PICA Studios artists loading up to move to Walmgate, York
PICA Studios are on the move to Walmgate after nine years in Jackson House at Grape Lane, York, opening in time for York Open Studios.
Based in an historic Georgian building at Unit 4, Enterprise Complex, Walmgate, the new studios will offer painting, printmaking and life drawing, as well as re-housing every PICA artist.
Ceramicist and PICA founding member Emily Stubbs says: “We’ve been searching for nearly a year and it’s been a challenge, but we’ve managed to take all of our artists with us and to offer them better spaces, as well as the opportunity to teach in a lovely workshop room.”
PICA Studios artists Sarah Jackson, left, Emily Stubbs and Lesley Birch carrying the last items out of the Grape Lane studio
Goodbye to the artists’ keys for the Grape Lane studio
Painter and fellow founding member Lesley Birch says: “The rent at Grape Lane was going up and up and it was becoming increasingly difficult to manage. We were having to fund-raise to keep us going and we felt overcrowded too.
“We put out a call on Instagram, saying we hoped to expand, and SPACE, a community-led co-working space located in Walmgate, contacted Emily. They were really helpful in giving us advice and leading us to our new property.“
PICA Studios are run by a committee of six – Lu Mason, Mark Hearld, Lesley Birch, Evie Leach, Ric Liptrot and Emily Stubbs. Leach, Liptrot and Stubbs will be seen, but not Hearld, surprisingly, at York Open Studios on April 18, 19, 25 and 26, when PICA artists Lesley Shaw, Katrina Mansfield and Sarah Jackson will be participating too from 10am to 5pm each day.
Out with the old: Artist Ric Liptrot turns his hands to cleaning windows as part of the clear-out at Grape Lane
In with the new: The workshop space at PICA Studios’ studio in Walmgate
YORK Open
Studios 2020, the chance to meet 144 artists at 100 locations over two April
weekends, should have started with a preview this evening, but the annual event
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.
More Alike Than Different, by Lu Mason
Lu Mason, multi-media
IN her latest work, Lu is looking at how we connect as human
beings, using the theme that we are all cut from the same cloth.
“My installation consists of one long series of paper figures,
all connected to each other, all cut out from the same roll of paper: More
Alike Than Different,” she says.
Lu has had an unusual
journey to where she is now as an artist. She worked for many years as an
occupational therapist, but she always painted patterns for her own enjoyment
and had a small business making rag rugs.
Lu Mason: Unusual journey
Fifteen years ago, she
started making cut-paper mobiles, since when she has enjoyed putting her work in public places in
the form of installations, as well as creating mobiles using Perspex shapes
over the past year.
“I make site-specific work, in collaboration with
clients,” she says. “I’m interested in doing installations, residencies and workshops
and I’m now producing a range of brooches made out of Perspex too.”
Lu was one of the 2020
York Open Studios multimedia bursary recipients in a
scheme set up to enable artists to create experiences such as digital works,
installations, films or performances for the annual event. Take a look at
madebylumason.weebly.com.
Andre, by Nick Kobyluch
Nick Kobyluch, drawing
NICK’S pen and ink drawings explore line, form and colour
through both landscape and portraiture work, most of his final pieces
originating from drawings initially done in his sketchbooks.
Born in Bradford, he moved to London to work as a freelance
illustrator for design, editorial and advertising clients, from the Observer
and the National Lottery to Barclays
Bank and Oxford University Press, after completing his BA in graphic design at
Hull College of Art in the 1980s.
Over the years, he has moved away from commercially commissioned work to pursue his own interests in drawing, motivated by a desire to experiment and evolve as a line artist, favouring the pen, “the most unforgiving of mediums”, over pencil and charcoal.
Nick Kobyluch: Motivated by a desire to experiment
The urban environment inspires Nick. “I love cities and the way
they represent in complex physical form the many ways we interact as
individuals and as a society,” he says. “It’s all there in the odd
juxtapositions, hidden corners and strange compromises.”
He names Frans Masereel, George Grosz, Edward Bawden, Eric
Ravillious, Richard Diebenkorn and David Gentleman as artists he “comes back to
time and again”. “All share a mastery of line and form,” he says.
This would have been his first year as a York Open Studios exhibitor: the latest affirmation of his desire to “keep moving forward” as an artist. Contact him via nickkobyluch2@gmail.com.
Hole Of Horcum, by Michelle Hughes
Michelle Hughes, printmaking
MICHELLE is a printmaker
and graphic designer, creating linocut prints inspired by nature and the great
British countryside.
“I love exploring the
countryside by bike or on foot, camera in hand, capturing ideas for my next
prints,” she says.
Once back in her garden
studio, Michelle makes simple but stylised silhouettes based on her
photographs, then cuts these shapes into lino. She hand-prints with an etching
press, using oil-based inks to create tonal blocks of colour.
Michelle Hughes: Artist and workshop tutor
For 25 years, Michelle
designed homeware and fashion ranges for large corporate companies such as
Disney, George Home at Asda, Arcadia and Shared Earth. In June 2016, she took
the leap of faith to set up her own business, initially in graphic design, then
printmaking, bringing together her love of craft, photography, colour, nature
and exploring.
“I’ve always loved working with my hands and making things,” says Michelle, who also holds workshops in her Holgate studio. “I like the spontaneity of making marks with the tools, the quality of line and the graphic style of the final print. It enables me to distil the landscape down into simple lines.”
Michelle has designed a series of a dozen linocuts, A Landscape Speaks, for the National Trust property Sutton Hoo in Suffolk. Learn more at michellehughesdesign.com/.
Oil on canvas by Lucy McElroy
Lucy McElroy, painting
AFTER 15 years as an art teacher, Lucy balances her time between
the “joys and challenges of being a mother, teaching part-time at All Saints RC
School and spending time developing her own practice in her home studio”.
“Traditional techniques enable me to create a true likeness of
my subjects, while exploring ways to capture beautiful and emotive moments on
paper and canvas,” says Lucy, who studied fine art at the University of Leeds.
Lucy McElroy: Capturing beautiful and emotive moments
She works in pencil, pastel, charcoal and oil on canvas and
finds time for a few portrait commissions each year, undertaken in between her
own creative projects.
This would have been the first year that Lucy had participated
in York Open Studios. View her work at lucymcelroy.co.uk.
The Blue Bell, in Fossgate, York, one of 30 new works Ian Cameron made for York Open Studios 2020
Ian Cameron, painting
IAN’S artwork is created
using crayon wax rubbings, vibrant Brusho-coloured washes and Indian ink
drawings, embellished with collage and watercolours to create a multi-layered
effect.
“I love to draw in my
sketchbook,” he says. “I usually draw with a black gel pen and often use
watercolours. Sometimes I rub over embossed surfaces such as manhole covers
with a wax crayon and then paint over with a colour wash to create a resist
effect. The final picture has a great deal of depth brought about by the
different layers or levels.”
Ian Cameron in the wooden studio he built in his garden
Ian developed an interest in art “quite late in life”, at 50 to be precise, in 2003 when he attended GCSE Art evening classes. A-level studies and an art and design foundation course at York College ensued.
2020 was to have been his seventh year in York Open Studios, exhibiting 30 new works created in the wooden studio he built in his back garden. For more info, visit ifcameron.tumblr.com.
TOMORROW: Fran Brammar; Geraldine Bilbrough; Ruth Claydon; Jacqueline James and Jean Drysdale.