2020
Taylor Jack Smith on UCL Public Engagement blog
Interested in making your own animations? Try this activity by alumnus Taylor Jack Smith on the UCL Public Engagement blog.
Artist Support Pledge
Artist Support Pledge, an initiative on instagram by Matthew Burrow to support artist during the pandemic. Artists are invited to sell work for up to £200 and each time £1000 is reached, they pledge to buy another artist's work. #artistsupportpledge
Many artists' work can be seen online, including alumna Diane Chappalley's series of works 'Anxious Flowers'. See www.instagram.com/dianechappalley.
Dwelling is the Light - Timothy Taylor
Antonia Showering is showing in Dwelling is the Light, an online show at Timothy Taylor, 15 April – 15 May 2020. See the Timothy Taylor website.
Diane Chappalley in Conversation
Read the interview with Diane Chappalley, which is in place of the closing event for Behind Closed Doors at Informality Gallery.
Seedlings for Solace
Seedlings for Solace is dropping off seedlings at homes around the city in return for £5 donations to London domestic abuse charity Solace Women’s Aid. The project is being run by Hannah Morgan, a sculpture student at the Slade School of Fine Art, who started it when the Slade shut down. With the help of some friends and fellow students, she began growing and distributing from hubs in north and south London.
There is an article in Time Out.
David Leverett
We are sorry to hear of the passing of David Leverett (1938 - 2020). He taught a printmaking at the Slade for many years until his retirement.
Slade Archive Project - Phase II
Read Slade Archivist Dr Liz Bruchet's update on the Slade Archive Project - Phase II, on the Slade Archive Project Blog.
Pollock-Krasner Foundation Grant
Many congratulations to Katy Kirbach who is a recipient of a Pollock-Krasner Foundation Grant for 2020-21!
A Colour a Day
Follow Jo Volley's A Colour a Day project, a year-long project to celebrate one colour each day by recording a swatch of it, on The Pigment Timeline Blog: https://blogs.ucl.ac.uk/pigment-timeline.
The Bird Game
Marianna Simnett's The Bird Game (2019) can be viewed online until 24 April 2020. See Marianna Simnett's website: http://www.mariannasimnett.com/bird-game.html.
Isolation Interviews - Brooke Benington
Brooke Benington have published Isolation Interviews with alumni Anna Joy Reading , Jean-Philippe Dordolo and Olivia Bax . Read them on: https://www.brookebenington.com/isolation-interviews.
Dear World Project
Work by Rutie Borthwick & Rebecca James, Harley Kuyck-Cohen, Nicole Morris, Giulia Ricci and Julia Vogl can be seen online in Dear World Project, a cross-disciplinary public engagement collaboration that explores mental health, its diagnosis, and the use of labels often associated with feelings and emotions. See the Dear World Project website.
a-n Artist Bursaries 2020
Congratulations to Yva Jung who has been awarded an a-n Artist Bursary for 2020. The bursary will fund a residency in Felixstowe, which will culminate in a performance and video work exploring themes of journeys, borders and encounters. See the a-n website.
PHYLLIDA! - Film
PHYLLIDA! A film by Third Channel of Phyllida Barlow preparing for her 2019 ‘cul-de-sac’ exhibition at the Royal Academy can be seen online on YouTube.
Saffron - Thomson & Craighead
Thomson & Craighead's Saffron is free to watch for the next week on: https://vimeo.com/296629179
Saffron - Thomson & Craighead
Thomson & Craighead's Saffron is free to watch for the next week on: https://vimeo.com/296629179
Saffron - Thomson & Craighead
Thomson & Craighead's Saffron is free to watch for the next week on: https://vimeo.com/296629179
Inaugural World Pigment Day
Inaugural World Pigment Day, 22 March, dedicated by Jo Volley & Ruth Siddall, tune in for a live stream from 12 noon on Longplayer: https://longplayer.org/listen/
Blog: https://blogs.ucl.ac.uk/…/…/world-pigment-day-22-march-2020/
Colour and Poetry Day 2020
Today, 21st March, is International Colour Day & World Poetry Day. Unfortunately the symposium Colour & Poetry, scheduled for today has been cancelled. Associate Professor Jo Volley, would like to share with you this piece of text that fairly encapsulates the spirit of it for her.
Then the man in the blue suit reaches into his pocket and takes out a large sheet of paper, which he carefully unfolds and hands to me. It is covered with Picasso’s handwriting – less spasmodic, more studied than usual. At first sight, it resembles a poem. Twenty or so verses are assembled in a column, surrounded by broad white margins. Each verse is prolonged with a dash, occasionally a very long one. But it is not a poem; it is Picasso’s most recent order for colours… For once, all the anonymous heroes of Picasso’s palette trooped forth from the shadows, with Permanent White at their head. Each had distinguished himself in some great battle – the Blue period, the Rose Period, Cubism, ‘Guernica….. Each could say: ‘I too, I was there…” And Picasso, reviewing his old comrades-in-arms, gives to each of them a sweep of his pen, a long dash that seems a fraternal salute: ‘ Welcome Persian Red! Welcome Emerald Green! Cerulean Blue, Ivory Black, Cobalt Violet, clear and deep, welcome! Welcome!’
Brassai, Conversation avec PIcasso (1964)
Ellie Doney talks to 'rial talk on Soundcloud
Artist and PhD student Ellie Doney talks to Anna Ploszajski about sugar on 'rial talk available now on Soundcloud.