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Showing posts with label millidge. Show all posts
Showing posts with label millidge. Show all posts

Thursday, 10 August 2023

Exhibitions by artists from Wickford and Billericay

'ADHD HYPER FIXATION and Why it looks like I love Pedro Pascal' is an exhibition by Wickford artist Heidi Gentle Burrell. 3 June - 1 September at The Rhodes Gallery in Upmargate, The Centre in Margate.

Whether it be her Kryptonite or her super power, ADHD hyper fixation certainly makes for an interesting life. This exhibition is a sneak peek into Heidi’s brain and what it looks like to have ADHD and how it effects her life and art. The exhibition has been visited by Hollywood star Pedro Pascal.

'George Morl: Electrum Spektrum', 17 August 2023 to 14 January 2024, Chelmsford Museum.

‘Electrum Spektrum’ is an installation by Basildon born artist George Morl, who lives in Wickford. The installation has grown from a series of projects and evolving conversations with students in Cornwall and Essex. It features artworks by Morl and the students, and features work from their collaborative collection of art. The works trace the evolution of social and technological networks and reflect on conversations about their experiences of online spaces.

'Theatrical Ceramics' by David Millidge, 18-26 August 2023, Hyde Hall.

This summer at RHS Garden Hyde Hall, immerse yourself in the second solo exhibition of ceramic art created by artist David Millidge. Head to The Hilltop Lodge to discover a carefully curated exhibition of stunning pieces inspired by architecture, films, fashion and culture. This diverse collection draws you into a fantasy world and includes vessels, modular abstract sculpture and figurative work, which brings mannequins to life.

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Robbie Robertson - Somewhere Down The Crazy River.

Friday, 14 April 2023

Chaiya Art Awards exhibition 2023












Chaiya Art Awards, the UK’s biggest art awards illuminating spirituality is bigger and better than ever. With a first prize of £10,000, this third biennial competition, is now hosting over 100 artists in a unique exhibition entitled AWE+WONDER.

Savour this rare but affordable art collection over 14 rooms across 2 galleries. Engage with the artists as they respond to the theme of AWE+WONDER. Their work expresses itself in diverse mediums, including painting, drawing, sculpture, photography, video, textiles, ceramics and installations. Immerse yourself in its multi-faceted spirituality. Give yourself time – to hover, to breathe, and let its contents kiss your space with the unexpected. Make space for uninhibited, magical journeying.

Reaching out far and wide to solely UK artists Chaiya Art Awards invited thousands to participate and over 700 submitted. Founder, Katrina Moss comments “We know that art helps us to gain a fresh perspective in times of crisis and conflict, but can also be genuinely transformative, taking the artist and the viewer on journeys of discovery. Each year’s competition is underpinned by the theme of spirituality and we invite and engage people of all faiths to enter; those with none and everyone in between. When setting each year’s competition brief, we give artists the opportunity to explore and express their response to spirituality and to the theme through their creativity.”

Joining Katrina on the judging panel for 2023 were Kaffe Fassett, Favour Jonathan, Alastair Adams, Dr Christo Kefalas, Marcus Lyon, Ann Clifford, and Alastair Gordon. The public are also invited to vote for their favourite artwork with the winning artist receiving a £1000 prize.

Alongside the exhibition is ‘AWE+WONDER’ the book which includes all the finalists’ work alongside vibrant poetry and prose. It allows profound engagement with the theme viewed through the eyes of both artists and writer.

7-16 April 2023 at gallery@oxo and The Bargehouse on London’s Southbank
Bargehouse Street, London. SE1 9PH
11-6pm (last day till 4pm)
FREE ADMISSION
Art for sale £150 - £25,000
more info at https://chaiyaartawards.co.uk

The exhibition includes several artists I know and have worked with in various ways: Deborah Harrison; David Millidge; and Ali Mulroy. David Millidge's 'The Last Supper' was included in several commission4mission exhibitions including 'Reconciliation', the exhibition I organised at Coventry Cathedral. My Artlyst interview with Chaiya Art Awards founder Katrina Moss and other pieces on the Chaiya Art Awards can be found here, here, here and here.

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Gordon Gano (featuring Mary Lou Ward) - Oh Wonder.

Monday, 28 October 2019

'Creation' exhibition: Holy Trinity Sloane Square
























Images of AI and genetic engineering are not among those usually found in churches. Hayley Bowen’s ‘Man creating man in the guise of healing’ is a triptych illustrating transhumanism in relation to medicine and its link to covert eugenics, exsoskeletal and organ manipulation, cybernetics and eventually new humanoid creation. The work is currently at Holy Trinity Sloane Square. The artist asks,’ Is this interfering with God’s plans, or do we not understand his plans?’

The triptych, she says, is: ‘simply a graphic interpretation of the issues we face when we interfere with natural evolution. The laws of nature should naturally de-populate, with human development accelerating, but now we know that we are becoming sicker and weaker, as we are nearing overpopulation. Our existence does not make sense, unless we are working to an end or exist for a higher power, prisoners of our physical body.’

‘Creation’ is a group show by commission4mission artists that was first at All Hallows by the Tower and now is at Holy Trinity Sloane Square. The group was formed to help revive and encourage the practice of commissioning and placing works of contemporary art in churches and other public places. For this exhibition a mix of abstract and representational imagery has been created, utilising assemblage, ceramics, digital illustration, drawing, painting, puppetry and sculpture.

Mark Lewis, commission4mission’s Chair, says: ‘We have encouraged our artists to reflect broadly on the theme and 25 artists have responded with imagery that ranges from depictions of the Genesis Creation stories to Christ’s birth and our recreation through redemption, by way of flower studies, the creation of the poppy as a symbol of remembrance, and future creation using AI and genetic engineering.’

As with Bowen, David Millidge is also unafraid to grapple with weighty themes, in his case violence and death. His fragmented pots utilise images from The Church of Spilled Blood in St Petersburg, the creation of a memorial to the assassinated Emperor Alexander II. Millidge’s new ceramic sculpture ‘Gassed’ also deals in death being inspired by a painting of the same name by John Singer Sargent which hangs in the National War Museum. ‘Gassed’ is ultimately about the creation of the poppy logo as a symbol of rebirth and remembrance.

Michael Garaway is a mixed media artist who finds continual inspiration in urban landscape and new technologies to inform and produce his atmospheric and semi abstract work. He says, ‘I see creation as an on-going interactive process, which involves exploring and attempting to understand ways of ordering the world, and our views of the world.’ His work orders the appearances of specific locations with the use of grid and pattern. Divisions and multiples of a 12mm grid are used to develop and fix compositions, and Celtic step and knot patterns are incorporated in some of the work, linking to a much earlier Christian practice of illumination.

Clorinda Goodman’s ‘Ancilla Domini’ is a resin cast, a hexagonal representation of the Biblical moment when Eve disobeyed God’s command not to touch the fruit of the Tree of Knowledge, which led, not only to the expulsion of Adam and Eve from the Garden of Eden, but the growth of the human race and expansion of God’s creation through the world. Thus Eve, as well as the Virgin Mary, is seen as the ‘Handmaid of the Lord’ in fulfilling God’s purposes for his creation.

‘Christ & Cephas’ by John Gentry is a work about forgiveness, restoration and redemption. In John 21 we read of Peter being restored, forgiven, and, commissioned. In John’s image the triangle on the left of Christ is both Trinity and Fire. The pillar in the centre is the Pillar of Fire by night. Christ’s wounded hand is upon Cephas’ shoulder. Peter holds in his hand a net. In the net are fish, but also tin cans, plastic, glass bottles. The re-creation has been made possible by the redeeming work of Christ who commissions his body to proclaim and live Gospel. The rubbish is a type of sin. What a mess! “Who shall deliver us…?” Alleluia, says John, for saving grace!

Sculptor Deborah Harrison, in ‘Born Again’, gives us a body emerging from an egg, while Italian artists Laura Grenci and Maurizio Galia focus on water and music respectively as sources of creation.

Lewis Braswell, Mary Flitcroft and Jacqui Parkinson are exhibiting with commission4mission for the first time. Lewis Braswell sees creativity as mimicry of the acts of the Creator. Ultimately, he wants to remind the viewer of his or her relationship in the divine dialogue among God and people and to lead that viewer into deliberate conversation. Mary Flitcroft is a ceramic artist whose work is contemplative and abstract. She currently works with porcelain paper clay in very thin, translucent sheets which she folds, tears, cuts, marks and stains with colours. Her work is contemplative and abstract. Jacqui Parkinson produces artwork with textiles – usually on a large scale – for public buildings and her work has regularly toured cathedrals. Jacqui uses a powerful graphic instinct together with the intimacy of the hand-stitched line to create work that feels highly spontaneous, very lively, moving and thoroughly engaging. Her work is designed to catch the eye and challenge the mind.

‘Creation’, a group show by commission4mission artists at Holy Trinity Sloane Square from Tuesday 29 October to Saturday 9 November 2019. The exhibition can be viewed from 10.00am to 4.00pm.

Friday, 15 February 2019

Reconciliation: commission4mission exhibition



‘Reconciliation’ is an exhibition by commission4mission artists in the Chapel of Christ the Servant at Coventry Cathedral (1 Hill Top, Coventry CV1 5AB) from 10 March – 12 April 2019. Cathedral opening hours: Mon to Sat – 10 am to 5 pm (Last entry for visitors is 4 pm), Sun – 12 noon to 4 pm (Last entry is 3 pm). Private view: Saturday 9th March 5-7pm

‘Reconciliation’ is a group show by commission4mission artists. The title and theme for the exhibition can be understood in terms of reconciliations that are emotional, political, personal, biblical, national, communal etc.

Revd Jonathan Evens, commission4mission's secretary says: 'Our artists have reflected broadly on the theme responding with imagery that ranges from various forms of embrace, through pardoning and connections to aspects of the Life of Christ including Annunciation, Crucifixion and Glorification. Contemporary issues addressed include conflicts in the Middle East and plastic pollution. There are also images of Coventry Cathedral itself, emphasising its reconciliation ministry. A mix of abstract and representational imagery has been created, utilising ceramics, collage, digital illustration, drawing, painting, photography and sculpture.'

The exhibition includes work by Ally Ashworth, Hayley Bowen, Harvey Bradley, IrinaBradley, Valerie Dean, Mary Donaghey, Jonathan Evens, Maurizio Galia, Michael Garaway, John Gentry, Clorinda Goodman, Laura Grenci, Deborah Harrison, David Hawkins, Anthony Hodgson, Eugenia Jacobs, Mark Lewis, David Millidge, Lucy Morrish, Irene Novelli, Janet Roberts, Henry Shelton, and Peter Webb.

'The Last Supper', a sculpture by David Millidge is inspired by Leonardo Da Vinci's iconic Christian masterpiece. However, it is not about Judas or betrayal. It is about the journey of religious tolerance.
The disciples in this Last Supper are all identical figures but decorated with a thin veneer of symbols and images representing different faiths (ceramic transfers).

David says: 'If we are to continue living in a world where wars, conflicts, prejudice and persecution remain on the decline, we must continue to break down the barriers that divide us with acceptance and respect for the different faiths that we live by. My sculpture portrays an optimistic vision of a future where all ideologies sit side by side in harmony.'

The faiths represented, approximately in order of affiliated members are: Christianity, Islam, Atheism, Hinduism, Buddhism, Sikhism, Judaism, Taoism, Bahaism, Confucianism, Jainism, and Shintoism.

Mary Donaghey's contribution also images a reconciliation yet to be realised. In one area of her painting, armaments are piled resembling a bonfire with monetary notes of the major countries dealing in the Arms Trade. This is ready to be used in the igniting of it all. Nearby, Israeli soldiers are welcoming displaced Palestinians into new houses, the fence being down. An Iranian prison is open, prisoners emerging. A Syrian hospital is supplying prosthetic limbs, skies clear, nails being shovelled into a hole in the ground. The offending leaders of these countries also behave with compassion towards their present victims.

Former Bishop of Barking, David Hawkins also addresses contemporary issues with his mixed media pieces: 'Carrier bags have become the latest culprits in the war on pollution, with two million being purchased every minute across the globe. Back lit by the sun, they become angels of death and destruction. Our Celtic forbears saw God’s activity in the mundane of everyday life – in our century, even in carrier bags.'

The Angels of Death pictured in these images feature in Old Testament stories which foreshadow the forgiveness and reconciliation to be found in the death of Christ.

Similarly, Michael Garaway's 'Friday Process - Mark' also focuses on the significance of Christ's crucifixion coming as it does from a series of four which present in graphical form the symbolic 'hardware' related to Christ's suffering and death, as described in the Gospel accounts.

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Glenn Kaiser - Presence Of The Lord.

Tuesday, 26 June 2018

Pilgrimage exhibition: commission4mission at St Saviour's St Albans

My thanks to David Millidge for these photographs of commission4mission's Pilgrimage exhibition at St Saviour's Church, St Albans, which can be viewed until 30th June 2018:
















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Enya - Pilgrim.