What's on in Ruddington

Nottinghamshire, England

Ruddington sits just outside Nottingham and has enough character to make a stranger feel like they belong immediately. The local history is woven into the fabric of the town itself, with the Ruddington Framework Knitters Museum keeping old traditions alive while The Frame Breakers brings a bit of grit to the neighbourhood scene. It is a place where you can learn about spinning yarn or hear some loud music without ever needing to leave the village limits. There is always a reason to drop by for a chat or a gig, and the community keeps things moving along nicely. You might catch a knitting workshop one afternoon or a live band another evening, all within easy reach of your front door. Near Here helps you find what's on without making you feel like you are chasing ghosts across the county.

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Evening screening with BSL interpretation of Naeem Mohaiemen THROUGH A MIRROR, DARKLY
CinemaArts & Culture

Evening screening with BSL interpretation of Naeem Mohaiemen THROUGH A MIRROR, DARKLY

Book your free ticket for an evening screening with live BSL interpretation of THROUGH A MIRROR, DARKLY, a new three-channel film by Turner Prize nominated artist Naeem Mohaiemen. The film explores memorialisation, protest, and political violence through the lens of events in May 1970, when American students protesting domestic racism and overseas wars were met by state violence. Doors: 6.15 pmFilm screening: 6.30 – 8 pm (approx) Please note this film contains historic content featuring racialised language, images and graphic descriptions of violence, including death and acts of war. It may not be suitable for viewers under 16 years of age. Parental discretion advised. About the filmAs the Vietnam War came to its bloody end, for the American media, the memory of four American students shot dead at Kent State University was sometimes as emotionally charged as the millions of deaths in Vietnam. In the decades that followed, a memorial community has formed around the ‘four dead in Ohio’. Yet while the deaths of students Alison Krause, Jeffrey Miller, Sandra Scheuer, and William Schroeder at Kent State, Ohio, are remembered, not many recall Phillip Lafayette Gibbs and James Earl Green, two students killed ten days later by police officers at Jackson State College, Mississippi, a Historically Black College. By choreographing the relationship between archival footage and contemporary ceremonies memorialising the dead, THROUGH A MIRROR, DARKLY explores the role of memorials as...

Wed 15 Apr18:15Bonington Gallery(4.6mi)

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