Making Faces: Educational Project Residency Exhibition
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Archive
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Venue:
Chapel Arts Studios -
From:
July 20, 2023 -
To:
August 04, 2023 -
Location:
South West England
Next year, 2024, will be the final year of the dig at the Ness of Brodgar, when the archaeologists move on to post excavation work. While my residency on site will end, I expect to have my own post project […]
It’s About Art I needed a reminder really, as a way of redirecting and reordering my thinking. My friend and fellow blogger Stuart Mayes has the sign “It’s About Art” written large and hung in his studio. This is a […]
This week has been busy for the bees, they have been working their merry way around my brain, culminating in a day on the sofa where they could sleep and recover, stare mindlessly at moving images on a screen. But […]
The River Crane flows into the Thames at Isleworth next to Richmond Lock. You have to walk along the Thames at low tide through squelchy mud and turn up into the mouth which forms a cascade of fast-flowing water […]
Much of making art for me is about trying things out. I tend to work in series of works where I am exploring particular ideas that have evolved from other art works I have created. Very often it may appear […]
A digital, aquatic meditation on the origins and existence of humanity and its potential future, shaped by evolving AI
Nicholas Ferguson’s unusual career trajectory
Feel I’ve reached a bit of a crisis point. The garden, which I love working in and being in, is really getting too much at my age. The photo of the inside of the compost bin struck me as quite […]
Ovewhelm When I feel tired or overwhelmed, too much to do, too much to think about, my executive functioning starts to fail, the bees in my brain start buzzing and I become unable to function or speak. This is a […]
I am a late discovered autistic artist. I am awaiting a formal diagnosis.
I have been reviewing my life through a new lens, an alternative perspective on my interpretation on my artistic life.
The subject of a new exhibition, Anna Lerner’s photographs and words turn the mundane into something fresh, says Anna Lamche