Archive for the ‘Participation’ Category

Tuning In: In progress – Sound Art by Kingston College Creative Media students

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Tuning In: In progress – Sound Art by Kingston College Creative Media students
Sound Matters Schools Programme
Listen online from Friday 22 November 2013

 
As part of the Stanley Picker Gallery’s Schools’ Programme, Kingston College Creative Media students have been participating in Tuning In a series of Gallery-based workshops inspired by Crafts Council touring exhibition Sound Matters.

Throughout Tuning In students learnt about exhibiting maker’s practices and craft processes and inspired by composer Cathy Lane, electronic musicians Scanner and Yuri Suziki, and designer and installation artist Dominic Wilcox, have composed and recorded their own Kingston upon Thames themed sound-based artworks for public presentation onsite, online and as a local radio broadcast.

Samples of voice and ‘created sound’ based works in progress can be heard below.

Beats per Minute (BPM) Hospital

Jaffa Cakes Ending Hearts

Jaffa Cakes Ending Hearts remix

TFL Water & Rails

TFL tfl202

TFL Outdoor Adventures

MCLA Sport

MCLA2 Mixdown

Fashion Fashion Mixdown

Pid-Gion Teri Hates

Boudicca in Conversation with Kingston University Students May 2013

Boudicca Residency Launch, Fellows Studio, Stanley Picker Gallery May 2013
Boudicca: A request, A meet, A question
Conversation and Collaboration with Kingston University Students
May 2013

Contributing to their Stanley Picker Fellowship, Boudicca (Fashion Designers Zowie Broach and Brian Kirkby) were in residence in the Gallery’s Fellows Studio from 1-15 May 2013. Here they experimented with new ideas to progress their Fellowship research and as part of this invited 16 students from Kingston University to participate in a two group exchanges.

Participants whose interests ranged from the practical to theoretical, were invited from a breadth of courses including Fashion and Design, Art History, Photography, Film Making and Computer Games Production.

For Boudicca, interdisciplinary collaboration and debate is integral to the development of contemporary design practice, particularly with regards to fashion and our ability to conceive the art form as independent from industry. Together the groups discussed these issues with reference to Boudicca’s practice past, present and future, and touched upon questions of identity – how and why does one change it?

For students these exchanges offered an “intriguing insight into the life, design and thought processes of professional practitioners at a fork in their practice” and have continued discussion as an independent online collective. For Boudicca, the input of the group opened new conversation and the opportunity for interdisciplinary and academic collaboration.

To keep updated with Gallery Projects and Events please Sign Up to our mailing list, follow us on twitter @PickerGallery, email n.kay@kingston.ac.uk or call 020 8417 4074.

Above image: Boudicca Residency Launch, Stanley Picker Gallery Fellows Studio, May 2013

You Could be a Model: Creative Review Highlights Gallery Picture Disc Project

Andy Holden, Daniel Eatock and Ice Sea Dead People, Picture Disc Designs 8 May 2012
Release of Ice, Sea, Dead People 7″ Picture Disc:
Spun by Stanley Picker Gallery Participants with Andy Holden & Daniel Eatock
Available from September 2012

Creative Review online are currently profiling a unique project initiated earlier this year by two of our Stanley Picker Fellows Andy Holden and Daniel Eatock who worked together to create the new 7″ vinyl limited edition for the band Ice, Sea, Dead People.

Now the Stanley Picker Gallery and Lost Toys Records are delighted to announce the release of the double a-side 7″ picture disc for the band’s tracks ‘You Could be a Model’ and ‘Ultra Silence’.

The picture discs were made as the result of a collaboration between the band with Stanley Picker Fellows Andy Holden and Daniel Eatock. Eatock’s concept to spin paper discs on turntables with pens being held down on them for the duration of the music on each corresponding side, was born into fruition at the Stanley Picker Gallery in May 2012, when the band played each song 10 times consecutively whilst music lovers and participants from the local community drew on the paper discs as they rotated before them. 180 discs were pressed into records with each side of every record a unique. The video for the single was filmed at the event by by Kingston University BA Film making students Aris Maleas, Vasia Ntoulia and Vincent Descourtieux.

Creativity and fun at 45rpm – Local Participant
A high-paced, fun-filled evening that left me in a spin – Local Participant

Click here to watch the music video and pre-order a Picture Disc
Click here to read the article on the Creative Review Blog
Click here to listen to an Ice, Sea, Dead People interview on BBC Radio 6 Music

Above image: Picture disc designs made by gallery participants during a live performance by Andy Holden, Daniel Eatock and band Ice Sea Dead People, 8 May 2012

The Picker House & Collection: Publication Launch & Guided Tours

Publication Cover Image of The Stanley Picker House and Collection: A Late 1960s Home for Modern Art and Design
The Picker House & Collection: A Late 1960s Home for Modern Art & Design
Publication Launch & Guided Tours
October - November 2012

A book detailing the extraordinary private house and art collection of Stanley Picker on Kingston Hill, written by staff from Kingston University’s Faculty of Art, Design & Architecture, is to be published by Philip Wilson Publishers in October 2012 and launched at the Stanley Picker Gallery, to mark thirty years since the death of arts patron Stanley Picker in 1982.

Born in New York in 1913, Stanley Picker arrived in England, having completed his studies at Harvard University, to take over his father’s cosmetics business. Under Picker’s leadership, the company developed as a large and successful cosmetics manufacturer that produced make-up brands Outdoor Girl, Miners and Mary Quant, among others, and created a wealth that permitted Picker to indulge his greatest love: the arts.

Picker’s connection with Kingston upon Thames began in June 1945 when he purchased a factory at Hook Rise, off the Kingston by-pass. In 1957 he then purchased a plot of land in Kingston with the idea of creating a modern home. His desire was realised in the remarkable house that was designed in 1968 by British architect Kenneth Wood. When Picker retired in 1976, he devoted more time to his interest in art, and Wood returned to build a private gallery in the garden, dedicated to the more important items of Picker’s growing collection. In 1977 he established the Stanley Picker Trust to support the education and careers of young arts practitioners.

The book draws on Picker’s extensive private archive, charting the development of the Picker House as a luxury home for its owner and for the significant collection of modern and contemporary painting and sculpture that he amassed over a 25-year period, beginning in 1957 and ending with his death in 1982. Beginning with a biographical introduction to Stanley Picker and his personal, artistic and business connections, written by Dr Jonathan Black, the book then goes on to examine aspects of the development of the Picker House and its interior and garden. Dr Fiona Fisher explores the central role that Picker’s art collection played in the creation and realisation of Wood’s design for the house and garden; while Professor Penny Sparke charts the remarkable project for the interior of the house that Stanley Picker, Kenneth Wood and staff at Conran Contracts and Conran Design Group implemented together; and Rebecca Preston examines the history of the Picker House site and the garden that was created by designer Victor Shanley.

Picker’s collection of paintings and sculpture and his artistic legacy are examined in chapters written by Dr Jonathan Black, Professor Fran Lloyd and David Falkner. Jonathan Black situates Picker’s collection of paintings within the context of London’s rapidly growing contemporary art market of the 1950s and the personal relationships that Picker developed with galleries and gallery owners. Fran Lloyd’s chapter maps Picker’s acquisition of an important collection of over a hundred modern and contemporary sculptures, and discusses the themes and influences that underpinned Picker’s selection of artists and works and the significance of their staging within the private spaces of his house and garden and the public environments of the cosmetic company’s offices and factory. Stanley Picker Gallery Director David Falkner’s concluding chapter reviews Kingston University’s Stanley Picker Fellowship scheme, established in 1977, and the responses of recent fellows to the Picker House and its painting, sculpture and furniture collections. Stanley Picker wanted his house and collection to be preserved for study and enjoyment by future generations. For conservation reasons, the house and gallery can only open to a small number of visitors each year, but an important aim of the book is to bring to a wider audience the extensive knowledge of the house and collection the team has developed through their research.

The Picker House and Collection: A Late 1960s Home for Modern Art and Design by Jonathan Black, David Falkner, Fiona Fisher, Fran Lloyd, Rebecca Preston, and Penny Sparke will be published by Philip Wilson Publishers in October 2012. The publication of the book coincides with the re-opening of the Stanley Picker Gallery at Knights Park, following a period of closure for refurbishment.

Above image: Back cover image of The Stanley Picker House and Collection: A Late 1960s Home for Modern Art and Design

Working Title – Creative workshops for children and young people

Stanley Picker Gallery Participation Programme accompanying Daniel Eatock's One + One, March 2012
Working Title – Creative workshops for children and young people
Responding to Daniel Eatock's One + One
February - March 201

The workshop was different and very amusing – Student, Kingston College

The Stanley Picker Gallery has been delighted to welcome Foundation Diploma Media Students from Kingston College, young people from the Anstee Bridge Project and the Stanley Picker Gallery Art Club, to participate in ‘Working Title (Working Title)’, a series of practical and discussion-based workshops followed by an exhibition, inspired by Daniel Eatock’s creative practice and dynamic installationOne + One.

During the workshops, which formed part of our Participation Programme, students explored Eatock’s exhibition and responded by making their own drawings and ‘one + one proposals’ that incorporated the stock of displayed objects. They imagined, designed and constructed their own, unique pairings, beginning with collages made from catalogue cut-outs, followed by images taken from google search engines, photo-shopped to design specifications set by the artist. In groups, students championed a favourite idea that had been suggested by their peers, then planned and sourced the physical components for construction. They photographed their combinations and made prints as artistic records of the outcomes.

Kingston College students, who were enrolled on a college module, titled ‘Designing Print-based Media’, learnt about the process involved with creating digital prints as artworks and for publicity and took a tour of the printmaking rooms and digital media suites at Kingston University, guided by Art & Design students and technical staff. Making use of this knowledge, new and existing skills, and with the advice of Rob Mann, Senior Graphic Designer at Kingston University, pupils used special templates to design their very own Stanley Picker Gallery exhibition posters – each unique to the artist making it. Their final challenge was to collaborate to curate and install their artworks ready for exhibition.

The Stanley Picker Gallery team were extremely impressed by the creative thinking and team-work displayed the group, whose final challenge was to collaborate to curate and install their artworks ready for exhibition, also named ‘Working Title’. Both workshops and the exhibition, were a great success and many congratulations were shared among all involved.

Kingston College Media Students create artwork inspired by One + One, Stanley Picker Gallery Participation Programme, March 2012

Exhibition Launch: Daniel Eatock One + One

Daniel Eatock One + One
Daniel Eatock: One + One
Exhibition Launch
8 February - 31 March 2012

Open: Tues-Fri 12-6pm, Sat 12-4pm

Stanley Picker Fellow Daniel Eatock will be working on-site at the Gallery every Wednesday for the 8-week duration of his new exhibition One + One to produce a brand new body of work that has originated as part of initial developmental research for the re-branding of national television network BBC2.

One + One has been developed over the course of Eatock’s Stanley Picker Fellowship, in close collaboration with staff and students at Kingston University, and will result in an extensive series of new object-based works that each establishes a range of formal, practical or conceptual conceits connecting two otherwise independently existing objects.

As well as containing around 100 specific objects that have been specially sourced over recent weeks ready to combine into their One + One pairings, the Gallery installation (pictured above) is dominated by a specially commissioned ‘infinity-cove’. The largest single structure built for the Gallery by technician Marc Bultitude in the eight years he has been working for the venue, the imposing structure is nontheless designed in such as way so as not to be visible in the completed works.

Over the course of the exhibition, Gallery visitors will be invited to participate in aspects of the production process; the exhibition content evolving continually as the original objects are employed, and re-employed, in the execution of the final works.

Participants and Gallery Visitors are all invited to a special Closing Event on Saturday 31 March 12 – 4pm being held to celebrate all 8 weeks of works made for One + One.

Click here to read more about the exhibition.
Click here to read an interview with Daniel Eatock about the One + One exhibition in Dazed Digital.

Above image: Daniel Eatock One + One (installation view by Helen McCathie)

The Big Draw 2011

Big Draw 2011
The Big Draw 2011
These Hands Are For Drawing
Saturday 15 October 2011, 1.30pm-3pm

In October 2011 the Stanley Picker Gallery took part in the nationwide project, The Big Draw. Our one-day event, These Hands Are for Drawing, welcomed people of all ages who together made drawings and designed their very own exhibition space, inspired by Martin Westwood’s sculptural exhibition These Hands Are Models.

Click here for more information about the nationwide Big Draw 2011.

Above image: Stanley Picker Gallery Big Draw 2011

Big Draw Logo

Make/Break the Mould

Stanley Picker Gallery Schools Exhibition inspired by Martin Westwood, 2011
Stanley Picker Gallery Participation Project
Make Break the Mould
Autumn 2011

Make Break the Mould was a series of creative workshops inspired by the practice of acclaimed contemporary artist Martin Westwood, whose sculptural exhibition These Hands are Models was installed at the Gallery from 6 October – 26 November 2011.

Three schools – King Athelstan Primary School, Shrewsbury House Preparatory School and Southborough High School, along with young people from the Anstee Bridge Programme and local children from the Stanley Picker Gallery Art Club enrolled as partners on the programme.

Throughout Make Break the Mould participants explored Westwood’s exhibition and responded by making their own collages, drawings and sculptures out of clay. They interviewed Westwood and visited his studio and ceramic workshop, questioned professional sculpture and Kingston University Fine Art graduate Rebecca Wilson, and learnt about specialist materials, equipment and techniques such as extruding and press-casting before using them to create their own, unique artworks. Finally groups collaborated to design a group installation ready for one of two programme exhibitions which celebrated the achievements of all involved. These inventive exhibitions were titled These Hands Are For Making by children from King Athelstan Primary School, Shrewsbury House Preparatory School and the Stanley Picker Gallery Art Club, and Casting Ideas, curated by young people from the Anstee Bridge Programme and Southborough School. The Stanley Picker Gallery team were extremely impressed by the creativity, open-mindedness and team work displayed by all.

Above image: These Hands Are For Making, school's exhibition installation image

River Adventure

'River Adventure' Young people create floating artworks for IYAF 2011
River Adventure
International Youth Arts Festival (IYAF)
28 June - 16 July 2011

The Hogsmill riverbank, immortalised in Millais’ famous painting of Ophelia, became the focus of two special visual art projects for IYAF 2011 – A View Through a Bridge and River Adventure.  The former saw pupils from St John’s Primary School drawing individual view points through the Blue Bridge, which when pieced together and exhibited became an full-size drawing of a view through the bridge. River Adventure involved a series of workshops in which young people from the Anstee Bridge Programme created floating artworks to be sent down the Hogsmill from the Gallery towards the Blue Bridge and onward. Documentation took place at every stage and, with the support of Kingston University Fine Art graduate, Steve Nice, was compiled into a film of their experiences, which was played at the Gallery throughout IYAF.

Above image: 'River Adventure' Young people create floating artworks to send down the Hogsmill River as part of IYAF 2011.

Who was Muybridge? Who am I?

Muybridge in Kingston Human Zoetrope
Who was Muybridge? Who am I?
Responding to Dance of Ordinariness and Muybridge Revolutions
18 September - 13 November 2010

Throughout Muybridge in Kingston, the Stanley Picker Gallery collaborated with Kingston Museum to give local schools the exciting opportunity to interact, explore and create new artwork across Kingston upon Thames. Participants were introduced to the work of Eadweard Muybridge and on a visit to Muybridge Revolutions examined original examples of his photographs and inventions including the zoopraxiscope and accompanying discs, and learnt about how these have influenced modern photography, film and animation. Through drawing, discussion, photography and performance children considered Muybridge’s achievements and character, his fictionalisations and ambition and, in turn their own. Inspired by the blue plaque dedicated to Eadweard Muybridge in the town centre, children created their own versions and acted out the ambitions detailed on their plaques, professionally photographed in a series of successive images which  were transferred onto thier own working zoetrope models.

Pupils also explored Trevor Appleson’s film and sound installation Dance of Ordinariness. Thematic games were played in the space and we discussed the installation and its connection to Muybridge. Children selected a Muybridge ‘film still’ and considered the person, animal or event behind the scene to inspire, compose and perform a contemporary dance piece, complete with title, sound effects and props. Chandlers Field School were lucky enough to have Trevor Appleson in their audience who also took part in a Q&A session. Much enjoyment was had by all, the pupils thrilled to meet a ‘real living artist’ and Appleson was pleased to share his experiences and autographs with the group.

Participants: St John’s C of E Primary School (Year 5), Chandlers Field Primary School (Years 3 & 4) and the Stanley Picker Gallery Art Club.

Above image: Muybridge in Kingston, Contemporary Zoetropes