Tower 42, RAJasper Johns and the ad/disadvantages of working in a home based studio

Monday 13 November 2017

This week I went with @alexmcintyre and her friend Karen first to see my work at Tower 42

and then to the Jasper Johns at the Royal Academy.

I suppose that until now I had only really thought of Johns and his bright flags, and not really thought much about him.  However current events in America make his darkened flags and targets seem really relevant and contemporary.  These works were made in the 1950s, another very right wing era in American politics, with McCarthy, and pre the 1960s civil rights movement.

And the thing that struck me the most was the image of a target as an eye.  The way that any target you focus on is looking back at you.  Every target I looked at after that peered back at me and made me nervous.  And then it allowed me to also see them as tunnels, like an eye, a space through which it is possible to see.

It got me thinking about American gun culture, Nationalism,  and at a personal level the goals (targets?) we set ourselves.

No photos allowed, so you will just have to go and see for yourself!


After clearing the mess that was the flood in our house, (I am just about at the end of the back log of washing) peering up at water marked ceilings, waiting for things to be fully dry, I am relived that I was at home when it happened.  So that while at the time of the flood the anxiety about getting everything out of the way of the water was panicky... the fact that I was there to turn off the stopcock means that the damage was less than it could have been.  And this and a visit to Alex McIntyre’s studio this weekend had me thinking about the advantages/disadvantages of a home based studio....Advantages: no travel time, the possibility of ruining pyjamas as you stroll in and do a bit of work before you are even dressed, the glance into the studio in the evening as I go to brush my teeth and see what I have done... is a real motivator.
The fact that I can use an hour here or there, and above all the fact that it is not an additional cost. Ability to stop work the moment I am needed at home. And the fact that when the studio gets over crowded I can use the rest of the house as drying space!



The disadvantages: no peers,(however this can be planned for by networking outside of studio time), distraction of domestic tasks (which do after all have to be done) , size (see above) , no Open Studios (but I plan to apply to a local artists open house so that will be solved).

So I had set myself a target of getting a bigger studio by next year, but Jasper Johns has me reassessing my targets, and when this one looks back at me I think maybe I got it wrong and there are more important things for next year. I’ll keep them to myself until they have looked me back in the eye.

And just to say Alex McIntyre has probably put herself in the perfect position by having a studio within a short walk across the fields from her flat...

Making New Work

Tuesday 24 October 2017



This year has been heavy on administration and a bit light on making. Having had some success with the promotion I have decided to have a concentrated period of making, and have started on a series of works under the working tile of Spaces In Between.  There is still admin to be done but I am going to  make an attempt to go back to my earlier resolution to limit it to one hour a day max.  Today that is this blog plus twitter and instagram, and then the next few days will be the Corby Glen appointments.  It is also prime competition entry time so I will have to be picky about what I enter.



New Tiny Experiments in colour in process, all 10x10cm
1
  
2
4

5

6


                  
 80x80cm currently drying








close to dry 80x80 cm, made using Cadmium RedPurple and earth tones, and just a little green, once dry I will de deciding hat to do about the surface sheen which is currently rather lovely in its wet state, so may add a gloss finish to parts



50x50cm, hand mixed oil on canvas, still drying, and as it dries the turquoise in particular changes its appearance


work drying

100x100cm, handmixed oil on canvas, base coat in indigo, 2017



And there are others, lots of my work currently needs a mask because of poisonous pigments and toxic solvents.....



I am making some new bigger work




This is the very first stage of a piece which will be 150x100cm














Exhibiting at Tower 42

Friday 13 October 2017

So at the end of Roy’s People Art Fair I had a bunch of leads, things to follow up, and so I did.
On Monday I will be installing work for a 3 month exhibition at Tower 42, 25 Old Broad Street, London EC2N right in the heart of the City.  I will have a cabinet including two sculptures:
Phoenix Egg
and
Mr Equiano’s Scales
along with 4 of my Small Experiments in Colour and 4 of my Tiny Experiments in Colour, in addition I will be installing one large work in the downstairs lobby on the wall to the right as you go up the stairs a few days later.
In addition to this opportunity there are two others in the pipeline.
So as well as following up with these I was off to Corby Glen for the sheep fair, recruiting people to share their memories for the Corby Glenn project.  I have over 30 volunteers, I have been in touch with the gallery for available days for recording which they have kindly provided, so the next job is to allocate them all a slot which I will do after Monday.


Today I am spending the day making sure all the frames, work and even sugar lumps are in perfect condition, and wrapping things to take on Monday.  Got to make sure there is some family time this weekend!

Pech Merle, when art reaches immortality, earth piments @lizziecannon @a_n @roy'speople AF

Monday 11 September 2017

Last week I had the pleasure of meeting up again with Lizzie Cannon, who has just started an artist blog on a-n too.  I met her at her beautiful show Liminal Matter which is currently on at Greenwich University.  We were engaged in an artist crit. and one of the things we talked about was the process of creating as a resistance to mortality.

During the summer I had the chance to go to Pech Merle caves in the south of France and see the work of artists who lived 25,000 years BC.  You are forbidden from taking photographs in the caves for obvious reasons, so the image from inside the cave I have here is from their postcards.


 I always get a frisson from seeing a work of art I have met before in art history books, but the feelings I had here were beyond that.  To stand in front of the work of people from so many thousands of years ago, the first humans, and know that they too looked at their environment and felt the need to create images.

The pigments used include manganese black and ochres.

The caves here are already painted by nature, the natural pigments  seep about of the limestone and create gorgeous shades of colour across the surfaces.  I don't know whether these sites had religious significance, or if that theory comes from the fact that third person to see them, and the first adult, was a curate. What I do know is that just as now the people who went into the caves were inspired by its intrinsic beauty and used what was there to build their own additional images.  And the size of the hands in the hand stencilling shows that the artists were both men and women.  The images appear to be those of different artists over time, some more abstract than others, some painted like those above and some etched into pigment covered limestone  surface.  Some deliberate, and some accidental like the fossilised  child's footprint.


So to make that link with the artists I decided to retrieve some of my own pigment....
sand pigment mix dug up from Paul's building site

filtering the sand from the ochre pigment, the pigment is soluble, the sand is not, and the pigment is in smaller particles so a process of dissolving and filtering then drying
dried in the sun, the filtered ochre

So while I was in the region I experimented with extracting my own ochre from the soil. Well, actually from my bother's place, so when I used this particular shade of ochre I will be calling it Paul's ochre.  My brother is in the process of rebuilding a ruined building in the Lot, and one of the techniques used locally is to mix ochre laden sand into the grout



eroding grout
My Paul's ochre next to Sennelier French ochre,
 mine is alot greener and darker .
in order to for the grout to closely match the stone.  So I had a go at extracting the ochre from the sand, I still have a final filtering to go as I think there is residual fine sand particles remaining, but the process was incredibly satisfying.

It is possible to see the pigments seeping put of the rocks wherever the limestone has been cut, these same pigments that were used at Pech Merle and the other local cave art sites. Next year I hope to collect some of the darker reds.  And I intend to play with heating some of this to see if I can get the transformation to red and darker.






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Sarah Needham will be at Roy's People Art Fair this weekend 14-17th September and she will be happy to talk to you about her experiments in colour.

Roy's People Art Fair, pigment experimentations #RPAF

Wednesday 6 September 2017

So today you will find me off my usual instagram account @sarahneedham1965 and taking over the @royspeopleartfair in an instatakeover. Come and find me there, like, repost and comment!

The fair is on 14th-17th September and I'd love to see you at Stall 38

Preparations for an Art Fair and a Sheep Fair #rpaf @royspeople @royspeopleartfair

Sunday 6 August 2017

Between September 14-17 I will be taking part in Roy's People Art Fair in Islington and on October 8th the Corby Glen Sheep Fair: From urban Art Fair to rural Sheep Fair.   At the sheep fair I will be recruiting people to join in with my Corby Glen project collecting oral histories, and will have a screen showing of "Corby Glen Walk" a series of local photographs in the Willoughby Gallery on the Sunday and I will be asking people to sign up to share their memories of the way in which agricultural trade has impacted on their lives.


At Roy's People Art Fair I will be showing some of the work that I have produced in the last year engaged with evocative abstract spaces.  I have been working on a new piece combining earth pigments; ochres and their artificial antecedents Mars Red in combination with poisonous Cadmium Red. Mixing rust colours with poison feels apt in the current global political climate. Naturally occurring earth pigments produced by iron deposits in the soil are the oldest pigments used by people for mark making along with charcoal. I combine them with industrial revolution colours, mars red an artificial red ochre, viridian an artificial green initially produced for ceramics (to colour earth), and cadmium red a poison  I will be showing "Mars Red" so long as it is fully dry, and the other works I will be selecting from can be found by clicking this link, if you like, let me know which ones you'd like to see the most of all. l


Mars Red
Hand mixed oil on canvas, 100x100cm, 2017

My profile for Roy's People Art Fair can be found by clicking this link: 





Reflections on Malaga

Friday 21 July 2017

I loved Malaga as a city to visit. Flying over the patch work of ochres on our way in was tantalising enough.
 It has a rich and visually present cultural history.

The Alcazabah, built on the ruins of a Roman theatre is a door way into the city, its forms echoing down the centuries.



You start of entering gate after gate, winding up the paths, through the trees and occasional stopping places that allow you a little shade before you reach the gardens.
I suspect the walk feels much shorter in the winter.  The gates are tall enough to have ridden a horse through.
And as well as finding a shady spot what you are actually doing is passing through the fortified walls. This would have been a well defended spot. It is said to have been built to defend the port against pirates. The Moorish features of the gates appear more pronounced as you climb the hill. I don't know whether this is because they have been better preserved?


Whatever it's function it is certain that it's forms are beautiful, with  gateways giving out onto sunlit path ways.





The cities biggest church now sits in the original eye-line to the coast.
And after a while the gate ways start giving way to court yard gardens, having taken over some Roman Masonry and found a use for it, and up through the orange groves.  The  sea is now visible above the city to the right.
And then the surprise of hill top water and geometrical gardens.

At the top the buildings, open on to court yards, the colours of the earth the plants the building materials speak for them selves.

The waterways at the centre of the pathways irrigating these mountain top gardens. And making it difficult to defeat the fortress, as they can keep a safe water supply and grow food and keep animals within the walls.

So it is functional, but not only functional




The geometry of the design lends itself to little selections of balance and beauty.



There is also a display of pottery artefacts, replicas mostly made in the traditional way. And this is where I find my first Malaga bull. 

And after that he keeps cropping up.





Museum of contemporary Art

And so surprisingly does this Rub el Hizb star, present at the palace here but repeated in a different form on the door of the Church.












And then there was the garden. And the joy in geometrical pattern persists in the brick work and painted walls of the cities churches.

And the courtyards through out the history of architechture here  coming all the way into the basement level of the contemporary Pompidou Art
Centre.

I had originally gone to Malaga for the Art Fair as any one who follows this blog regularly would know.  I had chosen a digital representation, however the  biggest thing that I think I learned were :



1. It is difficult to be noticed in a massive art fair if all you are is a few images on a screen every 10 minutes, seems obvious but....

2.It is imprtant to make sure that any expectations you have are set out in the contract.  So I was offered this digital display* but it was not clear what exactly they were offering, so I emailed to ask about the publicity which went with it...they emailed back to say that the artists on screen would be listed in catalogues, on line and off and would be part of the e publicity coming up to the show.  Neither of these things happened until after the event.  So I took the opportunity to leaflet, I had had some nice post cards printed in Spanish, but was asked not to by the organisers.

What I would say was that I was lucky, because the screen I was on was working from the Friday at the start of the fair, however half the screens were not working at that point and even half way through Saturday some were still not working.

There was other gossip I heard about the organisation of the fair that I won't repeat here.  The positives were that the fair was well attended by artists and the quality of the work was good, so they had that right. All the stands were of a good size, none were squished up.  The venue is very big and it was filled in a kind of luxurious way with plenty of space in the aisles.

  And yet by half way through there were very few sales made my rough estimate made by counting red dots was about 40.  There were big crowds of people but I think most of the people there were there out of interest and without a serious expectation of buying. In fact the gallery that made the most sales was selling prints. There did not seem to be any Malaga based galleries or many Malaga based artists there, and this was probably a mistake, Malaga has a good art scene, and Malaga galleries would have brought in local collectors and buyers.  It might have been better if the organisers had started with a smaller fair, but concentrated on a quality of audience as well a quality of exhibitors.  I think they tried to do too much as it was their first fair.

My conclusion in this massive fair an on screen showing where literally the only presence was the screen was not worth the money.  The purpose of showing in the Fair is to make sales and to create contacts, this did not really work for me.  Lesson learnt.


* (In fact I was originally offered a stand, but weighing up the costs of the stand, and of getting my work there and an unknown untested market I chose to find out more about the fair by trying the on screen option and attending, that was a good decision.)

But back to Malaga itself: Going around the several world class galleries was a dream, the old centre of Malaga is all walkable and very attractive.  I started off with the Picasso Museum, which of course got me thinking about gender dynamics, and that was the theme that stayed with me through out the trip.

This museum is in a lovely court yard style building so is cool and pleasant to be in.  The collection is of less well
known work, curated basically along a time line so that as you progress through the galleries you progress through his life.  His work has a very Catholic gender sensibility from the start, something very nineteenth century which doesn't change with the twentieth century in which he lived.  Women  were often his subjects, and seem to have been in both sense of the word.  His over arching theme was to have painted power.   The work is permeated by a violence. And after seeing the whole show I sat in the garden for a coffee and was delighted to have been reminded of his dove works by the birds that were flying around there, it created a welcome counter point.
 The physical manifestations of power and violence run through out the galleries and architecture I visited in Malaga, (that recurring bull for one) and got me thinking about the role of culture as a mediator for violence and power, an interpreter, a subliminater, an exposer, a critic?

And that got me thinking, so that when I went to the Museo Carmen Thyssen in the general collection the curation and the exhibition notes seemed to suggest that most of the art work in the 19th century galleries had been painted to suit the tastes of foreigners:

That they were either painted for visitors to the region or to suite the notion of Spanishness that was in favour in the Paris galleries where they might be sold.  So that there is an "exoticism" in these works, based around many images of flamenco dancers and other stereo typical "Spanish" themes.  I have to say that on the whole they left me fairly cold.  Then I went in to the film about the other exhibition that was on, Realism.  Here it was claimed that the true Spanish tradition was realism in the twentieth and early twenty first century.  They explored what Realism meant, but what I was a bit confounded by was that there was no mention of the Franco (1939-1965) regime or the role of fascism in the demand for that particular aesthetic, which seemed a bit peculiar to me.   In addition in this film about the exhibition which included a number of artists there was only one woman and her work was of still lives of fruit, which fitted with the very domestic role of women.  And I was wondering if it was simply that to a Spanish audience it would have been to obvious to say or whether something else was going on....

So then on to the Museum of Contemporary Art.  Here there was a stark contrast in the two initial one person shows.  There was the rather violent and misogynistic work of .... which left me feeling rather hated, and the counter point of the very beautiful painterly photographic work of Dutch artist........Her work referenced Northern Renaissance Dutch paintings using lovely light and simple props that created links with the contemporary photographs that they were.  Of course this is also an aesthetic of women in interiors but there was a subversion here of those values and a link to the humanity of the subjects that was touching and beautiful in both the images of the girls and boys men and women portrayed.  This is however probably the first contemporary art gallery I have been in that contained two Adam and Eve works (both photographic)  by different artists.  The Gallery is not enormous the foot print of the gallery a triangle which makes it hard to judge, but I would guess the whole place is probably no bigger than the Whitechapel in London.  And I guess that when you have religiosity as a theme, and were under a pro-religeous dictator at the time when the rest of Europe was questioning fidelity to a religeous way of life, the fact that contemporrary art seems so preoccupied by open dispalys of power is not that surprising.