Claire Wellesley-Smith is an artist, curator, writer and researcher based in Bradford, West Yorkshire, UK. Her projects are situated within arts, heritage and community wellbeing. The ability of textile to transform and connect over time informs her studio, community and research practices. Prior to joining the Open University she researched, wrote, developed, delivered and evaluated multiple long-term socially engaged arts and heritage projects with community and care focussed organisations. Funders of this work include Kings Fund, Arts Council England, Mind, The Henry Smith Charity, Esmée Fairbairn Foundation, National Lottery Heritage Fund and NHS foundation trusts.
Teaching, visiting lectureships and artist residencies include West Dean College of Arts and Conservation, Crafts Council UK, Gawthorpe Textile Collection, Brontë Parsonage Museum, Royal School of Needlework, Fibre Arts Australia, Tversted Skole, Denmark, Cultureghem and FARO, Belgium and IASPIS, Sweden. Curation and exhibition work include projects for Museum Dr Guislain, Belgium, British Textile Biennial and Bradford 2025 UK City of Culture.
Claire completed her AHRC funded doctoral research project in Geography at the Open University having previously completed a Masters in Visual Arts at Bradford School of Art and a BA in Politics at Newcastle University. She is currently a Grand Union DTP ESRC Postdoctoral Research Fellow in Geography.
Geographies of making, health and wellbeing.
Industrial and domestic textile production and their heritages.
Community resilience.
Post-industrial landscapes and memory.
Socially engaged arts practice.
What is the potential of creative practice for building community resilience in flood-prone communities in the UK? (2024-10-01)
Griffin, Liza; Revill, George and Wellesley-Smith, Claire
International Journal of Disaster Risk Reduction, 112, Article 104760
Crafting Resilience: Cultural Heritage and Community Engagement in Post-Industrial Textile Communities. (2023-05-16)
Wellesley-Smith, Claire Elizabeth
PhD thesis The Open University