Glastonbury and Street’s week brings woodcuts, baby kit, carers’ coffee and young performers
By Laura Linham 4th Jun 2026
What's On in Street and Glastonbury is brought to you by The Loft - your local spot for great food, live music and late nights.
Glastonbury and Street have lined up a properly mixed week, with a major Harry Brockway exhibition at Somerset Rural Life Museum, affordable art on the High Street, a family event in Street, support for carers, a birth stories art workshop and young performers taking to the stage at Strode Theatre. It is the sort of line-up that makes "there's nothing on round here" sound less like a complaint and more like a confession that you have not looked.
Running now, Harry Brockway: Ways With Wood Exhibition continues at Somerset Rural Life Museum until Wednesday, 2 September. The major exhibition celebrates the life and work of Glastonbury-based artist Harry Brockway, who lived from 1958 to 2024, with wood engravings, woodcuts and wooden sculpture on show. Entry is free with Museum Unlimited, while normal admission applies, with adult tickets listed at £11, concessions at £9, children aged five to 17 at £5.25, and under-fives free. The museum is open Tuesday to Sunday, from 10am to 5pm. A serious look at a serious local artist, then, and one that gives everyone a better excuse for going to the museum than "it looked like rain".
Also running now, Affordable Art Sale is at Glastonbury Galleries, 10a High Street, until Friday, 5 June. The listing says visitors can drop in to see work by five local artists, including paintings, ceramics, mosaics, bags made from waste, disperse dyed bags, photographs, Chinese brush art, textiles and hand-painted cards. The event page gives the dates as 29 May to 5 June, although the body text appears to contain a typo saying "05 May", because apparently even art cannot escape admin gremlins. Opening hours are listed as 10am to 4pm each day.
On Wednesday, 3 June, Footsteps in the Forest Shamanic Retreat finishes at Earth Spirit, Duddon, near Glastonbury. The listing says the retreat includes guided shamanic trances, ancestral healing, day and evening ceremonies connected to the land, and engagement with plant medicine and nature spirits. Fees are listed as £418 fully residential, £270 non-residential and £100 for day passes. It may not be everyone's usual Wednesday, but then again neither is answering emails while eating toast over the sink, and look how popular that has become.
On Saturday, 6 June, Bump, Baby & Beyond Event takes place at Crispin Hall in Street from 11am to 2pm. The event is aimed at growing families, from pregnancy through to preschool years, with local businesses, expert advice and support, new and preloved shopping, and baby and children's essentials. It is also a chance to meet other local parents, which may be useful if your current social circle is mainly a toddler, a washing basket and the person delivering more nappies.
On Monday, 8 June, Street Carers Group meets from 10.30am in the rooms to the rear of the Crispin Centre, with access from the square opposite the library. The free informal group, supported by Somerset Carers Service, is for people who regularly help a friend, family member or loved one with daily tasks. First-time attendees are asked to call Cath on 07535 279359 in case of schedule changes. It is practical, supportive and free, which is a rare enough combination these days to deserve its own round of applause.
Also on Monday, 8 June, Birth Stories Project Art Workshop takes place at 90 High Street, Glastonbury. The free workshop requires registration through the event page and invites people to share birth stories through art as part of a communal canvas. It will be facilitated by artist Sarah Slaughter and professional facilitator and doula mentor Samsara Tanner. The listing says babies in arms are welcome, but childcare for toddlers and older children is not provided, which is worth knowing before anyone turns up with half a packed lunch and a scooter.
Also on Monday, 8 June, Mid Somerset Musical Spectacular begins at Strode Theatre in Street. Performances are listed for Monday, 8 June, Tuesday, 9 June, and Thursday, 11 June, each starting at 7pm. The concerts bring together young performers from local schools, music clubs and drama groups, with a different cast performing each evening. Tickets cost between £3 and £9, with proceeds going to Somerset Music and other children's charities. Three nights, different casts and ticket prices that do not require remortgaging anything: a small miracle in live entertainment.
To add a local event for free, you can nub your event for Wells, Glastonbury and Street, or Shepton Mallet.
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