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Feb
2
Mon
Kyffin Williams Lecture @ Highgate School: Mills Centre
Feb 2 @ 8:00 pm – 10:00 pm

Dr Jonathan Black, Senior Research Fellow in History of Art at Kingston University and co-author of Abstraction and Reality: The Sculpture of Ivor Roberts-Jones is to give the seventh KW lecture on Monday 2nd February at 8.00 p.m. in the AV Room in the Mills Centre. Book here: https://highgateoc.org.uk/kw2015-lecture

Feb
11
Wed
Hornsey Historical Society: Talk by John Hinshelwood @ Union Church Hall, cnr Ferme Park Rd/Weston Pk,
Feb 11 @ 8:00 pm – 9:00 pm

“Hornsey Wood House” talk by John Hinshelwood. 8pm, Union Church Hall www.hornseyhistorical.org.uk

Feb
19
Thu
Highgate Cemetery: “Buried Treasure?” @ Highgate Cemetery
Feb 19 @ 7:00 pm – 9:00 pm

Dr David McAllister will discuss attitudes to burial in the years leading up to the birth of the Garden Cemetery movement in the early nineteenth century and the establishment of Highgate Cemetery itself. His talk will focus on attempts by a series of writers including Wordsworth, Burke, Godwin and Bentham to identify the value of buried bodies, and to establish whether the grave was anything more than an inefficient dumping ground for human remains.

David McAllister is a lecturer in Victorian Literature at Birkbeck, University of London, and course director of its MA in Victorian Studies.

Sep
3
Sat
Heritage Plant Fair @ Highgate School
Sep 3 @ 10:30 am – 3:30 pm

Plant heritage, Plant Fair, to be held at Highgate School North Rd, London N6 4AY on September 3rd, 10.30am to 3.30pm. Plants Shrubs and Spring Bulbs for Autumn planting. Entrance fee £2-50 for non-members. Members and children free. Contact daisydogone@aol.com

Nov
7
Mon
The hidden wildlife of Provence – Will Atkins, Highgate School @ Mills Centre, Highgate School
Nov 7 @ 7:00 pm – 8:30 pm

7-november

 

 

 

Mondays @ the Mills Lectures – Michaelmas Term 2016

7th November 2016, Mills Centre AV Room

The hidden wildlife of Provence

Will Atkins, Highgate School


Following in the footsteps of that peculiar Victorian species, ‘the British Naturalist on the Riviera’, biology teacher Will (whose photos have appeared on The One Show, in Country Life magazine and in the British Wildlife Photography Awards) has chronicled some of the unexpected, colourful and wonderful fauna that can be seen only a small distance from the packed beaches of Provence.  In showing the results of his photographic safaris, he will be aiming to add an extra dimension to your future visits to the south of France.

Tickets can be booked through Ticketsource, by clicking here

Refreshments, including wine, are available from 6.30 pm and afterwards.

 

Nov
28
Mon
The Francis Crick Institute at Mondays @ The Mills ! @ Highgate Junior School, Auditorium
Nov 28 @ 7:00 pm – 9:00 pm

28th-november

Mondays @ the Mills Lectures – Michaelmas Term 2016

28th November 2016
The Francis Crick Institute

Clare Davy and Professor Julian Downward, FRS


The Francis Crick Institute conducts ground-breaking medical research to understand why disease develops and to find new ways to prevent and treat illnesses such as cancer, heart disease, stroke, infections and neurodegenerative diseases.  These talks will survey the history of the Crick and introduce its new home next to St Pancras, before focussing on some of the cancer research being conducted there.

Refreshments, including wine, are available from 6.30 pm and afterwards.

Jan
16
Mon
Mondays @ The Mills: The New Junior School and Fibonacci @ Highgate Junior School, Auditorium
Jan 16 @ 7:00 pm – 8:30 pm

16th January
The New Junior School and Fibonacci
David Smith, former Head of Physics
Highgate’s magnificent new Junior School opened for business in September of last year. After exploring the history of the Junior School, David will describe the philosophy behind the new structure, making particular mention of the Leonardo Bonacci – known as Fibonacci – and the features around the building that his sequence inspired.

Mar
2
Thu
Wail @ Jacksons Lane
Mar 2 @ 8:00 pm – 9:00 pm

Why do whales sing? Why do humans wail? Last year, Little Bulb Theatre embarked on a quest to discover the answers to these perplexing questions and more. Now, they share their findings in an aquatic cabaret of songs, science and soundscapes with chances to win cheap prizes galore! Little Bulb Theatre return to their lo-fi roots in this haphazard two-hander that’s sure to be a whale of a time. Part gig, part lecture, part your lips and WAIL!

Mar
3
Fri
Wail @ Jacksons Lane
Mar 3 @ 8:00 pm – 9:00 pm

Why do whales sing? Why do humans wail? Last year, Little Bulb Theatre embarked on a quest to discover the answers to these perplexing questions and more. Now, they share their findings in an aquatic cabaret of songs, science and soundscapes with chances to win cheap prizes galore! Little Bulb Theatre return to their lo-fi roots in this haphazard two-hander that’s sure to be a whale of a time. Part gig, part lecture, part your lips and WAIL!

Mar
4
Sat
Wail @ Jacksons Lane
Mar 4 @ 8:00 pm – 9:00 pm

Why do whales sing? Why do humans wail? Last year, Little Bulb Theatre embarked on a quest to discover the answers to these perplexing questions and more. Now, they share their findings in an aquatic cabaret of songs, science and soundscapes with chances to win cheap prizes galore! Little Bulb Theatre return to their lo-fi roots in this haphazard two-hander that’s sure to be a whale of a time. Part gig, part lecture, part your lips and WAIL!

Sep
18
Mon
Mondays @ The Mills: Women and revolution from the bluestockings to Virginia Woolf @ Mills Centre, Highgate School
Sep 18 @ 7:00 pm – 8:15 pm

Mondays @ the Mills: Women and revolution from the bluestockings to Virginia Woolf

18 September 2017

In an exciting and engaging lecture illustrated by contemporary cartoons, Highgate’s Head of History and Foundation Historian Dr Benjamin Dabby will draw upon his ground-breaking research into the culture of Britain’s ‘long nineteenth century’ to overturn the conventional account that women were confined to the domestic sphere and excluded from public life.  In revealing a world in which public debate about the progress of the nation was shaped increasingly by women, he will show how women’s and men’s gendered identities were as hotly debated then as they are today. Dr Dabby’s latest book: Women as Public Moralists in Britain has been published recently by the Royal Historical Society, and copies will be on sale for £30.

Talks take place on Mondays at 7pm in the AV Room in the Mills Centre. Refreshments, including wine, are available from 6.30 pm and afterwards.

Nov
18
Fri
The Bloody Chamber @ Jacksons Lane
Nov 18 @ 7:30 pm – 8:30 pm

What are little girls made of?

They are made of the forest floor, the blood of the moon cycle, the fluttering of wings and the turning of keys. They are made of sweat, howling notes and desire. They are made of night scented stock – heady and sweet, the lily and the rose, the knife and the rope.

They are made of all the tales our Mothers told us.

And all the ones they didn’t dare.

Using circus as a physical vocabulary, the award-winning Proteus will translate the fever dream style of Angela Carter’s macabre fairy tales to the stage. The Bloody Chamber is a heady, erotic, and surprisingly funny re-phrasing of some of the most famous folk and fairy tales in Western culture.

At a moment when women and men across the country confront the double standards of safety, sex, and the fears of what goes bump in the night, Carter’s incendiary caustic take on fairy stories as cautionary tales could not be a more formidable challenge to the status quo.

Nov
19
Sat
The Bloody Chamber @ Jacksons Lane
Nov 19 @ 7:30 pm – 8:30 pm

What are little girls made of?

They are made of the forest floor, the blood of the moon cycle, the fluttering of wings and the turning of keys. They are made of sweat, howling notes and desire. They are made of night scented stock – heady and sweet, the lily and the rose, the knife and the rope.

They are made of all the tales our Mothers told us.

And all the ones they didn’t dare.

Using circus as a physical vocabulary, the award-winning Proteus will translate the fever dream style of Angela Carter’s macabre fairy tales to the stage. The Bloody Chamber is a heady, erotic, and surprisingly funny re-phrasing of some of the most famous folk and fairy tales in Western culture.

At a moment when women and men across the country confront the double standards of safety, sex, and the fears of what goes bump in the night, Carter’s incendiary caustic take on fairy stories as cautionary tales could not be a more formidable challenge to the status quo.