
The Bleddfa Centre
In 2023 the Sidney Nolan Trust announced a merger with the Bleddfa Trust, bringing together two well-established arts organisations on the Welsh / English border.
Upcoming workshops & events
The Bleddfa Centre was founded by James Roose-Evans (1927-2022), a pioneering British theatre director, priest, and writer on experimental theatre, ritual and meditation. In 1959 he founded the Hampstead Theatre Club, London, then in 1974 the Bleddfa Centre for the Creative Spirit, in mid-Wales.
The Trustees of both organisations recognise their shared objectives in the power of the creative arts to enhance and change lives. The Sidney Nolan Trust will take forward the values and spirit of Bleddfa and look forward to an ambitious and vibrant artistic future for the benefit of all.
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CPD for Artists: Introduction to Drama Therapy
Saturday 25 October, 2 – 5 pm
An introduction to Drama Therapy with experienced therapeutic arts facilitator Matthew Trustman. Adult workshop, by donation.
To book: Simone 07960 499894 or pleezsime@hotmail.com -
Bleddfa Bites: Food & Entertainment
Saturday 25 October, 6 pm onwards
Food and entertainment from 6 pm, £10pp (limited spaces).
To book: Simone 07960 499894 or pleezsime@hotmail.com -
Family Arts and Crafts
Sunday 26 October, 11 – 3 pm
Family arts and crafts, props and parade with artists Simone Gilliatt and Jo Jo Vagibondi.
FREE drop-in -
Community Cafe: Cook & Lunch
Wednesday 29 October, 11 am – 2 pm
Help in the kitchen and learn culinary skills from 11 am or just enjoy a homemade lunch and cake from 12 pm. Led by resident artist Simone.
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Chwarae | Play Evening
Wednesday 29 October, 6 – 7:30 pm (£5–£10 suggested donation)
Monthly sessions with games, noise, movement and a little mayhem for all ages and abilities. Led by Simone Gilliatt.
Contact: Simone 07960 499894 or pleezsime@hotmail.com -
Smashing: Mosaic Making and Mindfulness
Thursday 30 October, 11 am – 3 pm (£5–£10 suggested donation)
Mosaic making and mindfulness session with Simone.
Contact: Simone 07960 499894 or pleezsime@hotmail.com -
Accessible Art Session (October)
Friday 31 October, 11 am – 2 pm (£2 per person)
Inclusive art session.
Contact: Geraint at geraint.edwards1@gmail.com or 07779 111704 -
3,2,1 Dance
Wednesday 12 November, 6 – 8:30 pm
‘Free movement’ sessions: 6–7:30 pm Led session, 7:30–8:30 pm Free dance space. Explore movement solo, as a pair, or in groups; all styles and experience welcome.
Contact: Simone 07960 499894 or pleezsime@hotmail.com -
Bleddfa Community Craft Fair
Saturday 15 November
A community celebration of craft and creativity.
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Community Cafe (November)
Wednesday 26 November, 11 am – 2 pm
Lunch, learning, and time together in the community café.
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Chwarae | Play Evening (November)
Wednesday 26 November, 6 – 7:30 pm (£5–£10 Sliding Scale)
More fun and games for all ages, led by Simone Gilliatt.
Contact: Simone 07960 499894 or pleezsime@hotmail.com -
Accessible Art Session (November)
Friday 28 November, 11 am – 2 pm (£2 per person)
Inclusive art session.
Contact: Geraint at geraint.edwards1@gmail.com or 07779 111704 -
'We are innocent when we dream' Performance
Saturday 29 November, 7 pm
A special performance made possible by the generous support of Community Foundation Wales and the Social Value Forum Development Fund.
Venue Hure
Bleddfa's Old Hall Barn is a wonderful venue for workshops, events and special occasions.
To find out more about the space and hire costs please contact info@sidneynolantrust.org

James Roose-Evans (1927-2022)
James Roose-Evans, best-remembered as a theatre director but also a prolific writer and an Anglican priest, founded the Bleddfa Trust in 1974.
This move was both countercultural and idealistic. Like Arnold Wesker’s Centre 42 – which began in the 1960’s as a touring festival aimed at bringing art and culture to the impoverished provinces – the Trust’s ambition was to enrich life and community in the Welsh Marches. It was called The Bleddfa Centre for Caring and the Arts, then later The Bleddfa Centre for the Creative Spirit, its mission evolving with each new Director.
Not the least achievement was James’s daring and generous rescue of three sets of buildings to serve the community. Bleddfa’s magnificent St Mary Magdalene Church was on a 1973 list for closure. James devised a programme of exhibitions of sacred art, seminars, retreats, concerts and workshops before raising money for the Church’s restoration. He was all his life a gifted fund-raiser and networker of genius: in 1959 he founded and ran the Hampstead Theatre; in 2015 he co-founded Frontier Theatre Productions.
Around 1980 – as the local population dwindled – Bleddfa lost first its post-office, then its school. The village was evidently dying. James raised the money first to save and then adapt the school to create a much-loved gallery. A set of agricultural buildings were repurposed by architect Dennis Vickers and converted into the Hall Barn (named after benefactor Wendy Hall), a wonderful space for exhibitions, story-telling, concerts, films, and artistic performances of all kinds, as well as a home for community events.
Trust activities were multifarious. Neil McGregor, then-Director of the British Museum, who gave the first Bleddfa Annual Lecture (to an audience just shy of 200) commented that ‘The Bleddfa Centre is a place where the big questions of life are asked.’ His successors included Peter Maxwell Davies, Jonathon Porritt, Melvyn Bragg, Libby Purves, Mark Tully, Satish Kumar, Marina Cantacuzino and Marian Partington. Poet Kathleen Raine and artist Thetis Blacker visited. James himself gave a guest lecture on the subject of The Arts and Creativity, and in 2016 launched the last of his 21 books, following a poetry and music recital.
1987 was designated Bleddfa’s Festival of the Tree: some 31 events included workshops, concerts, films, meditation days, and guided walks; new forest trails were created and the oak wood above the village restocked. Other major Festivals followed: the Family, the Garden, the Mother. Meanwhile the Old School Gallery exhibited The Brotherhood of Ruralists and Robin Tanner, attracting wide audiences. Bleddfa also featured poetry days and meditation retreats with international participation, and much, much else.
Perhaps the Trust's activities are best celebrated by the former archbishop of Canterbury Rowan Williams, Bleddfa’s chief patron, who wrote that ‘Bleddfa is a place where people, ideas and imaginings meet at depth, in a way that is very rare. I think it represents all that is most hopeful for our anxious and fragmented culture.’
These are qualities not easily quantified – and hence often in danger of getting lost or forgotten. And yet, in a period of crass materialism when profit seems to matter more than community and well-being, such intangibles have especial value. They may help explain why James’s legacy remains so important to so many, and why he is so sorely missed.
James drew no salary throughout his years as Director. After he retired a merger with the Sidney Nolan Trust in 2023 was seen as the best prospect for safe-guarding his ideals and continuing his artistic and creative legacy.