Friday, 17 December 2010

2011—YEAR OF MARITIME LYME

Misty summer morning 2010
This is an exciting new project in Lyme for 2011 which has been announced where by Lyme will hold a year long festival to celebrate its links with the sea.  Many organisations and clubs have been invited to participate in various ways, see quote below from the publicity material received by the U3A Photo Improvers Group. The members have been invited to take part in a month long exhibition of maritime prints at the local museum.

"Lyme Regis’s history and fortunes have been inextricably linked to the sea - from seven centuries of trade flourishing and fading through its port to its current reliance on tourism as a seaside resort, while traditional trades and crafts of fishing and boat-building have continued and adapted across the centuries.  The ‘Year of Maritime Lyme’ will be a year-long celebration of Lyme’s maritime culture, economy and heritage.  It will promote all the various maritime-based activities and events that already take place in Lyme, and will also encourage and promote new projects and initiatives.  In essence, by creating a lively ‘diary’ of Lyme’s maritime activities across the year, the town wants to trumpet and add value to what Lyme already does by branding it in a media- and visitor-friendly way.

But it’s more than a marketing exercise.  We believe that by working together we will create new relationships, partnerships and activities that will bring even more kudos, publicity and tourists to Lyme Regis and have a lasting benefit. Maritime Lyme is a self-
help, community-led initiative that will run on volunteer effort and minimal resources.  The aim is to achieve high visibility with a low carbon footprint using all available channels of communication (website, blogs, press stories, leaflets, etc) to get the message across.

Organisations that have already agreed to participate, hold themed events and be part of Maritime Lyme include: Lyme Regis Museum, Lyme Regis Development Trust, the Fossil Festival, Lyme Regis Sailing Club, Lyme Regis Gig Club, Artsfest, Somerset College of Arts and Technology, South West Maritime History Society, Lyme Regis Boatbuilding Academy and Dorset County History Centre, RNLI, Lyme Regis Harbour Master.
"

The photo group will be able to display up to 24 A4 prints for a month long exhibition in September. Prints will be selected throughout the previous 6-8 months by a small group of non-particpating members. Every person interested in taking part will have at least one image on show.

Friday, 10 December 2010

Street Photography Now - Sophie Howarth, Stephen McLaren

This is a beautifully produced book showing some of the world's best street photography. It also explains what motivates and fascinates these 46 men and women contributors.

You close the book and still feel intrigued to understand more about the situations you've seen. Some are very amusing and uplifting, others leave you questioning and thoughtful. The pictures show you that wherever people are in the world they are consistently unaware of themselves and their actions. I thought the interviews were very good and editorially perceptive. So much better than the usual assembly of unrelated submissions. They give a real insight into the photographers and were suitably down to earth as is appropriate for street photography.

This is the most comprehensive book I've read on the subject to-date and it cleverly captures what makes street photographers tick.

Monday, 4 October 2010

LYME REGIS ARTS FEST 2010


What a treat there was in Lyme and its surrounding area over the past 10 days, a real surfeit of arts, crafts, exhibitions and workshops. There are over 60 ArtsFest6 artists who showcase their work in collaboration with local businesses. These include an exhibition of children's art, painting, poetry, drumming and dance workshops, interactive drawing at the musuem, busking by young musicians and a Big Draw event at the Aquarium on the Cobb.

The whole festival included two major group exhibitions at the Town Mill Galleries and the Baptist Church Hall, open studios where you could meet artists in their environments and view their work and an art trail around the town where artists' work was on show in shops, cafes, pubs and other businesses.

A tremendous amount of work went into the organisation of the whole event which has been an important date in the town diary for the last seven years. What was so great about it was that even if you didn't want to take part in the workshops or found visiting an artist's studio on your own, you could just walk up and down the main shopping street and take in a wide variety of artistic and photographic work.  The Art Trail enabled artists to place their featured work in local shop windows which gave them access to an audience which might not normally go to an exhibition.  It was truly amazing, and it all happens again next year, wow!

http://lymeregisartsfest.com/

Monday, 20 September 2010

Copyright issues

Copyright issues have always been a bone of contention as unscrupulous agency staff and picture editors want to use images and not have to pay for them. Or they adapt them to look veryslightly different and call it their idea. Unless you have a very strong case with plenty of backup material, and deep pockets, these days it seems that anything goes and the original photographer is the loser. Young photographers who are willing to work for peanuts will accept a job regardless of the fact that they are copying someone else's work. I found this long comment thread through the OCA site and read the first half a dozen comments and the latest half dozen comments but in the end the overall opinion was that even though the original photographer had had his work adapted there was very little he could do about it as he had refused to sell the image to a publisher in the first place. 


When I worked as a commercial photographer, covering social charity events for a drink related forum, I was asked for my negatives with no indication that I would be paid for them. When I refused, the manager said that I would never work for them again if I didn't hand them over for free. Fortunately I was in a position that I didn't need their work, which wasn't very lucrative anyway, so I stuck to my guns, but never got any offers of work from them again!

It's one of life's lessons to learn that this does happen and decide how you will react if it happens to you. As I said, the one time I was threatened, I was able to walk away, some people are not so lucky as to be able to do that.

http://webdesign.about.com/od/copyright/Copyright_Issues_on_the_Web_Intellectual_Property.htm 

Sunday, 19 September 2010

Male Domination in Photography

This has been a subject that I have been watching in Flickr recently and it's interesting to read the different points of view from both male and female photographers. 

http://www.flickr.com/groups/ocarts/discuss/72157624647324931/ 

I was a commercial photographer at Heathrow airport in the late 1980s/90s when there weren't too many photographers around and the work was spread around quite nicely, thank you. I worked for several airlines around the airport doing mainly 'grip and grins' and feature pictures for their publications. There were three airport photographers (not press photographers as you see in TV programmes such as Airport) and the ratio of male to female was one male to two females (me included). Each of us specialised in a different area and if you wanted a particular type of picture you went to one person.


Later on more photographers came on the scene but these were mainly men who specialised in aircraft photographs rather than people which meant that my area of expertise remained fairly available. There was no fighting, no commercial rivalry and when we met up, as we did occasionally, we chatted as friends. If we needed help or couldn't meet an obligation, a quick phone call to one of the others made sure the job was covered.

I really don't think it matters what sex a true photographer is, what matters is their work and their competence. If you have any skills in your area of expertise being male or female shouldn't come into the equation. A woman driving HGV lorries is accepted for what she does, not that she is, I think it is the same in photography, show you can do the job and you are accepted in the industry.

Bending Space - photography of Georges Rousse

I came upon this website by chance and was totally blown away. Firstly I thought it was my eye sight giving me trouble and that I might need new glasses but, when I looked and looked and read about Georges and his projects, I realised how amazing his work was.
His vision is something I know that I lack but to see it in others is pure pleasure. I can take an idea and go further but to have the original idea is the thing that I struggle with.

His works are photographs of paintings done on buildings which are made to look like overlays of colour. From the single point perspective of rousse’s camera, his paintings are made to appear 2-dimensional, in reality you would see that the paintings are strategically done in 3 dimensions.
 

This illusion is what makes rousse’s work so intriguing. his ‘durham’ project is
currently the subject of the documentary ‘Bending Space’, a fitting title to describe Rousse’s work.

http://www.georgesrousse.com/english/reception.html

Saturday, 14 August 2010

Waterfalls and Footpaths, from Kyoto to Okinawa

This is an exhibition of carvings, woodblock prints and drawings by David West which can be seen at the David West Gallery, Town Mill, Lyme Regis from August 14 - October 10 2010.

In the spring of 2008 David was invited by the Great Britain Sasakawa Foundation of Japan to spend a month in Japan.  During amonth of walking and exploring he met lots of insteresting creative people, drew every day and kept an illustrated journal, recording the daily events he found interesting.  He did not use a camera, just observed, sketched and made notes.  The exhibition at the Town Mill consists of drawings made on the journey plus wood carvings and woodcuts done since his return.


Imagine my surprise when I arrived in the exhibition room to find that all the main exhibits are made from wood. The hanging above is made up of socks decorated as fish hanging above a river made of wood with metallic turtles swimming below.  Whilst the majority of items do consist of pencil and wash drawings, the main room has several wood carvings, coloured and in some cases, covered with gold leaf.  I had a personal tour from the Town Mill guide who explained the reasoning behind several of the items which really brought the exhibits to life.
 
David's exhibition details can be seen on the Town Mill website, then go to News and Events/What's on at the Mill:

http://www.townmill.org.uk/

Another excellent example of David's experience in Japan. The centre panel represents the wet streets of Japan where they have similar weather as here in Britain.


Sunday, 18 July 2010

We English - Exhibition by Simon Roberts photographer

Simon Roberts travelled throughout England in a motorhome between August 2007 and September 2008, for this portfolio of large-format tableaux photographs of the English at leisure. Photographing ordinary people engaged in a variety of pastimes, Roberts finds beauty in the mundane; the result is an elegiac exploration of identity, attachment to home and land, and the relationship between people and place. This is the most significant contribution to the photography of England in recent years." Chris Boot, Publisher

http://we-english.co.uk/gallery.html

Reviews:
“The first place he photographed was the beach at Skegness in Lincolnshire, where people have holidayed since the nineteenth century. It’s a bit grim. The sky is overcast and the water brown, there is litter and everyone is bundled up, wearing coats. The scene is mundane and familiar to many, but Roberts has managed to bring a lyrical quality to it. The sea and sky are huge, the view is elevated and looking down we get a vast sense of space….There are two stories in his photographs: one is everyday, the other is eternal.”
Hannah Duguid, The Independent, 1st October 2009

“Low and leaden skies, grey rain-streaked beaches, toxic-looking yellow stubble in farmers’ fields, caravan parks hoisting the flag of St George and the assorted leisure activities of the Great British public: shooting a birds, car boot sales, mud races and Derby Day. The influence of past masters is evident, but Roberts’s wide-open images allow in as much landscapes as possibly. This shows we leisure-practitioners in context, organic elements within a larger canvas. We look as dull as the topography and weather, occasionally lit up by a Turner-esque ray of sunshine. While Roberts is not the first to find beauty in bleakness, or in the mundane, even moronic, weekend habits of the English, he brings to the treatment an irony-free and lovingly meditative gaze.”
Chris Morris, Timeout London, 22-28 October 2009

“We English has all the hallmarks of a great body of work by a photographer of considerable depth. It shuns the flashy “in-yer-face” tactics so commonplace in favour of quiet thought and subtle observation. It is work that repays the reader through frequent re-examination: full of humour, but more subtle than Erwitt; full of commentary, but less judgemental than Parr; full of beauty, but without cliché.”
Michael Cockerham, Blue Filter, October 2009

Personally I think this body of work shows the English with all our quirkyness, spots and all, out for a day to enjoy ourselves.  The British way is to put up with the weather, take it as we find it and get on with it!  Simon Roberts shows it warts and all and I think that the true British spirit will be lost soon and his work records our indomitable spirit whatever fate and the weather throws at us

Friday, 16 July 2010

Architectural Photography

As I am now working on the Buildings and Spaces of Project 3 I have been researching architectural photographs and came upon the website of The International Association of Architectural Photographers.

http://www.iaap.co.uk/index.htm

This association showcases members work and gives contact details in countries around the world.  Some of the photography is the standard type where you are just recording a scene to make a permanent record but some of the images are exceptional. I found the pictures of Blain Crellin, an Australian photographer based in Shanghai particularly exciting especially as he seemed keen to add human interest to his images, see website below.

http://www.iaap.co.uk/ptpl.index.php?PageT=ViewPh&act=&ID=802

We all know how difficult it is to obtain the perfect shot of a tall buiding and, if you don't have an architectural lens, how much work is needed to eliminate your converging verticals so to see some of these images stimulates me to get out there and have another go!

Sunday, 11 July 2010

Skandia Sailing Team GBR Exhibition - Southampton Art Gallery

In another part of the gallery there was a stunning exhibition of images taken of the Skandia Sailing Team GBR featuring members of the team and action pictures taken out on the water.  The images make my own attempts look pretty feeble against them. The exhibition has closed (can’t find it anywhere on the Southampton City Gallery web site but I scanned in a piece from the brochure as you can see here. Makes my images seem dull and uninspiring!


Here’s a link to the Royal Yachting Association website where you can some stunning images of the team instead:


Lowry Exhibition – Southampton City Art Gallery

14 May – 5 September 2010
These quirky images, drawn in pencil or biro, are so simplistic as to make you believe you could do something similar in the same medium.  Drawings made by Lowry showed his distinctive style of ‘matchstick men and match stalk cats and dogs’ as quoted in the song by Brian and Michael.  It seems that he rarely carried pencil and paper on his travels and so, when inspired, he drew on anything to hand including the backs of envelopes and cloakroom tickets.

This exhibition also shows how Lowry could draw and paint with great precision as in The Southampton Floating Bridge shown here as a pencil drawing and watercolours.
Lowry’s original pen and pencil sketches give great hope to one such as me who finds it very difficult to produce artwork in other than the photographic medium.











(c) Estate of L S Lowry

Tuesday, 6 July 2010

Review: Within the Frame: The Journey of Photographic Vision (Voices That Matter) by David DuChemin



Overall, I liked "Within the Frame" a lot for showing me the "sensitive" side of photography. This is not only a great book to look at, but it also features some extremely useful advice that is a must for any photographer, whether amateur or pro, looking to improve their work, or even just to explore some new ideas.

The focus is more on using your gut feeling, being patient and aware of your surroundings. Also, although most pictures were taken in some exotic location, the author stresses that the difference between a good picture and one that draws the viewer in and actually makes her feel something, is your attitude towards the subject, not where in the world you happen to be.

Art at Eype

I visited an interesting exhibition of paintings, ceramics, sculpture, painted furniture and digital art at a local church on Sunday (July 4th) at Eype (outside Bridport, Dorset) where a group of artists were displaying and selling their work. It was truly captivating.  So much so I ended up buying a pretty little jug decorated with red poppies made by a sculptor called Katherine Lloyd who so loved her work that she said goodbye to every piece that she sold.

http://www.marinehouseatbeer.co.uk/catalog/artist.php?artistid=89&galleryid=18

The exhibition was organised by local artist, Sally Davis, who works in an attic studio in Bridport and specialises in digital art.

http://www.photoartbysally.co.uk/gallery/index.php?cmd=cat&cat=10

This was a truly delightful exhibition and it was a real pleasure meeting people who were so enthusiastic about showing and talking about their work.

Thursday, 24 June 2010

Small Spaces

I have just started Project 3 - Buildings and Space - of the People and Place module so I read with interest about the V&A’s exhibition on small spaces.  This sounds like an exhibition not to be missed. The museum in London invited 19 architects to submit proposals for small structures that examine notions of refuge and retreat. Seven of their designs were selected for full-scale construction inside the museum.  The theme of this exhibition was a powerful thread animating and holding together these seven buildings, commissioned by the V&A's curator of designs, Abraham Thomas. The thread is made of what would be called resistance – architectural resistance to the ever-growing world of buildings that look as if they have been designed by computers and built by robots.

Buildings include a Fujimori teahouse, a timber book tower by Rintala Eggertsson named The Ark, and a plaster cast of an ad-hoc living space in Mumbai, squeezed between a warehouse and the architects' office (Studio Mumbai), and out in the museum's John Madejski Garden, Norwegian architets Helen & Hard (based in Stavanger) have created a building named Ratatosk, after a mythological Nordic squirrel and is made from ash trees that have been split apart and then milled by a computer-driven machine.

This Small Spaces exhibition has a strong message about nurturing local architecture which should be led by imagination rather than computer wizardry. This exhibition closes at the end of the summer but all seven of this small buildings have something valuable to convey.


Wednesday, 23 June 2010

Ethics

I’ve been following a thread in the OCA Forum Photography, Film & Digital Media on Ethics in photography and must agree that I find that much of what appears in newspapers and magazines today would not have been acceptable 20-30 years ago.

http://www.oca-uk.com/forum/school-photography-film-and-digital-media/ethics

The images used to illustrate this argument show, in the first instance, a young girl who has been shot dead.  The true story will be lost as her particulars as a person seem to have disappeared, but the real story that this picture is used to illustrate is when is it right to have hoards of photographers photographing ‘an incident’ for publication in the next day’s papers.

Gareth Dent (OCA’s CEO) Says...
To kick us off I have pasted below an extract from an earlier post in the Coffee Shop:

‘Yiannitsa and others [in the Coffee Shop Forum] have drawn our attention to the fact that what we find shocking reflects what we have in our head as much as what is in front of us. Photography is particularly problematic in this way, but this does not seem to me to be a valid reason to avoid it.’

Now at the risk of compounding the offence I would like to illustrate my point by comparing two images. It is not necessary to click on the links to get the sense so please do not do so if you feel you will be upset by the images.
The first image by Carlos Garcia Rawlins appeared in the Guardian in January, it shows a young woman, Fabienne Cherisma, who has been shot dead in Haiti (It is here - scroll down to see it) http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2010/jan/26/haiti-earthquake-shooting-girl-story

The second image is a different perspective on the same scene. To my knowledge it has not appeared in the UK press. It is a photograph of the first photograph being taken. It is here.

http://prisonphotography.wordpress.com/2010/03/18/photographing-fabienne-part-nine-interview-with-nathan-weber/

The tragedy of a young woman's death is presented to us in the second image as a commodity, like air freighted exotic flowers, to be got to market as quickly as possible to maximise its value.

I have heard, during discussions before, about how incidents have ensued but only when the press or photographers are present.  How is it that photographers or film makers are on the spot when an incident kicks off and how is it that photographs are misrepresented when published?  I can remember a picture in The Guardian several years ago where it seemed there was a man screaming obscenities at a young woman whist being surrounded by policemen.  The inference was that of police brutality but when the picture was published by the paper, the woman in question wrote in and explained that she was not being abused by the man; she was asking if he was okay.  The intention of the image was completely distorted by the paper.

I have just been reading random blogs on the OCA website forum and came upon this extract from a fellow student who was using the forum to express her feelings and thoughts about a personal situation and whether to exploit that situation using photography.

“This is mostly not about photography, except a little at the end, but I felt the need to write about it and this is my only space right now.

While travelling into London on the train last week, someone committed suicide by walking in front of my train.  I was in the front of the first carriage and heard the impact as the train hit him, and the awful banging and thudding that vibrated up through my feet as his body was tossed around underneath.  None of us knew it was a person at the time, although I think it was one of the first thoughts to occur to everyone after we released our collective breath and our hearts had slowed back to normal rhythms. 
And the photographic footnote?  Well, I could have taken photographs.  The thought occurred to me.  The police, paramedics and stretcher were all right outside my window, I had my DSLR in my bag, and it would have been easy.  But it didn’t feel right and I didn’t do it.  (I obviously don’t have the makings of a photojournalist.)   And – if I’m going to be brutally honest here – at least a little of my reluctance was that I thought I might be disapproved of by other passengers.  I’m not proud of that bit, and it was only part of the mixed emotions I was feeling, but it was a factor.

I don’t think it’s necessarily wrong to take photographs in these situations, and I say that having been on the receiving end of it.  My parents were both killed in a car crash many years ago, and photographs were taken and published of the badly crushed car that they had travelled in.  It must have been a slow news day, as the accident was reported on BBC Radio and it made – with photographs – the front page of some of the tabloids.  This didn’t/doesn’t bother me; the photographers were doing their job and, although it brought home to me how violent the accident must have been, it didn’t make things any worse for me.  I would not have been happy had the photographs been of their bodies, however.  And I certainly didn’t like the reporters turning up on the doorstep, directly intruding into our grief, even though you could say they were only doing their job too.  

Is it wrong – or, perhaps more aptly, in bad taste - to photograph these things?  After all, these are personal tragedies, not major news.  I don’t know: the question’s been debated endlessly and I don’t think I have anything useful to add to it.  I only know that when it came to it, and for whatever reasons, I didn’t do it.”
I have been in the situation where I was there as a photographer taking pictures of a works football match.  One of the players went to kick the ball and ended up with a badly broken let.  I know it is not ethical to photograph someone else's pain but I was being egged on by a fellow employee. I was strong enough not be to goaded by him, but he would not let it go and only by saying quite firmly that I would not take any pictures would he stop. He thought it was quite acceptable to take pictures of someone's distress.

 

Sunday, 20 June 2010

iPad and iPhone uses

I was checking out the ‘We are OCA' RSS feed and found an interesting review of the new iPad by ‘Jane’ who is excited about the possibilities of using the pad instead of having to take her sketchbook and watercolours round with her. The interesting point is that she had to cease using it on a recent trip to Spain as it caused too much interest and she was unable to get on with her painting.


On the same website is listed another website which shows iPhone pictures using just the iPhone camera.  Galleries are now open which show only pictures from the camera and it opens up a brand new world of opportunities as people in the street are far more used to seeing mobile phones being used and are likely to react less than to someone using an obvious camera.


And from the above website I was led to another page which shows only iPhone images:

I see my iPhone in a completely new and different light as I have used the camera before  but only when I didn’t have my usual compact with me. The possibilities are endless!


Friday, 18 June 2010

Reading Material: Ways of Seeing - John Berger

As I commented in my previous blog, I have never had a chance to study art appreciation and this course through OCA has encouraged me to look and read about works of art (be it paintings or photographs) and try to understand better the meanings behind what you see.

One student, in the OCA Forum website, recommended the above book as an excellent support to this course and I have been ploughing through it.  There are approximately 200 images contained within it covers (and it's quite a small book) and explanations given on what painters were trying to achieve when they put paint to canvas.  It was hard going at first, and I remember another student writing in the blog that it was better to dip into the book rather than try to take it all in at once.  This seems a good plan and having dipped I found a good explanation on Cubism which was something I never understood.  John goes on the explain that a cubist painter trys to show something from several views not just a conventional view that you would normally see.  After reading this explanation Picasso' cubist work seems clearer, and with the explanations accompanying the pictures, I can grasp the significance of some of his work. 
     I shall continue to dip in when I have a few minutes to broaden my understanding and appreciation of major works of art.

Tuesday, 15 June 2010

Picasso at the Tate Liverpool

http://www.tate.org.uk/liverpool/exhibitions/Picasso/roomintro.shtm 

I found an article in The Mail On Sunday written by author Mark Hudson who reviewed this exhibition (6 June 2010).

http://findarticles.com/p/news-articles/mail-on-sunday-london-england-the/mi_8003/is_2010_June_6/picassos-wrong-angle- art/ai_n53912159/?tag=content;col1

Mark Hudson comments on Picasso’s motives for his paintings and says: ‘If this exhibition overstates its case, it does provide an intriguingly different angle on an artist whose work has become almost overfamiliar. And it brings together a glorious collection of works, many of them little seen. If you're anywhere near Liverpool, you must see it.

This is an exhibition that I would like to see but due to the distance have had to view what is included online.  As such, I am limited to the pictures that are included on the website but am able to find other websites of his work.  I also found a website entitled Picasso – The Blue Period which gives an explanation of his thinking around paintings produced during the period 1901-04. 

http://www.artknowledgenews.com/blueperiod

For someone who had never had a chance to study art and the theories behind it I am discovering a whole new world thanks to the internet.  It's like being a customer in a sweet shop where you can choose what you like and have as much as you like, and keep coming back.
  I have always found Picasso’s painting very disturbing as I find it hard to understand the significance behind them.  The explanations given with the paintings, Mark’s review and the article by The Art Appreciation Society have given a whole new meaning to the featured paintings.

Wednesday, 9 June 2010

9 JUNE 2010 - DORSET ART WEEKS UPDATE

The past two weeks have had a surfeit of art in and around Lyme Regis.  The 10th Dorset Art Weeks finishes this weekend with over 40 artists in and around Lyme who have opened their doors to the public.
www.dorsetartweeks.co.uk/

I have been to visit several local artists including:

Silversmith Lucy Campbell (featured by me in Assignment 1 for the People & Place module) has displayed previous and new work as well as working on new commissions as her visitors talk to her about her exciting work.  One of my pictures featured in my portfolio of Lucy was used to advertise her workshop in the local free paper at the beginning of the event.
www.lucycampbell.net

The Pop-up National Gallery of Lyme was hosted by Hugh Dunford Wood in a Georgian house decorated with handmade wallpaper and engraved handmade glass created by the Queen’s former glass engraver Laurence Whistler who lived there until about 40 years ago. Hugh displayed work and sketches by himself, his wife and son.  Hugh’s website can be found at:
www.dunfordwood.co.uk

Two inspiring women artists with studios in the Old Town in Lyme are Jacqueline Curle and Christine Allinson.  Jacqueline exhibited over 7 years’ worth of her work at her home in Coombe Street.  Her work is mainly impressionistic with bright swirls of colour on large canvases.  Jacqueline doesn’t have a current website but can be contacted by email.


Christine Allinson is currently working on a series of large canvases inspired by her fascination with birds of prey.  Christine is a well-known local artist born in Northumberland in 1954 she studied at St. Martin’s School of Art in London, worked as a graphic designer in London before becoming a free-lance independent designer and moved to Lyme Regis in Dorset in 1980 to work. Christine has exhibited widely in the West Country and in 2009 had a solo show in London. Her work is in many private collections.
www.christineallison.com/home

Local photographer Peter Wiles has opened his riverside home to display shots of Lyme and a new collection focussed on people in their places of work. Peter is well-known for his innovative images of everyday life in and around the town and he also works as a photojournalist for the local and national press.
www.peterwilesphotography.co.uk

All in all it has been a very exciting two weeks spent visiting local artists and viewing their work in progress in their studios.  The artists above are just a brief snapshot of the 40+ artists in and around Lyme, time did not permit me to visit more, due to personal commitments and studio opening times, much to my disappointment. 

Monday, 31 May 2010

Art in the Country - Dorset Art Weeks

For the next fortnight from Saturday (29th May) artists and crafts people across Dorset are inviting the public in to see what they do.  Studios and galleries are opening around the county to enable people to look around and talk to the artists about their work and inspiration.
It’s all part of the Dorset Art Weeks, the county’s 10th biennial celebration of visual arts which include sculpture, textiles, jewellery, glassworking and more. The event is organised by the Dorset Visual Arts whose aim is to celebrate the fact that we have a high level of talent in the county.
Lyme Regis takes part in this festival of art with several studios opening for the two weeks. The studios and galleries in Lyme which are taking part are listed on the website below:


I intend to visit as many of the open studios during the coming two weeks as possible and will add to this blog as I do.

At the same time the Lyme Regis Philpot Museum is showing, in the recently opened Malthouse Gallery, pictures of Old Lyme entitled ‘Another Look at Old Lyme’ which shows how the town has developed over the past 100 years.


Before we moved here in September last year we had visited the town at least twice a year for over 20 years and have been interested in its history and developments.  So much so, that in the past couple of years, since the advent of the World Wide Web, I have followed events through local papers which published their weekly copy on the net.