Friday, October 29, 2010

Non-We Are Open Exhibition....

Hi all, Just a bit off info about the new exhibition opening in Middlesbrough Tonight.... It's not by We Are Open, BUT We like to support Our Boro Art Scene.


Here not There

Running from:
29 October-02 December 2010

Upstairs above the Olde Young Tea House

84 Grange Road
Middlesbrough
Tees Valley
TS1 2LS

The exhibition will include works by Middlesbrough based artists Adam Clarke and Diane Welford alongside German born, Glasgow based artist, Michael Stumpf. The majority of works in the exhibition have never seen before in the UK and include four new commissions.

Set over three rooms, disused office space in Middlesbrough town centre, two striped of their previous office space attire to showcase Original Artwork, the third (The Lamp Room) will house a temporary library, writing desks and space to share. An entire wall has been dedicated to a new site specific process drawing by Adam Clarke, other wo a new series of furtive pen and ink drawings by Diane Welford and two new commissions by Michael Stumpf.

To accompany here not there a limited edition screen print and catalogue will be available at £40.00 and £2.00 respectively.

This exhibition was initiated by Adam Clarke as a positive response to the ever increasing gap between the artist and museum or commercial galleries. Here not There is an alternative space that offers flexibility and responsiveness to new artistic trends that institutions do not. Here not There strives to show that artist’s can and should look to be more intuitive at creating their own success. The established systems already in place do not always allow for this level of exposure. An essential part of this is The Lamp Room, a space for emerging communities to meet.

Exhibition preview event will take place 29 October at 6 - 9pm with the exhibition continuing until 02 December 2010. Anyone interested in doing it for them themselves and getting involved should join the here not there facebook page.


Tuesday, October 26, 2010

New Show @ The Gallery

Look At This! Its coming to our little Pop Up Gallery on Friday! Drop by if you're on Linthorpe Road (Middlesbrough)

http://www.design-event.co.uk/TimeandPlace.php

Here's the facebook event if you wish to attend the opening!

http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=115540495171734

Monday, October 18, 2010

Zine Launch At Writers Block!


Local Art Zine 'Making it look Accidental' is launching its first and second issues this week at Writers Block!


Making it look accidental is an underground look at Middlesbrough from the perspective of two, somewhat jaded, ex Art Students. Funny, sad, touching and confusing, it covers the joys of CCTV cameras, 'interesting' local art, Reviews and interviews, cartoons and articles written by the terminally mad that no one would ever dream of publishing.

Also launching its second issue at the event is 'Im Afraid of Everything' a zine comprised of funny, dark and twisted short stories by writer Michael Hann, illustrated by John Chadwick.

We promise you we'll be selling a selection of local zines by Teessides finest underground Artists/Writers/Poets, Short film screenings, booze, slightly sinister poetry and short story readings, ART NETWORKING (come and maybe meet the next person you'll collaborate with) some more booze (perhaps wine), music, some stand up comedy, a selection of lamps for you to look at and enjoy at your leisure and lovely art.

You're welcome to come along, Friday the 22nd of October 7pm til 9pm at Writers block HQ (95-97 Albert road)

Sunday, October 10, 2010

New Facebook Page for updates!

Psssttt......hey, guess what?

We now have a community page on Facebook, So we can keep you updated via status and pretty pictures and eveything else.


We-Are-Open

Be our friend. :)

Thursday, October 7, 2010

Sarah Bennett Opening At the Pop Up Gallery

Currently in the Pop Up Gallery is Sarah Bennett with an exhibition of romantic costume design.


*Kindly modelling the Corset with finger details and Crinoline for the photos is Steph.

The exhibition charts three years worth of work from her Degree and clearly shows Sarah’s progression from creating historically accurate costumes to a designer of fantastical corsets and vamp inspired dresses in red satin.


We Are Open: This is great, we love dresses, hats and corsets! What were your inspirations for all of these costumes?


Well firstly, I love the Goth style, not the skulls and cross bones, more classic gothic. I love black, red, this (Red Dress with Crinoline) is basically Victorian in style, the shape is correct, the opening is historically accurate, but I wanted to give it a fantasy theme, it has a bit of a vampire thing going on.

I’ve never made anything like it before and it was just something I was interested in.




I did a 5 week work experience at York theatre royal, they were working on Wind in the Willows, the costumes were very advanced…they showed me different ways of doing things. I learnt a lot of different techniques. Our first two years (during the Degree) were purely constructional, re-creating 18th century corsets etc.. No design work, the third year stuff is all my own ideas.

We Are Open: What about this chap over here? (Mannequin dressed remarkably like Henry the Eighth)

Oh him? He was inspired by an oil painting from Auckland castle at bishop Auckland, He’s Tudor, there’s a collection of paintings there which are quite biblical, they wanted us to create a costume from the painting. He’s made with hand painted fabric, with freehand gold thread details done on a sewing machine, all been finished to a really nice standard, nothing will happen to it, you can wash it wont fray or damage. These (mannequins in costumes) are all made from historical patterns, its pretty much spot on. The princess dress is from 1460…

We Are Open: The hats really pretty…

The hat is really uncomfortable, it’s supposed to be worn at an angle, and its really hard to keep on.

We Are Open: Do you like the Pre- Raphaelite style?

I do actually, I like the style, I like going to auctions and buying junk, a lot of the pictures are from my house, lots of fantasy, romantic Pre-Raphaelite prints and calendars.

We Are Open: So what are your hopes for your time in the Pop up Gallery?

I’d like to see what happens in the next year, I think this is just testing the publics reaction, and to see if there’s a market. I’d like to make someone something special, a gown or outfit or wedding dress, something for a themed event made especially for them, a bespoke service. It’s not dressmaking, its costume making! I’d love someone to come in and ask for a corset, something fun! I like to be free and break the tailoring rules a bit.

We Are Open: Great! Ok, sum your entire practice up in one sentence…..

I enjoy the fantasy and I love sparkly things!


Sarah Bennett Costume Design is now on at the Pop Up Gallery on Linthorpe Road, Middlesbrough. Pop in and see, weekdays from 10 til 5.

Tuesday, October 5, 2010

We Are Open Talks to Designer Michelle Parratt















Opening today at the Pop Up studio on 9 Newport road is Designer Michelle Parratt with her collection of unique jewellery, fine art canvases and beautiful handmade scarves (We particually liked the scarves, we had our eye on them all the way through the interview :D)

We Are Open: So, tell us a bit about your background in design?

Well, I’ve got a BA (Hons) in interior textiles and floor coverings, specialising in floor covering design. I came up North 11 years ago working for the commercial and residential markets, So far I’ve worked for two design companies, (Amtico ltd and Armstrong World Industries)

We Are Open: Impressed! What influences your Art work?

I love looking at architecture, because of my background in surface design, I love incorporating the

texture and patterns and building layers on the canvas. I work in mixed media, I

love to draw but also incorporate that abstract modern feel, I like using gold leaf, acrylics, I started doing jewellery, I make my own beads in polymer clay. I like to try and keep my jewellery and my art similar in both colour and theme, I try to be individual do something different to what everyone else is doing, some of it is a little bit wacky, unusual and quirky.

We Are Open: I like those scarves….

The scarves are handmade too! I customise them, adding buttons and beads, Arty scarves with a little twist!

We Are Open: How’s it been setting up a shop for the first time?

At home its difficult to see how (all the art) is going to come together in the shop, but the pinks and purples in the canvases have tied in well with the shop colour, I’m quite pleased with it.









We Are Open: The shop opens today, how do you think people are going to react to your work?

I’ve already had a lot of interest before we’ve even opened!. On Saturday we were in the back room and we heard a rattle someone was trying the door, we came out and there was a big massive crowd, it was scary! A lady spotted some of my stock in the window and placed an order for some handmade buttons. I think my art works well as gifts, that’s always what I intended it to be, I love the gift shops in Yarm, that’s what I love about the north east, all the quirky little towns and gift shops. It’s really affordable art! The canvases are a little bit more expensive, but it’s all original.

Visit The Pop Up Gallery Tuesday to Sunday 10am to 5pm @ 9 Newport Rd Middlesbrough

Saturday, October 2, 2010

Post residency interview ‘He is Dead and He is Going to Die.’

'I took to dribbling down my front' Oil on wood

“Playfully descriptive titles cannot hide or disguise the melancholy sense of loss, impermanence and dislocation haunting Sebastian Trend and Adam Hogarth’s work.”

Adam Hogarth and Sebastian Trend have been residents at the Pop Up Gallery since the 14 September, showing their multi-media exhibition of screen prints, photography and new video pieces

With the end of their residency at the Pop Up Gallery drawing near, we caught up with Adam Hogarth to talk about how their exhibition ‘He is Dead and He is Going to Die’ has been received in Middlesbrough.

We Are Open: So, for anyone who missed your exhibition, could you describe the influences and techniques behind the work?

Ok, so obviously the collection of work is called “He is dead and he is going to die”
and it references Roland Barthes' book about the essence of photography, the books called ‘Camera Lucida’ and is concerned with the ‘domestic photograph’

The process pretty much starts with photographs, family photographs, but it is the domestic photograph, so its not necessarily just family, there are pictures of pets as well, and ex girlfriends, this is the starting point for the two different sets of mine and Sebastian’s work.

Sebastian is concerned with the impermanence of photographs, he paints the photographs in with bleach then they’re re-interpreted into oil paintings. He’s really interested in having a dripping quality, that’s why he started using bleach in the first place, it give his work a viscous quality, he uses layers of gesso so it almost looks like wet paint.

(Adam) Mine is screen prints, my work is more interested with sentimentalities of imagery, some of my work has an obsessive streak, so I’ll do things like repetitive tasks, a lot of my work was animation, drawing similar cells over and over again, or the dart board where I’ve been throwing darts at an object loads of times, or even the screen printing process which is a repetitive process. My work titles reference dart slang, there’s ‘Three in a bed’ which is a darts term for 3 darts in one number, diaper dart, black dog and madhouse which is a double one finish.


'Three in a bed' Screen print

We Are Open: Tell us a bit about the new installations?

(Adam) My film is a photograph that’s been placed on a dartboard, and had three darts thrown at it, for every three darts that hit it, its been scanned into a computer, the process is repeated, a few thousand times, then its turned into a stop frame animation. Sebastian’s films are photographs that have had bleach pored onto them, the whole emotion of the photograph slowly taken off the face of the photograph, so by the end of the film, you’re just left with a blank photo.

We Are Open: So how have you found the residency? Has the space worked out well for your exhibition?

It’s a good space, well lit and in a good location! You get plenty of people walking in; it’s a good place to respond to as an artist. We’ve had this exhibition shown in Narc magazine, we’ve had a lot of punters coming in, commenting on how good it is,
The opening night was really nice as well!

We Are Open: Do you think having a Pop Up Gallery exhibition has helped you as an artists?

At the moment we’re just in a position where we’ve graduated and just starting to exhibit on our own and figuring out our own practice without external support. This kind of exhibition helped build on that really, build up to the next stage as an artists.


We Are Open: So what next now the exhibitions finished?

(The Art) is probably going to get taken back to the studios and used for my next pieces of work, so this dartboard piece with the picture in the middle (“Stadium”) that’s going to be used in a series of screen prints I’m going to produce, that’s called around the clock, it's going to be pictures of the royal family, with darts thrown at them. So, yeah, it’s just back to the studio for us to get on with making work!

Friday, October 1, 2010

We Are Open is now on Twitter!

Keep up to date with the latest creative adventures in Middlesbrough, follow us!

http://twitter.com/Hello_WeAreOpen