Category Archives: General news

A silver day

I spent the day learning to make a spoon and bowl with silversmiths Howard Fenn and Steve Wager – lots of tapping and hammering and annealing with a blowtorch, dipping in an acid bath.

To make the bowl of the spoon, we had to nest the flat form in a notch in a tree trunk, then delicately hammer in a spiral motion. The room resounded with the rhythm of different people’s tapping.

I then inaugurated the spoon with a creme brulee and the bowl with some wasabi peas – it only fits about three but they’re so hot it’s enough.

 

 

Mural in Hook

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I’ve just finished a big mural project at St Paul’s C of E Primary School in Hook, near Chessington.

The project began with three days working with the whole school, class by class, creating colurful birds, leaves, flowers and buildings using a variety of media from acrylic to collage and coloured pencil.

Year 2 created some amazing collage vehicles, while Year 3 drew their own homes with great detail and a dash of imagination:

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Other year groups experimented with colour mixing to create dozens of different shades for bricks and leaves, year 4 drew beautiful birds and year 6 worked in groups to make large collage/drawings of key buildings in or connected to the area, including Southwark Cathedral as a focal point.

I painted their drawings onto the boards and collaged on the cut out bricks, then added all the richness of bird and plant life, as well as the homes and vehicles that the children created (including an unfeasibly large number of tanks!).

It’s the third time I’ve worked at St Paul’s and it was lovely to recognise so many children and to see how their creative work has developed over the years.

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Whitechapel presentation

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In July I spent some time at Bainbridge Studios screen printing a limited edition poster of all the beautiful drawings done by Year 6 at Cannon Barnett Primary School, Whitechapel. The drawings were done during workshops I did with the class in May exploring their local built environment for the English Heritage pilot project, Special Places. The class also chose a building they wanted to list and presented their ideas to a team from Tower Hamlets planning department, and visited a live conservation project at Altab Ali park with Ben Pearce from High Street 2012. The project came to a conclusion on July 14th with a visit to the school from Baroness Andrew, the chair of English Heritage, who presented all the children in the class with their screen printed posters, and in return, they presented her with one of the posters which she has promised to frame and display in her office,

Year 6 were a fantastic class to work with, as were teachers Peter and Laurens,  and I thoroughly enjoyed the project. Both English Heritage and Tower Hamlets are hoping to repeat the project in other schools in the future.

Special Places poster

This is the artwork for the giant poster I have been screenprinting for the English Heritage project ‘Special Places’, which I worked on during May with Canon Barnett Primary School in Whitechapel. The Year 6 class did some really wonderful drawings of the built environment around the school following some exploratory walks with cameras, and I have put all their work together into one image. I pushed them to add lots of detail with different weights of pen and I think the results are impressive. I particularly like the chimney on the Truman Brewery, the lovely patchwork of the gherkin and the way the school itself (second from the bottom on the left hand side) looks like a fairytale castle.

They were a fabulous class to work with – each child will now get their own poster to take home.

Special Places 2011

gherkin2I’ve just finished a two week project in Whitechapel for English Heritage, with Year 6 at Canon Barnett Primary School.

Equipped with sketchbooks, the class have been walking and drawing the built heritage of the area, as well as making collages, seeing behind the scenes at the renovations at Altab Ali park, and making a presentation to professionals from English Heritage and Tower Hamlets council about which local features they would like to see listed. We also visited the Ian Berry photography exhibition at Whitechapel Art Gallery, which is practically next door to the school.

It’s been a very enjoyable project and the next step is for me to design then screen print a poster with the children’s drawings, which we will present to the chair of English Heritage in July. Looking forward to going back already.

Fretwork, light and lustrous prints

On a busy, dusty bus-heavy road in Lambeth is a secret treasure – the house formerly lived in by Kenyan poet, author and daytime civil servant Khadambi Asalache. When he died he left his house to the National Trust, and it’s a magical space filled with 20 years-worth of hand-carved fretwork, and a collection of beautiful objects from all over the world, from African tapestries to 18th century lustre-ware.

I was very lucky to be invited to explore the house with groups of children from the neighbouring Heathbrook Primary School, and then work with them to create a set of printed postcards inspired by the house. In groups of 6, we stepped through the door into another world – the children remarked that it was like entering a fairy tale. Khadambi’s widow Susie welcomed the children and showed them round the exquisite rooms, where every surface was decorated with animals, swirls and patterns. The children took photographs, and back at the school we used computers to play with the images and alter them. Finally we used block printing and mono printing, informed by the photographic work, so that each child produced one piece of artwork celebrating the house. These were then made into a set of postcards which were printed up and presented to various people connected with the house.

The house is currently undergoing huge renovations because of structural problems: each individual piece of fretwork is being removed, labelled, and cleaned before being replaced in exactly the same position. Eventually the house will open to the public through the National Trust, by appointment as it is a small and delicate space. But it is well worth the effort.

 

 

Mural in Teddington


I’ve just finished a public art commission – 2 murals in the Teddington Health and Social Care Centre.

A lot of Lionels

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I’ve just started a series of family learning workshops at Ham House – we will be creating a permanent timeline exhibit to celebrate the house’s 400th anniversary. For the first session I made badges for everyone, randomly allocating them a character from the house’s fascinating history.

Zoo Book finished

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I went to London Zoo this afternoon to deliver the hand-made giant book I have been making for the education department.

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It’s a story about one of the zoo’s ferrets, Toffee, visiting all the other animals in the zoo to find out about how they live.

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Anne will take both the book and the real-life Toffee with her when she goes to visit schools to explain about the Zoo’s work.

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Anne and Sophie (above) were both really pleased with the outcome.

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The book is entirely hand-made and a mixture of collage, ink, watercolour and acrylic on Somerset paper, with Japanese binding.