In this pair of videos, we will consider the deeply personal worlds created by artists and how we read them as they are presented to us.
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12 March 1788 Sheriff Clerk’s Office – £200 Reward “Whereas William Brodie, a considerable House Carpenter and Burgess of the City of Edinburgh has been charged with being concerned in the breaking into the General Excise Office for Scotland and stealing from the Cashier’s Office a sum of money –
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Make an artist’s folded book of observed plant life growing in unusual conditions in this two part video stream. In this first video we will look at selected images from the exhibition ‘Paul Duke: No Ruined Stone’.
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In our first video artist Tessa Asquith-Lamb will explore the documentary nature of the work of Paul Duke in his project No Ruined Stone.
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Join artist Tessa Asquith-Lamb for a tour specifically designed for visually impaired visitors.
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“Edinburgh is in fact two towns in more ways than one. It contains an upper and under town – the one a sort of thoroughfare for the children of business and fashion, the other a den of retreat for the poor, the diseased and the ignorant.”
Robert Chambers ‘Traditions of Edinburgh’ 1824.