Mahu closing - June Saturday 27th 2015 
If P then Q press readings & Mahu in Paint

at the Hardy Tree gallery - 4pm onwards - Free Entry www.hardytreegallery.com 119 Pancras Road. London, UK. NW1 1UN0
email steven@sjfowlerpoetry.com for further details

 

If P then Q is a pioneering British press edited by James Davies, which has led the way in conceptual and experimental poetry publications over the last half decade. With an extraordinary list of readers, this will be a beautiful way to close the Mahu exhibition program. www.ifpthenq.co.uk

4pm to 7pm - a durational reading by Peter Jaeger

7.30pm - readings from Stephen Emmerson, seekers of lice, Nathan Walker and Chrissy Williams

9pm -  a live collective art & poetry collective collaboration where painters and poets will respond to each other in live time in the making of new works, featuring Amalie Russell Fabian Peake, David Kelly-Mancaux, SJ Fowler & others.


about Mahu 

A solo exhibition by SJ Fowler www.stevenjfowler.com/mahu

A novel onto gallery walls. A novel written without prelude or revision. A novel written in black ink on white walls. A novel in words that veers into neologisms. A novel in language that veers into abstract symbols. An asemic novel. A novel of twenty-one days, before it is stripped, chopped, framed, never to be reunited again.


Hardy Tree Gallery is a London based art gallery.  The gallery promotes the work of emerging visual artists, photographers and performance artists. Co-founders Cameron Maxwell and Amalie Russell, aim to create a space which pushes boundaries and gives artists the freedom to bring their visions to life.

Hardy Tree Gallery is located next to St. Pancras station. The name Hardy Tree comes from a tree in the St. Pancras churchyard. Before turning to writing full time, Thomas Hardy worked as an architect apprentice and in the 1860’s was commissioned to dismantle tombs in the churchyard to allow the new St. Pancras train tracks to pass through. Rather than discard the many gravestones, Hardy placed them around a tree.

The tree, which has grown amongst the gravestones, represents growth, memories and the history of the area.

For more info, please contact info@hardytreegallery.com