Preserving the Archive with Cassia Clarke
Price
£8
Date
Thu 22 May 2025
Time
6–7.30pm
Location
Foyle Rooms

Explore how personal photographic collections play an important role in preserving and narrating British history.
Ever wondered why some histories have been preserved more than others?
What can personal photography tell us about the identity of people in the photographs?
How do we share, collect and archive our personal pictures in the digital age?
This 90-minute workshop invites participants to learn how personal photographic collections can play an important role in preserving and narrating British history. After visiting the exhibition, the group will look through a selection of photographs of family life, friendships, neighbourhoods, work and leisure. The group will discuss why the photographs were taken and what they tell us about the people in them, learning how to preserve images using archive techniques.
The workshop is led by Cassia Clarke, an independent community archivist and artist educator who recently rescued her family photographs which had been stored in an airing cupboard and in her nephew’s bedroom.
Cassia Clarke
Cassia’s work focuses on acquiring, critiquing, and reconstructing knowledge, and then disseminating it.
She integrates compassionate conservation, facilitation, and knowledge sharing into her person-centred approach, which prioritises learning as a form of freedom and enjoyment.
