In this episode, David Williams-Ellis talks about the primary influence of his art teacher at Stowe School, his experience of studying in Italy, how a chance sight of a sculpted female figure in Pietrasanta had a lasting influence on his work, his ability to create a sense of movement and poise in his sculptures, his commissions for memorials in Aberdeen and Normandy, and his continuing love for making art.
Continue reading “Considering Art Podcast – David Williams-Ellis, sculptor”Considering Art Podcast – Benjamin Hannavy Cousen, painter
In this episode, British artist Benjamin Hannavy Cousen talks about how he converts books into visual artworks by mapping each colour mentioned in them with layers of acrylic paint applied with a syringe. He talks about how he creates “an archaeology of memory” and how his English Literature, History of Art and Cultural Memory studies have informed his work.
Continue reading “Considering Art Podcast – Benjamin Hannavy Cousen, painter”Considering Art Podcast – Kim Pace, multi-media artist
In this episode, British artist Kim Pace talks about the weird, hybrid creatures she paints and sculpts focusing on fluid identity, her upbringing with an artistic mother and eccentric father, her love of ceramics, the influence of Mexican folklore and female surrealists, the importance of drawing and her love of grotesques.
Continue reading “Considering Art Podcast – Kim Pace, multi-media artist”Helaine Blumenfeld – Intimacy and Isolation at Hignell Gallery, London
Esteemed sculptor Helaine Blumenfeld has a new exhibition of both new and earlier works which focus both on her anxiety and her hope for the times in which we live. Mostly conceived in lockdown and created in 2022, these new, small-scale abstract sculptures are the result of an extended sculptural vocabulary and approach intimacy both as a personal as well as a global phenomenon.
Continue reading “Helaine Blumenfeld – Intimacy and Isolation at Hignell Gallery, London”Considering Art Podcast – Beezy Bailey, multi-media artist
In this episode, South African artist Beezy Bailey talks about his family roots, his time in New York with the likes of Andy Warhol and Keith Haring, his Fine Art degree in London, his collaborations with rock stars David Bowie, Dave Matthews and Brian Eno, his alter ego Joyce Ntobe and his response to exhibiting in an English stately home.
Continue reading “Considering Art Podcast – Beezy Bailey, multi-media artist”Considering Art Podcast – John Atkin, sculptor
In this episode, sculptor John Atkin talks about the influence on his work of the industrial and rural landscapes of his youth, how Henry Moore came to finance his MA, the inspiration of Wilfred Owen and other literary figures, his love of found objects, how he discovered garment patterns that alluded to the human form, and his landmark sculptures in China, the US, Canada and the UK.
Continue reading “Considering Art Podcast – John Atkin, sculptor”Considering Art Podcast – Marie-Thérèse Ross, multi-media artist
In this episode, Marie-Thérèse Ross talks about how her sculptural skills developed from collages, how she developed the idea for anthropomorphic furniture, how fragmentation expresses the sense of movement in her work, her fascination with birds and animals through which she can sometimes express anger and her recent collaboration with a composer.
Continue reading “Considering Art Podcast – Marie-Thérèse Ross, multi-media artist”Considering Art Podcast – Claire Morgan, multi-disciplinary artist
In this podcast, Northern Irish artist Claire Morgan talks about how an early trauma has had a profound impact on her life, how she was drawn to taxidermy for her installations, how concern for the environment is a key component of her works and how her art has been a journey of self-discovery.
Continue reading “Considering Art Podcast – Claire Morgan, multi-disciplinary artist”Considering Art Podcast – Gbolohan Ayoola, Nigerian painter and sculptor
In our latest podcast, Nigerian artist Gbolohan Ayoola talks about the art scene in his hometown of Lagos, the state of the art market for Nigerians and Africans in general, the deficiencies of an art college education, the influences that drive him as an artist, his “blue woman” series, how current issues such as police brutality and global migration have shaped his work and how his latest works dream of a future African renaissance.
Continue reading “Considering Art Podcast – Gbolohan Ayoola, Nigerian painter and sculptor”Considering Art Podcast – Brett Murray, South African satirical artist
In this latest podcast, Brett Murray describes his upbringing as a white person in apartheid South Africa, how the 1976 Soweto riots changed his life, how he used his art to help in the struggle against the apartheid regime, his self-exile in London and his triumphant return when the African National Congress was unbanned, how he set up a sculpture department at Stellenbosch University, his satirical artwork criticising the corruption and greed within the now ruling ANC, The Spear controversy and his recent, softer work looking at family and the impact of global warming.
Continue reading “Considering Art Podcast – Brett Murray, South African satirical artist”