Exhibition
Tower Bridge At Home: ‘Making The Bridge Sing’
10 Jun 2020 – 31 Dec 2020
Regular hours
- Wednesday
- 09:30 – 17:00
- Thursday
- 09:30 – 17:00
- Friday
- 09:30 – 17:00
- Saturday
- 09:30 – 17:00
- Sunday
- 09:30 – 17:00
- Monday
- 09:30 – 17:00
- Tuesday
- 09:30 – 17:00
Address
- Tower Bridge Road
- London
England - SE1 2UP
- United Kingdom
‘Making the Bridge Sing’ is an exhibition that spotlights Hannah Griggs, one of the first female workers on Tower Bridge, now online for the first time. The exhibition is designed around the artwork of artist, inventor and filmmaker Di Mainstone.
About
London’s defining landmark, Tower Bridge, has brought artist Di Mainstone's fantastical world of Hannah Griggs, a real-life cook at Tower Bridge in the 1910s, online to families, history lovers and Londoners for the very first time.
An online iteration of Tower Bridge’s 'Making The Bridge Sing' exhibition unveiled in January in the historic Victorian Engine Rooms, online visitors can explore Hannah’s life as a cook in the famous towers and also as a keen gardener. Real elements of Hannah’s life are revealed alongside a specially composed musical narrative, which imagines dreamlike sights and sounds that she experienced while working at the Bridge to help her plants grow.
Her story can now be experienced in the following ways:
Watch an extract of ‘Time Bascule’
'Time Bascule’, a film created by sound artist, inventor and filmmaker Di Mainstone and the focus for the exhibition, imagines Hannah to be experimenting with music - creating magical sounds by ‘playing' different parts of the Bridge with unusual, invented instruments to help her plants grow. In a remarkable twist, it features some of Hannah’s London descendants.
Online fans can also watch behind the scenes footage of the making of 'Time Bascule', along with Di's concept sketches for the digital art piece.
Di Mainstone has previously developed instruments to create music from the Brooklyn Bridge, Clifton Suspension Bridge and most recently Sunderland’s new Northern Spire Bridge. The New York Times has featured her as one of the “new generation visionaries” of the international digital arts scene.
Listen to the sounds of Hannah’s world
Making The Bridge Sing imagines the soothing and ethereal sounds of Hannah’s world, accompanied by images of nature growing around the Bridge. Viewers can click to listen to the birds chirping, the waves of the River Thames flowing below, the bees buzzing around Hannah's plants, and the outside bustle as she goes about her work at the Bridge.
Free activities to try at home
Families wanting to bring Hannah’s world to life at home can get creative with three free downloadable activity packs.
Designed to celebrate Tower Bridge’s 125th anniversary, the Time Bascule film and accompanying Making The Bridge Sing exhibition are part of an eclectic programme of arts, installations and intimate events to establish Tower Bridge as a must-see London cultural venue.