Whitman is an artist/printmaker who frequently draws inspiration from myths, literature and story-telling. Her engagement in a range of media and her understanding of the historical context of particular material processes inform her fascination with the idea of transformation. At Highgate Gallery she will be showing works created inresponse to: the Greek myth Demeter and Persephone; Emily Bront’s novel Wuthering Heights; and, the subject of Transformation itself, works which Whitman refers to collectively as ‘Alchemical Allegories’. The thread binding her content together is the notion of a domain existing within, and beyond – the material world.
Gallery times: Wednesdays to Fridays 13:00-17:00,
Saturdays 11:00-16:00, Sundays 11:00-17:00,
Mondays & Tuesdays Closed
Private View: Friday 15 September 2023 18:00-20:30
Highgate Gallery Rosalind Whitman Transformations – Lizards Bite


Handmade In Highgate is back at the Highgate Literary and Scientific Institution for the September designer/maker fair. Come and find up to 30 of the UK’s brightest and best designer makers. The HLSI library will be also be hosting a book sale. Entrance is FREE and everyone is welcome.
Open:
Friday: 5pm – 8pm
Saturday: 10am – 6pm
Sunday 11am – 5pm

Handmade In Highgate is back at the Highgate Literary and Scientific Institution for the September designer/maker fair. Come and find up to 30 of the UK’s brightest and best designer makers. The HLSI library will be also be hosting a book sale. Entrance is FREE and everyone is welcome.
Open:
Friday: 5pm – 8pm
Saturday: 10am – 6pm
Sunday 11am – 5pm

Handmade In Highgate is back at the Highgate Literary and Scientific Institution for the September designer/maker fair. Come and find up to 30 of the UK’s brightest and best designer makers. The HLSI library will be also be hosting a book sale. Entrance is FREE and everyone is welcome.
Open:
Friday: 5pm – 8pm
Saturday: 10am – 6pm
Sunday 11am – 5pm
Meet the unlikely duckling hero, and hear the story of a duck who was different! This much-loved classic tale has been adapted by Sandal Sticks Theatre into an interactive storytelling performance, featuring song and puppetry. A heart-warming tale for all the family.
Suitable for ages 3+
In this capricious game between two acrobats, nothing is fixed. Feel welcome to take a seat on one of the rolling stools and be an actor in this moving composition. The performance invites to make contact, to touch, to be part of and to influence. Or none of this, you can stay invisible in the group.
An exhibition of paintings.
Pamela Willoughby’s art transitioned from a mood of dark and brooding to one of bright optimism. This echoed the changes in her life as appreciation of the freedom and beauty of nature helped her to overcome her struggles with polio and an oppressive father. Every brush stroke was her expression of that freedom and a testament to her indestructible will to fight for her life to succeed.
Pamela Willoughby: Beauty Amidst Hardship at Highgate Gallery.
Open:
Friday 13 October: 13 .00 – 17.00
Saturday 14 October: 11.00

– 16.00
Sunday 15 October: 11.00 – 17.00
Wednesday 18, Thursday 19, Friday 20 October: 13.00 – 17.00
Saturday 21 October: 11.00 – 16.00
Sunday 22 October: 11.00 – 17.00
Wednesday 25, Thursday 26 October: 13.00 – 17.00
An exhibition of paintings.
Pamela Willoughby’s art transitioned from a mood of dark and brooding to one of bright optimism. This echoed the changes in her life as appreciation of the freedom and beauty of nature helped her to overcome her struggles with polio and an oppressive father. Every brush stroke was her expression of that freedom and a testament to her indestructible will to fight for her life to succeed.
Pamela Willoughby: Beauty Amidst Hardship at Highgate Gallery.
Open:
Friday 13 October: 13 .00 – 17.00
Saturday 14 October: 11.00

– 16.00
Sunday 15 October: 11.00 – 17.00
Wednesday 18, Thursday 19, Friday 20 October: 13.00 – 17.00
Saturday 21 October: 11.00 – 16.00
Sunday 22 October: 11.00 – 17.00
Wednesday 25, Thursday 26 October: 13.00 – 17.00
An exhibition of paintings.
Pamela Willoughby’s art transitioned from a mood of dark and brooding to one of bright optimism. This echoed the changes in her life as appreciation of the freedom and beauty of nature helped her to overcome her struggles with polio and an oppressive father. Every brush stroke was her expression of that freedom and a testament to her indestructible will to fight for her life to succeed.
Pamela Willoughby: Beauty Amidst Hardship at Highgate Gallery.
Open:
Friday 13 October: 13 .00 – 17.00
Saturday 14 October: 11.00

– 16.00
Sunday 15 October: 11.00 – 17.00
Wednesday 18, Thursday 19, Friday 20 October: 13.00 – 17.00
Saturday 21 October: 11.00 – 16.00
Sunday 22 October: 11.00 – 17.00
Wednesday 25, Thursday 26 October: 13.00 – 17.00
An exhibition of paintings.
Pamela Willoughby’s art transitioned from a mood of dark and brooding to one of bright optimism. This echoed the changes in her life as appreciation of the freedom and beauty of nature helped her to overcome her struggles with polio and an oppressive father. Every brush stroke was her expression of that freedom and a testament to her indestructible will to fight for her life to succeed.
Pamela Willoughby: Beauty Amidst Hardship at Highgate Gallery.
Open:
Friday 13 October: 13 .00 – 17.00
Saturday 14 October: 11.00

– 16.00
Sunday 15 October: 11.00 – 17.00
Wednesday 18, Thursday 19, Friday 20 October: 13.00 – 17.00
Saturday 21 October: 11.00 – 16.00
Sunday 22 October: 11.00 – 17.00
Wednesday 25, Thursday 26 October: 13.00 – 17.00
An exhibition of paintings.
Pamela Willoughby’s art transitioned from a mood of dark and brooding to one of bright optimism. This echoed the changes in her life as appreciation of the freedom and beauty of nature helped her to overcome her struggles with polio and an oppressive father. Every brush stroke was her expression of that freedom and a testament to her indestructible will to fight for her life to succeed.
Pamela Willoughby: Beauty Amidst Hardship at Highgate Gallery.
Open:
Friday 13 October: 13 .00 – 17.00
Saturday 14 October: 11.00

– 16.00
Sunday 15 October: 11.00 – 17.00
Wednesday 18, Thursday 19, Friday 20 October: 13.00 – 17.00
Saturday 21 October: 11.00 – 16.00
Sunday 22 October: 11.00 – 17.00
Wednesday 25, Thursday 26 October: 13.00 – 17.00
An exhibition of paintings.
Pamela Willoughby’s art transitioned from a mood of dark and brooding to one of bright optimism. This echoed the changes in her life as appreciation of the freedom and beauty of nature helped her to overcome her struggles with polio and an oppressive father. Every brush stroke was her expression of that freedom and a testament to her indestructible will to fight for her life to succeed.
Pamela Willoughby: Beauty Amidst Hardship at Highgate Gallery.
Open:
Friday 13 October: 13 .00 – 17.00
Saturday 14 October: 11.00

– 16.00
Sunday 15 October: 11.00 – 17.00
Wednesday 18, Thursday 19, Friday 20 October: 13.00 – 17.00
Saturday 21 October: 11.00 – 16.00
Sunday 22 October: 11.00 – 17.00
Wednesday 25, Thursday 26 October: 13.00 – 17.00
An exhibition of paintings.
Pamela Willoughby’s art transitioned from a mood of dark and brooding to one of bright optimism. This echoed the changes in her life as appreciation of the freedom and beauty of nature helped her to overcome her struggles with polio and an oppressive father. Every brush stroke was her expression of that freedom and a testament to her indestructible will to fight for her life to succeed.
Pamela Willoughby: Beauty Amidst Hardship at Highgate Gallery.
Open:
Friday 13 October: 13 .00 – 17.00
Saturday 14 October: 11.00

– 16.00
Sunday 15 October: 11.00 – 17.00
Wednesday 18, Thursday 19, Friday 20 October: 13.00 – 17.00
Saturday 21 October: 11.00 – 16.00
Sunday 22 October: 11.00 – 17.00
Wednesday 25, Thursday 26 October: 13.00 – 17.00
Welcome to Cirque Taboo, the sexiest circus in town. Out of the woodwork creeps the naughtiest bunch of beautiful freaks. They guarantee to delight your night with a cabaret jam packed with cheeky circus acts, delicious drag, bizarre burlesque and even a little bit of shocking sideshow.
An exhibition of paintings.
Pamela Willoughby’s art transitioned from a mood of dark and brooding to one of bright optimism. This echoed the changes in her life as appreciation of the freedom and beauty of nature helped her to overcome her struggles with polio and an oppressive father. Every brush stroke was her expression of that freedom and a testament to her indestructible will to fight for her life to succeed.
Pamela Willoughby: Beauty Amidst Hardship at Highgate Gallery.
Open:
Friday 13 October: 13 .00 – 17.00
Saturday 14 October: 11.00

– 16.00
Sunday 15 October: 11.00 – 17.00
Wednesday 18, Thursday 19, Friday 20 October: 13.00 – 17.00
Saturday 21 October: 11.00 – 16.00
Sunday 22 October: 11.00 – 17.00
Wednesday 25, Thursday 26 October: 13.00 – 17.00
Using puppetry, imaginative design and music, audiences are invited to join Nora as she explores the garden, discovering dragonflies as big as her head, plants that can eat you (and your toy giraffe) whole, a polar bear that likes fishing and maybe, just maybe, a tiger in the garden.
Suitable for ages 3+
Using puppetry, imaginative design and music, audiences are invited to join Nora as she explores the garden, discovering dragonflies as big as her head, plants that can eat you (and your toy giraffe) whole, a polar bear that likes fishing and maybe, just maybe, a tiger in the garden.
Suitable for ages 3+
An exhibition of paintings.
Pamela Willoughby’s art transitioned from a mood of dark and brooding to one of bright optimism. This echoed the changes in her life as appreciation of the freedom and beauty of nature helped her to overcome her struggles with polio and an oppressive father. Every brush stroke was her expression of that freedom and a testament to her indestructible will to fight for her life to succeed.
Pamela Willoughby: Beauty Amidst Hardship at Highgate Gallery.
Open:
Friday 13 October: 13 .00 – 17.00
Saturday 14 October: 11.00

– 16.00
Sunday 15 October: 11.00 – 17.00
Wednesday 18, Thursday 19, Friday 20 October: 13.00 – 17.00
Saturday 21 October: 11.00 – 16.00
Sunday 22 October: 11.00 – 17.00
Wednesday 25, Thursday 26 October: 13.00 – 17.00
Using puppetry, imaginative design and music, audiences are invited to join Nora as she explores the garden, discovering dragonflies as big as her head, plants that can eat you (and your toy giraffe) whole, a polar bear that likes fishing and maybe, just maybe, a tiger in the garden.
Suitable for ages 3+
An exhibition of paintings.
Pamela Willoughby’s art transitioned from a mood of dark and brooding to one of bright optimism. This echoed the changes in her life as appreciation of the freedom and beauty of nature helped her to overcome her struggles with polio and an oppressive father. Every brush stroke was her expression of that freedom and a testament to her indestructible will to fight for her life to succeed.
Pamela Willoughby: Beauty Amidst Hardship at Highgate Gallery.
Open:
Friday 13 October: 13 .00 – 17.00
Saturday 14 October: 11.00

– 16.00
Sunday 15 October: 11.00 – 17.00
Wednesday 18, Thursday 19, Friday 20 October: 13.00 – 17.00
Saturday 21 October: 11.00 – 16.00
Sunday 22 October: 11.00 – 17.00
Wednesday 25, Thursday 26 October: 13.00 – 17.00
Using puppetry, imaginative design and music, audiences are invited to join Nora as she explores the garden, discovering dragonflies as big as her head, plants that can eat you (and your toy giraffe) whole, a polar bear that likes fishing and maybe, just maybe, a tiger in the garden.
Suitable for ages 3+
Using puppetry, imaginative design and music, audiences are invited to join Nora as she explores the garden, discovering dragonflies as big as her head, plants that can eat you (and your toy giraffe) whole, a polar bear that likes fishing and maybe, just maybe, a tiger in the garden.
Suitable for ages 3+
Come and join our Musical Theatre Choir! A fun, low pressured choir focusing on songs from musicals, and older pop songs. We rehearse on Thursday evenings, 8-9.30pm at Jackson’s Lane, opposite Highgate tube station.
Throughout the year, we will cover repertoire from Rodgers and Hammerstein musicals, to Les Mis, to Sondheim, to West Side Story, to Wicked, and everything in between. Older pop songs will include songs by the Carpenters, the Beatles, and many more. This term, we will also be looking at some Christmas songs.
Any standard welcome, and no need to read music as the songs will be taught line by line. The choir is run by Rachel Dussek, a singer, singing teacher, and choir leader who trained in classical singing and then in musical theatre at Mountview Academy of Theatre Arts. Please get in touch by email or phone to book a taster session.
racheldussek@aol.com
£54 for a 6 week half term, working out as £9 per session. Half term dates are Thursday 2nd November – Thursday 7th December.
The Splash Test Dummies are off on an exciting adventure! With a brilliant array of stunt work, dazzling acrobatics, juggling and slapstick comedy, the Dummies are ready to roll out their beach towels and spring into an exciting hour of circus-filled hilarity for the whole family.
Suitable for all ages.
Performances at 11am & 2pm
The Splash Test Dummies are off on an exciting adventure! With a brilliant array of stunt work, dazzling acrobatics, juggling and slapstick comedy, the Dummies are ready to roll out their beach towels and spring into an exciting hour of circus-filled hilarity for the whole family.
Suitable for all ages.
Performances at 11am & 2pm
Come and join our Musical Theatre Choir! A fun, low pressured choir focusing on songs from musicals, and older pop songs. We rehearse on Thursday evenings, 8-9.30pm at Jackson’s Lane, opposite Highgate tube station.
Throughout the year, we will cover repertoire from Rodgers and Hammerstein musicals, to Les Mis, to Sondheim, to West Side Story, to Wicked, and everything in between. Older pop songs will include songs by the Carpenters, the Beatles, and many more. This term, we will also be looking at some Christmas songs.
Any standard welcome, and no need to read music as the songs will be taught line by line. The choir is run by Rachel Dussek, a singer, singing teacher, and choir leader who trained in classical singing and then in musical theatre at Mountview Academy of Theatre Arts. Please get in touch by email or phone to book a taster session.
racheldussek@aol.com
£54 for a 6 week half term, working out as £9 per session. Half term dates are Thursday 2nd November – Thursday 7th December.
Come and join our Musical Theatre Choir! A fun, low pressured choir focusing on songs from musicals, and older pop songs. We rehearse on Thursday evenings, 8-9.30pm at Jackson’s Lane, opposite Highgate tube station.
Throughout the year, we will cover repertoire from Rodgers and Hammerstein musicals, to Les Mis, to Sondheim, to West Side Story, to Wicked, and everything in between. Older pop songs will include songs by the Carpenters, the Beatles, and many more. This term, we will also be looking at some Christmas songs.
Any standard welcome, and no need to read music as the songs will be taught line by line. The choir is run by Rachel Dussek, a singer, singing teacher, and choir leader who trained in classical singing and then in musical theatre at Mountview Academy of Theatre Arts. Please get in touch by email or phone to book a taster session.
racheldussek@aol.com
£54 for a 6 week half term, working out as £9 per session. Half term dates are Thursday 2nd November – Thursday 7th December.
Marianne Fox Ockinga: Kings Cross – All Change
Recording the current upheaval in the landscape round the two great Victorian railway terminals of King’s Cross and St Pancras in relief prints, etchings, paintings, and drawings. A revolution in human and architectural affairs. This exhibition focuses on the huge changes in the area brilliantly depicted by Dickens in his novel ‘Dombey and Sons’ and frequented by the young Thomas Hardy.
Marianne has worked in the area for more than four decades. She has sketched and painted in the field, setting up her easel in notorious locations such as Goodsway and Coal Drop Yard, beside the Granary Square campus of the University of the Arts.
“These works are from the year 2000, when the area round St Pancras changed dramatically. It had become a gloomy and derelict place, as many of the old red brick Victorian buildings crumbled or were eradicated by the developers’ wrecking ball. I first saw and recorded this when, some years before, I was invited into the now demolished Culross Building to draw and paint. From the roof, I could clearly see the outline of Highgate in the distance.”
Recovering from a serious illness, in 2001 Marianne felt reinvigorated and eager to get down to work again at St Pancras. The first shock was to see cranes behind a scaffold of hoardings starting to yank out the Victorian gasholders. Marianne wanted to record what was happening quickly, knowing time was not on her side. Often, she went out at night, using the canal towpath, especially sinister in the shadows now that the familiar public lighting had been removed. By working regularly on site, local businesses got to know her work, and became supportive. Several exhibitions, presentations and shows in public and commercial venues ensued. These began with ‘Transition July 2002’ at the CTRL Visitor Centre at St Pancras. She held shows in a range of venues in the UK and Netherlands.
Marianne was born in the Netherlands but began her art education at the Bath Academy of Art in 1960. She completed her training at the Rijksakademie, Amsterdam, returning to settle in the UK in 1971. Marianne has always favoured working in the open air, drawing and painting from observation. Until 2000 she focused on landscapes across Europe, in the Netherlands and Italy especially. She also has taken portrait commissions. Since 1971 printmaking became the main focus of her work, especially after acquiring a large Columbian press.
In London Marianne has also worked at large sites in transformation, undertaken by invitation and commission, such as the Olympic Park for the 2012 Games and the Arsenal Emirates complex. She was also witness to the decommissioning and conversion of the elegant art deco Arsenal Highbury Stadium complex, recording in a variety of media. Her work is in collections both public and private, among them the Victoria and Albert Museum. She is a brother member of the Art Workers Guild.
Highgate Gallery is open:
Wed – Friday: 13.00 – 17.00
Saturday: 11.00 – 16.00
Sunday: 11.00 – 17.00
Marianne Fox Ockinga: Kings Cross – All Change
Recording the current upheaval in the landscape round the two great Victorian railway terminals of King’s Cross and St Pancras in relief prints, etchings, paintings, and drawings. A revolution in human and architectural affairs. This exhibition focuses on the huge changes in the area brilliantly depicted by Dickens in his novel ‘Dombey and Sons’ and frequented by the young Thomas Hardy.
Marianne has worked in the area for more than four decades. She has sketched and painted in the field, setting up her easel in notorious locations such as Goodsway and Coal Drop Yard, beside the Granary Square campus of the University of the Arts.
“These works are from the year 2000, when the area round St Pancras changed dramatically. It had become a gloomy and derelict place, as many of the old red brick Victorian buildings crumbled or were eradicated by the developers’ wrecking ball. I first saw and recorded this when, some years before, I was invited into the now demolished Culross Building to draw and paint. From the roof, I could clearly see the outline of Highgate in the distance.”
Recovering from a serious illness, in 2001 Marianne felt reinvigorated and eager to get down to work again at St Pancras. The first shock was to see cranes behind a scaffold of hoardings starting to yank out the Victorian gasholders. Marianne wanted to record what was happening quickly, knowing time was not on her side. Often, she went out at night, using the canal towpath, especially sinister in the shadows now that the familiar public lighting had been removed. By working regularly on site, local businesses got to know her work, and became supportive. Several exhibitions, presentations and shows in public and commercial venues ensued. These began with ‘Transition July 2002’ at the CTRL Visitor Centre at St Pancras. She held shows in a range of venues in the UK and Netherlands.
Marianne was born in the Netherlands but began her art education at the Bath Academy of Art in 1960. She completed her training at the Rijksakademie, Amsterdam, returning to settle in the UK in 1971. Marianne has always favoured working in the open air, drawing and painting from observation. Until 2000 she focused on landscapes across Europe, in the Netherlands and Italy especially. She also has taken portrait commissions. Since 1971 printmaking became the main focus of her work, especially after acquiring a large Columbian press.
In London Marianne has also worked at large sites in transformation, undertaken by invitation and commission, such as the Olympic Park for the 2012 Games and the Arsenal Emirates complex. She was also witness to the decommissioning and conversion of the elegant art deco Arsenal Highbury Stadium complex, recording in a variety of media. Her work is in collections both public and private, among them the Victoria and Albert Museum. She is a brother member of the Art Workers Guild.
Highgate Gallery is open:
Wed – Friday: 13.00 – 17.00
Saturday: 11.00 – 16.00
Sunday: 11.00 – 17.00
Marianne Fox Ockinga: Kings Cross – All Change
Recording the current upheaval in the landscape round the two great Victorian railway terminals of King’s Cross and St Pancras in relief prints, etchings, paintings, and drawings. A revolution in human and architectural affairs. This exhibition focuses on the huge changes in the area brilliantly depicted by Dickens in his novel ‘Dombey and Sons’ and frequented by the young Thomas Hardy.
Marianne has worked in the area for more than four decades. She has sketched and painted in the field, setting up her easel in notorious locations such as Goodsway and Coal Drop Yard, beside the Granary Square campus of the University of the Arts.
“These works are from the year 2000, when the area round St Pancras changed dramatically. It had become a gloomy and derelict place, as many of the old red brick Victorian buildings crumbled or were eradicated by the developers’ wrecking ball. I first saw and recorded this when, some years before, I was invited into the now demolished Culross Building to draw and paint. From the roof, I could clearly see the outline of Highgate in the distance.”
Recovering from a serious illness, in 2001 Marianne felt reinvigorated and eager to get down to work again at St Pancras. The first shock was to see cranes behind a scaffold of hoardings starting to yank out the Victorian gasholders. Marianne wanted to record what was happening quickly, knowing time was not on her side. Often, she went out at night, using the canal towpath, especially sinister in the shadows now that the familiar public lighting had been removed. By working regularly on site, local businesses got to know her work, and became supportive. Several exhibitions, presentations and shows in public and commercial venues ensued. These began with ‘Transition July 2002’ at the CTRL Visitor Centre at St Pancras. She held shows in a range of venues in the UK and Netherlands.
Marianne was born in the Netherlands but began her art education at the Bath Academy of Art in 1960. She completed her training at the Rijksakademie, Amsterdam, returning to settle in the UK in 1971. Marianne has always favoured working in the open air, drawing and painting from observation. Until 2000 she focused on landscapes across Europe, in the Netherlands and Italy especially. She also has taken portrait commissions. Since 1971 printmaking became the main focus of her work, especially after acquiring a large Columbian press.
In London Marianne has also worked at large sites in transformation, undertaken by invitation and commission, such as the Olympic Park for the 2012 Games and the Arsenal Emirates complex. She was also witness to the decommissioning and conversion of the elegant art deco Arsenal Highbury Stadium complex, recording in a variety of media. Her work is in collections both public and private, among them the Victoria and Albert Museum. She is a brother member of the Art Workers Guild.
Highgate Gallery is open:
Wed – Friday: 13.00 – 17.00
Saturday: 11.00 – 16.00
Sunday: 11.00 – 17.00