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 their 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 say.
Jill Tattersall, mixed media
THIS would have been
Jill’s second York Open Studios since she and her The Wolf At The Door art
enterprise moved north from Brighton.
Before turning to art,
she taught mediaeval French literature, leading to her fascination with the creation
myths: Norse, Eastern, European and Aboriginal. “I’m overawed
by early cave and rock art, made long ago with the simplest, most elemental
means. People looked up into the night sky, just as we do, and must have asked
the same questions about their place in the universe.”
Coasts and maps have
inspired her too. “I used to live as far from the sea as you can get on this
island but, like most of us, I was fascinated by coastlines and the sea,” says
Jill. ”I moved, and till recently lived on the south coast, where the
light is fabulous. I try to avoid trite seaside scenes and ration myself
to a few sea-related pieces a year.”
Town and country are key influences as well. “Subjects just crop up: loaves of bread, a stretch of pavement, a passing scene, reflections in a train window,” she says.
“Often I use my own hand-made cast or moulded cotton paper. I then apply washes of paints, inks, dyes and pure pigments to build up intense, glowing colours, combining gold and silver leaf with recycled elements. Labour intensive, highly individual. The paper has a seductive, unpredictable surface: I like the danger and uncertainty this brings. You can wreck a promising painting at any moment.”
Jill’s paintings are in
collections from Peru to Tasmania. Since moving north, she has exhibited at Kunsthuis
Gallery, The Dutch House, Crayke. Discover more at jilltattersall.co.uk.
Here Be Monsteras, Kayti Peschke, ceramics
KAYTI creates ceramics under the name of Here Be Monsteras from her garage studio in her garden in the Wolds east of York.
Her background is in photography and magazine design, but a year ago she started making pottery and now she has converted full time. “It has become an obsession,” she says.
Kayti makes wheel-thrown
ceramics with stoneware clays to create functional objects for the home. “A
collection of special pieces that bring a bit of extra joy to the ordinary,” as
she put it ahead of what would have been her York Open Studios debut.
She has been working on
new collections, including screen-printing ceramics with artist Jade Blood,
creating travel cups and a full dinnerware set, as
well as collaborating with restaurants and cafés that serve their menus on her
tableware.
“A cup of tea in a handmade cup really
does taste better, maybe because the process feels more special or you take
more time over it? I’m not sure why, but it’s true,” she says.
In her home studio, the cups of tea flow
and her puppies hang out in the sunshine as she listens to BBC 6Music or podcasts.
“I absolutely love being out there, creating, and hopefully this shows in the
things I make.”
As testament to that, her ceramics can be
found in York at Kiosk, Fossgate; Sketch By Origin, York Art Gallery; Walter
& May, Bishopthorpe Road; Lotte The Baker, SparkYork and Botanic York,
Walmgate. Take a look at herebemonsteras.com.
Joanna Wakefield, jewellery
DESIGNER jeweller Joanna’s
work combines her two passions, jewellery and textiles, with the third
essential element of her memories, observations and musings.
Joanna creates silver
and gold jewellery inspired by textiles, haberdashery and her vintage collections
and found objects.
Her work invokes a sense
of nostalgia. Alongside button-inspired pieces is a delicate interpretation of
handcrafted bobbins, thimbles, measures and needles.
Joanna first trained in design,
specialising in textiles, having grown up in a family environment of three
generations of needlewomen.
She travelled the world
as a Fair Trade designer, but after more than ten years she could no longer
ignore her desire to develop further creatively, leading her to re-train at
York School of Jewellery.
“A huge part of my jewellery designs is influenced by textiles and haberdashery, stemming from a fascination that grew from admiring my Grandma’s talents and fond memories of sorting through her button stash,” says Joanna, whose work was to have featured in the MADE shop at the Yorkshire Sculpture Park, near Wakefield, from March 7 to June 21.
Take a shine to Joanna’s
jewellery at joannawakefield.com.
Mark Hearld, collage, printmaking and ceramics
MARK studied illustration at Glasgow School of Art and an MA in natural history illustration at the Royal College of Art in 1999 before breaking into the artistic world with exhibitions at Godfrey & Watt in Harrogate and St Jude’s in Norfolk and in London’s arty Lower Sloane Street.
He specialises in bright collages, paintings,
limited-edition lithographic and lino-cut prints and now hand-painted ceramics,
his work often involving animals and birds, flora and fauna.
“I’ve always had an interest in natural
history and the British countryside,” says Mark, 46, who is strongly influenced
too by mid-20th century art and design. “I like the idea of the artist working
as a designer rather than making images to stick in a frame,” he reasons.
He undertook a set-design commission for the 2005 film Nanny McPhee and has done design projects for Tate Britain – cups, jugs, plates and scarves – and the Yorkshire Sculpture Park, near Wakefield, where he held a solo show, Birds and Beasts, from November 2012 to February 2013.
In 2012, Merrell Books published Mark
Hearld’s Work Book, the first book devoted to his work, and he has illustrated
such books as Nicola Davies’s A First Book Of Nature (2012) and Nature Poems:
Give Me Instead Of A Card (2019).
He curated the Lumber Room exhibition at
the re-opened York Art Gallery from August 2015 after its £8 million
development project, as well as a re-imagining of the British Folk Art
Collection at Compton Verney Art Gallery and Park. Contact him via
mark.a.hearld@googlemail.com.
Lauren Terry, Lauren’s Cows, painting
LAUREN has moved out of Bar Lane
Studios, not too far away, to a new studio workspace overlooking Micklegate Bar
and Blossom Street, where her focus remains on creating vibrant cow paintings,
prints and homeware.
Lauren’s Cows had began with a one-off painting of a cow that
she painted while working as a waitress and actress in the heart of London.
Growing
tired of city life, she craved a window to her country childhood. What better
view than a curious cow peering in on her kitchen table?
The
framer in North Yorkshire was so taken by the characterful cow that he offered
to host an exhibition if Lauren agreed to paint 20 more of her beautiful beasts.
The
response this debut show generated gave her the confidence to change career
tack by launching her art business and brand, and so Lauren’s Cows was born in
2012: a daughter-and-mother partnership where Lauren paints character-filled cattle in heavy-bodied acrylic paint and designing
items for the home in her York studio and Jude takes care of business from the
family home at Crackenthorpe, Appleby-in-Westmoreland.
“I love what I do,” says Lauren. “Cows have such a curious
nature and humorous personality that they just make me smile, and I take great
pleasure in passing that smile on through my vibrant paintings. It’s all about
capturing all the character while still remaining true to the breed.”
Lauren’s Cows can be found at laurenscows.com.
TOMORROW: Sharon McDonagh; Jane Dignum; Carolyn Coles; Adele Karmazyn and Nathan Combes