Liverpool Revenge Workshop

Liverpool Revenge Workshop Talks & Live Events: Liverpool Revenge Workshop
Bridewell Studios & Gallery, L7 8UL
Date(s): 29/05/2025
6:00 pm - 9:00 pm


Ahead of the festival launch, Gee Collins and George Grace Gibson are hosting Liverpool Revenge Workshops.

Beyond the workshops the work can be interacted via text message until 14th September. The outcome is yet to be decided, informed by the structures, advice and conversations has throughout Independents Biennial 2025.

29th May, 6-8pm, Bridewell Studios & Gallery

Workshop details:

“Art as Revenge” is the next phase of the ongoing collaboration between George Gibson & Gee Collins. After one too many arguments with arts organisations, we’re thinking about rap battles, revenge films, feedback forms and quitting. “Practically every person who graduates from art school will be forced to professionally reinvent themselves as something other than an artist. Because of this, the process of quitting art has been enshrined in the art world as its own respectable genre.” – Brad Troemel, 2024 (we think it’s deeper than this, but okay Brad).

About Bridewell Studios & Gallery:

In 1976 a small group of artists rented a derelict police station and established Bridewell Studios. Artspace Merseyside was formed in 1981 as a not for profit limited company to run the organisation and after the demise of Merseyside County Council the artists secured a loan to buy the property. In 2007 English Heritage gave the building a Grade 2 listing and in 2015 the company became a charity.

Constructed circa 1846 as a police station, the large red brick building is situated on the corner of a busy thoroughfare on the eastern edge of Liverpool city centre and just opposite The Royal Liverpool University Hospital. There is much evidence of its original function still visible including a Detective Office sign at the foot of the staircase and the row of cells.

Over the last 42 years many artists have worked or had connections with the studios and gallery, including Adrian Henri, Richard Young, Stephen Broadbent, Maurice Cockrill, Ian McKeever, Anish Kapoor and the singer/songwriter David Gray. The building itself became famous in the 1980’s as one of the locations for Alan Bleasdale’s ‘Boys from the Blackstuff’.

The Bridewell currently hosts 35 studio based artists and craftspeople whose creative practice includes painting, stone/wood sculpture, jewellery, stained glass, textiles, print-making, ceramics, metal and multi media.


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