Friday, 26 October 2018
Westland Place Studios Open Weekend
In 1993 when Westland Place Studios opened its doors just a stone’s throw from Old St. Roundabout there were said to be more artists per square foot and more artists studios in the area than anywhere else in Europe. The presence of these artists helped rejuvenate what was then a run down, semi derelict backwater of the city and in doing so they laid the foundations for the extraordinary transformation that followed.
25 years later the streets surrounding what is now known as “Silicon Roundabout” have changed beyond recognition. The artists who were instrumental in reviving the area have all but gone, forced out by ever-increasing rents. Against all the odds Westland Place Studios has managed to weather the storm of development and on the first weekend in November will celebrate its 25th anniversary. To mark this event and acknowledge its achievements the artists will be opening their doors and inviting the public into their studios. Housed in the evocative spaces of an old tobacco pipe warehouse Westland Place Studios are home to an eclectic mix
of established and internationally renowned Painters, Photographers, Sculptors, Printmakers, Filmmakers, Ceramists, Illustrators and Designers. In the past year their work has been exhibited in Venice, New York, Berlin, Paris, Tallinn, Brussels,Turin, Beijing. Lima Hong Kong and of course London.
25 YEARS OF WESTLAND PLACE STUDIOS OPEN WEEKEND
3-11 Westland Place London N1 7LP
www.westlandplacestudios.com
Free admission, no booking required
Opening Times:
Thu 1st November 2018: 6-9pm
Sat 3rd November 2018: 12-6pm
Sun 4th November 2018: 12-6pm
Tube: Old Street (Northern Line) (3minute walk)
Local buses: 243, 55, 43, 214, 205, 76, 21, 141
Participating Artists: Susan Austin, Gordon Beswick, Augustine Carr, Michael Czerwinski, Harumi Foster, Edith Gubbay,
Michael Hutchison, Tyler Mallison, George Morris, Teresa Narduzzo, Sheila Ogilvie, Mary Oley, Maureen Otwell, Claudia
Puntoni, Pietro Reviglio, Emma Ronay, Richard Sharples, Edit Toaso, Barbara Tong, Simon Williams.
For further information and high resolution images please contact: tucktite@gmail.com
Image above: Magic Mountain by Gordon Beswick
A bit of a chat with Lady Lucy
Lucy Woollett, also known as Lady Lucy makes paintings, drawings and moving image. Her work is strongly informed by her interest in the social function and value of her activities as an artist and more specifically as a painter. She seeks to find meaning and political application in the process of painting and draws on the art historical lineages of collaborative art practice and portraiture. She told The Rebel magazine that, "Lady Lucy" is a name she started using when she first moved to London in 1996. She was doing performances, fanzines, writing and DJing. She sees it as a youthful gesture, born through a feminist intention, which stuck and has continued to be of use. "For more info visit: here A painting by Lucy features in a group show at Mare Street's The A Side B Side Gallery next week.
The painting is called, 'Rrroadrunnerrrroadrunner' and the exhibition is called, Jo Mama's Second Alphabet Show.
The Rebel: What can you tell me about the work you've got in the Alphabet exhibition?
"It is one of a series of paintings I have been making for a couple of years where I paint directly onto off cuts of loose linen or canvas. Some of them are collages. All of them are designed to hang in various ways."
The Rebel: Do you have a favourite single or album by Jonathan Richman?
"Cornerstore" from Jonathan Goes Country" (1990, Special Delivery Records) listen
The Rebel: Would you rather own a red car or a blue car?
"My Dad has a Datsun Red Z"
The Rebel: The Alphabet Show takes place at A Side B Side in Mare Street? Are you a fan of Hackney?
"I live in one part of Hackney and my studio is in another. My studio is in Praxis, a Co-op and it may well be the last standing studio in Stoke Newington.
I don't like what's happening in Hackney with various communities having being forced out due to gentrification. Of course the artists contribute to that process. so we should think ethically about how we work."
The Rebel: What's the best exhibition you've seen this year?
"Flo Brooks - Is Now a Good Time Cubitt Gallery."
The Rebel: Who was the best art tutor you ever had - what was special about them?
"Ellen Cantor at MA Chelsea College of Art and Design. Ellen waltzed into my studio and started role playing the New York School, she told me about some amazing painters and I was so enlightened. Years later it was so sad to hear of her passing."
The Rebel: Which painting of your own are you most proud of?
" Probably the group portraits I have made such as Volunteers at Southbank Centre where I spent 3 months meeting and painting 60 Volunteers
working at Southbank Centre over the 60th Anniversary of the Festival of Britain. I am also very fond of a series of drawings World Filmography 1968. It showed as a Drawing Installation in quite a few galleries across 2006 / 2007 including The Drawing Room, London International 3, Outpost Gallery, Phoenix, Brighton and The Unit 3 Gallery which was part of London met building opposite the Whitechapel Gallery."
The Rebel: If you went on Mastermind what would be your specialist subject?
"POST PUNK"
The Rebel: Are you more of a cat person or a dog person?
"Cat"
The Rebel: Do you rate the films of David Lynch - do you think he's made any great films?
"Yes, and one of my Chelsea MA show works was a text piece that made a giant redacted script out of all the sentences in Twin Peaks containing the the name LAURA in them."
The Rebel: What projects / shows have you got coming up after the Alphabet show?
"Finish My PhD. I am working with my fellow residents where I live on Herbert Butler Estate to make some portraits."
Thursday, 25 October 2018
Jo Mama
"I’m not the first artist to do a show based around the alphabet and I wont be the last." (quote taken from Jo Mama's press release for her show at the Studio One Gallery in Wandsworth in October of this year). Part Two of Alphabet show opens on Thursday 1st November at The A Side B Side Gallery in Mare Street, Hackney at 6.30pm. There are 26 different artists who have contributed to the show including; painters such as Jasper Joffe, Martin Sexton, Peter Lamb, Neal Brown, Mimei Thompson, Jackie Clark, James Johnston, Chris Tosic, Jock McFadyen, Adrian R. Shaw, Lady Lucy, James Lawson, Sandra Turnbull, Jono Ganz, Kate Murdoch, Loretta Wall, Sarah Sparkes, Harry Pye and Kes Richardson. photographers; Richard Barr, and Andrew Petrie, and sculptors; Joseph Paxton, and Paul Wye. Jo Mama is an artist and curator currently based in Whitstable in Kent. The show features some of her personal possessions as well as artwork made by people she admires. Generously Jo is giving away 26 of artworks she made free of charge.
The first 26 people to visit Jo Mama's Second Alphabet Show will receive a free A5 sized artwork by Jo Mama worth £30
Above: Artwork 8
Above: Artwork 10
Above: artwork 11
Above: Artwork 12
Above: Artwork 13
Above: Artwork 20
Above: Artwork 22
Address of A Side B Side Gallery is: 352 Mare Street, London E8 1HR.
The opening party for the show is Thursday the first of November: 6.30pm till 10pm
Thursday, 11 October 2018
Funny Business at The Shortwave Gallery
'Funny Business' is an exhibition featuring the work of Sadie Hennessy, Jasper Joffe, Kate Lyddon, Harry Pye, and Geraldine Swayne is coming to The Shortwave gallery, Clements Road, Bermondsey, SE16 4DG. The opening party will be on Thursday 8th Nov and the show will close on Tuesday 27th Nov.
Geraldine Swayne is an artist and musician. This year she was the winner of the Royal Academy Summer Show’s Sunny Dupree Jury Prize. Paul Carter-Robinson of Artlyst magazine has described her as the best portrait painter in Britain.
For more info on Geraldine visit: here
Harry Pye is an artist, writer and curator. He is the editor of The Rebel magazine. He has exhibited work and organised events at both Tate Britain and Tate Modern. For more info on Harry visit: here
Kate Lyddon is a painter and sculptor and occasional curator. She won the Mark Tanner Sculpture Award 2014/15 and has exhibited at Jerwood Space, Zabludowicz Collection and Tate Modern. She was runner up in the Marmite Prize for Painting 2006. For more info on Kate visit: here
Jasper Joffe is a painter, writer, curator and publisher. He was the founder of the Free Art Fair and Joffe Books. For more info on Jasper visit: here
Sadie Memphis Hennessy is a “Mature Lady Artist” and Screen Print Fellow at The Royal Academy. Trevor Neal (of Trevor & Simon) has described Sadie as being a genius. For more info on Sadie visit: here
Tuesday, 9 October 2018
Jo Mama's Second Alphabet Show 1/11/18
East London's A Side B Side Gallery in Mare Street has just announced it will be the host of Jo Mama's Second Alphabet Show.
As with her previous exhibition (which took place at Studio One Gallery), this show will be sprinkled with some of her precious possessions and miscellaneous memorabilia that she's acquired over the years. Artists whose work feature in Jo Mama's Second Alphabet Show include: Kate Murdoch, Richard Barr, Neal Brown, Jono Ganz, Jasper Joffe, Lady Lucy, Andrew Petrie, Kirsty Buchanan, Adrian R. Shaw, James Johnston, Brontë Jones, Martin Sexton,James Lawson, Sandra Turnbull, and Loretta Wall The opening party for the show is on Thursday 1st of November 6.30pm until 10pm.
Above: Malcolm X by Jasper Joffe
Above: Snails by Mimei Thompson
Above: Julian Cope by Sarah Sparkes and Harry Pye
Above: 'Mask' by Paul Wye
Above: 'Uist Road' by Jock McFadyen
Above: Hang Dog by Joseph Paxton
Above: Good Times by Adrian R. shaw
Above: 'Centre' by Chris Tosic
Above: Thames Mudlark by Jackie Clark
Above: Isabella by Harry Pye and Kes Richardson
Above: 'Olympian' by Peter Lamb
Above: Portrait by James Johnston
A-side B-side Gallery was founded in late 2011 by artists Tinsel Edwards and Catherine Magnani. They are a not for profit company, supported in kind by friends of the gallery, grants and donations.
A-side B-side Gallery is located in Hackney central opposite Marks & Spencer. For public transport the closest station is: Hackney central station. Parking in the road near the gallery is restricted to dropping off & loading only. Or there is a Tesco car park nearby where you can park up to 1hr 30mins
News Just In: The first 26 people who attend Jo Mama's Second Alphabet Show will receive a priceless limited edition Jo Mama signed print absolutely free of charge!
Friday, 5 October 2018
Funny Business in Whitstable
Visit Gallery 64a in Whitstable this month and you'll experience some serious Funny Business...
ABOVE: Twinkle Troughton is left shocked and stunned by a painting by Kate Lyddon.
ABOVE: "How much is that painting in the window?"
ABOVE: "Oh, stop mucking about"
ABOVE: Maria encounters "Clease Encounters" painted by Harry Pye and Rowland Smith
ABOVE: "Mature Lady Artist: Sadie Hennessy" strikes again
ABOVE: "The Bearded Liza"
ABOVE: Harry Pye in front of 'Breakfast in Bed' painted by Pye & Smith.
ABOVE: Miss Poppinjay
ABOVE: Geraldine Swayne, paintings by Jasper Joffe
ABOVE: Rob Mumby keeps abreast of what's a foot (painted by Kate Lyddon)
ABOVE: A Freudian Slip
ABOVE: A close up of Sadie's balls
ABOVE: Geraldine's Thai Brides
ABOVE: 4 x Joffe paintings
The show is open Wednesday to Sunday, 1pm until 5.30pm until the 29th of October
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