Wednesday, 11 July 2012

So that was Mixed Special


 'Brash'


Private View (Thursday) ...

My drunken photography (above and below) See how busy it was ! :P

 Mixed Special artists Brigid Deacon and Lucy Towle

Interest in my work!


Sunday Market...

Biscuit decorating workshop

I made this with some help from Vicky Willmott, who was running the biscuit decorating workshop.. RAD!

 I brought my folks to see the show on Sunday. We drove down from Bewdely and parked in the tiniest multi-storey carpark ever, just up the road from the Mixed Special show. Here is my mum 'appreciating the 'view' ... ah East London, what a place!


Tuesday, when I finally took some shots of the show...




Grace Helmer

Holly Mills

Emily McCarten

Team Brigid and Harriet!

Brigid Deacon



Sunday, 1 July 2012

MIXED SPECIAL !!!


 It's finally here... what we've been saving up for almost 3 years now! I promise you it's gonna be good.. amazing in fact... actually, no... rad!!

I present the Camberwell Illustration external degree show... Mixed Special! I urge you to come, enjoy some awesome art, drink some beer and meet the Camberwell illo 2012 posse! :)

Visit the website before (or after) you come to the show: http://mixedspecial.com/

Skaters and animals

Just a nugget of my artwork in the mixed Special show.. private view THIS THURSDAY more bloggage to follow

Friday, 29 June 2012

Papergirl London!




After being involved in Papergirl Birmingham, I have now sent a selection of my work to Papergirl London, the private view of which is, unfortunately, on the same night as the Mixed Special private view! Arghhh! 

Friday, 22 June 2012

Camberwell Illustration show private view

busy busy busy!


Brigid Deacon :)

Mirandas animaltastic wallpaper and chair design

 Charlene and Katies massive mouth! 'Playology' - exploration of the human digestive system

Vicky Wilmott with her tent and shadow puppet animation

Sunday, 17 June 2012

Degree show at Camberwell

Here's the details

Here's my final project

And here is my art to be sold in the Illustration shop.

Please come


Skateboard Religion Board Graphic


Here is the board graphic I have done for Skateboard Religion, out very soon!
In fact, if you order from http://skateboardreligion.bigcartel.com/ now, you'll be able to get it at a discount price. 
Failing that, Parlour skate shop will be stocking the boards
Or, you could holler up Nik Jones or myself if you want a board.


Stu Smith, Sam Smith and Joel Dowuona


 Just a few portraits I did for  the Skateboard Religion board graphic

Sunday, 6 May 2012

It's live... Camberwell illustration website







The super amazing Grace Helmer, Daniel Clarke and Kraggy have put together this aaaaamazing website showcasing all of the radtastic work made by Camberwell illustration third years. This website coincides with our external degree show to be held at Red Gallery in July, more details to follow, but in the mean time.... please take a gander through our collective cyber portfolio :) http://mixedspecial.com/

PS As you can imagine, I've been working super hard, so have had no time for internet promotion and propaganda... more soon... I promise!

Monday, 26 March 2012

Papergirl Birmingham

I'm exhibiting in this...



'Papergirl is a global project that aims to open the art world into the urban streets of everyday life. It is an intervention seeking to surprise people and to heartily upturn the notable predictability of day to day life.'

'The concept begins with an open call for art, welcoming anyone creatively minded to submit their drawings, paintings, screen prints, photographs, textiles, stickers, poems, zines… anything that can be rolled up and transported with ease.'

'Art is collected, exhibited, and then distributed on mass to an unsuspecting public, via an atmospheric array of honkingly exuberant and ravishingly roadworthy Brummies on bicycles.'

http://papergirlbirmingham.tumblr.com/

COME TO THE SHOW!
APRIL 2nd - 27th, @48Sheet, The Mailbox, Wharfside, Birmingham


Some artwork I'm mailing up...


Peepshow Collective's museum of Objects and Origins


Museum


Peepshowers at their museum shop

Alongside other Camberwell students, I was fortunate to be asked by my second year tutor, Luke Best, to help out at Pick Me Up graphic arts fair with the running of the 'Museum of Objects and Origins,' a exhibition space curated by the Peepshow Collective.

'The museum of Objects and Origins is a collection of artefacts including drawings, objects, prints and costumes. Exhibition items from an invented past, the collection is also a living, growing display as themed workshops create new works to fill the cabinets.'

http://peepshow.org.uk/moo/









Peepshow are a group of artists formed to support and work with each other in the forms of illustration, animation and art direction. Peepshow are Chrissie Macdonald, Luke Best, Andrew Rae, Lucy Vigrass, Jenny Bowers, Miles Donovan, Pete Mellor, Marie O’Connor, Elliot Thoburn and Spencer Wilson.



Printing workshop at weekend






I've done two days so far and two more days to go and I'm stoked to be a part of this. Thank you Peepshow

http://www.peepshow.org.uk

Friday, 23 March 2012

Girls Get Busy zine contribution


Risograph print



The original black and white drawing of Lovenskate's Lucy Adams is in the latest Girls Get Busy zine. Thanks to Beth Siveyer for asking me to contribute.

Check out the Girls Get Busy blog here and get your copy of the zine!
http://girlsgetbusyzine.tumblr.com/

Lurker



Portrait of Stockwell lurkal (lurker-local), DIY skatespot enthusiast and all round awesome guy, Adam Johns.

http://johnser.blogspot.co.uk/

Fahrenheit 451 Illustration

'Frightening in its implications... Mr Bradbury's account of this insane world, which bears many alarming resemblances to our own, is fascinating.' -The New York Times



Here is an illustration I did of the following caption from Ray Bradbury's distopian Science Fiction novel, Fahrenheit 451.





'The system was simple. Everyone understood it. Books were for burning, along with the houses in which they were hidden.'

'Guy Montag was a fireman whose job it was to start fires. And he enjoyed his job. He had been a fireman for ten years, and he had never questioned the pleasure of the midnight runs or the joy of watching pages consumed by flames, never questioned anything until he met a seventeen-year-old girl who told him of a past when people were not afraid. Then Guy met a professor who told him of a future in which people could think. And Guy Montag suddenly realised what he had to do... '

Dedicated followers of fashion read this and weep