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2013

30 August 2013

Free return bus to Jupiter Artland

Departs from Queen Street at 10.30am, arrives at Jupiter Artland at 11am.

Departs from Jupiter Artland at 3pm, arrives at Queen Street at 3.30pm.

Free admission. Book tickets.

 

 

A free return bus to Jupiter Artland running once daily is available from the city centre during the Edinburgh Art Festival, leaving from and returning to the corner of Queen Street and Frederick Street. 

 

Tickets for the bus also allow free entry to Jupiter Artland. Booking essential. 

 

Please note that this bus will only run Thurs-Sun. Jupiter Artland is closed to the public Mon-Wed.

 

Corner of Queen Street and Frederick Street, EH2 3NH

30 August 2013

The Travelling Gallery: This Land

Free admission

 

This Land presents a beautifully alternative view of the Scottish landscape through works by artists with a diverse range of practices, including Henry Coombes, Andy Holden, Hannah Imlach, Michael Reisch and Iain Sarjeant. 


Initially located for the festival beside the City Art Centre, The Travelling Gallery - Scotland's unique mobile gallery of contemporary art - will then visit various venues within the city before touring the exhibition around Scotland. 

 

23-24 August: 11am - 6pm at City Art Centre

27 August: 11am - 5pm at Hawes Promenade in South Queensferry

28 August: 11am - 5pm at Festival Square on Lothian Road

29 August: 2 - 5pm at Drylaw Neighbourhood Centre

30 August: 11am - 5pm on the High Street in Portobello (outside Bank of Scotland)

30 August 2013

Haunted and Fairy-Taken Witches: The Place of the Restless Dead in Scottish Witch Trials

12:45–13:30pm

Free admission

 

Many witch trials in Scotland offer priceless and terrifying accounts of Scottish folk belief in the place of the ‘restless dead’ in the supernatural landscape. This category of dead, those who could not rest, were sometimes taken up into a fairy ride chiefly composed of them, and from there they could also co-opt the living as their votaries and servants.  Many of those men and women accused of witchcraft believed themselves to be part of this frightening, alluring nocturnal society, in which ancient beliefs mixed with medieval Christian calendrical customs to make a heady brew of story which ultimately proved fatal to those unwise enough to pour it out before the uncomprehending Presbyterian kirk.  Diane Purkiss, Fellow in English, Keble College, University of Oxford, will describe three sets of stories; those told by Andrew Man of his sexual liaison with the Queen of the Fairies, those told about Trowbound Katherine and her daughters, and those told by mid-seventeenth-century accused witch, Isobel Gowdie.

 

This event will take place in the Hawthornden Lecture Theatre.

 

Scottish National Gallery

The Mound, EH2 2EL

0131 624 6200

www.nationalgalleries.org

30 August 2013

Lecture: I’ve Bagged it!

2pm

Free with the price of an exhibition ticket (Adult £5, concessions £3.50)

 

The handbag has been one of the most useful accessories. Like costume it has evolved over the years according to fashion and its use. Bertha Walker will discuss her personal handbag collection, from the Georgian period to the present day. People are welcome to bring along their own vintage bags to the City Art Centre.

 

City Art Centre

2 Market Street, EH1 1DE

0131 529 3993

www.edinburghmuseums.org.uk

1 August – 1 September 2013

EAF Explorers

 

Designed for children and families, EAF Explorers is a special activity trail through the art festival. Pick up your free EAF Explorers passport and map from participating galleries and learn about some of the art on show by completing a series of fun, creative activities. Complete each activity and get your passport stamped at each gallery, then show us your stamped passport at Sarah Kenchington's Windpipes for Edinburgh at Trinity Apse to receive a special prize. 

 

EAF Explorers participating galleries: 

City Art Centre: Mon–Sat, 10am-5pm; Sun, 12–5pm

Dovecot Studios: Mon–Sun, 10.30am–6pm

The Fruitmarket Gallery: Mon–Sun, 10am–7pm (from 27 Aug: Mon–Sat, 11am–6pm; Sun, 12–5pm)

Windpipes for Edinburgh, Trinity Apse: Mon–Sun, 10am–6pm

 

The EAF Explorers passport and map and entry to the exhibitions related to the activities are free.

 

EAF Explorers has been developed by Alchemy Arts.

2 August – 1 September 2013

EAF Guided tours

1–1.45pm

Free to join

 

We'll be running a series of free guided tours throughout the festival - join us for a great way to sample a variety of different works on show and discover new artists. Tours will focus on different aspects of the exhibitions and on different parts of the city. 

 

Tours will depart from 169 Rose Street.

 

This is the site of Kenny Watson's The Days Fascia  and an installation of the first UK showing of Kalleinen and Kalleinen’s The Complaints Choir, a four channel video installation documenting the nine Complaints Choirs created and led by the artists themselves.

 

169 Rose Street, (behind The Roxburghe Hotel), EH2 4HQ

1 August – 1 September 2013

Tourists in Residence 2013: The Self-Guided Tour

The Selected Monuments of Edinburgh map can be downloaded.

 

This year's Tourists in Residence, artists Tom Nolan and Catherine Payton, have created Selected Monuments of Edinburgh, an Edinburgh map, from the unique perspective of artists based in the city. This is a self-directed tour so that you can make your way around the city of Edinburgh in your own time. 

 

This year's Tourists in Residence have also created the following guided tours: The Debtor's Day Off (11 August & 1 September), A dissociative walk and A symposium (with free tea and coffee)