Holy Shit! Visions of the Walworth Jumpers

Showing posts with label religion. Show all posts
Showing posts with label religion. Show all posts

Wednesday, 15 June 2011

Visions of the Walworth Jumpers at Sassoon gallery

On Sunday the 5th of June, I completed the mural I had been working on for a few days at the Sassoon gallery. Titled "Holy Shit!:Visions of the Walworth Jumpers", the show was a gathering of four graphic artists under the arches of Peckham Rye.


The lovely Peter Lally, organizer of the International Alternative Press Fair




We were four artists committed to rebeautifying the gallery and were given just a week to do so. I started the mural quite late in the week. These 7 days were quite challenging because I was in the middle of marking/doing assessments for my 3rd year Illustration students at the university of East London and also being engaged with other smaller assignements.




The lovely daughter of the Sassoon gallery managers.




Is it a lighthouse, a candle or a...penis?!




One strand of my work is about subverting imagery taken from established mainstream strands of culture. Here the religious brief, inspired from Mary Ann Girling really suited me perfectly because I had an opportunity to play with classical iconography and apply my own modern twist on it. The arches where the gallery is situated was the location for many wacky sects in the Victorian era and to this day, the area is peppered with churches of all denominations. Philip Hoare's book on the New Forest Shakers was of particular inspiration.



Pink eyes? Is it a classical painting? They must be positively alien!




I revisited Michelangelo's sistine chapel paintings, William Blake's prints and Gustav DorĂ©'s bible woodcut engravings.


Lord Hurk's painting. one of the other three artists doing work for the show.



The Krah came in and crafted this in one day with the help of an assistant. A well oiled and  impressive business!



Kevin Ward's pastoral/ voodoo dance.

I like this little guy!

There was an advantage to having started last and using colour last also. After a little chat with the gallery owner, I decided it would serve the show and my work best to try and tie in all the other disparate murals together by taking one colour from each mural and using it in my own.



I borrowed the grey from The Krah's, the orange from Hurk and the pink form Kevin's.


I am very happy with the final result. One reason I like doing murals so much is that you can't be too precious about the process and the result. It allows you to be bold and unattached to the work as these murals are not permanent.





The Sunday zine fair and Start your Own Cult workshop in full swing.







The Editions of You stand.




Kevin Ward at work under the watchful eyes of my demoness/ priestess!


BBC Radio 5 political correspondant John Pienaar came down to interview the team behing the fair. I have to say I was not aware of the political connection when I took on this assignement and was quite surprised when I saw Pienaar come down to the gallery. So folks, any political connection here made is the fair's and not my own. I prefer to be in control of the political tags I put onto my work, if and when I chose to.  And so far, I am more interested in forms of social commentary.



That said, the interview was pretty funny!


Wednesday, 16 March 2011

New York Exhibition

All images courtesy of Valerie Pezeron. Copyright protected. No reproduction without permission.

In January of this year, I took part in an exhibition at the Brownson Art Gallery, part of the Arthur M. Berger Art Gallery in New York. The group show was named Exhibit III and included artwork by faculty staff and students of Manhattanville college and the University of East London.

The artwork I had displayed were prints in progress from my book "Written by Men, Blame it on God" that I am developping with New Humanist and the Rationalist Association. Yes, the book is being developped and is coming along! Taking on the bible is a big job and one that I want to do well so I am taking my time.



I am quite happy with the results so far and am planning a cheap print run and a smaller one-off  handmade set of books for collectors to buy.