As I Was Going to St Ives is a new documentary film about three visual artists who work with text and who have connections to St Ives – NSA member Vivian Pedley, together with artists Rex Dixon and Adrian Frost. Showing at the Penwith Gallery in St Ives, with an accompanying exhibition, the film will premiere on the 13th September with a 5.30 opening and bar. It will then continue showing during the St Ives September Festival from 14 – 24 September 2022.  A short trailer for the film can be seen here

 

NSA member Simon Averill has a new show featuring his ‘Entanglement’ series of paintings at the Anima Mundi gallery in St Ives. The exhibition runs from 28th May to 11th July.

Scientists accept there is much that is unknown or misunderstood about ‘Quantum Entanglement’. It is this uncertainty that gives him scope and inspiration as an artist to imagine and explore. A physicist might say that form and colour do not, indeed cannot, exist at the fundamental level. As an artist he is not bound by these physical constraints – he has permission to misunderstand, to go beyond the physics, to make space for imagination and art.

These paintings are part of a series of over a hundred works that act like thought experiments taking place obsessively and systematically over a number of recent years. Speculative decisions are applied and carried out, each brushstroke a particle, each layer a wave.

 

As a painter I deal with illusory space on a two dimensional surface. I am testing the possibilities of liminal space where the focus of attention is on or just below the surface. My aim is to heighten the tensions that exist in and between the paintings; the juxtaposition of colour and mark create an optical disturbance that requires the eye to be constantly shifting to locate a point of focus. I work on the paintings in pairs, as they progress the connection can become more or less explicit. New entanglements are made on the surface of each painting and, I hope, in the eye and mind of the viewer. Importantly, I envisage that these pairs will become separated, yet their entangled relationships will remain wherever the individual works are located, accentuating my own interpretation of ‘action at a distance’.

 

Further information about the exhibition can be found on the Anima Mundi website Preview Friday 27 May, 6.00-9.00 pm. The artist will also be present for an Open Day on Saturday 28 May from 2.00 – 4.00 pm.

Anima Mundi, Street-an-Pol, St Ives, Cornwall, TR26 2DS

Exhibition 6 – 25 June.  Opening Party: Thu 9 June, 5 – 8pm.  @ Daisy Laing Gallery
Old bakehouse lane.  Chapel Street Penzance TR18 4AE.  Opens Tue-Wed: 11-4. Thu-Sat: 10.30-5

Inspired by “Heart Sutra”, one of the important scriptures of Buddhism, VOID is mixing Japanese woodblock printing with Chinese brass rubbing techniques to perform the abstract concept human emotion. From 169 pieces of small woodblocks to unlimited evolution of possibilities, the combination of different blocks is like language of conversation which is trying to translate the truth and pretense of life.

Winnie Lyn’s practice concerns experience and memories, aiming to translate the truth and pretense of life into different mediums. Currently she is focusing on inter-generational narrative, around both human and human to environment dialogues. She intends to channel her concerns into abstract forms that carry both an emotional charge and a “radiation” of meaning.

living the DREAM
exhibition 6 – 25 june
opening DREAM party: thu 9 june, 5 – 8pm
@ daisy laing gallery
old bakehouse lane
chapel street penzance tr18 4ae
Opens tue-wed: 11-4. thu-sat: 10.30-5

PZ.22 CREATE: Penzance Festival of Art

3 – 26 June

www.penzanceartfestival.co.uk

Celebrating Penzance as one of the most vibrant and innovative artistic towns in the country.

PZ.22 CREATE: Penzance Festival of Art brings together the town’s plethora of artists, galleries and museums for a celebration of the very best of Penwith art, giving visitors a unique opportunity to immerse themselves in the creativity and beauty of this historic coastal town.

 

“In this universe nothing is certain other than the cyclical rhythms of life; births, deaths and the living in between…” UD

 

 

 

 

Bo Hilton’s practice deals with the conceptual and poetic possibilities of the medium of painting, in particular those that occur through the processes of making a work.

To weave connections between memory, space and time, Hilton will often begin a work with motifs of the absent or invisible figure, such as specific memories of playing chess with his late father or a coastal walk with a friend. Minimal gestures, nuanced combinations of colour, the introduction of fragments of other found or remembered images, are repeated strategies that allow his paintings to have their own autonomy and volition.

As well as this gambit, Hilton will sometimes begin the painting with an idea about colour which for him is associated with the memory, for example using five reds and Black. Hilton’s approach relies on a process of applying, removing, then re-applying paint in diverse ways until the painting begins to say something as a whole. The painting proceeds according to what is needed with often dramatic simplifications and then further complicating until a resolution is reached. Often there is a tension between the forms at the edge of the painting and those in the central area of the painting. 

 As such the finished paintings often are only subtly imbued with the original motif and idea. 

 He believes the painting should work in terms of colour harmony and balance of forms and is interested in the retinal satisfaction in moving visually around the painting and this is key to the work. He is not interested in symbolism or narrative painting but in the way colour, shape and line can elicit a strong emotional response from the viewer which is associated with the colour used but also the fact that the colour can act as a metaphor for the particular memory of the event.

NSA member Jasmine Mills, together with fellow artist Lillian Thomson, are taking part in a joint exhibition – Quiet Portals – at Centre Space Gallery in Bristol in April.  

Showcasing in Bristol for the first time, Quiet Portals is a body of work developed since 2020 exploring themes of loneliness, space, and the place in between real and imagined.

Originally from Bristol and Norfolk, Lillian and Jasmine currently work and live in Cornwall. Both artists find common ground in paint, print, and drawing inspired by place and figure.

The show runs from 16th – 20th April, 10am – 4pm, with the Preview on 15th April at 4pm. Centre Space Gallery, 6 Leonard Lane, Bristol BS11EA.

 

NSA member Catherine Harvey Jefferson is exhibiting work in a solo show at the Salthouse Gallery in St Ives. The show is called JOURNEY – Paintings about Walking in Wilderness and runs from 19th – 25th March, 10-5pm daily.

Salthouse Gallery, Norway Square, St Ives, TR26 1NA

www.catherineharveyjefferson.com

JUPITER IS A CREATIVE TEST SPACE OPEN TO ARTISTS AND CREATIVES TO PRESENT THEIR IDEAS IN AN ALTERNATIVE SETTING.

 

Right at the heart of Newlyn, Cornwall, Jupiter opened in 2019 and has since hosted a brilliant and broad range of exhibitions, happenings, and gatherings.

‘Our roots run deep in our community, using learning, dancing, rave culture, street culture, photography, film, exploration, ceramics, painting, jewellery, printmaking, nature, storytelling, folklore, revolutions, rituals, sharing & celebration as our inspiration. Jupiter is a space of possibility’.

 

Jupiter Gallery is putting together a new programme of events and is looking for proposals for takeovers of one week or more. Your vision for the space does not have to be an exhibition, it can be a working studio or it might host performances and collaborations. It can be any configuration of creativity that you might imagine over a week or more.

If you are interested contact fayedobinson@me.com for information and application details, using the Subject header ‘Jupiter Takeover’.

THE DEADLINE FOR SUBMISSIONS IS MIDNIGHT 06/03/22.

 SUCCESSFUL APPLICANTS WILL BE INFORMED BY 17/03/22.

 @jupitergallerynewlyn