Wednesday, 1 May 2019 at 9:00 am – Monday, 30 September 2019 at 5:00 pm

Ruskin in Manchester 2019

A summer of events marking the 200th anniversary of the birth of John Ruskin (1819-1900)

Ruskin in Manchester will celebrate the legacy of John Ruskin (1819-1900) in Manchester, in the year that
marks the 200th anniversary of the birth of this visionary thinker, with a programme of public events taking place across summer 2019.

As an artist, writer, poet, critic, social reformer, philanthropist and ecologist, Ruskin’s is a legacy that
shapes our world and lives in so many ways. Expressions of his ideas can be found in the creation of the Welfare State and National Health Service, National Trust, Campaign for Drawing (Big Draw) and Labour Party.

Ruskin’s relationship with Manchester was simple and blunt; he hated the city. As a social reformer he was
deeply troubled by the pollution and poor working conditions. In his writings he talks of ‘Manchester devil’s
darkness’. And yet Ruskin would come to have a close connection to the city. Some of Ruskin’s most
important lectures were given in Manchester, including two linked to the Art Treasures exhibition of 1857.

It was in Manchester that the first Ruskin Society was founded (1878) and the people of Manchester and its
civic leaders responded to his ideas in their work to make the city a happier and healthier place to live.

Supported by the Guild of St George (the education charity founded by Ruskin in 1871) and Manchester
Metropolitan University, Ruskin in Manchester will see different cultural organisations across the city exploring the world of Ruskin through a programme of events, exhibitions, talks, walking tours and creative activities.

All of the listings forming the programme for Ruskin in Manchester will appear on the national websites:

www.Ruskin200.comand

www.ruskinto-day.org 

The full listing is being carried on the Ruskin in Manchester webpages hosted by The Big Draw:

www.ruskinprize.co.uk/manchester

Information on the Guild of St George can be found here:

www.guildofstgeorge.org.uk 

For more information, please contact:

Rachel Dickinson · r.dickinson@mmu.ac.uk

Book Tickets

RAH! - Research in Arts and Humanities