Sunday, 30 November 2008

Margaret's work in St Dogmaels Gallery, near Cardigan



St Dogmaels Gallery near Cardigan is now showing Margaret Sharrow's work.

Featured pieces are 'Nocturne', from the series 'Road Trip (Commute to Aberystwyth)', shown above, and selections from 'Soul Matters v. 1', 2008.

'Soul Matters v. 1' was previously exhibited as a video installation at the Aberystwyth University School of Art in April 2008.

The opening, Saturday 29 November from 6:30 pm, was fairly well attended considering what a frosty evening it was. It was the first time I had seen the new fountain in the back garden, a large rectangular concrete pool reflecting candles, with a large barbeque-cum-bonfire in a sort of silver dish described as 'like an alien spaceship'. Munching olives, I dipped back into the warm of the gallery.

Tricia McParlin has some interesting new work, very dark abstracts of night hills. Among the craft offerings, Greenweeds is a new producer of some sensuous handmade felt book covers in natural wool colours.

The exhibition runs until 28 February 2009.


welcome page ----- Margaret's webpage ----- Facebook ----- Flickr ----- Saatchi Online

Thursday, 27 November 2008

Links to galleries

A very subjective list of galleries with, eventually, links and reviews.




NORTH AMERICA



Buffalo, New York, USA


Albright-Knox Gallery
One of the top 20th century galleries in the States, but undervisited compared to the big names in the Big Apple. Where I developed a childhood love of all things Pop Art, first saw the Impressionists, and later grew to appreciate Abstract Expressionism. The Rothko, Pollack, de Kooning, and Clifford Still are still what I seek out on each return visit... along with Lucas Samaras' Mirrored Room.

Burchfield Penny Art Centre
Named after Charles Burchfield, American watercolour artist who lived in Buffalo, this newly revamped gallery is at Buffalo State College (known to Buffalonians, without irony, as Buff State), basically just across the road from the Albright-Knox. I haven't been there since the revamp...

Toronto, Canada

Art Gallery of Ontario

Most notable for the Henry Moore room (incredible!) and Group of Seven.


UNITED KINGDOM

London


This list is just a start!

Tate Britain

Tate Modern

National Gallery

National Portrait Gallery

Victoria and Albert Museum

British Museum


Wales

Yes, you really can see art at all these places, and more...

National Museum of Wales, Cardiff

Chapter Arts Centre, Cardiff


Prendre Gallery, Cardigan

Theatr Mwldan, Cardigan

St Dogmaels Gallery, near Cardigan


Mulberry Bush, Lampeter

Cafe Print, Lampeter


Gwilym C. Price, Son & Daughters, Lampeter

Oriel Cambria Arts, Tregaron

Aberystwyth Arts Centre

School of Art Museum and Gallery, Aberystwyth University

National Library of Wales, Aberystwyth

Ceredigion Museum and The Coliseum, Aberystwyth

Morlan Centre, Aberystwyth

Museum of Modern Art, Machynlleth

Oriel Wrecsam, Wrexham





welcome page ----- Margaret's webpage ----- Facebook ----- Flickr----- Saatchi Online

Paper Penguins

Captured penguins

One of the joys of being at the School of Art is the little unexpected things. For example, a couple of days ago someone put up a series of paper origami penguins in the main hallway by the notice board.

They were trundling along in a sedate curve but kept being knocked over by people unaware of their existence ('Mind the penguins!' 'What penguins?') or blown over whenever someone opened the door. I suspected the caretaker of righting them but some clearly preferred staring at the ceiling, which is very nice with the view through an oval hole in the first floor floor, ringed by wooden banisters. 'Waste of space!' pronounced Former Tutor, but I thought, if I was working somewhere, and suddenly Paper Penguins appeared in the corridor, it would bring a Moment of Joy into my day. This surely is one function of art. Not all art, certainly, but some art should be allowed to bring joy, and not just Big Ideas.

There is a sad postscript to this story. I came in this morning, and they had all been gathered up and affixed to the noticeboard in a stack, with a pushpin. Ouch!

More puzzlingly, a quick internet search for 'origami penguins' revealed nothing so simple and elegant as those innocents massacred against the green baize. You might try http://website.lineone.net/~john.montgomery/origami/penguin.html.

I will have to seek out the penguins' maker. I wonder if it was the same person who put a piece of red string leading from the street,

up through the car park, in through the front doors, and up several flights of stairs, to what, I never found out. 'I'm expecting something grizzly - a body!' enthused Tutor. What actually happened was that as I left that evening, in the dark, I felt something like a small animal tugging at my ankle. It turned out to be the string, in which I had become entangled while crossing the lawn.

Saturday, 22 November 2008

Off to Wrexham!

Well, it's quite a drive from Aberystwyth but I made a day of it, stopping at MOMA (no, not the Museum of Modern Art in New York, but the Museum of Modern Art in Machynlleth!) where I saw a really nice exhibition by Geoff Sansbury (some of the figurative work is Baconesque). Had to order from the breakfast menu at the CAT cafe, because the main meals weren't ready yet - I had been so looking forward to my usual, the pizza on wholemeal base with salad and a root beer (or the closest facsimile one can get to it in Wales). Scrambled eggs on toast really isn't their strong point - I don't recommend it. The dandelion coffee was nice, though. Then took the scenic route through Corris, bypassing Dolgellau, Bala, and Llangollen and got to the outskirts of Wrexham in good time, only to get snarled in the one way system and a crush of Christmas shoppers. I thought no one was shopping this year! Parking is almost impossible unless you surrender to the massive multistory carpark, but I managed to find a street with terraced houses nearby. I still didn't know where the library was, and as I was carrying other people's work in addition to my own, I didn't want to risk damaging anything so knew I needed to make two trips. The hazards in a busy pedestrian shopping zone multiply when carrying a largish canvas that is not yours, even if it is shrouded in bubble wrap: running children, strollers, shouting teenagers, and especially cigarettes suddenly seem incredibly lethal.

Oriel Wrecsam (that's Welsh for Wrexham Gallery) is located in the same building as the public library, and is a single, large, well-lit space supplemented by a second gallery inside the library itself. The room for dropping off work was round the corner, staffed by very nice if somewhat harrassed people, and almost full to the bursting. There must have been well over three hundred works there, mostly painting but quite a lot of sculpture and a few photographs (including mine). I think a lot of serious pruning will take place by judges Iwan Bala et. al. next week. Or else there will be loads of room dividers groaning under floor-to-ceiling work.

Did a little window / charity shop shopping then found the lovely church (parish church of St. Giles) all lit up on the outside and stuffed with an unfeasible number of charity Christmas cards for sale inside. I expected a table with a couple dozen packs but this was really excessive: there were tables for each charity stretching back a good twenty-five feet at the back of the nave, with a facing row of tables displaying other merchandise. The carvings etc. were quite nice: angels, I think, for the person in third year photography researching angels, but up on the ceiling (where you might say they belonged), and a recently discovered partially preserved Victorian mural over the altar.

On the way back I stopped at the Morlan Centre in Aberystwyth where the Christian Union was just taking down the 'Free' exhibition. It looked like they'd been having a good time and there was a selection of interesting prints by one of my second year friends. I was informed that over eighty people had attended, and lots of good discussion came out of the images. They're going to have a similar event in April, and asked if I could contribute again. I certainly could!


welcome page ----- Margaret's webpage ----- Facebook ----- Flickr ----- Saatchi Online

Friday, 21 November 2008

Margaret's work at 'Free' exhibition at the Morlan Centre, Aberystwyth, Saturday 22 November, 7:30pm




One of my photographs is being featured at an exhibition this Saturday in the Morlan Centre, Aberystwyth.

It is part of an event sponsored by the Aberystwyth Christian Union that will feature a selection of art and creative writing on the theme 'Free', which will form the basis of a discussion.

The exhibition will include works of other members of the School of Art.

Caffi Clonc



Last time I said there was always something going on in the School of Art. Well, today I had the nicest cup of tea I've had in ages.

It was part of an installation by Anna Evans called Caffi Clonc (clonc is Welsh for chat, and caffi is, well, cafe). Conceptually she is looking at language and the role it plays in society (in other projects as well: she told me that for nearly a year now, she has been cutting the hundredth word out of every issue of the Cambrian News). Practically the event was a transformation of the bare, scruffy walls of the project room into elegant black and white, with dim lighting, a long table with a white table cloth, three black seats, three white candles, and three black tiles. Visitors were presented with a slim menu offering a range of hot and cold drinks, and a choice of three flavours of 'word snacks': chocolate with cinnamon, ginger, or something fruity. I of course ordered the chocolate with cinnamon, and a peppermint tea. As I sat I was pleased to meet people I had never seen or talked to before (first years and art history students). It never occurred to me to wonder what words I might be served, or whether I would have a selection of random letters, like alphabet soup, but sweeter. Imagine my delight at being presented with a white plate dusted in white powdered sugar, lightly covering the word 'WONDERLUST'. Wonderlust is the name of a group of second year students planning a first exhibition in the restaurant on top of Constitution Hill.

Anyway, the biscuits were such fun to eat. It was hard to know where to start, and eventually I settled on a process of subtraction,

trying to make new words from the remaining letters each time I ate some, so 'WON LUST', 'ON LUST', 'LUST', and 'US' appeared on my plate, followed by the ghostly shadow of the original word, white plate against white sugar shadow, where the biscuits had once been. All the while quiet jazz added to the relaxed atmosphere. When I had finished my biscuits the waitress appeared again and offered me a 'words menu', instructing me to choose letters to make a word or short phrase for the next guest. I was then so excited to see the reaction of the next person to my word that I hung around taking pictures and savouring my tea, even after offering my seat to the next guest. And then... my word was spelled wrong! But it was a proper name, an unusual one, so fair enough...

Anna would like to do another cafe, which is a good thing, since several people said that we should have something like this every week!

Wednesday, 19 November 2008

Results of audio workshop

Well, I've just completed the audio workshop I mentioned in the last post. We walked around the building recording random interesting sounds, and learned how to edit on Audacity, a bit of free online software. And here are the results... twenty-two seconds of organised chaos. 'Wistful', someone in the group called it.

If I can figure out how to attach it, you can hear it. Having converted it from a .wav file into an iMovie video, I think I may have succeeded... In the event that you cannot hear the results, know that the main sounds are feet scuffing on carpet, a humidity control unit purring away, a roomful of people at a reception after a 'Looking at Art' lecture, the lowest key on a piano, and a key from the top octave.




welcome page ----- Margaret's webpage ----- Facebook ----- Flickr ----- Saatchi Online

Welcome to Margaret Sharrow's art blog


Hello, and welcome to my blog. I am finishing a B.A. in Fine Art at Aberystwyth University, and this blog will be a place where you can view my work in progress, as well as notices of current and upcoming exhibitions of my work. For more information, and my portfolio, please link to my website, sharrow.mosaicglobe.com, where you can also read about Greenland, where I have recently been travelling and taking thousands of photographs that form the basis of my work this year. (I also have an autobiographical blog about my trip to Greenland.) You can also view my work at Saatchi Online, Flickr and Facebook.

At the moment I'm quite busy getting work into shows around Wales. My solo exhibition at Cafe Print in Lampeter is now closed, but I still have pieces in St Dogmaels Gallery, near Cardigan and @ The Gallery, Rhayader.

This morning I mixed some cyanotype chemicals for my current degree work. Cyanotype is one of several alternative photographic processes I'm into. It was developed by John Herschel and Anna Atkins in the 1840s. It used to be used by engineers and architects for blueprints. It remains a lovely way of producing blue tone photographs. A lot of my current work is in the medium of cyanotype.

I'm about to attend a sound recording / editing workshop. The nice thing about being at an art school is that there's always something going on...