The wall of toothpaste at Baltic 39 galleries cannot fail to have an impact on every visitor, the smell is overpowering and pervades the air throughout the building.
Created by artist Russell Hill, it is part of a portfolio where everyday objects and consumables are transformed.
http://www.russellhillonline.com
It evoked memories of bedtime routines and childhood. For part of the MA Summer School we were invited to respond to the piece, again using a limited selection of materials that included some very unlikely domestic objects.
Monday, 1 September 2014
Daniel Buren at Baltic
The ever changing light levels in the gallery interplay with the Buren installation on the huge vertical windows. The colour and light combined with the architecture and space have a powerful effect on the meditative quality of this work. Every view creates an new abstract composition.
MA Summer School for Artist teachers at Baltic
Using the Baltic library point for an artwork, materials were restricted to a photocopier and paper with a few found objects. It was a challenge to create something that considered both the space of the bookshelves and the image on a page that was randomly generated by a dice game.
I was intrigued by the text on the page and the Jeff Wall photograph that was my random selection. I used the photocopier to reproduce the image and weave together the image and text. Further photocopies of the resulting structure generated various compositions. I selected three compartments at the back of the library to site my construction, creating peepholes and weaving the whole together with a ticker-tape of text from the book itself.
I hoped to explore the notion of text and image being interlinked drawing the viewer into a new world of the imagination.
I was intrigued by the text on the page and the Jeff Wall photograph that was my random selection. I used the photocopier to reproduce the image and weave together the image and text. Further photocopies of the resulting structure generated various compositions. I selected three compartments at the back of the library to site my construction, creating peepholes and weaving the whole together with a ticker-tape of text from the book itself.
I hoped to explore the notion of text and image being interlinked drawing the viewer into a new world of the imagination.
Thursday, 15 August 2013
Mikado work in Progress
Mikado Stage set Design
(The green board is not part of the design, the gap will be filled with a curtain or doorway.)
Monday, 12 August 2013
Designs for the set for Pinafore, Gilbert and Sullivan
Last year, 2012, St. Andrew's Gilbert and Sullivan society presented HMS. Pinafore.
I tried to do something different than the previous time where I represented the wheelhouse of the ship.
This time I simplified the design somewhat by merely representing the ship by the handrail and a suggestion of rigging.
The banner flags added colour and movement, also referenced the Jubilee year and the Olympics.
The text was chosen from the lyrics of the songs and overpainted as if the words had a dynamic life of their own.
These images are taken of my set plan, which I produce as a painted mock up in card.
They are painted in acrylics. I also use acrylics on the stage painting
Overall, I think the design went well as it created the feeling of wind and movement on board ship.
I tried to do something different than the previous time where I represented the wheelhouse of the ship.
This time I simplified the design somewhat by merely representing the ship by the handrail and a suggestion of rigging.
The banner flags added colour and movement, also referenced the Jubilee year and the Olympics.
The text was chosen from the lyrics of the songs and overpainted as if the words had a dynamic life of their own.
These images are taken of my set plan, which I produce as a painted mock up in card.
They are painted in acrylics. I also use acrylics on the stage painting
Overall, I think the design went well as it created the feeling of wind and movement on board ship.
Saturday, 3 August 2013
Gilbert and Sullivan set design
I am involved with the Gilbert and Sullivan society at St Andrews URC, Monkseaton and have been a member of the scene painters team for 10 years or so now. More recently I have been designing the sets as well as painting them.
I have taken a few different sources as inspiration for the design such as Japanese prints and screens.
Using Photoshop, I have roughed out a working plan for the stage set showing a general idea of how I would like it to look. I have copied a modern design for paper screens for the side flats.
This will have to be modified a great deal to fit the newly built properties of the stage set.
There will be a built pagoda and platform in front of the backdrop now so the idea for the waterpool and flowers will need to be changed. The distant pagoda will now be painted onto the backdrop, stage right.
The idea is to be looking out onto the garden from a screened indoor area towards a distant landscape of pagodas and cherry blossom with cascades of blossoms on the stage flats right and left.
Some examples of past designs:
The last time St. Andrews performed The Mikado, it was set in a modern style with the town of Whitley Bay standing in visually for the town of Titipoo.
(The image shown here is not how the set was designed, the group are putting on a concert of songs and the stage flats were placed over the curtains for this event and they are not seen in the correct order.)
This design is for one of the earliest I was involved with, showing a traditional approach with stone effect and gothic archway.
This is the design for The Grand Duke, for which I used the original set design drawing from 1896 as inspiration.

Wednesday, 24 April 2013
David Nash at Kew
Over the Easter weekend 2013, I was able to go to Kew Gardens to see the wonderful sculpture of David Nash. I have admired his work for many years as he was a visiting lecturer to Newcastle Polytechnic when I was a student there in the 80's. (Now Northumbria University)
I love his use of wood and the notion of quarrying the raw material from the trees that offer suggestions for the elemental shapes construct by Nash with chain saws.
He uses the natural movement and splitting of the wood in his work as they release their energy after being cut. The material helps to shape itself.
In the gallery at Kew he shows an amazing mural-sized drawing that shows the family tree of sculptures, the relationships and development of the shapes.

In the glasshouses it is a delight to find the sculptures amongst the foliage, inviting comparison with the sculptural shapes of the plants.
The Nash conservatory houses the most elegantly startling cone constructed from cork barks. The nature of the bark suggests something cast off by a creature like a shell. Each bark is different in its unique way inviting the viewer to observe all of them in their own beauty at the same time as the monumental structure of the whole cone.
These images were taken by myself on my phone, so I own the images but not the copyright of them as they are of Nash's work. So if you do use these images please acknowledge the artist when doing so.
I love his use of wood and the notion of quarrying the raw material from the trees that offer suggestions for the elemental shapes construct by Nash with chain saws.
He uses the natural movement and splitting of the wood in his work as they release their energy after being cut. The material helps to shape itself.
In the gallery at Kew he shows an amazing mural-sized drawing that shows the family tree of sculptures, the relationships and development of the shapes.

The interior of the gallery is a lovely space to display the smaller works, whereas the monumental sculpture is positioned in the park. Some of these are surprisingly, bronze, patinated to look like wood and scorched wood.
The natural beauty of the wood speaks for itself. This section through a tree is just an amazing natural object in its own right.
In the glasshouses it is a delight to find the sculptures amongst the foliage, inviting comparison with the sculptural shapes of the plants.
The Nash conservatory houses the most elegantly startling cone constructed from cork barks. The nature of the bark suggests something cast off by a creature like a shell. Each bark is different in its unique way inviting the viewer to observe all of them in their own beauty at the same time as the monumental structure of the whole cone.
These images were taken by myself on my phone, so I own the images but not the copyright of them as they are of Nash's work. So if you do use these images please acknowledge the artist when doing so.
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