 – 29 Oct 2020
Regular hours
- Friday
- 10:00 – 14:00
- Tuesday
- 10:00 – 17:00
- Thursday
- 10:00 – 17:00
Address
- 8 Submarine Cable Depot
- (Bottom of Warspite Road & turn right into industrial yard)
- London
England - SE18 5NX
- United Kingdom
Travel Information
- Nearest Bus Stop: Warspite Road. Busses 177, 161, 180, 472 from Greenwich and North Greenwich
- Nearest train station: Woolwich Dockyard. Trains regularly from London Bridge
A series of three public murals taking over the exterior of Cable Depot
About
Ed Hadfield
Pleasures of the Body
Curated by Iavor Lubomirov
11 September - 29 October 2020
Private Views
Friday 11th September
Friday 25th September
Friday 9th October
At Cable Depot: 6pm - 9pm
Please observe Covid safety guidelines - wear a mask and maintain 2m distancing. If possible avoid public transport and come in your own vehicle, by bike, or on foot. Hand sanitiser will be provided. Entry into the space will be limited to one person at a time. If this is not possible, plese join us online istead.
On Instagram Live: 7-8pm
Click on the link to Cable Depot’s Instagram profile, or if you already follow us you will receive an automatic notification at the start of the live stream: https://www.instagram.com/cable_depot/
In his latest series of Poetic Wall Art Murals, Ed Hadfield captures and conveys the body’s experiential relationship with its environment and the simple moments of pleasure that can slip by you before you even know they’ve happened. Working primarily with poetry, he scales the medium into wall sized murals so as to reach a more vernacular audience.
Pleasures of the Body is informed by the idea of the living body (soma) as a site of sensory appreciation and builds on the philosophers John Dewey and Richard Shusterman and their notions of unified and fragmented experiences, with a particular emphasis on somaethetics.
Ed's poetry builds on Objectivist poetic theory of “thinking with things as they exist” as well as the New Sincerity poetic movement which emphasises lyric subjectivity and the use of contemporary typography, layout & advertising techniques to take poetry to a wider public audience.
In making these works he has pursued the rhythm and rhyme of poetry to convey the feeling of experience; whilst using the visual language and design layout of typography to support that end.