Saturday, 18 August 2012

See No Evil - Bristol 2012

This week Britain's biggest Urban art project arrived in Bristol. See No Evil 2012 began Tuesday night and Nelson Street became one big canvass!

 Floodlit throughout the night the graffiti artists from around the globe transformed some of Bristol's buildings in to an open air gallery.

This weekend all the art work will be complete and a two day New York City style block party will take place on Saturday. Sunday will be family-friendly viewing.

A collaboration of graffiti art and music will bring Nelson Street alive. One of the popular panasian restaurants - Shanghai Nights, have set up a food stall in front of their newly painted restaurant.

The See No Evil event which first came to Bristol in 2011, was hugely successful. Some of the artworks created in 2011 have remained. I'm glad to see my favourite, was one of the originals voted by the Bristol public to stay!

I set off first thing on Saturday to take some shots of the completed art work and to get an interview and some video shots of some of the artists completing their master pieces!


I hope you enjoy this open air gallery and its vibrant colour and vivid imagery, installed along one of the central streets of Bristol.

The Police Station
Using the grime accumulated over the years!

Vibrant colour transforms this old building

Found this above the old courts!

A decorated pillar

Inkie!

An original from 2011

I love this eerie picture as you walk through the arch!

Leave a comment, let me know your favourite piece or if you don't like graffiti let me know what you think. Maybe you  don't feel its art at all! If you would like to see the rest of my pictures please go to my Pinterest page (JoAnne Dursley under the pin board entitled artwork).

Sunday, 12 August 2012

Pull Everything Out - an exhibition Corita Kent & Ciara Phillips

This exhibition is currently on show at Spike Island, Bristol. Spike Island is an international centre for the development of contemporary art and design. To find out more about Spike Island, click on the link www.spikeisland.org.uk

Spike Island

I went to see this collaborative exhibition last week. I was immediately impressed by the venue. Spike Island is a large building with very roomy exhibition rooms and a lovely cafe. The staff were also welcoming and knowledgeable.

This exhibition - Pull Everything Out - brings together over 70 prints by the artist Corita Kent (1918 - 1986) and a collection of  contemporary works by Ciara Phillips (1976).
Its a testimony to both artists engagement with experimentation, learning and collaboration. It also shows their shared concerns albeit generations apart.

Power Up

Corita Kent was born in 1918. She was also known as Sister Corita. She was the head of the art department at the Immaculate Heart College in Los Angeles. Her brightly coloured silk screen prints became recognised internationally during 1960's and 1970's. Sister Corita was very much involved with the community. She lectured and ran workshops. She was also an activist.

Left -Come off it (1966)
Right - Handle with Care (1967) 
Centre - bread & toast (1965)

 Her day-glo prints were inspired by billboards and advertising that she saw around her. These were part of the ever growing consumer culture that was springing up all over America! She produced over 400 prints and many commissions. These included book covers and text book illustrations. Corita designed large billboard size posters for Share, The international walk for hunger, Amnesty International and Physicians for Social Responsibility.

Pull Everything Out - has the most extensive selection of Corita Kent's prints (over 70) to be shown in the UK to date. You will see text based works from the mid 1960's.

Left -a passion for the possible (1969)
Centre - king's dream (1969)
Right - if i (1969)
Also political pieces from the end of the 1960's reflecting the consciousness of America's role in the Vietnam War, the Civil rights movement and feminism. Corita Ken died in 1986 aged 68.

Left - the cry that will be heard (1969)
Right - news of the week (1969)

Ciara Phillips was born in 1976 in Ottawa, Canada. She is currently based in Glasgow. Ciara also works in print. She produces textiles, photographs and wall paintings. In the Pull Everything Out Exhibition we see examples of screenprint on newprint on cardboard boxes.

Ciara Phillips - Pull Everything Out (2012)

Ciara studied Fine Art at Queen's University, Kingston (BFA 2000) and at the Glasgow School of Art (MFA 2004) She is the initiator of the Poster Club. The Poster Club comprises of seven artists who work collaboratively and also exhibit together.

Ciara Phillips - wall painting

So what did I think of the exhibition?
 My first thoughts were, its a huge Gallery with posters on the walls! However on closer inspection and  time spent listening to the short film on Corita Kent that runs in the room next door, I understood the significance of the messages Corita was saying in her very visual art during a very turbulant time in Americas history.
 Looking at the workspace that Ciara had set up in the first week of the exhibition, I understood the affinity that she had with Corita and her work.  I loved that Ciara was based in the workspace during July along with other artists and members of the Poster Club. They produced an updated version of the Irregular Bulletin a journal originally produced at the Immaculate Heart College, where Sister Kent worked.

 I found it very interesting but it did not inspire my own work.

Pull Everything Out - Corita Kent and Ciara Phillips Exhibition runs until 26th August 2012 in Gallery 1.

Leave me a comment if you get a chance to visit this vibrant exhibition!




Saturday, 4 August 2012

What is - Beyond the frame?

Are you interested in art?

When we think of art, do we automatically imagine a painting, framed and hung on the wall of our house or in an art gallery?

 Or, do we look beyond the frame and consider street art or graffitti art?


In this blog I want to discover art in all its many forms. Look at the Bristol art scene, its local artists, the urban art, the history of art and also some of my favourite artists and world famous artists from across the centuries.

Banksy - Bristol

David Hockney

Klimt
Frieda Kahlo
See No Evil - exhibition Bristol

I hope you will enjoy looking beyond the frame as I discover a diverse collection of art!



Lets look beyond the frame...