It's long overdue but here at long last is a visual timeline of my progression in my work since I've started studying at the Slade. I won't say much except that I have been dealing with the idea of interiors as uncanny spaces where this residue of nostalgia builds up... enjoy!
This last image isn't great quality but it is the start of my most recent move into sculpture and installation work, it's an exciting time and the feedback I've been getting from tutors has been really positive so far!
Thanks for taking the time to have a look, I appreciate any form of feedback/critique!
2 November 2010
19 October 2010
Frieze 2010
Every year Frieze Art Fair graces our beloved Regent's Park, and manages to spark excitement and inspiration for many. However, although I am happy to appreciate the variety of art forms the many international galleries that take part provide, I am NOT happy with the fact I spent 45 minutes queueing in the cold, having booked my ticket online, only then to spend another 2 and a half hours traipsing around the huge marquee of 'Art Market Stalls' being jostled by millionaire art dealers and gaggles of school trip students with their A3 sketchbooks!
Rant over.
What I'm trying to say is, in Frieze it feels like a typical Saturday morning market in an airfield in Essex, just a bit more expensive and without the stall holders hollering "Two pound for the pair!"
Here are some things I discovered, and will be following these guidelines next year...
- Don't take a big bag a small handbag will suffice while carrying your camera and a SMALL sketchbook. This way you can avoid the queues of people facing bag checks!
- Look at the map of the stall layout work out a system, if you wander about willy nilly you will get lost and/or miss something.
- Bring a bottle of water and snacks trust me, you won't want to pay the cafe prices, and you'll need to keep your energy levels up.
- Learn what you don't like quickly there are so many stalls and so much art, you will get to a point where enough is enough, don't waste your energy looking at something for the sake of it, concentrate on what catches your eye.
- Take lots of photos if you find a piece interesting, take some photos of it! And don't forget to photograph the wall sticker of the artist's name so you can research them further.
- Be sure to take regular breaks there's a lot of walking and standing around, you'll need to rest your feet every one in a while!
- Try to enjoy it! it may be overcrowded, but you are in the worlds biggest and most popular contemporary art fair, artists and famous dealers are always milling around, so get excited, ask questions and take as much as you can from the experience.
10 October 2010
The ball is rolling... a bit too fast
Good afternoon all!
My apologies for a lack of posts over the last couple of weeks! It has been incredibly hectic since starting at UCL, I've had a lot to deal with. My diary is filled for this month already with seminars, tutorials and lectures to attend, and I'm not going to lie, I feel incredibly overwhelmed by it all.
However, me being me, I have chosen to avoid getting help and have instead opted to push it all to the back of my head and concentrate on getting work done. We have had our studio spaces for just over a week now and the majority of us are cracking on getting work done, with only 40 people in my year it's been really easy getting to know everyone's faces, and a quarter of us came from the Chelsea Foundation course anyway!
Being in Slade is a really exciting thing, I'm happy to be in a lovely studio space and have the opportunity to make whatever the hell I like, and the tutors are more than happy to talk to us about our work. I am also impressed with their Contemporary Art Lecture programme, we had a lecture by the artist David Batchelor on Wednesday; I felt privileged to listen to such an established artist discuss and share his triumphs and fails with the whole of Slade art school.
Although I'm still trying to cope with everything being thrown at me, I am making the most of everything on offer and perhaps it's just a matter of time until I can feel like I really belong in such a prestigious establishment.
Watch this space.
27 September 2010
Skin at The Wellcome Collection
Since I was in the area, I decided to visit the 'Skin' exhibition at The Wellcome Collection on it's closing day. I'd visited The Wellcome Collection before as part of a science lecture with The Times and Eureka their science supplement magazine, so I was interested to see what depths they went to with the investigation of skin.
It turns out the curators are very clever people! What I loved about the exhibition was how it combined the technical and medical with the creative, I was able to look at the models and artifacts and appreciate them both on a science discovery level and as an artist. The draughtsmanship of the artists that documented the findings scientists made is just extraordinary.
Another plus point was the way contemporary works of art were slotted in with the artifacts; photography, installations and film all played a part in the exploration of the body's largest and most visible organ. There were a few contemporary works that really caught my eye;
A piece by Brian Dettmer caught my eye, this artist takes thick books of various genres, such as science text, history volumes and story books, and using surgical tools, such as scalpels and tweezers, delicately dissects the pages to reveal the inner workings and allow for closer investigation.
Tamsin Van Essen created a series of ceramics which held faults or defects on their surface, their shapes were based on 17th and 18th century apothecary jars. Their appearance poses the idea that these jars hold a disease rather than a cure for it, and leads the public to question their belief as to what is 'beauty' or 'perfection'.
'Medical Heirloom' 2008-2010
Zane Berzina uses mixed media and presents them as slides under microscopes, these 'slides' of processed materials are seen to be interpretations of the epidermis. Each slide is different in colour, texture and pattern and at first sight it isn't clear what is being viewed. I found them to be incredibly interesting and the ambiguity of the surfaces intrigued me.
'Membrane |||' 2006-2008
22 September 2010
Introducing 'My Style'
Before I begin posting any new work I make, I wanted to show you some of my recent work; so here are photos of my work in the Chelsea Foundation Show which opened in May this year. My foundation was an incredible experience, I learnt so much and I got on really well with the tutors.
Starting as I mean to go on...
Hello Reader!
Welcome to my blog, it's my very first one so I'm a bit of a newbie. I'll start by telling you about what's happening with me at the moment - I am due to embark on an exciting journey of self discovery and expression. To put it plainly, I start my degree on Monday.
So what can you expect to see on here? Well, I'm going to be making plenty of artwork so loads of photos of paintings and sculptures and general things of interest to me.
It's a slightly scary prospect, starting another new place, but it's times like this I've got to throw myself into everything - and hopefully I'll make some new friends out of it!
Here's to a new start!
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