Tuesday, 12 June 2012
Chroma Exhibition Catalogue: Pre-Order
PRE-ORDER LIMITED EDITION CHROMA CATALOGUE
£10 plus postage and packing
Pre-order your copy of the Chroma exhibition catalogue, which will be available in July 2012. This edition of just 100 will be numbered and signed by the artist.
This limited edition book will comprise full colour images of past and present work, including; photographic work, site-specific installation, studio shots and artists sketches. There will be an In Conversation between Liz West and curator Mark Devereux discussing the intentions of the work. Foreword by Lynne Green.
To order this unique artist's book, click on the buy it now button below. If you have any questions please contact Liz or Mark at the email addresses below.
lizziewest_uk@yahoo.co.uk | info@markdevereux.co.uk
BUY IT NOW
Tuesday, 29 May 2012
My Work on the Cover 'Signs of Life in the USA'
Signs of Life in the USA: Readings on Popular Culture for Writers
Sonia Maasik (Author), Jack Solomon (Author)
Product details
- Paperback: 710 pages
- Publisher: Bedford Books; 7 edition (21 Nov 2011)
- Language English
- ISBN-10: 031264700X
- ISBN-13: 978-0312647001
- Product Dimensions: 23.1 x 16.3 x 2.8 cm
Wednesday, 23 May 2012
My Work in Oddest Bar (as part of Chorlton Arts Festival)
Location:
OddestDates:
Monday 21 May, 2012 - 19.00-21.00
PREVIEW: Mon 21 May 19–21.00
EXHIBITION: Thu 3 – Wed 30 May
Supermarket trolleys as you have never seen them before!
As part of Liz’s colour research she builds collections using invented systems, often relating to a certain colour. In the ‘Trolley’ photographs she has experimented with building collections of block colour in the supermarket, a place where colour is in abundance, in order to understand how colour may look in mass.
Come and smile as you see a shopping trolley acting as an artist’s canvas.
Tuesday, 22 May 2012
'Still Here' - Exhibition at Untitled BCN, Barcelona

In case you happen to be in Barcelona next week, this exciting exhibition opens which includes my work:
STILL HERE
Opens 26 May. Runs 27th May - 6th June
untitledBCN has recently undergone renovations to the space and now present a project of several exhibitions in one, in this markedly pessimistic time these artists continue creating .... Still Here. The group exhibition includes the work of artists from Estonia, Germany, England, Japan and Spain.
Untitled BCN
c / Topazi 14
08012
Barcelona
Spain
c / Topazi 14
08012
Barcelona
Spain
Monday, 21 May 2012
Thank You
Thank you to the following people who kindly donated £10 or more towards Chroma through my Sponsume appeal, I managed to raise just over £500 which will really help with my solo exhibition:
Clare Cochrane
Naomi Kendrick
Jon Cronshaw
Shabana Basheer
D V Cole
Diana Harmer
Karen Boulton
Tracey Hebron
Paul Watson
Kevin Bradshaw
Suzanne Bradshaw
Suzanne Foster
Laura Maley
Andrea Marshall
Michele Pouncey
Helen Hyde
Wednesday, 16 May 2012
LIZ WEST: CHROMA - PRESS RELEASE
TITLE: Chroma
WHAT: Solo Exhibition by Manchester-based artist Liz West
WHERE: BLANKSPACE, 43 Hulme Street, Manchester, M15 6AW
WHEN: 6 – 29 July 2012 (Exhibition Launch: 5 July, 18:00-21:00)
INFORMATION:
Visitors to BLANKSPACE gallery in Manchester will be able to add a splash of colour to their lives when a new, special exhibition opens this July for one month only.
Running from Friday 6 July until Sunday 29 July, Chroma will be Manchester artist Liz West’s first major solo exhibition, celebrating her ambitious new work.
Liz began accumulating coloured objects from the age of seven when she started collecting bottles of bright nail varnish and arranging them in the order of the spectrum on her bedroom windowsill. So began an obsession, which over the last twenty years has seen Liz collect a huge variety of purely coloured objects.
Amongst the work on show at BLANKSPACE gallery off Oxford Road, a horizontal form cuts through four rooms interacting with colour, light and space. Opposite, an opening in the fabric of the space affords the viewer a glimpse into a chamber of infinite objects.
Artist Liz West said:
“I am thrilled about my solo exhibition taking place at BLANKSPACE gallery, as I am now at a point in my artistic career where I feel eager and ready to develop more ambitious, large scale work.”
Following Liz’s successful group exhibitions nationally and internationally, including Northern Futures Awards 2010 (People’s Choice Winner) and the Celeste Art Prize (New York), she has now received an Arts Council England award to support Chroma, allowing brand new work to be brought into reality.
Blank Media Collective Lead Curator, Kate Charlton said:
“Chroma will be a great start to the summer as this playful and colourful exhibition transforms BLANKSPACE like never before. Whether you are trained in the visual arts or just know what you like, this free exhibition is sure to trigger the imagination.”
Chroma is curated by Blank Media Collective and is kindly supported by Arts Council England, ASK Developments, Sandbar and Full Circle Arts. Admission to the exhibition will be free. Accompanying the exhibition will be a limited edition exhibition catalogue.
For further information about BLANKSPACE gallery visit the website at www.blankmediacollective.org. To catch more of Liz West’s work be sure to check out her website at www.liz-west.com and follow Liz and Chroma on Twitter: #ChromaExhibition & @LizWest_Art.
WHAT: Solo Exhibition by Manchester-based artist Liz West
WHERE: BLANKSPACE, 43 Hulme Street, Manchester, M15 6AW
WHEN: 6 – 29 July 2012 (Exhibition Launch: 5 July, 18:00-21:00)
INFORMATION:
Visitors to BLANKSPACE gallery in Manchester will be able to add a splash of colour to their lives when a new, special exhibition opens this July for one month only.
Running from Friday 6 July until Sunday 29 July, Chroma will be Manchester artist Liz West’s first major solo exhibition, celebrating her ambitious new work.
Liz began accumulating coloured objects from the age of seven when she started collecting bottles of bright nail varnish and arranging them in the order of the spectrum on her bedroom windowsill. So began an obsession, which over the last twenty years has seen Liz collect a huge variety of purely coloured objects.
Amongst the work on show at BLANKSPACE gallery off Oxford Road, a horizontal form cuts through four rooms interacting with colour, light and space. Opposite, an opening in the fabric of the space affords the viewer a glimpse into a chamber of infinite objects.
Artist Liz West said:
“I am thrilled about my solo exhibition taking place at BLANKSPACE gallery, as I am now at a point in my artistic career where I feel eager and ready to develop more ambitious, large scale work.”
Following Liz’s successful group exhibitions nationally and internationally, including Northern Futures Awards 2010 (People’s Choice Winner) and the Celeste Art Prize (New York), she has now received an Arts Council England award to support Chroma, allowing brand new work to be brought into reality.
Blank Media Collective Lead Curator, Kate Charlton said:
“Chroma will be a great start to the summer as this playful and colourful exhibition transforms BLANKSPACE like never before. Whether you are trained in the visual arts or just know what you like, this free exhibition is sure to trigger the imagination.”
Chroma is curated by Blank Media Collective and is kindly supported by Arts Council England, ASK Developments, Sandbar and Full Circle Arts. Admission to the exhibition will be free. Accompanying the exhibition will be a limited edition exhibition catalogue.
For further information about BLANKSPACE gallery visit the website at www.blankmediacollective.org. To catch more of Liz West’s work be sure to check out her website at www.liz-west.com and follow Liz and Chroma on Twitter: #ChromaExhibition & @LizWest_Art.
- ENDS -
EDITOR’S NOTES:
Listings
Chroma
BLANKSPACE, 43 Hulme Street, Manchester, M15 6AW
Friday 6 – Sunday 29 July 2012 (Exhibition Launch: Thursday 5 July 2012, 18:00-21:00) Exhibition opening times: Wednesday-Sunday: 11am-5pm | Thursday: 11am-7pm
Friday 6 – Sunday 29 July 2012 (Exhibition Launch: Thursday 5 July 2012, 18:00-21:00) Exhibition opening times: Wednesday-Sunday: 11am-5pm | Thursday: 11am-7pm
Further Information
Liz West
Liz West was born in Manchester in 1985. She graduated from the Glasgow School of Art in 2007, where she studied BA (Hons) Sculpture and Environmental Art. In 2010 Liz was shortlisted for the London Photography Award and also the prestigious Northern Futures Awards, winning the People’s Choice Award. More recently Liz was shortlisted for the Woolgather Art Prize 2011 in Leeds and selected for Expectations exhibition and Celeste Art Prize, both in New York. She has exhibited in the CUBE Open, Centre for the Urban Built Environment Manchester and in the Pedder Photography Exhibition, Bigger Picture Gallery London. Other exhibitions include Ambience of Play; greenroom Manchester, At Play 3; South Hill Park Arts Centre, Collagerie; Stew Gallery Norwich, Reduction; Broadcasting House Leeds and Colour; Beldam Gallery London. West Lives and works in Manchester.
Liz West was born in Manchester in 1985. She graduated from the Glasgow School of Art in 2007, where she studied BA (Hons) Sculpture and Environmental Art. In 2010 Liz was shortlisted for the London Photography Award and also the prestigious Northern Futures Awards, winning the People’s Choice Award. More recently Liz was shortlisted for the Woolgather Art Prize 2011 in Leeds and selected for Expectations exhibition and Celeste Art Prize, both in New York. She has exhibited in the CUBE Open, Centre for the Urban Built Environment Manchester and in the Pedder Photography Exhibition, Bigger Picture Gallery London. Other exhibitions include Ambience of Play; greenroom Manchester, At Play 3; South Hill Park Arts Centre, Collagerie; Stew Gallery Norwich, Reduction; Broadcasting House Leeds and Colour; Beldam Gallery London. West Lives and works in Manchester.
Media Contact
For further information, interviews and high-resolution images please contact Mark Devereux, Blank Media Collective
Director & Head of Exhibitions
Email: mark@blankmediacollective.org
Phone: 0161 222 6164 | 07739 026504
Email: mark@blankmediacollective.org
Phone: 0161 222 6164 | 07739 026504
Wednesday, 18 April 2012
Chroma – Solo Exhibition by Liz West | Sponsume
Chroma – Solo Exhibition by Liz West | Sponsume
I am seeking funding towards the development and cost of materials for this ambitious project… that’s where you come in! I have some exciting rewards to offer if you decide to fund my project including Limited Edition photographic prints, signed postcards and studio visits.
I make intensely coloured installation, video and photographic works from arrangements of found materials and consumer goods. In my work, objects are densely arranged in orders or enclosed within constructed spaces, such as cupboards and shelves or in containers such as shopping trolleys and cabinets to form compacted colour masses or gradations. I create sensory experiences in the form of richly saturated installations that immerse the viewer in a kaleidoscopic or optical environment.
I need your help to make this happen. This money will help provide me with a brilliant opportunity and platform to showcase my artwork to a wider audience through the exhibition and publication. Chroma will be an exciting event and exhibition for all to attend; including themed workshops, artist tours and talk.
I am a Manchester based visual artist working towards my first solo exhibition ‘Chroma’ due to take place at BLANKSPACE, Manchester in July this year (5 – 29th July). A Special Edition accompanying exhibition catalogue will also be produced, limited to just 100 copies. The exhibition will include a number of large-scale, ambitious, site-specific installations, made especially for this show.
I make intensely coloured installation, video and photographic works from arrangements of found materials and consumer goods. In my work, objects are densely arranged in orders or enclosed within constructed spaces, such as cupboards and shelves or in containers such as shopping trolleys and cabinets to form compacted colour masses or gradations. I create sensory experiences in the form of richly saturated installations that immerse the viewer in a kaleidoscopic or optical environment.
I need your help to make this happen. This money will help provide me with a brilliant opportunity and platform to showcase my artwork to a wider audience through the exhibition and publication. Chroma will be an exciting event and exhibition for all to attend; including themed workshops, artist tours and talk.
www.liz-west.com
Thursday, 12 April 2012
On Bread Alone Exhibition at Nexus Art Cafe, Manchester

Nexus Art Cafe present their new exhibition 'ON BREAD ALONE' which opens next week and features my work - install is ongoing this week, but join us on Wednesday 18th April from 5pm-7pm to partake in some crusty bread and fresh baked art with us!
Wednesday, 28 March 2012
Monday, 19 March 2012
'Spectrum' Exhibition at Broadstone Mill (in association with Manchester School of Art)

Broadstone Mill Gallery
Spectrum Exhibition
Opening hours: Wednesday – Sunday, 12 – 4pm.
Exhibition Date: 21st Mar 2012 - 29th Apr 2012
Organisation: Broadstone Mill Gallery
Venue: Broadstone Mill Gallery, Broadstone Road, Houldsworth Village, Reddish, Stockport, SK5 7DL.
Contact: Gallery, Open Studios
Email: rebeccadixon16@hotmail.com
Website: http://www.houldsworthvillage.co.uk
Artists: Liz West, John Davison, Sarah Middleton
Combining the works of three resident artists from both AWOL and Rogue Artists Studios, Manchester, spectrum aims to illustrate the ways in which differing practitioners use various mediums to explore the distribution and representation of the colours found in personal and public environments.
From the poetic depiction of rural landscapes on canvas, interventions that aim to create contemplative space, to immersive sculpture that investigates the aesthetics of the everyday; John Davison, Sarah Middleton and Liz West all deal with the notion of spectrum and its relationship to our surroundings.
Saturday, 17 March 2012
New Work at Broadstone Mill Gallery for 'Spectrum' Exhibition
Tuesday, 13 March 2012
Help An Artist Today: Sponsume.com
Liz West Needs Your Help
SPONSOR AN ARTIST TODAY
www.sponsume.com
I am a Manchester based visual artist working towards my first solo exhibition ‘Chroma’ due to take place at BLANKSPACE, Manchester in July this year (5 – 29th July). A Special Edition accompanying exhibition catalogue will also be produced, limited to just 100 copies. The exhibition will include a number of large-scale, ambitious, site-specific installations, made especially for this show.
I am seeking funding towards the development and cost of materials for this ambitious project… that’s where you come in! I have some exciting rewards to offer if you decide to fund my project including Limited Edition photographic prints, signed postcards and studio visits (visit the link above).
I make intensely coloured installation, video and photographic works from arrangements of found materials and consumer goods. In my work, objects are densely arranged in orders or enclosed within constructed spaces, such as cupboards and shelves or in containers such as shopping trolleys and cabinets to form compacted colour masses or gradations. I create sensory experiences in the form of richly saturated installations that immerse the viewer in a kaleidoscopic or optical environment.
I need your help to make this happen. This money will help provide me with a brilliant opportunity and platform to showcase my artwork to a wider audience through the exhibition and publication. Chroma will be an exciting event and exhibition for all to attend; including themed workshops, artist tours and talk.
Please help spread the word by sharing the Facebook and Twitter links to anyone you think might be interested in funding this exciting project.
www.sponsume.com
Wednesday, 7 March 2012
Tuesday, 6 March 2012
Inside at BLANKSPACE. Opens 29th March

Friday 30 March - Sunday 29 April 2012, BLANKSPACE, Manchester
INSIDE: 30 March - 29 April 2012
EXHIBITION LAUNCH: Thursday 29 March (6-9pm)
BLANKSPACE, Manchester
Free Entry
Participating artists: Claudia Borgna, Philip Cheater, Drop Collective, Gill Greenhough, Rosie Leventon, David Ogle, Emily Rubner, Liz West and Chris Wright
Within the insular and atmospheric setting of BLANKSPACE gallery, Inside explores the psychological connections we form with our environment, placing the participant within a collection of works that disturb, envelop, and engage. All the works featured in this exhibition are united by themes of absence, loss, memory, fantasy and nostalgia, sparking the imagination and placing the participant both physically and mentally within the viewing space.
Kate Charlton, Blank Media Collective’s Lead Curator states; “Inside gives us the opportunity to bring together a collection of artworks which are going to encourage the audience to interact with pieces in a new and different way. This is an ambitious exhibition, bringing together an eclectic range of artists helping them to showcase works that may not have otherwise have been realised. Inside will set a precedent to what will be another exciting year for the organisation.”
To accompany the exhibition, there will be a hand-made publication featuring short prose and poetry inspired by the exhibition themes. Collating the work of twelve emerging writers, each of the pieces creates a perfect accompaniment to the exhibition experience.
“For me, Inside questions the nature of experiencing an object in space, a primary concern of my practice and one that must be considered when using light as an artistic medium. Light rests on the border between the material and the immaterial, visually perceptible but without physical mass, a volume of light captured in space, an altered perception of materiality and permanence.” David Ogle, Artist
“I am thrilled as well as apprehensive to see how the viewers will relate to the work but certainly looking forward to this step and hopefully to open new doors.” Claudia Borgna, Artist
Inside follows Blank Media Collective’s inaugural and highly successful exhibition, The Title Art Prize, Manchester’s newest contemporary art competition celebrating emerging talent across the UK. Launching at BLANKSPACE gallery, Manchester on Thursday 29 March (6-9pm) and bringing together the work of nine emerging contemporary artists from across the UK and Internationally, this exhibition promises to be challenging and thought provoking. Throughout the exhibition there will be a series of workshops, talks and tours for the public, concluding on 29 April 2012.
FURTHER INFORMATION:
BLANKSPACE | 43 Hulme Street | Manchester | M15 6AW | 0161 222 6164
For further information about the exhibition please email Kate at exhibitions@blankmediacollective.org
| OPENING TIMES:
Wednesday-Sunday: 11am-5pm | Thursday: 11am-7pm | (Closed: Monday-Tuesday)
Thursday, 1 March 2012
Tuesday, 21 February 2012
Art Fist | A Place for Creative People: Artists' Showcase: Liz West
Art Fist | A Place for Creative People: Artists' Showcase: Liz West: I make intensely coloured installation, video and photographic works from arrangements of found materials and consumer goods. In the work ob...
My Work in Canvas & Cream Open Exhibition

Canvas & Cream Gallery, the revolutionary new concept South East London project space, launches its first open submission exhibition on Friday 17 February 2012 at 6pm.
Canvas and Cream is the idea of artist Dr Joanna Gore, along with her daughter, artist Emily Gore and partner Carpenter Paul Rushworth. The business is a family run social enterprise with an arts and environmental focus. The space includes an up-cycled dining room, arts workshop space, artist studios and an alternative therapy room as well as the dedicated gallery/project space, which will be hosting a vibrant creative events program throughout the year.
The Canvas & Cream exhibition was open to all artists living and working in the UK. Seventy eight artists applied for space in the exhibition and seventeen have been chosen to display their works, which range across an eclectic variety of mediums and styles from sculpture and carved glass to painting, digital enhancement and wood-relief prints.
Exhibiting artists include: Amanda Bracken , Andrew Ball , Ashley Hanson , Catherine Jacobs , Clare Winter, Estelle Jauneaud , Euan Stewart, Fay Watson, Hilary Tranter, Hugh Gilmour, Liz West , Mary-Jane Opie , Michael Coombs , Sirpa Pajunen-Moghissi , Susan Eyre, Theo Brooks, Will Frost.
Further information about the artists featured in the Open Submission Exhibition
Andrew Ball
Andrew’s works are elaborate, non-figurative digital compositions, drawing inspiration from characteristics of organic growth and structure, such as plants and architectural elements. His images display an exacting graphic quality, derived from a close interaction of colour, tone and line and an accent on space and light.
Amanda Bracken
Amanda explores aspects of cultural and painterly systems of colour, themes of light and weight, movement and stillness and the shifting nature of language, using 3D art works and drawings.
Theo Brooks
Theo present his collection of footware: “Seductive Qualities of Sneakers”, exploring the themes of desire and obsession within consumer behaviour in relation to urban fashion.
Michael Coombs
Michael make pieces that explore our perception of the world, inviting the viewer to look beyond their first impressions and to discover what is really presented to them. He investigates how we grasp on to objects to give stability to our understanding of an ever-changing world.
Susan Eyre
Working with textiles, print and mixed media, Susan’s practice uses collages to explore commonly held ideals reflected in archetypal romantic scenes and ideas of paradise set against an urban reality. Her interest is in discovering everyday experiences transformed by aspirations for the sublime.
Wilf Frost
Wilf is a seasoned veteran of the urban art movement and continues to reinvent his work as his views and the world changes. Currently his vibrant canvases incorporate people and animals in urban settings, with intriguing narrative themes.
Hugh Gilmour
Hugh’s sculptures and installations fuse the natural such as stone, wood and shell with the manmade and often kitsch elements of plastic, ornaments and beads.
Ashley Hanson
Ashley’s paintings are investigations into the dialogue and tensions between opposites: between the curved and the linear, liquidity and solidity, male and female, the natural and the man-made.
Catherine Jacobs
Catherine presents ‘Above and Beyond’, a new series of mixed media abstract landscape paintings on wooden blocks, created using an experimental process that combines the building up, layering, painting, washing away, re-layering and re-painting of materials with cross hatching drawing techniques.
Estelle Jauneaud
Estelle’s work derives from a fascination with exploratory graphics, and her creations emerge from the nexus of art and design. She is passionate about working and experimenting across multi-disciplined mediums and artistic sectors.
Mary-Jane Opie
Mary-Jane’s work studies the emotional relationship between humans and animals and explores the fine line between ‘adored pet’ and ‘power exerted over a dumb animal’. The viewer is invited to explore the canvas by means of details and ‘stories’ that take place in the background - enjoying the action but also becoming part of the joke.
Sirpa Pajunen-Moghissi
Sirpa’s paintings are suggestive of the hazy lines and shapes that evoke the snow-covered landscapes of her native Finland. In her latest work Sirpa uses her mother’s Seija-Marita Guttormsen’s woodcuts as a starting point to create memories and moments frozen in time.
Euan Stewart
Euan’s predominant subject is anatomy and a desire to map the human body and human condition. His work is driven by sequences, resulting from a life’s passion for the illustrated page.
Hilary Tranter
Hilary’s work experiments in mixed media, being open to accidentals. Her initial inspiration is rooted in observation, an experience, a fleeting moment or mood.
Fay Watson
Fay specialises in wood engravings, exploring the use of formal patterns and textures to convey aspects of her designs, and investigating the way the characteristics of the engraved line can influence and alter the original concept.
Liz West
Liz makes intensely coloured installation, video and photographic works from arrangements of found materials and consumer goods. Objects are densely arranged in orders or enclosed within constructed spaces to form compacted colour masses or gradations,
Clare Winter
Clare’s work probes the ageing body, society’s attitude towards older people, the history of understanding our bodies and, in turn, what it is to be human.
Further information about Canvas & Cream and how to reach us is available at www.canvasandcream.com
Monday, 13 February 2012
'Fixation' - Wolstenholme Creative Space

FIXATION
Curated by Joe McNulty
16 – 26 February 2012
Wolstenholme Creative Space
11 Wolstenholme Square
Liverpool
L1 4JJ
Featuring:
Kit Abramson, Diana Ali, Casey Carlin, Nicola Dale, Julie Dodd, Kirsty Evans, Chris Fagan, Lesley Halliwell, Nicola Hands, Joanne McClellan, Ben Roberts, Beth Ross, Matt Spencer, Dominic Thorpe, Samantha Vinsun, Liz West, Ruth White, Sam Venables
Friday, 3 February 2012
Fixation Exhibition at Wolstenholme Creative Space
FIXATION
from Thursday 16 February 2012
My work will be included in the exciting exhibition, Fixation. I have been selected to show the newly completed 'Trolley' series; showcasing all 6 photographs.
Fixation is an exhibition showcasing work of an obsessive nature - presenting work from a variety of sources in an exhibition that is diverse but cohesive in theme and media; producing a focal point for dialogue and reflection. Fixation closes with a special event on Sunday 26 February, check back for more details.
Private View: Thursday 16 February, 6-9pm
Exhibition Opening Times:
17 18 19 23 24 25 26 February 12-4pm
WCS | Wolstenholme Creative Space
11 Wolstenholme Square
Liverpool, L1 4JJ
info[@]wolstenholmecreativespace.com
from Thursday 16 February 2012
My work will be included in the exciting exhibition, Fixation. I have been selected to show the newly completed 'Trolley' series; showcasing all 6 photographs.
Fixation is an exhibition showcasing work of an obsessive nature - presenting work from a variety of sources in an exhibition that is diverse but cohesive in theme and media; producing a focal point for dialogue and reflection. Fixation closes with a special event on Sunday 26 February, check back for more details.
Private View: Thursday 16 February, 6-9pm
Exhibition Opening Times:
17 18 19 23 24 25 26 February 12-4pm
WCS | Wolstenholme Creative Space
11 Wolstenholme Square
Liverpool, L1 4JJ
info[@]wolstenholmecreativespace.com

Thursday, 26 January 2012
Talk for Textile Dept. Students for the Repeat Symposium at Norwich University College of the Arts
A while ago, Dr Hilary Carlisle (Dean of Faculty of Arts and Design) and Nick Rodgers (Course Leader) for BA Textiles invited me to give an artist talk to the 1st, 2nd and 3rd year students as part of their Repeat Symposium.
I discussed how I approached making work in different contexts, and illustrated this with examples of work made over the past 5 years. Initially, I talked about my collecting and how this influences my practice. I then discussed links with collecting to my work, including; 'Complementary Chart', a photographic project which involved making a work in the form of a 36exp. contact sheet where I arranged purely coloured objects in colour sequence, and how it was presented in an exhibition at the EASA HQ Gallery, Manchester. I then discussed 'Trolley's', a performance which was developed as an experiment with block colour in the supermarket. I then discussed my 'Chamber' installations and how rigorous in planning I have to be when constructing these on site, I also gave reference to the use of repeat in my work, as using mirrors in the 'Chambers' reflects the objects into infinity. I also showed them 'Aqua Chroma' a pattern based installation made from 3000 bottles. Lastly I showed the work of three artists that inspire me to make the work I do (based around large immersive created environments using colour or a mass of everyday objects). David Batchelor, Tara Donovan and Yoyoi Kusama all featured. There was time at the end for questions, and I was pleased that students were engaged enough to ask some excellent questions.
Other speakers were: Drusilla Cole; Keith Albarn and Claire Hart (Sanderson - Fabrics and Wallcoverings)
I thoroughly enjoyed giving the talk, and the positive responses from students and staff afterwards suggested that they found it most interesting and useful. I would really like to do more talks and would like to become more involved in teaching, so let me know if you (or someone you know) could provide such opportunities!
Here's a bit about the accompanying exhibition:
http://www.nuca.ac.uk/thegallery/diary
Associated with the prestigious textiles course at NUCA, who have created artefacts in response to the theme of 'Repeat'. Some works have been selected from current designers' output, whilst other exhibits have been produced specifically for the show. This show offers an opportunity to explore the notion of 'Repeat' within the practice of textiles design.
'Repeat' has been conceived and curated by University College academics Dr Hilary Carlisle, Dean of Faculty of Arts and Design, and the Course Leader for BA Textiles, Nick Rodgers. The exhibition draws on a range of contemporary textile practices and includes drawing, textiles, product, video, installation and design work.
'Repeat' refers to a fundamental theme within textiles and surface design and acknowledges its close association with textile manufacturing processes. In this show, exhibitors have been challenged to respond to the theme of 'Repeat' in relation to their own practice.
Martyn Blundell's video work explores the repetition of imagery and structure, whilst the work of John Macaulay exposes the repetition of everyday tasks in the form of screen-printed fabric. Designer Sarah Angold demonstrates her love of repetition and multiples in her lighting design and Nick Rodgers explores textile design through an investigation of numerical systems.
The show is accompanied by a symposium for students, which takes place on 25th January 2012.
Exhibitors include:
Les Bicknell
Martyn Blundell
Dr Hilary Carlisle
Jane Eastwood
John Macaulay
Zoe Miller
Louise Richardson
Jill Rodgers
Nick Rodgers
Grainne Swann
David Tudge
Alison Willoughby
Visitor information
Tuesday 10th January – Saturday 28th January
Open 12pm - 5pm (closed Sunday and Monday)
Exhibition open to the public, admission free.
I discussed how I approached making work in different contexts, and illustrated this with examples of work made over the past 5 years. Initially, I talked about my collecting and how this influences my practice. I then discussed links with collecting to my work, including; 'Complementary Chart', a photographic project which involved making a work in the form of a 36exp. contact sheet where I arranged purely coloured objects in colour sequence, and how it was presented in an exhibition at the EASA HQ Gallery, Manchester. I then discussed 'Trolley's', a performance which was developed as an experiment with block colour in the supermarket. I then discussed my 'Chamber' installations and how rigorous in planning I have to be when constructing these on site, I also gave reference to the use of repeat in my work, as using mirrors in the 'Chambers' reflects the objects into infinity. I also showed them 'Aqua Chroma' a pattern based installation made from 3000 bottles. Lastly I showed the work of three artists that inspire me to make the work I do (based around large immersive created environments using colour or a mass of everyday objects). David Batchelor, Tara Donovan and Yoyoi Kusama all featured. There was time at the end for questions, and I was pleased that students were engaged enough to ask some excellent questions.
Other speakers were: Drusilla Cole; Keith Albarn and Claire Hart (Sanderson - Fabrics and Wallcoverings)
I thoroughly enjoyed giving the talk, and the positive responses from students and staff afterwards suggested that they found it most interesting and useful. I would really like to do more talks and would like to become more involved in teaching, so let me know if you (or someone you know) could provide such opportunities!
Here's a bit about the accompanying exhibition:
http://www.nuca.ac.uk/thegallery/diary
Associated with the prestigious textiles course at NUCA, who have created artefacts in response to the theme of 'Repeat'. Some works have been selected from current designers' output, whilst other exhibits have been produced specifically for the show. This show offers an opportunity to explore the notion of 'Repeat' within the practice of textiles design.
'Repeat' has been conceived and curated by University College academics Dr Hilary Carlisle, Dean of Faculty of Arts and Design, and the Course Leader for BA Textiles, Nick Rodgers. The exhibition draws on a range of contemporary textile practices and includes drawing, textiles, product, video, installation and design work.
'Repeat' refers to a fundamental theme within textiles and surface design and acknowledges its close association with textile manufacturing processes. In this show, exhibitors have been challenged to respond to the theme of 'Repeat' in relation to their own practice.
Martyn Blundell's video work explores the repetition of imagery and structure, whilst the work of John Macaulay exposes the repetition of everyday tasks in the form of screen-printed fabric. Designer Sarah Angold demonstrates her love of repetition and multiples in her lighting design and Nick Rodgers explores textile design through an investigation of numerical systems.
The show is accompanied by a symposium for students, which takes place on 25th January 2012.
Exhibitors include:
Les Bicknell
Martyn Blundell
Dr Hilary Carlisle
Jane Eastwood
John Macaulay
Zoe Miller
Louise Richardson
Jill Rodgers
Nick Rodgers
Grainne Swann
David Tudge
Alison Willoughby
Visitor information
Tuesday 10th January – Saturday 28th January
Open 12pm - 5pm (closed Sunday and Monday)
Exhibition open to the public, admission free.
Featured Artist on Cental Stn. Website
My recent Trolley's project was selected by Central Station as their Featured Artwork in the 50x50 showcase as day 44/50:
Please have a look at the work and join this fantastic network of creatives:
http://thisiscentralstation.com/featured/4450-trolleys/

Here's what they said about my work:
"Liz West works as a visual artist, making large scale site-specific installation work. Her Trolley’s project is an experiment in building collections of block colour.
We strongly suggest taking a look at the full project here and finding out more about Liz’s work here.
And if you would like to see her work in the flesh, Liz’s work is currently being exhibited at Kitsch, Bristol."
Please have a look at the work and join this fantastic network of creatives:
http://thisiscentralstation.com/featured/4450-trolleys/

Here's what they said about my work:
"Liz West works as a visual artist, making large scale site-specific installation work. Her Trolley’s project is an experiment in building collections of block colour.
We strongly suggest taking a look at the full project here and finding out more about Liz’s work here.
And if you would like to see her work in the flesh, Liz’s work is currently being exhibited at Kitsch, Bristol."

Wednesday, 11 January 2012
Friday, 6 January 2012
My work in 'Kitsch' Exhibition (Broadwalk Arts - Bristol)
Kitsch: Selected Open Exhibition
Friday 20th – 27th January 2012
Broadwalk Arts presents: ‘Kitsch’
The aesthetics of kitsch (or ‘junk’ as it translates) can be considered brash, tacky, tasteless….
Kitsch exhibition offers an insight into 12 artists work that explores the themes, imagery and iconography associated with kitsch and how they can be incorporated within art and art practice. Kitsch is a selected multi-disciplinary exhibition of sculpture, photography, collage and painting that promises to be bright, bold and far from subtle.
Opening Night: Friday 20th January 5 -7.30pm (all welcome)
Exhibition will be open Sat 21st & Sun 22nd Jan 11-5pm & TBC sporadically/by appointment throughout the week (please contact exhibitionspace@broadwalkarts.co.uk)
Broadwalk Arts:
Unit 3
Broadwalk Shopping Centre
Knowle
Bristol
BS4 2QU
(Bus no 51 from Centre or Temple Meads Station)
For further information:
Sam Francis (curator) 07990 823874
exhibitionspace@broadwalkarts.co.uk
www.broadwalkarts.co.uk
Friday 20th – 27th January 2012
Broadwalk Arts presents: ‘Kitsch’
The aesthetics of kitsch (or ‘junk’ as it translates) can be considered brash, tacky, tasteless….
Kitsch exhibition offers an insight into 12 artists work that explores the themes, imagery and iconography associated with kitsch and how they can be incorporated within art and art practice. Kitsch is a selected multi-disciplinary exhibition of sculpture, photography, collage and painting that promises to be bright, bold and far from subtle.
Opening Night: Friday 20th January 5 -7.30pm (all welcome)
Exhibition will be open Sat 21st & Sun 22nd Jan 11-5pm & TBC sporadically/by appointment throughout the week (please contact exhibitionspace@broadwalkarts.co.uk)
Broadwalk Arts:
Unit 3
Broadwalk Shopping Centre
Knowle
Bristol
BS4 2QU
(Bus no 51 from Centre or Temple Meads Station)
For further information:
Sam Francis (curator) 07990 823874
exhibitionspace@broadwalkarts.co.uk
www.broadwalkarts.co.uk
Labels:
bristol,
broadwalk arts,
exhibition,
fine art,
kitsch,
photo,
photograph,
tasteless,
visual arts
Tuesday, 6 December 2011
Thursday, 17 November 2011
Friday, 4 November 2011
The Title Art Prize is well underway

The Title Art Prize [BLANKSPACE]
28 October - 27 November 2011, BLANKSPACE, Manchester
THE TITLE ART PRIZE: 28 October - 27 November 2011
EXHIBITION LAUNCH: Thursday 27 October (6-9pm)
AWARDS NIGHT: Saturday 12 November (6-9pm)
WINNING ARTISTS’ TALKS: w/c 21 November
BLANKSPACE, Manchester
Free Entry to all Events
The Title Art Prize Press Pack (Click to Download)
THE TITLE ART PRIZE SHORTLISTED ARTISTS:
(See below for further information)
Bartosz Beda | Christopher Bethell | Anne Charnock | Jamie Crewe | Nick Davies | Lisa Denyer | Hannah Devereux | Joe Doldon | David Dunnico | Susan Francis | Rowena Harris | Calum Johnston | Ami Kanki | Ka Wah Liu | Laura Yolanda Lowe | Kit Mead | Liz Murray | Sachiyo Nishimura | David Ogle | Stella Ouzounidou | David Sargerson | Mark Selby | Richard Stone | Liz West | Jacqueline Wylie
To celebrate 5 years of supporting emerging practitioners, Blank Media Collective is launching an important new art prize in Manchester featuring the nation’s top emerging visual artists.
Blank Media Collective’s Director, Mark Devereux says; “The Title Art Prize encompasses the excitement, support and commitment we [Blank Media Collective] have for emerging practitioners. With works spanning painting, photography, video, installation and sculpture the exhibition showcases some of the best emerging talent from throughout the UK. In the first 2 weeks of the exhibition we are inviting visitors to vote for their favourite piece, with the winning artist receiving the prestigious People’s Choice Award.
I am very excited about the launch of The Title Art Prize this year and sure it will become one of the most recognized art prizes in the coming years. Signaling the end of the first full year at BLANKSPACE and Blank Media Collective’s fifth year, I am proud to be leading such an energetic and forward-thinking organisation working with passionate and talented artists. We are incredibly grateful to our sponsors (ASK Developments, Sandbar and Fred Aldous) for making this and our continuing work possible.”
With a panel made up by Northern Art Prize winner (2009) and Tate Britain exhibiting artist Paul Rooney, Cornerhouse Exhibitions Coordinator Tomas Harold, Arts Council England Relationship Manager Neil Harris, independent Curator Alex Hodby and Sandbar Director Stephen Gingell, the winning artist will receive £500 along with a solo exhibition supported and curated by Blank Media Collective. Three other artists will receive cash prizes aimed at helping to benefit their future creative practices and the winner of the People’s Choice Award will receive art materials and equipment.
“Its great to see artists being pro-active in collectives such as Blank Media. In difficult times such as these we need to pool our resources and help each other as much as we can. I hope Blank Media projects such as The Title Art Prize will provide much needed experience and exposure to artists from the region and beyond.” Paul Rooney
Blank Media Collective has been a constant source of inspiration, support and promotion for thousands of artists both throughout the UK and Internationally ever-since it was formed by Director, Mark Devereux in 2006. Showcasing exhibitions, live music & performance, workshops and a monthly online magazine; Blank Media Collective’s dedicated volunteers are giving creatives much-needed opportunities during difficult times for many creative organisations.
The Title Art Prize launches at BLANKSPACE on Thursday 27 October (6-9pm) with the opportunity for visitors to vote for their favourite piece of work. The winner, three runners-up and People’s Choice Award will be announced on Blank Media Collective’s fifth birthday on Saturday 12 November (6-9pm), with the exhibition continuing throughout and until Sunday 27 November.
FURTHER INFORMATION:
BLANKSPACE | 43 Hulme Street | Manchester | M15 6 AW | 0161 222 6164 | www.blankspacemcr.org
exhibitions@blankmediacollective.org
OPENING TIMES:
Monday, Wednesday, Thursday & Friday 1-7pm | Tuesday 1-9pm | Saturday & Sunday 11am-4pm
Participating Artists
Sachiyo Nishimura: www.snishimura.com
There are certain spaces and objects within cityscapes that, located both inside and at the outskirts of most urban circuits around the world, have become almost imperceptible to the casual viewer. These objects and spaces/non-places coexist anonymously, unrelated to any specific local identity, looking quite similar to each other regardless their specific location. Sachiyo Nishamura’s work proposes a mathematical re-composition of their photographic image, using mixed graphic-manipulation operations that are based on arbitrary mathematical formulae of my design, and then extended on a photomontage that sets out a reconstruction of the urban space. By doing this, Sachiyo aims to put forward another version of the cityscape that is more complex than the real referent image.
David Ogle: www.saatchionline.com/davidogle
“The immediacy and linear quality of drawing naturally lends itself to my way of working. A pulse of movement is captured across a surface, with viewers becoming implicated in the works time-based process by visually tracing the forms progression from beginning to end. This build up of a constant form often affords my work illusionary three dimensional qualities, with geometric shapes multiplying to create optical depth across a flat plane.
Growing out of this, my sculptural work aims to take the fundamental properties of drawing (with a focus on flatness and line) and transfer these into new spatial situations. Physical spaces are intersected by lines and forms that optically flatten an environment, each step the viewer takes offering a new perspective on extruding entities that seem to discard any kind of three dimensional physicality.”
Rowena Harris: www.rowenaharris.com
Harris enjoys floating her work in ambiguity, placing it between seriousness and irony, between functional and decorative, between real and fake, made and found. Harris’ work exudes a pre-ironic austerity and seriousness that is synonymous with modernism, yet through the material language, a relationship with a contemporary saleable style becomes apparent and thus this seriousness becomes questionable.
Richard Stone: www.richardstoneprojects.com
Stone’s work materialises in many forms from objects and installation through to site-specific works. These have been shown at Schwartz Gallery and Beaconsfield in London as well as at further galleries and sites in the UK and abroad. He has recently been selected for the Threadneedle Prize 2011.
Stone takes a distinctive approach to recurrent themes of self and place, absence and transience, from mischievously re-casting the dimensions and structural details of gallery and site-specific spaces to recently engaging viewers as participants through the reenactment of a memorial. Materials and found objects are equally intrinsic and seductively reworked or reconfigured, these have included ornaments engulfed in ghostly auras of smooth amorphous wax, carpets unraveled and suspended, erased antique paintings, earth, flowers and other delicate ephemera. Works often appear in physical and conceptual states of metamorphosis and flux, incorporating sharp contrasts of light and dark or are interwoven with grainy expressions of solitude and stasis. Such works have been described as inherently dark and poetic in their range, oscillating in scale from the intimate to the monumental and as resonating with art historical and popular cultural references, from Felix Gonzalez-Torres’s conceptual work to Peter Saville’s Joy Division album covers.
Mark Selby: www.manifesto-art.co.uk
Mark Selby’s practice includes the use of sculpture, installation and film. His work explores notions of failure or dysfunction, particularly in the context of communicative acts, represented though the re-engineering of a space or object. This often develops into large-scale environments that are sinister or disorientating - placing the viewer into the position of physical interlocutor. He was the Recipient of the Clifford Chance / UAL Sculpture Award in 2009 after completing his MA in Fine Art at Wimbledon College of Art. Recent exhibitions include The Electric House, SHIFT Gallery, London., Fig.3, David Roberts Art Foundation, London and Sluice Art Fair. Curatorial projects have included Coming Out of the Woodwork (2010) and Unobtrusive Measures, which will tour to Kunstpavillon, Munich in 2012. Mark is a lecturer in Fine Art at the University for the Creative Arts.
Liz Murray: www.lizmurray.co.uk
Liz Murray works with sculpture, installation, film, video and photography. Recent projects have ranged from large scale, site specific installations (in New York, she tasked the city’s psychics to predict what her new work would look like, rebuilding and filming a full-size cardboard set based on American cop shows), to working with archival material from publications and mainstream cinema of the seventies and eighties. Another aspect of her practice is live art, of which recent performances have included a commission for Highbury Fields in Islington (‘They Came From Nowhere’, 2010), and ‘Hairport’ (2008), at Tate Britain.
Murray completed her MA Fine Art at Chelsea in 2005. Residencies since include Youkobo Artspace, Tokyo (2011), Futura Centre for Contemporary Art, Prague (2010) and The Red Mansion Foundation, Beijing (2006). Recent work has been shown at Karlin Studios in Prague, and Stedefreund, Berlin. Murray lives and works in London.
Liz West: www.liz-west.co.uk
Liz West makes intensely coloured installation, video and photographic works from arrangements of found materials and consumer goods. In the work objects are densely arranged in orders or enclosed within constructed spaces, such as cupboards and shelves or in containers such as shopping trolleys and cabinets to form compacted colour masses or gradations.
West is interested in the aesthetic of densely packed and richly coloured arrangements and displays found in shops, markets and museums. In her work, she creates sensory experiences in the form of richly saturated installations that immerse the viewer in a kaleidoscopic or optical environment.
Systems of ordering, classification and coding are applied in the development and generation of work. Boundaries are established, which determine both what is collected and where it is collected from. West continually searches and collects coloured objects ranging throughout the spectrum. Only purely coloured objects are gathered, disallowing any items that were made of more than one colour. West is interested in the intense and concentrated colour found in synthetic materials and in artificial light. West is concerned with the psychological influence of colour, its effect and sensory impact upon the viewer.
Lisa Denyer: www.lisadenyer.com
Lisa Denyer is interested in capturing a precious, jewel-like quality within my paintings whilst also retaining an abstract feel. She has always been fascinated by natural shapes, silhouettes and simplified motifs. Up until now her practice has solely revolved around escapism; from everyday life into the natural world. However, in recent work her focus has shifted from vast landscape vistas to geometric shapes and patterns. Lisa believes that this adaptation of her practice is due to the fact that, having spent the last two years in a city that she loves, escapism is no longer a major concern within her work. It is aspects of the city, such as repetitive architectural patterns, light reflecting from windows, and shadows cast by buildings that are currently influencing her paintings.
As part of Lisa’s latest project Crystal Abstracts, she has also been looking at microcosm and macrocosm and the idea of universal designs which span the cosmos. She has been especially inspired by crystal formations.
Kit Mead: www.kitmead.co.uk
Kit Mead’s practice has developed through themes and concepts that focus on the understanding and experience of time and memory. Defined by the temporal qualities and specific conventions of the media he exploits, Kit frequently employs cinematic devices to communicate the structures of his outcomes. His work revolves around site, actions and moments, with the pieces relying on and responding to the environments they are located in.
Ka Wah Liu: www.kawahliu.com
Ka Wah Liu’s work pursues the possibility of connecting an uncanny experience in relation to the unconscious of mankind. As a means to evoke the real in a world where people are dissatisfied with the confined model of culture and to deal with one’s initial lack of completeness, she explores the notions of the grotesque and the uncanny, which is strange, hidden, yet familiar. Adopting the methodologies of the early-aged playing with plasticine, which rubbing, squeezing and dismantling applied, she interrupts, damages and shapes the material, creating an abjected human face or body, to project residues of desire and traces of inherently traumatic experience of a vulnerable self.
Joe Doldon: www.joedoldon.co.uk
Joe Doldon’s practice is material led. This is the starting point for all of his work, which is usually modest and of low monetary value. Work materialises through a process of experimentation, following certain formulas through which he aquaints himself with the properties and the potential of the medium whilst constantly thinking about how to detract the material from its everyday use and aesthetic. Joe aims to make work of an optimistic nature, which operates on a subtle level. Recent work has become more abstract and open-ended. He wants his work to speak in metaphors and become ever more conscious about the viewers role in completing the work, bringing their own interpretation and meaning. Simply how perception and visual experience is unique to each individual is an impetus for making work.
Calum Johnston: www.calumjohnston.com
Games are at stake, and in play. In Calum Johnston’s work games function to designate potential ways of perception, which might subsequently be undertaken or may take place only imaginatively. But furthermore the work is characterized by humour, playfulness and in configurations of sometimes-manipulated settings and a well-developed sense of conception. Calum uses normal, everyday materials carefully turned into art works via a distinct deconstruction and reformulation of its simple everyday framework. His intentions are to direct the viewer’s gaze to the details of existence, to invite viewers into a space and challenge them via these transformations, not in order to confuse or alienate, but to suggest connections and open up for other perspectives and on showing the distinctions between art and life.
Laura Yolanda Lowe: www.blankmediacollective.org/portfolios/yolandalowe
Form, space, light and movement are integral parts that make up the world we see everyday. Laura Yolanda Lowe is interested in what happens in this visual world, what we see if we introspect our visual sensations and concentrate on the actual nature of the information that falls on our retinas. The experience of the visual field is to be aware of the fact that you are seeing. Of the four main parts that make up our visual field, the phenomenon of light, which determines brightness, shadow and colour, is what intrigues me the most. The eye owes its existence to light; our sight is dominated by colour. Colour has no physical properties; scientifically it is a product of light. It is our visual system and the interaction of the wavelengths in physical light which creates our perception of colour. We see colour as the colour of something else, on an object for example, it isn’t a natural thing to see colour simply as itself. By allowing ourselves to see perception as the object we can begin to experience the meta-physical sensations of colour and light. Colour is the place where our brain and the universe meet as an energy.
Nick Davies: www.blankmediacollective.org/portfolios/TheTuber
For the project contained within the Title Art Prize, Nick Davies has undertaken the role of a cultural translator. In his practice the ideas drive the form, function and nature of the work undertaken. Most of the work will aim to be a part of the context that creates it, using the gallery space as a place to contemplate the results.
His main interests are our notions of intelligence, creativity, and our values surrounding how we both live, learn and relate to one another. This work is heavily underpinned by philosophy, cultural theory and by his own direct experience within our civic society.
He is heavily influenced by British conceptual artists such as Stephen Willats, Michael Landy, and Jeremy Deller, as well as by the thinking of figures such as Buckminster Fuller and Victor Papanek. Nick currently lives and works from his home in Devon.
Jamie Crewe: www.blankmediacollective.org/portfolios/jamiecrewe
Jamie Crewe is an artist, writer, and nightingale living in Sheffield. His work addresses structures and their discontents, contrasting the formalities of established architectures with acts and objects that undermine, exceed, or desolate them. Using a variety of adopted dialects, including gestures and utterances from cinema, amateur draftsmanship, and the materials of queer theatrics, he builds, empties, disassembles and rebuilds in order to indicate what is elided.
Framed by the structural concerns of the European avant-garde, from Dada to the Lettristes to Oulipo, and moving with the atemporal multiplicity of current technology, he works with video, photography, drawing, objects, texts, and actions to create works that react to each other and their habitat in ways that are lucid, ambiguous, and fragmentary. Particular concerns are gender, desire, and legacies, and the power relations therein. He is also co-organiser of the bi-monthly art event PRISM, which takes place in various venues around Sheffield, and editorial assistant for the Transmission lecture series at Sheffield Hallam University. He is currently introducing André Gide to his sister and building a set of ornamental dog figurines.
Jacqueline Wylie: www.blankmediacollective.org/portfolios/jackie
Jacqueline Wylie uses a variety of materials: wool, digital photography, text and video to paint and draw with, preferring to use simple readily available materials and processes. Her knitted paintings, such as Constellation or Shipwreck (after Mallarmé), refer explicitly to painting practice, but use wool instead of paint, to blur the boundaries between fine art and craft, and consider how value and worth are assigned to materials and processes.
“It is the ideas behind art that interest me most, not the processes, or craft. Hand knitting, is a laborious, obsessive activity rather like painting; the same movements are repeated endlessly to build up pattern and texture. By deliberately positioning banal, undervalued processes and materials within an art context, I direct the viewer’s attention onto the question of how we assign value to art or craft.”
Much of Wylie’s work is site specific, often made in response to historic buildings and landscapes, drawing on her previous employment as an archaeologist specialising in building conservation and vernacular architecture. In Manchester Time Piece, her most recent work with Tern Collective, Wylie used photography and durational performance to explore ideas of time, movement, dislocation, personal journeys, and the bucolic.
David Sargerson: www.blankmediacollective.org/portfolios/davidsargerson
The esteemed artist Ivon Hitchens once said that landscape was ‘a peg on which to hang a painting’. “I understand this to mean that although landscape is the inspiration for the painting process it does not necessarily define the outcome of it. Ivon Hitchens used landscape as the genesis for his painting but was not bound to strict representational concerns. Instead the final image is a result of an exploration in to the method of painting itself. The exploration of composition, line, tone, shape, colour and form are also fundamental to my work and portraiture is very much my peg.”
Christopher Bethell: www.blankmediacollective.org/portfolios/christopherbethell
Christopher Bethell’s current practice places him within the sub-culture of Urban Exploration: exploring what is usually out of bounds. Explorers interpret this in differing ways. Some favour infiltrating the network of drains and sewers deep beneath us, others prefer seeking out ways out onto cranes and the rooftops of city skyscrapers. However, most commonly they explore derelict or emptied buildings: the most popular of these being Britain’s asylums and hospitals.
His work considers the nature of wanting to see the unseen; attempting to evaluate what draws himself and other members of the community to these sites. Christopher tries to communicate the placid atmosphere that is experienced whilst exploring - a feeling that is amplified in such places as (derelict) hospitals in contrast to the noise of active ones.
Photography has changed what is commonly believed to be beautiful. Most would not wish to live (or even be) in these conditions, but once photographed they become an aesthetic fascination. Christopher’s images describe the serene beauty of these buildings that are now devoid of purpose.
Bartosz Beda: www.bartoszbeda.com
Bartosz Beda has graduated from Manchester Metropolitan University in 2011 and takes influences and inspiration from the world around him. Using his personal expression to develop these concepts into his paintings, Bartosz observes and focuses upon ordinary elements of reality to make synthetic summaries.
Susan Francis: www.axisweb.org/seCVPG.aspx?ARTISTID=13808
Susan Francis is a visual artist, born in Belfast but now living in the South of England. Her practice encompasses sculpture, installation and video, often residing somewhere in the spaces in between. It is quiet work, a vocabulary of cast offs, objects, liquids and processes, at times unstable and prone to decay, yet familiar to us all. Peering into the unspoken corners of our condition, the work unfolds as a constant inquiry, an unfinished sentence, a dialogue, if you like, articulated in material, object and space.
Ami Kanki: www.amikanki.com
Ami Kanki investigates the relationships between people, art and museums and proposes how to encourage people to deepen the engagement with museums and art. Visiting a museum is a contemporary leisure activity. We can choose how to spend our leisure time from many choices such as watching films, visiting amusement parks, playing sports and so on. Ami enjoys all these activities but visiting museums, especially art museums, has a different meaning from other activities for me. She considers that adopting art in our life possibly produces a spiritual influence.
The museum is a place to introduce art works and artists and also a representation of the world surrounded with art. Some people see museums as a church, where they can reflect themselves. Ami empathises with their experience at museums. Visiting museums and seeing art works offer her inspiration for her life. This experience makes Ami interested in museums and would like others to be aware of the power of art.
Stella Ouzounidou: stellaouzounidou.blogspot.com
Stella Ouzounidou tries to reassess the products of our cultural waste. She often uses found objects from eBay or other sources. The notion of memory is somehow always interlinked in her work and she deals with it as an inseparable phenomenon of our everydayness. Collecting, archiving and gathering things is part of Stella’s process and often visible in the execution.
‘Our obsessions with memory functions as a reaction formation against the accelerating technical processes that is transforming our Lebenswelt (lifeworld) in quite distinct ways. [Memory] represents the attempt to slow down information processing, to resist the dissolution of time in the synchronicity of the archive, to recover a mode of contemplation outside the universe of simulation, and fast-speed information and cable networks, to claim some anchoring space in a world of puzzling and often threaten heterogeneity, non-synchronicity, and information overload.’ Huyssen, A. in Gere C. 2006
Hannah Devereux: hannahdevereux.co.uk
Hannah Devereux’s practice is an investigation into the abstraction of landscape. An interest in the extraction of reality from photographic images drives the work she makes. Divisions are a prime element within her work, holding a central role in the abstraction of an image. Her work values boundaries; edges which have the ability to considerably minimise an image, eliminating detail and complications, consequently forming something new which may be so pared down that any reference to its source is lost. The concept of comparison is important; this often manifests in the creation of parallel works. Their partnership calls attention to similarities, distinctions and subtleties, establishing that the smallest differences are able to encourage what the image is and how it may be seen.
David Dunnico: daviddunnico.wordpress.com
David Dunnico is a documentary photographer from Manchester. He said of the piece:
“I put the individual breaths together in the order I found them, avoiding any attempt to make the piece melodic or rhythmic, it was supposed to be sounds, not musique concrète”.
Anne Charnock: annecharnock.com
Anne Charnock’s art practice encompasses photography, painting, drawing and text-based installations. For her subject matter she turns time and again to her love-hate relationship with technology. Anne has smashed and burned mobile phones before photographing the charred fragments. She has worked with faulty computer printouts and corrupted data files. Anne’s studio has a stash of broken bits of technology, donated by friends and family on the off chance she’ll find a use for them in her art making. One such donation was a faulty point-and-shoot digital camera. Anne worked quickly to master the camera’s errant behaviour and produced eight portraits before the camera failed completely.
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