Wednesday, September 23, 2009
Waste Materials become Textile Art
A Folly at the NEC
'A Folly' at the NEC Recycling and Waste Management international exhibition, September 15-18. I was invited by 'Jarshire' who specialise in decentralising waste management, selling and renting baling units to institutions and small communities, thereby reducing transport of waste and providing a local income. The sculpture attracted a lot of people to the stand and both Jarshire and myself benefitted from the interest. QSP, a company offering health and safety training in the waste management sector, bought all the art I had brought to sell to display in their training centre.
The MOD have since requested I bring 'A Folly' to their recycling training course in Taunton. This is currently being considered as taking it to Birmingham required a lot of fuel, somewhat contradictory for a 'green' exhibit. I am suggesting that I create something on site from the course's own waste. This could still involve bottles and I could take smaller frames by train to assemble in situ.
East Cheshire Hospice, who host a profitable, annual Art Exhibition of local artists in Macclesfield Town Hall, have asked if I would like to exhibit a large sculpture of waste materials, suitable for sale, in October 2010.
Monday, July 6, 2009
Jodrell Bank Art Show 5.7.09
Friday, July 3, 2009
Recycled Fashion Workshops - Training Youth Workers 2009
To engage young people in the Global Citizenship iniative, St Helen's youth services have employed me to deliver training in Environmental Arts to youth workers which they can then use in their youth clubs. Creativity is an important skill to foster in young people in order to stimulate creative thinking and the environment is an issue that involves everyone regardless of gender, class, ability or race.
Recycled Fashion Workshops - Working With Youth Workers and Young People
Macclesfield College End of Year Art Show 2009
'Follicles' exhibited with 'A Folly' also represents an aspect of the modern human condition. It consists of almost 400 ceramic pinch pots laid out on a bed of sand. The natural rough texture of the clay is preserved with only the internal surface glazed in a variey of shades of blue and green, sometimes irridescent like the pearlised lining of mussel shells. Spread out on the floor the pots lie in waves of colour reminiscent of the surface of the sea. 'A Folly' and 'Follicles', although not directly connected within the modern human condition, have structural similarities; they are both formed from repetitive circular units arranged in waves of colour.
A Folly
Follicles
Thursday, July 2, 2009
Eco-Art Workshops 2008

Sub-Ocean 2009
Window 2009
Urban Fashion Created from Waste - 1
Urban Fashion from Waste - 2
Urban Fashion Created from Waste - 3
The Underwater Tent 2008

The 'Tent' fabric was plastic, made by fusing mostly translucent food packaging within sheets of clear plastic wrappings. A 'reef' was made from paper pulp (business envelopes). The 'Tent' contained plastic flotsam and jetsam salvaged from a Scottish beach, fishing boat ropes being stitched onto the inside. Viewers were invited to enter and experience the coloured light filtering through, the muffled sounds of the surroundings, the very distinctive smell (!) and then write their comments on the outside of the tent. The responses varied from 'wishing they were there on the beach' to horror at the state of our oceans.





