The Lost Workshop

€0.00

The Lost Workshop is a hands-on experience blending writing and instant photography. Participants reflect on a time they felt lost, create self-portraits, and physically alter both image and text using tactile processes inspired by Malta’s shifting landscape. Through this act of erosion and reworking, the workshop explores how personal stories can be reshaped, and how changing the way we tell them can shift how we see ourselves.

Outcome: This workshop expands access to fine art by using familiar, accessible technology while framing art-making as a tool for reflection and transformation. Participants leave with a physical artwork and an embodied understanding of how revisiting and reshaping personal narratives can influence identity, offering new perspective, agency, and meaning.

The Details:
Sunday 12th April at 1pm.
Location - Bored Peach Club
Free Entry - Booking Required
10 participants Max.

The Lost Workshop is a hands-on experience blending writing and instant photography. Participants reflect on a time they felt lost, create self-portraits, and physically alter both image and text using tactile processes inspired by Malta’s shifting landscape. Through this act of erosion and reworking, the workshop explores how personal stories can be reshaped, and how changing the way we tell them can shift how we see ourselves.

Outcome: This workshop expands access to fine art by using familiar, accessible technology while framing art-making as a tool for reflection and transformation. Participants leave with a physical artwork and an embodied understanding of how revisiting and reshaping personal narratives can influence identity, offering new perspective, agency, and meaning.

The Details:
Sunday 12th April at 1pm.
Location - Bored Peach Club
Free Entry - Booking Required
10 participants Max.

MEET ERIN LONDON

Erin London is a multidisciplinary artist from the United States whose work explores memory, identity, and cultural inheritance through photography, textiles, and installation. Raised in the Southeastern United States and shaped by family lore, her practice draws on personal and regional histories to examine themes of migration, matrilineal ritual, and the emotional architecture of home. Working often through environmental self-portraiture and site-specific storytelling, her work reflects the layered histories, beauty, and contradictions of the American South. She lives and works in Alabama.