YORK River Art Market will return for its eighth summer next month, sited once more along Dame Judi Dench Walk by Lendal Bridge.
“This city-centre riverside location lends itself to the open-air events of our award-winning market,” says founder and director Charlotte Dawson. “It has often been compared to the Left Bank in Paris.”
Each of the three weekends – August 5 and 6, August 12 and 13 and August 19 and 20 – will host a different variety of more than 30 independent artists and makers from all over Yorkshire and beyond from 10am to 5.30pm.
“Each event has something new to see, and there is always something to suit all budgets,” says Charlotte.
Among the artists and makers taking part will be illustrator and Bull bassist Kai West, noted for his gig posters; ceramicist Jill Ford, new for 2023; printmaker Izzy Williamson, also new for 2023, and Cuban painter Leo Moray, who made his York Open Studios debut this year.
Look out too for York jewellery maker and York Open Studios regular Joanna Wakefield and Last Maps, Thomas Moore and Angel Jones’s small design studio, dedicated to producing work that celebrates adventure and the natural world. They designed this summer’s York River Art Market (YRAM) poster, by the way.
YRAM’s chosen charities this summer are York Rescue Boat, the city’s independent lifeboat and search and rescue team, and Henshaws, which supports people living with sight loss and a range of other disabilities to achieve their ambitions and go beyond their expectations. The charities will be present at YRAM to raise funds and awareness of their work.
YORK Open
Studios 2020, the chance to meet 144 artists at 100 locations over two April
weekends, has been cancelled in the wake of the Covid-19 pandemic.
However,
with doors sadly shut for the April 17 to 19 and April 25 to 26 event,
CharlesHutchPress wants to champion 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.
Each day,
in brochure order, five artists who now miss out on the exposure of Open
Studios will be 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.
Addresses will not be included at this time.
Meanwhile, York Open Studios artists are finding their own way to respond to the shutdown by filling windows with their work instead. Look for #openwindowsyork2020 to locate them. “If you see one in your area while taking your daily exercise, take a picture and let us know,” they urge.
Jill Ford, ceramics
JILL began working as a potter in 2002, converting her garage into
a studio and establishing her company Jill Ford Ceramics.
Her contemporary white porcelain encompasses innovative
textural wall pieces, vases and bowls thrown on the wheel and a
range of candlesticks, her work marked by richly
textured decoration inspired by mountains and coastal rock formations.
Jill’s ceramics mirror the seasons, both in the processes she
uses and the changing nature of her landscapes, with winter’s extreme temperatures
making for a particularly impactful time of year.
A year spent trekking and sketching in the Scottish Highlands has provided
inspiration for a range of Mountain Edge pots that gives a sense of exposure
and drama.
Jill, who is a member of the Northern Potters Association and East Riding
Artists, exhibits widely in galleries and shops around Britain and abroad,
including New York, and she shows work at ceramics and craft fairs too. She also delivers masterclasses to
potters’ groups and teaches ceramics in workshop sessions. Find out more at
jillford.com.
Danny Knight, photography
AFTER participating in York Open Studios in 2017 with works from Berlin, documentary-style photographer Danny was all set to feature his street photography collated from New York and his home city of York in the 2020 event.
“Old York/New York is a series of still images documenting the mundane events of the people who walk the streets of these two famous cities, while contrasting their similarities/differences.”
His work seeks to capture “the everyday moments in these two amazing cities that are quite often missed due to the pace of life we live”.
As well as being a photographer, Danny
works for the creative film production company Hewitt & Walker and is a city
leader for Sofar Sounds York, the monthly venture that “reimagines live events
through curated secret performances in intimate York settings”. For more info,
seek out info@dannyknightphotography.co.uk.
Carrie Lyall, printmaking
CARRIE is a self-taught printmaker, based in Stamford Bridge, from
where she runs her Rose & Hen business.
Her linocut prints, illustrations
and handmade books are inspired by nature. Using botanical themes, she creates
delicate silhouettes and patterns in contrasting colours, employing oil-based
inks.
“I connect with nature while out walking, taking photographs or
collecting subject matter, to be sketched and transformed into design ideas at
home,” she says.
“My favourite part of the process is cutting the designs, and I
often get completely immersed in creating marks and lines.”
Carrie is a member of York Printmakers and a volunteer team
leader for Etsy Team York. 2020 would have been her first year as a York
Open Studios artist. Check her out at roseandhen.etsy.com
Alison Spaven, textiles
ALISON’S passion for needle
felting started six years ago during a chance encounter with the craft.
“I’ve been painting and drawing
for a lifetime, and even flirted briefly with ceramics, before a day out with
friends to a felting workshop on a canal barge changed my creative drive
forever,” she recalls.
“I was inspired to create and work with wet and needle felted wool by some great tuition from friends and professional tutors. Needle felting, in particular, rapidly became an obsession and the husband indoors insisted that new homes had to be found for things, as falling over yet another hare is not his favourite pastime!”
Alison’s experience with
sculpting in clay gave her the initial skills to work in 3D, before developing
her own textural technique when painting with wool. Created with
rare breed wool, using a single felting needle, Alison’s pictures consequently
have a sculptural quality, a deliberate carry-over from her initial 3D work.
Alison, who trades as The Crafty
Wytch from her Wytchwood Gallery and Studio, is a familiar face around Malton and
beyond from her work as a stalwart of The Press and Gazette and Herald advertising
team. Head to thecraftywytch.co.uk to discover more.
Kevin McNulty, printmaking
KEVIN describes himself as a compulsive printmaker, who explores
themes such as identity and the human condition in his bold limited-edition
printed collages, wherein he combines photography, arbitrary images, texture
and abstract pattern.
“Experimenting with process and technique, I interweave
modernity with the absurd to build complex and captivating designs,” he says. “I
find inspiration in the everyday. I build layers for my prints using anything I
can lay my hands on, including found items.” Even mobile phone parts and
discarded teabags.
Kevin’s
working practice is underpinned by a desire to make “pure prints by pulling each
image by hand and embracing the fortuitous accidents that evolve each design as
it transitions from laptop to ink and paper”.
Those prints were to have featured for the first time in this month’s now cancelled York Open Studios. Find his work at kevinmcnultyprints.com.
TOMORROW: Gail Fox; Jane Atkin; Amy Stubbs; Emily Stubbs and Elliot Harrison.