AFTER ceramics, jewellery, paintings, collage, films and textiles, now the artists at PICA Studios are branching out into one-off postcards for one weekend only.
More than 20 creatives share the workshop space, in Grape Lane, York, that is rarely open to the public, except for the annual York Open Studios.
However, on Saturday and Sunday, from 10am to 4pm, PICA Studios will play host to a special Postcard Show and Sale of original artworks made by studio members.
PICA artist Lesley Birch says: “I successfully launched a postcard project during lockdown and so we’ve decided to follow that format this weekend. A postcard is small, affordable and original, and as we only have a small space to display them, we felt this would work well for our first collaborative show in the foyer outside of York Open Studios.”
Each postcard will sell for £25 to raise funds towards improving the studio space and to create a gallery in the foyer at PICA, where the studios opened in February 2017.
For jewellery designer Evie Leach, the postcard project has helped push her creative practice. “It’s taken me in other directions to make a series of artworks on paper inspired by my jewellery designs. This is what a studio is all about: inspiring and innovating members to go beyond their comfort zone.”
Fellow founding member Emily Stubbs says: “This is the first time we have collaborated with so many of us producing work just for the studio. It’s a bonding experience and we’re looking forward to it very much.”
Joining Lesley, Evie and Emily in the postcard show will be Katrina Mansfield, Ealish Wilson, Sarah Jackson, Ric Liptrot, Jo Edmonds, Lisa Power, Amy Stubbs, Mick Leach, Rae George, Lesley Shaw Lu Mason and Kitty Pennybacker, with more still to come.
The £25 postcards can bought in person at PICA or online through Instagram, where “you can spot the one you want” at instagram@picastudios.
One final thought: in an age when a postcard dropping through the door is increasingly rare, how does such an occurrence make Lesley Birch feel? “Receiving a postcard is absolutely lovely,” she says. “All the smudges from the postmark, the date and the handwriting make it a piece of history. It’s the good old days of snail mail.”
Now comes a repurposing of a postcard with the stamp of art to each one.
INTO The Blue, an exhibition of paintings, sculptures and prints by York’s Westside Artists, is running at Pyramid Gallery, Stonegate, York, until March 13.
“This is an eclectic show of work by this collaboration of artists from the West of York,” says gallery owner Terry Brett. “In Pyramid’s 40th year in York, we’re keen to celebrate the wealth of talent here in our city, starting the year off with this beautiful show.”
“Each artist has created new work to portray their personal interpretation and concept of the exhibition title, Into The Blue. With so many diverse disciplines, the exhibition really is a sight to behold.”
Taking part are Adele Karmazyn (digital photomontage); Carolyn Coles (painting); Donna Marie Taylor (mixed media); Ealish Wilson (mixed media and sculpture); Fran Brammer (textiles) and Jane Dignum (printmaking).
So to are Jill Tattersall (mixed-media collage); Kate Akrill (ceramics); Lucie Wake (painting); Mark Druery (printmaking); Richard Rhodes (ceramics); Sharon McDonagh (mixed media) and Simon Palmour (photography).
Pyramid Gallery is open from 10am to 5pm, Monday to Saturday, but closed on Sundays at present.
AFTER the Covid-enforced fallow year of 2020, York Open Studios returns this weekend for its 20th parade of the city’s creative talent.
Preceded by tomorrow’s preview evening, from 6pm to 9pm, the event will see 145 artists and makers open 95 studios, homes and workplaces on July 10 and 11 and July 17 and 18, from 10am to 5pm.
Among them will be 43 debutants, prompting CharlesHutchPress to highlight six newcomers a day over the week ahead, in map guide order, as York prepares for a showcase of ceramic, collage, digital art, illustration, jewellery, mixed media, painting, print, photography, furniture, sculpture and textiles skills this month.
Fiona Lane, painting, 8 Claremont Terrace, Gillygate, York
SELF-TAUGHT artist Fiona paints seascapes and landscapes, mostly on canvas.
“Most of my work is seas and trees,” she says. “I’m inspired by the beautiful and diverse Yorkshire countryside, which is so accessible to me.”
Favouring mixed media, she loves working with colour and light, creating pictures that she describes as “almost 3D” and “soothingly immersive”.
“I’m always developing my style,” she says. “I stretch and smooth paint which I apply with palette knives and brushes, adding details with other media. I prefer to paint outside, whether in the woods, by the sea or in my flower-filled York courtyard.”
Fiona will be taking part in tomorrow’s preview evening.
Ealish Wilson, textiles, PICA Studios, Grape Lane, York, second weekend only
TEXTILE designer Ealish has lived and worked in many places around the world, spending 15 years in the USA before making her way to York and joining the PICA Studios arts hub.
However, Japan was where her work was transformed. “Japan taught me that art exploration and practice is a lifelong journey from which we constantly learn,” she says.
“Experience informs the creative process over time, enhancing and developing an artist’s expression. It’s about seeing creativity in the everyday.”
She brings this philosophy to making her sculptural textiles, using a variety of substrates and techniques, including print, drawing, photography and stitching.
“I repeat this process to create multiple iterations and layers to my designs,” she says. “Much of my process investigates pattern and its transformation through surface manipulation. I use many traditional hand methods of stitching, such as pleating and smocking, to physically alter my original designs.
“Frequently my work starts in the digital realm: whether photographing an object or one of my own paintings, it serves as inspiration for new work. Many of my images are everyday scenes or objects of purpose that appear mundane but feature a beautiful shape or colour that’s a perfect jumping-off point to create a textile.”
Ealish, who sees the craft of making as “my form or meditation”, is also exhibiting in the Westside Artists’ Momentum Summer Show at Blossom Street Gallery, York, until September 26.
Amy Butcher, textiles, 1 Carlton Cottages, Wigginton, York
FOR Amy’s applique-based hand embroidery, a collage of intricately cut fabric shapes creates a foundation. This is then stitched and embellished to make illustrative pieces rooted in nature and animals.
“My love of art and textiles started at school and has been a passion ever since,” says the largely self-taught Amy.
“The support and inspiration from an embroidery class enabled me to continue to develop my work and confidence, and in 2014 I was fortunate to get the opportunity to work with the greetings card company Bug Art.”
She now works on developing her own range of greetings cards, prints, cushion panels, coasters and embroidery stitch kits, printed from her original textile art for Beaks & Bobbins.
Tomorrow’s preview evening will be the first chance to catch her York Open Studios debut.
Joanna Lisowiec, illustration, 40 Hempland Drive, York
JOANNA’S prints and illustrations look to nature, classical art and mythology for inspiration, as she focuses on birds and animals in her bold, clean and distinctive linocuts, drawings and paintings.
“My aspiration is to capture truths that make one ponder the beauty of life,” she says.
Originally from Poland and brought up in Colorado, USA, and Switzerland, she first came to Britain to study illustration at Edinburgh College of Art, falling in love with the wild Highlands and later with the “quaint English countryside” when she moved to Yorkshire for her MA in advertising and design from the University of Leeds.
“As an illustrator and printmaker, I’m known for a bold style of illustration with lots of texture, usually focused on the beauty of nature and narratives inspired by folklore. I love reading books and would love to illustrate a classic novel one day,” says Joanna, whose surname is pronounced “Lease-oviets”.
“When I’m not working, I can be found with my nose in a book, taking long walks in the countryside, drinking tea and listening to the rain.”
She will be opening her studio for tomorrow’s preview.
Dee Thwaite, painting, 10 Bedale Avenue, York, second weekend only
DEE uses acrylic paint, inks, graphite, oil pastels and charcoal in her sea and landscape paintings and drawings, marked by stormy skies, movement in the clouds, shifting light and the changing seasons.
Mainly self-taught, this contemporary abstract artist expresses her love of the North Yorkshire coastline on canvas, board and paper in works that combine both a physical and emotional response when she paints, predominantly with her hands, as opposed to brushes.
“Painting has become such a healing and therapeutic part of my life and one of my greatest passions,” says Dee.
Tabitha Grove, painting, Arnup Studios, Panman Lane, Holtby, York
TABITHA uses bold colour, contrast, ink, watercolour, gold leaf and collage on handmade paper, fabric and even garments to explore perceptions of the body and how they can be challenged and celebrated.
Her career as an actor and costume designer for film and theatre has informed Tabitha’s passion for storytelling and her fascination with the way our bodies interact with our environments.
Tabitha’s career portfolio career extends to co-managing Look Gallery, in Helmsley, being an art therapist in hospitals and now working in piano restoration, where she learns rare skills that influence her art.
Each experience has informed Tabitha’s style, she says, leading to her “bringing diverse technique to a new perspective”.
TOMORROW: Reg Walker, Michelle Galloway, Judith Glover and Here Be Monsteras Ceramics (Kayti Peschke).
YORK art group Westside Artists open their Momentum Summer Show at Blossom Street Gallery, by Micklegate Bar, York, on Friday (25/6/2021).
This coterie of artists from the Holgate and West area of York will be showing a varied range of disciplines, from painting and photomontage to textiles, ceramics and mixed-media art.
Among the participating artists, and a key organiser too, is Sharon McDonagh, from Holgate, who had her mixed-media work long-listed for this year’s Aesthetica Art Prize, whose accompanying exhibition is running at York Art Gallery. One of Sharon’s submitted pieces, Autonomous, is now featuring in the Momentum show.
Joining her at Blossom Street Gallery are: Adele Karmazyn, digital photomontages; Carolyn Coles, seascapes; Donna Maria Taylor, mixed media; Ealish Wilson, textiles; Fran Brammer, textiles; Jane Dignum, prints; Jill Tattersall, mixed media; Kate Akrill, Skullduggery ceramics, and Lucy McElroy, portraits.
So too are: Lucie Wake, from Facet Painting, paintings and portraits; Marc Godfrey-Murphy, alias MarcoLooks, illustrations; Mark Druery, pen and watercolour sketches; Michelle Hughes, prints; Rich Rhodes, ceramics; Robin Grover-Jaques, painting and metalwork, and Simon Palmour, photographs.
The Momentum Summer Show will be gaining momentum until September 26. Gallery opening hours are: Friday, Saturday, Sunday and Monday, 10am to 4pm; Covid-compliant measures are in place.
VILLAGE Gallery, in Colliergate, York, will reopen on Wednesday (2/12/2020), when Lockdown 2 ends, to present the first collective exhibition for York’s Westside Artists.
Running until January 23 2021, Immersed will showcase the work of Adele Karmazyn; Carolyn Coles; Donna Maria Taylor; Ealish Wilson; Fran Brammer; Jane Dignum; Jill Tattersall; Lucy McElroy; Marc Godfrey-Murphy; Richard Rhodes; Robin Grover-Jacques and Sharon McDonagh.
“2020 has been an extremely hard year everyone, not least of all for artists, with many exhibitions and events being cancelled,” says gallery owner and curator Simon Main.
“So, Village Gallery is delighted to announce that its next post-lockdown exhibition will feature a group of local artists in their first collective showing.
“The ‘Westside Artists’ is a small group of artists based around Holgate in York, who work in varied disciplines, such as painting, photomontage, print making, collage textile art, pottery and mixed media, and in varied subjects, from landscapes and seascapes to portraiture and abstract.”
Village Gallery’s opening hours are 10am to 4pm, Tuesday to Saturday, with Covid-secure social distancing measures in place.
“This exhibition is opening in time for everyone to find a truly unique Christmas gift while supporting local artists,” says Simon.
“Aside from its regularly changing art exhibitions, Village Gallery is York’s official stockist of Lalique glass and crystal, and additionally sells art, jewellery, ceramics, glass and sculpture, much of it the work of local artists.”
TODAY and
tomorrow should have been spent visiting other people’s homes, not staying home,
for weekend two of York Open Studios 2020.
On Monday, art attention will turn to episode one of Grayson’s Art Club, a six-part Channel 4 series wherein artist Grayson Perry promises to battle the boredom of Coronavirus lockdown by taking viewers on a journey of art discovery.
From his London workshop, Perry will encourage the British public to create their own art while in isolation, built around six themed shows that will climax with an exhibition of viewers’ art.
Been there,
done that, will continue to do that, might well be the resourceful attitude of
the 144 artists and makers at 100 York locations after the Covid-19 pandemic
strictures turned York Open Studios into York Shut Studios.
Over the past
four weeks, CharlesHutchPress has determinedly championed the creativity of
York’s artists and makers, who would have been showcasing their ceramics,
collage, digital, illustration, jewellery, mixed media, painting, print,
photography, sculpture and textiles skills this month.
Each day,
in brochure order, five artists who now miss out on the exposure of Open
Studios have been given a pen portrait on these pages, because so much art and
craft will have been created for the event and still needs a new home. The last
ten are being profiled over this weekend, and again home and studio addresses
will not be included at this lockdown time.
York Open
Studios artists have responded to the shutdown by filling their windows for
#openwindowsyork2020, while plenty are showcasing their work over the York Open
Studios period online via their websites.
This weekend,
you can visit yorkopenstudios.co.uk to take your own virtual tour. The
YOS website says: “We’re doing a Virtual
Open Studios, with artists posting based on a daily theme for the ten days
spanning our two weekends.They’ll be showing you their studios and workshops,
favourite processes, answering your questions, and of course lots of pictures
of their new work.
“Search for
#YorkOpenStudios anywhere on social media or follow your favourite artists to
see more.”
First, however, here are five more artists and makers for you to discover. The final five will follow tomorrow.
Mim Robson, printmaking
MIM is a multi-disciplinary
artist now working primarily in printmaking and textiles, with a background in
community arts engagement and land art.
“My current project uses mono-printing techniques,
natural dyes, eco-printing and patchwork to explore themes of memory,
transition, loss, family, identity and womanhood,” she says.
She also is working on a set of illustrated zines, small books and tiny stories, their subjects varied but “generally an expression of an idea, thought or small observations of people or notable moments”.
Having grown up in the Yorkshire countryside, the natural world inspires her diverse artistic portfolio, whether land art and ephemeral artworks using materials from nature, such as delicate yet vibrant floral mandalas, or her short-lived beach artworks.
Inspired by sand artist Andres Amador, Mim began making large-scale sand art on the Yorkshire coast in 2016. “Using rakes to make patterns in the sand, these usually take at least three hours to complete…and a few miles of walking,” she says. “I use photography to capture these creations at their peak; they last for the rest of the day until the tide washes them away.”
Since completing a national diploma in 3D design
craft at York College, she has taken assorted craft courses, learning wood
carving, stained glass work and willow weaving; worked and studied in community
and youth work and undertaken a degree in Creative Expressive Therapies from
the University of Derby.
“This now underpins all of the creative events, Crafty
Socials and art, craft and creative expressive workshops I run, as well as my
art-making,” says Mim, whose making extends to darkroom and alternative
photography techniques, stop-motion videos and henna tattooing at festivals and
events. She even finds time for an environmental beach-clean project.
Head to mimrobson.com for more info on this PICA Studios artist.
Lesley Shaw, printmaking
ARTIST and printmaker
Lesley works primarily in charcoal, dip pen and ink and traditional printmaking
techniques, such as linocut, mono and drypoint.
“Life drawings form the basis of all my work,” she says. “I work quickly and instinctively to capture the beauty and simplicity of the form, looking at the shape and line the body takes.”
Whether figurative or
animals, her illustrative line drawings are bold, simplistic and striking,
inspired by such artists as Egon Schiele, Toulouse
Lautrec and Sybil Andrews of the Grosvenor School artists, who captured the
spirit of 1930s’ Britain with iconic vibrant linocuts.
Lesley, who has a degree in illustration,
lived and worked in London for more than 20 years before settling in York. She
has sold work at the Mall Galleries, in London, and to the BBC and takes part
in both York Open Studios and Art& in York, where she is a member of York
Printmakers and the York Art Workers Association.
She works from PICA Studios, set within an 18th century printworks, now home to the workshops of around 25 artists and makers. Discover more at lesleyshaw.me.
Elena Skoreyko Wagner, collage
CANADIAN illustrator
Elena makes bright, intimate, intricate, hand-cut paper collages.
“Using recycled bits of
paper imbued with their own histories, I assemble poetic images to illustrate
personal stories and emotional experiences,” she says.
Elena completed a BFA in studio art from York University in
Toronto, Canada, in 2006, then spent a decade winding her way through odd jobs,
a masters in occupational therapy, a couple of overseas moves and motherhood times
two en route to illustration.
“I found my way to illustration when some former professors
asked me to illustrate a paediatric assessment and suddenly everything made
sense,” she says.
“I now work as a freelance and make zines, as well as the colourful hand-cut collages pieced together from collected paper snippets. My work is often autobiographical, depicting women and children to touch gently on social issues, find magic and uncover meaning in the mundane.”
Elena
lives in York with her economist husband and two children. “I can be found most
days nestled in a nook, manifesting a rainbow tornado of paper
snippets, or making equally impressive messes with my two
small protégés,” she says.
Now working from PICA Studios, she would have been making her York Open Studios debut. Take a look at elenastreehouse.com.
Ealish Wilson, textiles
EALISH has lived and worked in many places around the world,
spending the past 15 years in the USA before making her way to York and now joining
the PICA Studios arts hub.
However, Japan was where her work was transformed. “Japan taught
me that art exploration and practice is a lifelong journey from which we
constantly learn,” she says.
“Experience informs the creative process over time, enhancing
and developing an artist’s expression. It’s about seeing creativity in the
everyday.”
She brings this philosophy to making her
sculptural textiles, using a variety of substrates and techniques, including
print, drawing, photography and stitching.
“I repeat this process to create multiple
iterations and layers to my designs,” she says. “Much of my process investigates
pattern and its transformation through surface manipulation. I use many
traditional hand methods of stitching such as pleating and smocking to
physically alter my original designs.
“Frequently my work starts in the digital realm:
whether photographing an object or one of my own paintings, it serves as
inspiration for new work. Many of my images are everyday scenes or objects of
purpose that appear mundane but feature a beautiful shape or colour that’s a
perfect jumping-off point to create a textile.”
2020 would have been the first year in York Open Studios for a textile designer who sees the craft of making as “my form or meditation”. Visit ealishwilson.com to see her work.
Greg Winrow, printmaking
GREG splits his time 50/50
producing silk screen and linocut prints covering a variety of topics in his
York studio, where he uses a Hawthorne press for his lino work.
Earlier, he studied art
and design in York and photography and design in Harrogate before acquiring his
interest in printing techniques.
Now a keen member of the
York Printmakers, taking part in their annual fair, he has exhibited too at the
York River Art Market and York galleries. 2020 was to have been his second year
in York Open Studios.
And finally, tomorrow: Marcus Callum; Robert Burton; Jo Walton; Emma Walsh and Northern Electric (Katie Greenbrown).