Tag: Amelia Murray

  • Movember exhibition at The Lauriston

    Titan of the 'tache: Lionel Richie (detail). By Ben Rix
    Titan of the ‘tache: Lionel Richie (detail). By Ben Rix

    This month people across the world will stop shaving and let their top lip whiskers grow wild to raise money and awareness for prostate cancer and men’s health.

    But for illustrator and painter Ben Rix, the jibes from friends about his inability to grow a “sponsor worthy moustache” were enough to make him put down the moustache comb and pick up a paint brush.

    His Movember Series is a collection of watercolour portraits of iconic musicians, all of whom are well known for their moustaches.

    Paintings of Freddy Mercury, Lionel Ritchie and Carlos Santana all feature in the exhibition at the Lauriston pub on Victoria Park Road, as well as a portrait of Frank Zappa who himself died of prostate cancer in 1993.

    Rix works in a variety of media, from large scale murals to animation, but he chose a different style for this series.

    He says: “I chose portraiture as I find it stirs great emotional reactions in people, which is very heart warming and gives huge purpose to my art.”

    He is also open to those who would like to commission their own bespoke watercolour ‘mo’-mento.

    “I am also taking requests for Movember portraits so if people want to commemorate their ‘tache or have a hairy lipped icon painted they can get in touch and cash from the sales will go towards the cause,” he says.

    Until 15 November at The Lauriston, 162 Victoria Park Rd

    benrix.co.uk

  • Gift of the Gabb – Opera Rose at A Brooks Art

    abrooksart_prime titanium_detail_jonathan_Gabb 009
    Detail from ‘Prime Titanium’ by Jonathan Gabb

    Spectacular three-dimensional sculptural paintings are the focus of Jonathan Gabb’s solo exhibition, Opera Rose, at the former Victorian florist turned gallery A Brooks Art.

    Combining acrylics with PVA glue, Gabb questions the function of paint by deliberately misusing it. Critic Helen Sumpter makes the comparison of Gabb’s work to the “cool colour field paintings of Barnet Newton” and the “gestural action paintings of Jackson Pollock”.

    Gabb says: “With a painting, people expect paint on a canvas or pigment in liquid on a flat surface, I’m trying to do something different. I want to transform it into something else – the paint is freed from a fixed surface and can be viewed as an object.”

    The artist will be opening the doors to his studio in South London on 6 October for an informal Q&A as part of the Art Licks weekend and arranging an ‘Art Skype’ to allow visitors to join in from afar.

    For those who want more of an insider’s view of the exhibition, Gabb will be giving a talk on 7 October to explain the ideas behind his practice and walk visitors through the site-specific installation.

    Until 16 November 2013

    A Brooks Art
    194-196 Hoxton Street
    London N1 5LH

    abrooksart.com

     

     

  • Open your art – Urban Dialogues exhibition at Red Gallery

    Urban Dialogues: We Are Best Friends by Nataliia Taranukha
    Detail from ‘We Are Best Friends’ by Nataliia Taranukha

    A mixed-media showcase of work exploring and questioning the interplay between art, belief and identity will take place at Red Gallery, Rivington Street, from 2-14 October.

    The fifth annual Urban Dialogues exhibition, organised by Three Faiths Forum (3FF), will feature the work of 20 artists and includes four nights of events.

    The show is about bringing people together who may not normally meet, challenging their thinking and providing a platform for discussion, whatever their philosophy. There are two specially commissioned collaborations by artists from different backgrounds, which 3FF Exhibition Organiser Abi Girling says are always very exciting and receive a very strong response.

    Group installation The Fury Jukebox, by female artists Zena Edwards, Rasheeda Nalumoso, Cherelle Skeete and Kate Pearson, is a ‘vehicle of discussion’ reflecting on women’s and girls’ anger, and Walls Have No Sides by David Borrington and Aithan Shapira aims to challenge our concept of walls and boundaries. Both collaborations will be documented through an online, interactive film.

    Girling says the exhibition provides an “independent, open space where everyone is on an equal footing. It’s open to everyone and enables freer dialogue.”

    Since 2009, she has seen “the audience grow as well as pushing into new ones” with events such as the women only Female Voices on 10 October and the launch of an intercultural choir at their Shoreditch Singathon on 13 October.

    2-14 October
    Red Gallery
    3 Rivington St
    EC2A 3DT

  • Paper caper – origami night at The Queen of Hoxton

    Paper craic: Learn origami and have a tipple in a tipi
    Paper craic: Learn origami and have a tipple in a tipi

    The Queen of Hoxton is launching the second annual origami workshop season in their pop-up rooftop tipi The WigWam on 22 October.

    Run by Sam Tsang of Sesame’s Origami School, the monthly workshops invite origami beginners, experts and enthusiasts to learn the ancient art of paper folding.

    Materials are all provided in the 90 minute sessions and a free glass of mulled wine, spiced cider or hot buttered rum is included in the ticket price.

    Sam, 37, lives in West London and has been teaching origami for six years after receiving emails asking for tutorage. He was originally selling his origami flowers online.

    He says: “I first got into origami like everyone else, folding paper aeroplanes at school.”

    However it was learning to fold a flapping bird that started his interest.

    Now he runs public and corporate workshops, recently teaching origami to over 200 people at the 2013 Thames Festival. He also folded “origami shoes” with New Look at London Fashion Week.

    For those apprehensive about origami, Sam says: “There’s nothing to be afraid of, it’s only paper.”

    The Queen of Hoxton
    1-5 Curtain Road
    EC2A 3JX

    queenofhoxton.com