Showing posts with label Wakefield. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Wakefield. Show all posts

Thursday, August 7, 2025

Painting Budapest in Wakefield: György Gordon (1924-2005)

We were very pleased to host Arpad Bak, a PhD student from the University of Leeds, on a recent placement. Arpad conducted in-depth research into stories of migration to the Wakefield District. 

In this guest blog post, he recounts the story of artist, György Gordon. As part of his research, Arpad interviewed Gordon’s daughter, Anna. 

We’re very grateful to Arpad and Anna for this fascinating article.

Wakefield-based Hungarian-British painter, György Gordon (1924-2005) means to his hometown what Jacob Kramer (1892-1962) means to neighbouring Leeds. 

Both artists arrived in the UK as refugees from East Central Europe in the 20th century. They made lasting contributions to their newly found homes’ cultural life, both as artists and educators. 

Below we look at Gordon’s life and artistic legacy 20 years after his death.

An abstract oil painting of an older gentleman, resting his head against his hand, looking a bit displeased. The painting is in shades of green, blue and grey.
György Gordon, Self Portrait, 1983. Oil on Canvas. 49 x 59.5cm. Wakefield Permanent Art Collection (The Hepworth Wakefield). Full credit at end of article.

Gordon and his daughter, Anna fled Hungary in 1956, amid the turmoil of the anti-Soviet revolution. More than 200,000 people left Hungary during or after the repressed popular uprising against Moscow’s dominance over the country.

Anna was six when they fled. The only thing she took with her was a plush toy of a monkey. Anna grew up to be a fashion designer living in southern England and still cherishes this personal object from her childhood: “It has been a faithful company for me throughout my life.”

Gordon and his first wife, Márta Edinger (1924-1997), both held degrees from the Hungarian College of Fine Art. When the revolution broke out in Budapest in late October 1956, Marta was on a work trip to Australia. She drew caricatures at the Olympic Games in Melbourne. Meanwhile Gordon held an art residency in Zsennye, a village in western Hungary, not far from the Austrian border.

On 4 November 1956, the Soviet Union invaded Hungary and crushed the uprising. Although Gordon did not join the armed fights in the streets of Budapest, he was part of the intellectual opposition to the Stalinist regime in Hungary. 

Gordon feared the consequences of this dissent and decided to escape the country through the western border. Márta had relatives in the US and the family planned to reunite there.

Gordon was 32 at the time of the revolution. Anna had barely started primary school. Together, they set out to cross the border on foot across a forested area. They didn't take any baggage, which could have betrayed them. They walked during the night and hid during the day. Once they sheltered in an abandoned farmhouse. At other times they buried themselves in leaves, Anna recalled during our conversation.

Painting of a hooded person in mourning, painted predominately in shades of blue
György Gordon, Mourning, 1964. Oil on Canvas. 99 x 57.5cm. Wakefield Permanent Art Collection (The Hepworth Wakefield). Full credit at end of article.

It took three days for them to reach the border, as they lost their way in the wilderness multiple times. “There were many trails left in the woods, which my father imagined were traps,” Anna explained. But their real ordeals started just after arriving in Austria.

After some weeks spent at a refugee camp in Salzburg, Gordon and his daughter were carried overseas with a humanitarian airlift. They arrived at Ellis Island around Christmas. However, the authorities found out that the painter was a member of the Communist party in Hungary. He and Anna were deported back to Austria, as “undesirable aliens.”  It is important to note that Gordon had to be a member of the Communist party in order to have employment in Hungary.

Anna and Gyorgy were imprisoned upon their return. Anna shared a cell with four other children, also deportees, the youngest of whom was only four years old. After four days, she was placed under the care of a Hungarian couple. Her new foster parents took her to Germany, where they planned to work at a local coalmine. However, they soon changed their mind and decided to return to Hungary. They forced Anna to beg money in churches for the travel.

Whilst on the train heading home, Anna fled her foster parents. She jumped off the vehicle in Austria, in the hope of finding her father there. Her parents were already in the UK by that time. Anna ended up in another refugee camp, but the Red Cross helped reunite her with her parents. In June 1957 Anna took a plane to London, on her own, and finally joined up with her family there. However, instead of regaining the life that she left behind in Budapest, she found her parents’ marriage in a crisis. They divorced soon after.

An abstract two dimensional screen print of a female torso in white, pink and green against a black background
György Gordon, Female Torso. Screenprint on paper. 50.5 x 58cm. Wakefield Permanent Art Collection (The Hepworth Wakefield). Full credit at end of article. 

Gordon met his second wife in the community of Hungarian émigrés in London. In 1961, he married Marianne Mózes (1936-2013), who studied piano at the Royal Academy of Music. At that time, Gordon worked as a graphic designer for multiple agencies. 

For a while, they lived with a community of young artists from Hungary in Menelik Road, Kilburn. Many of them became successful in their careers in the UK or other countries. 

But Anna noted there were sad stories too. Their friend, the film-maker Robert Vas, who made a number of documentaries for the BBC, took his life for not gaining British citizenship, in fear of imprisonment in his home country.

György and Marianne became British citizens in 1964, a year after the birth of their son, Adam. The same year, they moved to Wakefield, where Gordon was offered a lecturer position at the Wakefield Technical and Arts College. He taught graphic art and later painting at this institution for over twenty years. Later on, Marianne also joined the staff of the college as a teacher of music. 

The Hungarian couple soon found many new friends among local arts professionals. They included fellow artists Martin Bates, Peter Murray and Steve Simpson, curator James Hamilton, and art critic W. T. Oliver.

The Gordons' home became a site of vibrant social life. “The house was full of people. People around the table talking, arguing, planning,” evoked Anna. They also frequently hosted music performances. First, the Gordons lived in a three-storey house near the city centre, at 42 Bond Street. They moved to a pair of former barn buildings in Heath Common, just outside Wakefield, in 1978. It took almost a decade for them to fully refurbish the ruined historical buildings, called the Joiners Shop & Old Smithy. 

Gordon retired in 1986, after which he devoted most of his time to painting.

A large traditional Yorkshire stone house
The Gordons' former home in Heath Common, near Wakefield. (Shared with consent of the current residents and Anna)

According to Anna, who by the that time had left the family home, Heath Common was a major turning point in Gordon’s life: “He finally had the studio of his dreams and he could just be home and paint. I could see that he was completely content at that point.” 

This sense of settlement was also reflected in the change of direction Gordon’s art took there. Previously, his paintings had often addressed the violence that he had seen during the Second World War and the 1956 revolution. In Heath Common, he turned to more conventional themes, such as portraits, building interiors and landscapes. However, a melancholic atmosphere remained a hallmark of his work. His human figures, including a series of self-portraits, appear to be fragile. They are enclosed in overwhelming spaces or exposed in vulnerable postures.

Hungary continued to be a subject matter for Gordon even after his period of trauma paintings. As soon as the family was naturalised in Britain, they started visiting their aging parents in Budapest. While in Hungary, Gordon made many sketches and photos of themes of potential interest.

Sketching of a horse flicking its head back and bearing its teeth. It is imbued with anger and violence.
György Gordon, Horses. Screenprint on paper. 41.5 x 51.5cm. Wakefield Permanent Art Collection (The Hepworth Wakefield). Full credit at end of article.

Gordon then returned to these sketches in his studio in Heath Common. For example, he completed a series of portraits of his in-laws. These artworks explore old age, loneliness, and isolation. Gordon also painted subjects from his new home in Britain. He made portraits of James Hamilton and the onetime Sheffield-based Lindsay String Quartet. He also produced studies of his home and its environment in Heath Common.

From the mid-1960s, Gordon regularly participated in exhibitions in the Yorkshire region. His works were often displayed alongside those by Peter Murray, the founder of the Yorkshire Sculpture Park. 

In 1974, the Wakefield Art Gallery celebrated Gordon’s presence in the city with a retrospective exhibition entitled “Ten Years in Wakefield." This was followed by further major solo shows, including in Budapest, London, and Leeds. 

A number of Gordon's works are held in public collections, including The Hepworth Wakefield, the National Portrait Gallery, London, the National Széchényi Library, Budapest, and the University of Leeds.

By Arpad Bak, University of Leeds, funded by the AHRC through the White Rose College of the Arts & Humanities (WRoCAH)

Artwork images and credit lines:

1. György Gordon, Self Portrait, 1983. Oil on Canvas. 49 x 59.5cm. Wakefield Permanent Art Collection (The Hepworth Wakefield). Purchased from the Artist, 1986 with support from a V&A Purchase Grant. (C) The Artist. Photographer: Norman Taylor. Image Courtesy: The Hepworth Wakefield.

2. György Gordon, Mourning, 1964. Oil on Canvas. 99 x 57.5cm. Wakefield Permanent Art Collection (The Hepworth Wakefield). Gifted by the Friends of Wakefield Art Gallery and Museums, 2012. (C) The Artist. Photographer: Norman Taylor. Image Courtesy: The Hepworth Wakefield.

3. György Gordon, Female Torso. Screenprint on paper. 50.5 x 58cm. Wakefield Permanent Art Collection (The Hepworth Wakefield). Transferred from the Print Loan Scheme, 2007 (C) The Artist. Photographer: Norman Taylor. Image Courtesy: The Hepworth Wakefield.

4. György Gordon, Horses. Screenprint on paper. 41.5 x 51.5cm. Wakefield Permanent Art Collection (The Hepworth Wakefield). Transferred from the Print Loan Scheme, 2007. (C) The Artist. Photographer: Norman Taylor. Image Courtesy: The Hepworth Wakefield.

Friday, July 11, 2025

Cynthia Kenny: A city framed - now open at Wakefield Museum

We've opened a new exhibition at Wakefield Museum celebrating the life and work of local artist, Cynthia Kenny (1929-2021)!

The exhibition, Cynthia Kenny: A city framed, is open until June 2026. It explores our changing city through the artist’s eyes.

Three adults sat on outdoors-inspired seating in the centre of the Cynthia Kenny gallery, with landscape and architectural buildings framed against deep blue walls
Photo credit: Nick Singleton

Cynthia Kenny was one of Wakefield’s most important artists. She painted places in Britain and beyond and exhibited around the world. But Wakefield always held a special place in her heart. From the 1960s to 2000s, Kenny documented Wakefield’s changing landscape.

The exhibition features cityscapes, rural scenes, and detailed studies of buildings. Visitors can admire iconic views and well-known landmarks and discover Wakefield’s hidden gems.

As well as producing her own intricate works, she was a founding member of Wakefield Art Club. Kenny was also a trustee for the Friends of Wakefield Art Gallery and Museum for many years.

The artworks are also brought to life by a new soundscape, created by artist Michelle Duxbury. Her recordings from the city to evoke a day in the life of Cynthia’s Wakefield. Duxbury has also recorded creative audio descriptions for several of the exhibition’s star works.

You can also find out more about Kenny’s influence and legacy. Enjoy an exclusive new film by Nick Singleton featuring interviews with Kenny’s friends, colleagues, and contemporaries.

The exhibition also reveals how Cynthia Kenny continues to inspire artists today, showcasing new photography by members of the Wakefield Museums and Castles Youth Forum.


There's more info, photos and videos from the exhibition on our Cynthia Kenny: a city framed page.

Thursday, March 20, 2025

New display by the Children in Care Council

We have recently installed a new display in The Wall @ Create café display space. We are very proud to be hosting the We are… exhibition by the Children in Care Council.

A white cafe wall featuring a range of artworks by the Children in Care Council, with rainbows, animals and flowers a common theme
The We are... exhibition in Create café

We are... features work produced by and on behalf of care-experienced young people from the Wakefield District.

Children live in care away from their birth families for many reasons. This can cause significant trauma and barriers. 

We Are… is an invitation to listen, understand, and stand together with the young people of our care-experienced community.

A child's drawing of a rainbow with the words happiness, nice, peace, love and care written above it
One of the artworks on display

The Children in Care Council:

  • Work with adults to help them understand and support young people
  • Co-produce celebration events such as the Care4Us Awards and Care Leavers’ Week
  • Enjoy a range of participation activities

Get to know the young care-experienced community in their video introducing the We are… exhibition.


The exhibition was first displayed at Anglers Country Park in 2024. A selection of the works is now on display in the Create café in Wakefield One, 10 March to 16 May 2025. 

Some of the photos in the display show the young people taking part in forest-based activities with Countryside Officers. They also planted flowers and created spider habitats.

A framed photograph of a natural spider habitat, with twigs in a lattice around a shrub

A frame containing two photographs of faces made out of natural materials on the side of tree trunks


At Pontefract Castle, the young people worked with our team to design and deliver an exciting escape room activity.

They even created a time capsule that is now buried at Pontefract Castle. It contains a record of the work they’ve done to challenge stereotypes about children in care. When it’s opened in 100 years, people will find out about the young people’s identities, their hopes and dreams. 

A long metal cylinder time capsule in a hole in the ground at Pontefract Castle
The time capsule ready to be buried at Pontefract Castle

During the activities, the group also discuss different topics that matter to them. These include the importance of siblings getting to grow up together and the role of good and bad rules in their lives. 

They made a series of short films exploring these issues:





Watch the full We are… playlist to hear more from the Children in Care Council.

Visit the We are… display in the Wall @ Create Café space, inside Wakefield One, until 16 May 2025.

Fostering Wakefield

Did you know that there is a national shortage of Foster Carers?

When you foster, you don’t just care for a child, you help change their life.

By offering love, support, and guidance, you have the power to create lasting positive impact on their future. Fostering Wakefield are here to support you in every role you take on.

Enquire today at Fostering Wakefield


As a fostering friendly employer, Wakefield Council support our employees to make a difference, enabling them to balance employment with looking after children. 

Nearly 40% of foster carers combine fostering with other work. Those who do, say that a supportive employer can make all the difference. 

At Wakefield Council, we have fostering friendly HR policies for all our foster carers. This includes offering carers flexible working and paid time off for training and settling a new child into their home. 

Being a fostering friendly employer means we can improve support for staff, making workplaces friendlier for foster carers, benefiting the children in their care and also making it easier for people to consider fostering.

If you want to know a bit more about fostering with us, get in touch with the team: fostering@wakefield.gov.uk

Thursday, February 20, 2025

Research, development and recreation of Cistercian ware - Naomi Aderonke

Naomi Aderonke, a local ceramicist who has a passion for history, has recreated a style of pottery made in medieval Wakefield. 

In the middle ages Cistercian ware was made in Potovens (pot ovens) in Wrenthorpe. Initially, they supplied practical bowls and cups to Cistercian monks in their abbeys. The abbeys closed in 1540. However, the pots were so popular in Wakefield that they kept making them. In the 1600s, they started also decorating the pots in coloured slip. 

Naomi lives near the site of the Wrenthorpe pottery kilns. She has researched the medieval techniques and style to recreate examples from our collections. Her work has now gone on display with original Cistercian ware at Wakefield Museum.

Read on to discover more about Naomi's research and work in her guest blog.

Naomi Aderonke in a floral apron, holding a clay pot, stood in front of rows of pottery pieces in a workshop
Naomi Aderonke hosting her tyg making workshop

Why Cistercian ware?

I was looking for a historical link between Wakefield and Ceramics. I’d been interested in looking into alternative industries that might have been significant in Wakefield's history, that weren't textiles and coal mining.

Being a ceramicist myself I wanted to find a link between where I grew up and the craft I loved. 

Researching this I stumbled upon an article on Engole. Here I learnt of Wakefield's link to Cistercian ware. 

I then cross-referenced with other sources, like the archaeology data service and Historic England's records. I learnt more about Cistercian ware's significance, not just to Wakefield, but the surrounding areas of Yorkshire.

The first hurdles

Initially, I wanted to truly recreate as much as I could of the original process that was used in the 1500s.

Potovens was named for the kilns there. A recreation of the original kilns used is outside Wrenthorpe's village hall. Sadly, I do not have the funding, land or skill to recreate an original replica of a working Potovens kiln.

Another issue I had was sourcing local clay. I worked with a local geologist who obtained maps of clay deposits in the area. I started my inquiries.

I sent several emails to the local parks, castles, estates, canals, lakes. I also contacted the original places the potters would use for their clay, Outwood Colliery.

All answers came back as negative. However, it did give me a deeper insight into the local land.

Most original clay deposits would later become coal mines; leaving the land surrounding them unstable. The old pits themselves have been rewilded into marshland for local birds and animals. The castles, parks, estates and lakes such as Newmillerdam and Pugneys are protected land or have been made unstable due to mining. And finally, the canals cannot be dug up due to it causing canal erosion. 

While initially I felt sad and frustrated at this dead end, I knew that the protection of Wakefield's wildlife and history was more important than a few bags of wild, local clay.

Project research and development 

One of the first things I did once I was able to start this project was contact Wakefield Museum. I wanted to learn more about Cisterian ware in Wakefield from an historian's perspective. 

Brown hand-sized piece of pottery fragment with yellowed decorations that somewhat resemble plants and animals
A piece of Late Cistercian ware pot, decorated with white slip and a heavy iron oxide glaze

I was invited by them to the museum store in Ossett. I got to handle original Cistercian ware dug up from both Sandal Castle and Pontefract Castle.

After seeing these original examples of Cistercian ware I threw myself into the practical development side of the project. 

A partially complete brown Wrenthorpe pot, with multiple practice handles in different places
A Wrenthorpe pot used to practice pulling handles on - hence all the handles! 

What makes Cistercian ware look the way it does?

First I looked for a red clay to recreate the original red clays used at the time. I ended up using one called Keuper Red. This gave me the dark reddish, almost purple, when fired, clay.  

Initially in the late middle ages they used a clay called 'glacial clay'. This white clay was easily found on the surface without too much digging. This clay contained many impurities. It was the main clay used in Brandsby-type pottery popular in the 1200s and 1300s.

The next thing I did with this clay was make around 30 to 40 test tiles. It was important for working out how I was going to make the colour for the pots.

After handling the pieces in the museum store I realised there was the use of two slips under the glaze, not one. A red/brown colour and a yellow slip (or so I believed at the time). 

A brown conical vase or jug with a yellow pattern
A Wrenthorpe pot in the museum collection

Trial and error: development

I was not sure how they’d done the yellow slip with glaze. However, I knew from extrapolating the resources and knowledge of ceramics at the time, the colour most likely used in the slip was a red iron oxide.

Red iron oxide tends to create a reddish-brown colour. This explained the rich red-brown colour of the pots, even the ones where the glaze had chipped away (but the surface of the clay had not). 

With this, I created a multitude of test glazes and slips with different red iron oxide percentages. I kept some slip and glaze test tiles without the separate and used a mix of both slip and glaze on others. 

Four staggered wooden shelves with an array of rectangular pieces of clay coated in varying degrees of red iron oxide
Test tiles stood to dry, with differing percentages of red iron oxide

I also tried to create a yellow slip with yellow staining. Unfortunately, this was a failure, and forced me to go back to the drawing board.

The base glaze was a peer-reviewed transparent glaze for dark clays. This prevented the base glaze from causing any clouding.

After working out the glazes, lead-free compared to the glazes used in the late medieval era, I began to focus on the shapes of the pieces.

Shaping the pieces

Similar to using a sketch book, I used my miniature wheel to create miniature versions of Cistercian shapes I had seen and researched.

Creating smaller versions of these reduced clay usage for failed pots. It also allowed me to create multiple variations of shapes without worry of trimming. 

A series of differently shaped miniature test pots, based on original Cistercian ware
Miniature test pots

Tygs

I decided to try both throwing and hand-building larger versions of Cistercian ware pieces, specifically tygs. This was a later Cistercian ware style, from around the 1700s.

A tyg was a mug with multiple handles, with each handle breathing up the mug into separate sections of the rim. This allowed people to share and pass around a drink more easily.

A tall, brown, mottled incomplete drinking vessel with five small separate handles on it, and Naomi's miniature replica
One of the original, incomplete tygs in our collection, and Naomi's miniature replica

None of the original tygs would have been hand-built. However, I decided to do this due to my desire to later host a workshop on 'making your own tygs'. A hand-built method would allow me to teach multiple people how to make their own tygs more easily.

Using these initial hand-built tygs, I decided to recreate the traditional yellow designs or post-reformation Cistercian ware again. 

I looked back on references from the museum store, as well as yellow and brown slip ware from Staffordshire in the 1600s. From this, I was able to extrapolate that the slip was actually not yellow at all. Instead, I worked out it was the old white clay initially used in Cistercian ware back in the 1400s. It was tinted yellow by the iron heavy glaze used.

I tried this method out on some of my failed pots. Unfortunately, they held little colour as I’d not added enough red iron oxide, nor dipped them for enough time.

However, as you can see on these zoomed-in areas, when the glaze pooled it allowed a colour going towards the yellow colour I was looking for: 

Close-up of a piece of brown pottery with a pale yellowy glazeClose-up of two pieces of brown pottery with a glaze pooling into a pale yellowy colour
Two close-up examples nearing the desired yellow slip effect

Final stage

After putting all I had learnt to practice, I focused back on the workshop and end pieces for the Cistercian display for Wakefield Museum.

Firstly, I made and tested templates for the tyg workshop. I created net templates to work out how to get the best effect.

After working that out, I sought to create an example tyg using this method. This was then decorated with Yorkshire iconography such as rhubarb and Pontefract cakes. 

A brown dual-handed tyg drinking vessel, with a yellow circle and Pontefract Cakes design on it
One of Naomi's tygs with a 'Pontefract Cakes' design

For the pieces for the museum display I wanted to respect the original pieces, but I did not aim to make exact replicas.

The choice to do miniatures came from the fact miniature throwing is a big part of my practice. I wanted to reflect not only the original piece but recontextualise it for a modern era.

Most people enjoy collecting miniatures of ceramic pieces. It allows them to collect much more, especially if they have smaller homes. Most miniatures are wholly based on modern ceramics. I think that having the ability to have a small part of history (whether local or international) allows people to reconnect more with the ceramics of the past.

A series of larger, original Cistercian ware vessels, with Naomi's miniature pieces beside them
Naomi's miniatures with their original inspiration pieces at the museum store

I would like to thank Wakefield Council for funding this as part of Our Year - Wakefield District 2024 and the help and support of Wakefield Museums and Castles.

Naomi's pieces are now on display with original Cistercian ware from our collection, in a new exhibit at Wakefield Museum.

The original Cistercian ware pieces and Naomi's designs in a display case with a yellow background at Wakefield Museum
The Cistercian ware display at Wakefield Museum


Thursday, January 9, 2025

Oral history transcription: volunteer blog

Charlotte McDonnell is an oral history transcription volunteer with Wakefield Museums and Castles. She has been volunteering with us for one year and has transcribed 26 oral history interviews so far. 

In this guest blog she shares her experiences, including clips from some of her favourite interviews.

A person typing on a laptop while wearing headphones

My role as an oral history transcription volunteer

As Wakefield Museums and Castles work on the development of a new museum and library for Wakefield, they are collecting a diverse range of oral history interviews. These interviews help to document and preserve Wakefield’s local history through the voices of the people who lived it.

My role in this project is to transcribe the oral history interviews. Transcriptions help museum staff to catalogue, search for and use oral history interviews. They also ensure that any audio that is shared through displays or digital content is accessible.

Listening carefully, I transcribe the audio of each interview exactly as it’s been spoken including keeping any grammatical mistakes and local dialect used. Usually, I’m able to get around four minutes transcribed per day.

After I finish the initial transcription I go over the whole interview again to correct any mistakes. It’s important to do this as there can be times where you think you got it right only to re-listen and realise you made an error!

From this role I’ve been able to learn so much about the people, projects and local organisations in Wakefield. 

Here are a few of my favourites:

A very important cooker

Helen Teagle talks about her mother’s 1953 Cannon Gas Cooker in her interview, which was carried out after she donated the cooker to the museum collections. 

To me the most interesting part of this interview is how much life story can come from one object. For example, Helen talks about how her parents bought the cooker at a showroom in Wakefield shortly after they got married and how they moved it to each new house that they bought.

The stories Helen tells about the many recipes her mother made using the cooker also give great insight into domestic life in the 1950s and onwards, which is an often underexplored area of history. 

In this clip, Helen talks about learning how to cook from watching her mother.


BaBi steps

I really enjoyed transcribing the interviews recorded as part of the BaBi Wakefield project. BaBi Wakefield is a research project that aims to reduce health inequalities in babies born in Wakefield through collecting maternity and child data. 

The project is run by Dawn Wright and through her interview we can see the incredible amount of work that goes into running BaBi Wakefield. 

Dawn smiling at the camera, sat next to a sign for BaBi Wakefield and the orange and white striped BaBi bear
Dawn Wright

Here Dawn speaks about her role in the project and why it is important:


One part of Dawn’s interview that really caught my eye was when she spoke about one of the positive changes a sister project, Born in Bradford, made to child asthma rates by changing the old bus routes. 

It really highlighted to me the important impact these projects are able to create.


Getting wordy about Wakefield

Finally, the interviews of Philip Dawson Hammond, and Micheal Yates and Roger Manns from the Black Horse Poets provide a fascinating look into Wakefield’s literary organisations.

6 members of the Wakefield Word Group, and Councillor Jack Hemmingway in the middle, smiling at the camera. Councillor Hemmingway is holding a trophy of a horse.
Members of the Black Horse Poets and Wakefield Word Group with their new patron, Councillor Jack Hemingway, in January 2024.

Philip in his interview spoke about the many stories he has from his time working for the Wakefield Express. 

My favourite one was about a new press that had been built to produce the newspapers that had been designed by Rockwell International - who designed a space toilet!


Micheal Yates and Roger Manns in their joint interview spoke about the strong community dynamic that their poetry group fosters. 

I really enjoyed listening to the ways people come together to share their passion for poetry and help others grow by providing thoughtful feedback.



Get involved!

If you would like to volunteer as an Oral History Transcription Volunteer, please get in touch by emailing muscasvolunteering@wakefield.gov.uk 

We'd love to hear from you!

Thursday, October 31, 2024

Lighting up Wakefield: guide to The Timekeepers by Illuminos

This year's Light Up Wakefield (part of Our Year - Wakefield District 2024) invites you to see spectacular digital installations and experience the city in a whole new light!

One of the 2024 installations is The Timekeepers by Illuminos, which will be projected onto County Hall. 

It is a projection mapping piece based on the 300-year old story of Wakefield-born genius John Harrison. Harrison set his mind to the great mystery of the age – the perfect measurement of time and space. 

The Timekeepers celebrates the great variety of heritage, culture and arts that can be discovered across the Wakefield district.

The installation flies through time and tells stories, large and small from the Wakefield district. 

We're extremely excited, as our collections play a big part in telling the story! It sees some of our tiniest objects made gigantic on the beautiful facade of County Hall.

So what objects can you expect to see in The Timekeepers? Here's a guide to some of the highlights - some you might be familiar with, and others you might not!

The Waterton Clock, 1670s

An ornate lantern clock from the seventeenth century, about 40 centimetres tall, featuring silver nature designs, a domed top, and a swinging pendulum

This is a gorgeous lantern clock which was owned by the Waterton family for generations. 

Charles Waterton (1782 - 1865) of Walton Hall thought that the clock was once owned by Sir Thomas More (1478 - 1535). Waterton believed he was a descendant of More. 

More was Lord High Chancellor to Henry VIII - until he had him executed!

However, the clock was actually made over 100 years after the death of More. Nevertheless, it is a beautiful piece and lends itself brilliantly to The Timekeepers! It's also the oldest clock in our collection.

The 'Castleford Pig', around 1910

A tiny black wooden carved pig, with a looking glass in its belly containing tiny replications of photos of Castleford

The 'Castleford Pig' is literally a window through time! 

Inside this tiny carving of a pig is a looking glass. When you hold the object up to the light, you can see six pictures of Castleford from the early 1900s. 

It's an example of a Stanhope picture viewer, and novelty versions were very collectable. They came in many shapes and sizes, and could feature lots of pictures.

The Timekeepers is about incredible, huge visuals projected onto one of Wakefield's most spectacular buildings. 

So it's absolutely delighted us that our tiny pig, which is only about the size of a £1 coin, is going to be the size of County Hall! 

Glassware made by Bagley and Co Ltd in Knottingley, 1930s

A bright yellow glass vase with four handles and four little koalas on the handles
Although originally started as a bottle factory, Bagley's also made decorative glass. It became especially known for its vibrantly coloured glass developed in the 1930s.

However, there's a hazardous reason behind some of these brilliant colours - some were created using uranium, a radioactive element!

Coloured glass production ended in the 1940s when uranium was needed for atomic bomb development in the Second World War.

After the war, Bagley's went on to create a very dark black glass, known as 'jetique'. 

The eyepopping colours of Bagley's glassware makes it perfect to be projected in The Timekeepers. 

If you'd like to see more, there's a whole Glass Room at Pontefract Museum (don't worry, these ones aren't radioactive!) 

Yorkshire Forced Rhubarb

Inside of a forced rhubarb shed, a dark room with lots of stalks of bright pink rhubarb reaching to the sky

A celebration of Wakefield's heritage wouldn't be complete without rhubarb!

Thanks to good soil mixed with lots of ashes, horse manure and textile waste, and just the right amount of rain, Wakefield specialises in 'forced rhubarb'. The city forms part of the 'Rhubarb Triangle' with Leeds and Morley.

There's a display about the history of growing rhubarb at Wakefield Museum, where you can even hear it growing. The sound might surprise you!

You can also find out more about why Wakefield roots for rhubarb in this blog post.

Phenakistiscope discs, 1880s

A circular wooden phenakistiscope disc with illustrations of a horse and rider on the outer ring, and a jumping dog on the inner ring

They might be a bit of a mouthful to pronounce, but phenakistiscope discs are actually an early type of animation.

They were invented in the early 1800s, long before film or even photography as we know it. 

Our collection of phenakistiscope discs, including this one pictured, belonged to the Farrers. The Farrers were a famous clock-making family from Pontefract. Hence the link to The Timekeepers

The Illuminos team bring these discs to life through digitally replicating their analogue animation.

Playmakers - Sykes and Slazenger

A blue quiver with a leather strap, containing wooden arrows with coloured feathers
A Slazenger quiver of arrows, 1950s

Wakefield has quite the sporting heritage! Our Playmakers collection tells the story of how, for more than a century, Horbury was a centre of sporting excellence and innovation.

The factory at Horbury was first founded by William Sykes, and then became Slazengers during the Second World War.

Horbury-made sporting equipment supplied the World Cup, Challenge Cup, and was endorsed by sports stars including Steffi Graf and Don Bradman.


Commemorative marbles from A Reight Neet Aht, 1930s to 1950s 

A large glass marble with 'Castleford, Reight neet aht, April 21 1936' painted on it

Prepare yourself for a torrent of marbles to cascade down County Hall! And no, it's not just because we've lost ours... 

A game of marbles was a big deal in Castleford! From 1936 an unlikely and flamboyant charity event called 'A Reight Neet Aht' created a buzz at the Castleford Co-Operative Hall. 

Known as 'taws', these marbles contests raised money for Leeds Infirmary over the next 20 years.

The marbles for the tournament, along with glass trophies, were made in and around Castleford. They all look mighty impressive projected large in The Timekeepers!

You can don your gladrags for a glamorous game of marbles in A Reight Neet Aht at Castleford Museum.

The Wakefield Pageant, 1933

A photograph of a long chain of girls in matching outfits, with the girls on the outer sides of the 'train' carrying wheels, and a torch at the front
A group of girls from Thornes House Secondary School and Ings Road Central School acted as a 'ballet' steam train in the 1933 Wakefield Pageant!

The Pageant of Wakefield and the West Riding took place in June 1933 in Thornes Park, Wakefield. It celebrated Wakefield's past and present, and imagined the city's future.

A whole cast of schools and societies took part, each playing different roles from Wakefield's proud history. They also helped to make the costumes and lavish backdrops.

More than 2,000 performers took part in the Pageant over 10 performances. Thousands of people turned out to enjoy the spectacle.

Objects and photographs from the 1933 Pageant are projected alongside The Hatchling in The Timekeepers. The Hatchling was an amazing event during the summer of Our Year - Wakefield District 2024, which saw a dragon hatch in Wakefield.

The Wakefield Pageant was very much the 'Our Year' of 1933!

You can see a special art display inspired by the Wakefield Pageant by artist Louise Goult in the lower atrium of Wakefield One.

Anglo-Saxon cross, around 900 to 1000 AD

The remains of a decorated Anglo-Saxon cross shaft, topped and tailed by reconstructions of what the rest of the originally brightly painted cross might have looked like

This stone cross is the first evidence of a settlement in modern Wakefield. 

The cross was probably used for preaching, and it stood in Wakefield's marketplace until 1546. It then disappeared until 1861, when Edmund Waterton (son of Charles Waterton) rescued it from the demlotion of an old butcher's shop. The cross shaft had been used as a doorstep to the butcher's!

Not only is this object important in telling us about the creation of Wakefield, it was once a vibrant and colourful creation. 

The cross is on display at Wakefield Museum - it is on loan courtesy of York Museums Trust.