Illustration by Natalie Newsome
Image Jon Barlow
Image Jon Barlow
Image Krisztian Elek
Image Jon Barlow

Article | The Persistent

It was a pleasure to welcome journalist Emma Haslett to our studio to meet with Helen Caddick and Margo Selby in conversation about their moon landing art installation during it’s exhibition at Canterbury Cathedral. Emma's publication 'The Persistent' publishes news and topical editorial from a women’s perspective for women. 

‘The Chaotic, the Creative, the Instinctive, the Structured, the Mathematical’

An immersive project at Canterbury Cathedral marks the 1969 moon landing—and the women from a Navajo reservation in New Mexico who made that landing possible.

If you find yourself about 60 miles southeast of London this summer and you just happen to wander into the cool embrace of the Canterbury Cathedral, count yourself lucky. As you enter, you’ll spot a 16 meter (52 foot) handwoven textile suspended from the cathedral’s vaulted ceiling. The artwork is a burst of colour and pattern and is one half of an immersive project—the other half is a companion piece of music—inspired by the 1969 moon landing and the women from a Navajo reservation in New Mexico who made that landing possible. 

For the full article by Emma Haslett visit 
THE PERSISTENT  

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Illustration by Natalie Newsome.

READ THE FULL ARTICLE HERE
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