Welcome to Benjamin Pollock's virtual shop.
Here are some upcoming dates:
1st - 5th July Miniatures
6th - 10th July Handmade Wooden Toys & Bears
11th - 15th July Puppets & Toy Theatre
16th July - Vintage toy theatre material
From the 17th July we will be opening Friday - Sunday 12 - 6 with virtual appointments available on Thursdays.
Tuesday, June 30, 2020
Monday, June 29, 2020
Isolating Together: Virtual Toy Theatre Festival III

We're back! Coming again to a personal screen near you!
ISOLATING TOGETHER
Another night of Toy Theater wonders.
Another colossal event of miniature proportions.
Presented by Great Small Works: John Bell, Trudi Cohen (Cambridge, MA), Jenny Romaine (New York, NY), Stephen Kaplin (Jackson Heights, NY), Roberto Rossi (Red Hook, NY) and Mark Sussman (Montreal, QC)
With thanks to the Puppet Slam Network, the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs, the Jarvis and Constance Doctorow Family Foundation, the Scherman Foundation, and the Mental Insight Foundation for their generous support.
With thanks to the Puppetslam Network, the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs, the Jarvis and Constance Doctorow Family Foundation, the Scherman Foundation, and the Mental Insight Foundation for their generous support.
RUNNING ORDER
Amanda Card (NYC)
Robert Poulter’s New Model Theatre (London, UK)
Maisie O’Brien (Dallas and Philadelphia)
People’s Puppets of Occupy Wall Street (Brooklyn, NY)
Felice Amato (Boston, MA)
Alex and Olmsted -- Alex Vernon and Sarah Olmsted Thomas (Takoma Park, MD)
Steph Hill-Wood (Detroit, MI)
Sue Truman, The Crankie Factory (Seattle, WA)
Paradox Teatro Family (Mexico City)
Bénédicte Guillon Verne et Pierre Bérerd of Le Chemin qui Marche (near Québec City)
Edna Bland (Sanford, FL)
Léonie Zikos (Cappadocia, Turkey)
Felicia Cooper (Stafford Springs, CT)
Great Small Works/Roberto Rossi (Red Hook, NY)
Linda Wingerter & Polly Sonic of the Stringpullers Puppet Company (Ithaca, NY)
The Weeping Mary Collective, submitted by Alva Rogers (New York, NY)
Wednesday, June 17, 2020
Saturday, May 23, 2020
Streaming Event: Jules Verne Adaption

HEAR YE, HEAR YE...
Each weekend, Saturday and Sunday only, you'll be able to see one of legendary productions of the famous marionette company Carlo Colla & Figli of Milan. This weekend, "From the Earth to the Moon", after the novel by Jules Verne, written in 1865, with music from Jacques Offenbach's operetta "Le Voyage dans la lune". Carlo Colla's first marionette production of this show was in 1898.
Only today Saturday 23 and Sunday 24 May will be online "From Earth to the Moon", by the Fondazione Carlo Colla & Figli, which comes from Jules Verne's novel of 1865.
In 1875 composer Jacques Offenbach composed the operetta "Le Voyage dans la Moon" which the show was inspired.
In 1898 Charles II Colla put hand to the lyrics to create a version suitable for puppet representation. The Company worked on making puppets, hand scolding them and making their clothes. The sets were commissioned by Antonio Rovescalli, to be integrated by Ugo Bellio, Achilles Lualdi, scenographers of the Teatro alla Scala, in the early 900. s.
A work of artisan effort that led to the show "From Earth to the Moon", with puppets impersonating Terrestrials and Lunari, achieving a great success.
In 1993 a new version of the show was presented at the Festival dei Due Mondi in Spoleto, last represented at Piccolo Teatro Grassi at the end of December 2019.
Monday, May 04, 2020
May Fayre Memories Documentary
For 45 years Maggie Pinhorn and Alternative Arts have organised the Covent Garden May Fayre and Puppet Festival. In this video Punch and Judy professors, puppeteers, entertainers and puppet builders discuss what makes the day so magical, why people travel from across the globe to attend, and thank Maggie for her unparalleled contribution to British puppetry.
Beverley Puppet (Online) Festival: Back to Nature
The award-winning Beverley Puppet Festival usually fills the streets with excited onlookers. Giant creatures roam around Toll Gavel, Butcher Row and the Flemingate Centre; tiny, magical worlds are revealed to unsuspecting audiences in the Friary Gardens and indoor shows for all ages from 0-103 take place at The Friary, East Riding Theatre, Beverley Masonic Hall and Toll Gavel Church Hall.
The Covid-19 pandemic could have caused cancelling this year's festival; however, it was decided instead to go online. This is a new adventure for the festival team and one that now spans two months instead of just one weekend!
Anna Ingleby and Kerrin Tatman, Founder & Co-Artistic Director / Co-Artistic Director respectively, share:
"The emphasis is on what can be done at home, not on filming finished performances which we would prefer to see live. Three artists’ videos per week have been commissioned, to start appearing from May 18th – July 12th to inspire and invite people of all ages to participate in a diverse range of puppetry-related activities that can be completed at home."This year's festival theme is BACK TO NATURE to which the artists will each bring their own unique interpretation and audiences are encouraged to do the same. The original stimulus for this theme is the current climate change crisis. Unless nature is respected, important ecosystems which are needed to support human survival will collapse.
Sounds pretty exciting. MORE innovative ONLINE solutions to physical world limitations...
Sunday, May 03, 2020
Student Production: Shakespeare Film Adaptation
Anglia Ruskin University's Film & Television program students created this toy theatre trailer recently. They shared with me that, "...We are going to release a very different version very soon!"
I look forward to it!
Tuesday, April 28, 2020
Article: Toy Theatre Thrives Online During Quarantine
Great Small Works, a New York-based performance collective, recently organized the first virtual Toy Theatre Festival, providing an online platform for international artists who responded to an open call.And boy, did they respond! In a matter of just days - sometimes hours - performers from around the world stepped up to volunteer performances in the time of our mutual pandemic quarantines.
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John Bell (Great Small Works) hosts the festival with two alternating puppets designed by Isaac Bell. |
Saturday, April 25, 2020
Saturday, April 11, 2020
Pollock’s Easter Instagram Exhibition
Benjamin Pollock's Toyshop will be hosting an Easter Instagram Exhibition, posted over the weekend starting at 3:00pm (GMT) Friday 10th April on Instagram @benjamin_pollocks_toyshop
The full exhibition will be posted on Facebook on Easter Monday 13th April
Facebook.com/BenjaminPollocksToyshop
And will also be posted to the Benjamin Pollock’s Toyshop website.
Sunday, March 29, 2020
Saturday, March 28, 2020
Isolating Together: Virtual Toy Theater Festival
COMING TO A PERSONAL SCREEN NEAR YOU!
*** I s o l a t i n g T o g e t h e r ***
Great Small Works' Online Toy Theater Festival
Toy Theater practitioners from around the world will offer original (very) short shows. From the intimacy of the Victorian parlor to the intimacy of your personal viewing device, puppeteers transform the traditional form to reach out during these days of separation.
Some of the lineup of performers:
Dirk and Barbara Reimers, Papiertheater Polidor (Germany)
Modern Times Theater (East Hardwick, VT)
Great Small Works/Stephen Kaplin (Jackson Heights, NY)
Dan Van Allen (Baltimore, MD)
Dan Hurlin (NYC and Hawley, PA)
Ira Karp and Peter Schumann (Glover, VT)
Katherine Fahey (Baltimore, MD)
Katya Popova (Boston, MA)
Eli Nixon and Ida Marcus (Providence, RI)
Lindsay McCaw (Detroit, MI)
Tianding He, Yiru Chen, Ge Gao, An Hua (NY, NJ and Shanghai)
Laurie McCants (Bloomsburg, PA)
Amelia Castillo (Santiago, Chile, via Glover, VT)
Isabel Bazan and Mauricio Martinez (Mexico City)
Joshua Krugman (Glover, VT)
Kate Brehm (Brooklyn, NY)
Birthe Thiel, Theatre Mont d'Hiver (Germany)
Miss Pussycat and Quintron (New Orleans, LA)
Alissa Hunnicutt (North Hollywood, CA)
Michael and Valerie Nelson (Vallejo, CA)......and many, many more!
Friday, March 06, 2020
The Shackleford Project: Climate Change as Drama
"An entrancing production. For sheer power to haunt the imagination…it’s hard to picture anything surpassing 69°S.” - The Boston Globe
Phantom Limb: 69˚S. from EMPAC @ Rensselaer on Vimeo.
“Exquisitely rendered….beautifully constructed.”
– Los Angeles Times
"A remarkable achievement of multimedia artistry, the spellbinding 69ºS. is like nothing you've ever seen before.”
– Backstage
“Imagine the laboratory of a Victorian-age mad genius, and you’d probably come up with something like the Tribeca apartment of…Erik Sanko.”Phantom Limb Company’s 69 Degrees South may be first production staged at the Brooklyn Academy of Music’s Next Wave Festival to require a sojourn in Antarctica to make aural recordings. The company’s principals, set designer Jessica Grindstaff and puppeteer Erik Sanko, received a National Science Foundation Artists and Writers grant to capture the sounds of ice cracking, wind shearing, and feet trudging through the snow—all part of their layered spectacle opening April 28 2020, running through May 3rd.
– Village Voice
But 69 Degrees South—which chronicles Ernest Shackleton’s almost doomed 1914 Antarctic expedition—is no National Geographic special: It includes puppets and live dancers, 28-foot-tall moving iceberg sculptures, NASA satellite imagery, and a minimalist score by the Kronos Quartet, along with Sanko’s legendary downtown noise-rock band Skeleton Key creating its own rather maximalist cacophony. “We’re big fans of letting images evoke meaning,” says Grindstaff, who, along with Sanko, hopes to make one of history’s greatest adventures resonate deeply—and wordlessly—for a contemporary audience.
Tuesday, March 03, 2020
Friday, February 28, 2020
Friday, February 07, 2020
Monday, January 06, 2020
Saturday, January 04, 2020
Monday, December 16, 2019
Lost & Found: Tinkering with Intent
Take a peek into Blair's bizarre and beautiful world. In a remote corner of New Zealand's South Island, tucked away among the last remaining tracts of native forest, lies a little-known place of wonder. It is the life's work and extraordinary creation of inventor, artist and self-confessed tinkerer, Blair Somerville.
For over twenty years Blair has single-handedly owned, operated and ceaselessly expanded the Lost Gypsy Gallery, his wonderland of homegrown wizardry and a playground for kids and adults alike. Using only recycled materials, Blair takes DIY to artistic extremes. His creations are ingenious, interactive, and often hilariously impractical. They take many shapes and forms and share an uncanny ability to amaze, entertain and inspire.
Art and entertainment don't need to be expensive. Sometimes the most fascinating and wonderful things come from the most peculiar places.
Blair Somerville lives in the remote town of Papatowai, on the South Island of New Zealand. He uses found materials and other curious objects which he re-purposes into magical moving artworks.
Blair realized early on that he didn't need a lot to live, and that money and material possessions were not important. Instead he has chosen to value happiness, creativity, and well-being.
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If you'd like to visit Blair, please note that he is open summers only, November - April, 10am to 5pm. Closed Wednesdays
Sunday, December 15, 2019
Old-Time "Moving Pictures"
A listing of 16 different late 19th-century "Boy's Own Panoramas" for home entertainment, from H. G. Clarke and Co. in London. These 19th-century crankies include moving panoramas about John Gilpin, Dick Turpin, Punchinello, Punch and Judy, and views of the Thames embankment, the Oxford and Cambridge boat race, and a state procession with Queen Victoria. From the back of a racist galanty (shadow figure) show script inspired by Christy's Minstrels (an American blackface minstrel group which toured in England from 1857 to the turn of the century). Thanks Matthew Isaac Cohen for sharing this source.
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