List of Artists for the September 2010 Exhibition.
Zoe Bailey
Sue Barnes
Sue Blandford
Janet Brooke
Ted Davis
Amy Douglas
Patrick Edgeley
Gary Eastwood
Sally Elford
Rowena Gilbert
Sarah Jones
Victoria Langdon
Sin Mui Chong Martin
Mary Moox
Nick Patchitt
Eve Poland
Flo Snook
Anna Tilson
Liz Toole
Ed Tucker
Rory Walker
Paul Walsh
Sue Barnes
Sue Blandford
Janet Brooke
Ted Davis
Amy Douglas
Patrick Edgeley
Gary Eastwood
Sally Elford
Rowena Gilbert
Sarah Jones
Victoria Langdon
Sin Mui Chong Martin
Mary Moox
Nick Patchitt
Eve Poland
Flo Snook
Anna Tilson
Liz Toole
Ed Tucker
Rory Walker
Paul Walsh
Klara Cservenka

www.myspace.com/klaracservenka
www.klaracservenka.com
klaracservenka@googlemail.com
Claire Fletcher

Claire is currently working on a book for children published by Puffin Australia.
Claire exhibits her work at her studio, The Black Winkle, in Hastings and also at Made in Hastings, a shop that she runs with four other artist/makers.
www.madeinhastings.co.uk
Rowena Gilbert

Using additions of metal oxides for the reds, blacks and blues, the coloured clay layers are brushed on the slip cast vessel or inlaid in incised lines and marks. The surface marks are created using various sgraffito tools when the clay vessel is in a leather-hard state. Rowena bisque fires, then masks areas on the outside of the vessel using wax resist, glazing the inside and the unmasked areas with a transparent gloss with the final firing at 1160°C. All pieces are hand made and have Rowena's signature mark on the base.
www.rowenagilbert.com
Stella Harding

I am excited by the life and energy in natural materials but seek to transform and defamiliarise them in different ways. I use painting, mark-making, stencilling, scratching and sanding to add surface texture and pattern whilst retaining many of the characteristic signs of movement and growth. Stencilling and spray painting is both a reference to the tradition of mark-making on wicker basketry and a way of connecting with the myriad forms of textual expression which are written onto the fabric of the urban landscape.
I prefer using materials that I have grown or collected myself, yet having only a small garden forces me to consider ways of making the most of limited supplies of materials as well as wider issues of sustainability, economy and waste. I often re-work finished pieces or recycle elements that have had a previous life.
I enjoy working on a large scale with open, linear, abstract forms. Having learned recently that several of my pieces are based on the spatial geometry of hyperbolic paraboloids I am keen to learn more about the relationship between basketry and mathematics as a means of experimenting with form and space.
I welcome commissions and requests to run workshops.
www.basketryplus.org/StellaHarding/gallery.html
Sylvie Howitt

I love paper, all kinds of paper! especially paper from a different era with its unique texture, colour and smell.
With a chance discovery of a collection of vintage maps in a dusty attic, my imagination was fired by a mixture of works from Victorian woodcuts to Hans Christian Andersen and my current favourite artist Rob Ryan.
Papercutting as an art form has existed for thousands of years, during which people have been cutting paper, transforming it into art as unique and diverse as their culture, from simple folk art, to elaborate mathematical masterpieces.
For me, the use of recycled vintage materials seemed the perfect way to express a simple story of hope and love, with a material from a golden age of adventure, romance and hope.
I hand cut paper from my own freehand drawings. I love the physical process of cutting into paper with a sharp blade, sometimes scissors, releasing that one off image and design as a result.
There is something very appealing about the immediacy of this medium and the challenge of keeping the entire delicate image intact within the frame of the paper without the whole piece falling apart.
I love the symmetry of the designs and the way it tells a story. You will find that my designs vary from the contemporary to the traditional folky look depending on my mood and inspiration.
The paper I use has its own story, sometimes adding meaning to my paper cut and therefore bringing life into it.
Whether it is the colours, the musical notes, the maps or the place names, I hope there can be something to trigger a connection, joy, memories ...
www.sylviehowitt.com
Ed Tucker

clients thus far have included:
Time magazine // Pearlfisher Design //Mountain Bike Rider // Ransom Publishing // IPC Media // Liquid Records // The London Magazine // Plan B Magazine // Cookchick Design Free Radical Sounds Records // GeoActive Magazine // Earthforce Clothing // Cuff Cuff Jewellers // International Academy Of Colour Therapeutics
www.edtucker.biz
Anna Wenger

All items are hand made, unique and full of individuality. Each cushion’s intricate motif is hand drawn before being free hand embroidered, using varied threads and stitches to form a tactile design.
She has recently collaborated with Brighton tattooist James Robinson to produce an exciting range of limited edition prints.
www.sacredstitches.co.uk
Debbie Ayles

The starting point is always based in observed reality. Layering is used as a technique to make images more complex, allowing viewers a richer visual experience. Line is an important part of the paintings or prints, offering the means of conveying movement, shifting view points and the mutability of the source material. It is then segmented, deconstructed and manipulated, finally being rebuilt as enigmatic and individual narratives. The bright, multicoloured images that formed my reconstructed barns a couple of years ago now are complemented by complex linear decisions or as different colour choices. Each new painting seems to suggest the possibility of further exploration and development.
The study of my environment and travelling around East Anglia looking for such barns is quite an adventure. I feel I am recording a part of local history for future generations. It is impossible to say how many of these may exist in a few years. Judging by their resilience in the past, they may be around for a while. However two of the barns are now residential properties and one is a tennis court.
www.debbieaylesartist.co.uk
Lulu Allison

Another aspect is that of mould or fungus, a thing that is poor or ignored but often has great beauty. Somewhere between the invasion of a mould and the architecture of the space is where I try to place my work.
www.luckylulu.co.uk
Sue Blandford

I am concerned with paradoxes of light and dark, peace and unease. Also relationships between man made objects or interventions in natural situations.
I never go anywhere without a camera looking for photographs in their own right but mainly for material for paintings. Objects in context but slightly out of place. I am interested in what happens in the golden 30 minutes in the evening when the light is low and transformative giving glimpses of something other. When objects glow out of dark spaces or as with glasshouses, become beacons filled with mystery and seemingly inner light.
My work is a visual diary of observations that chime with internal states or life phases.
www.sueblandford.com
Sin Mui Chong-Martin

Apart from using pencils, my drawings are achieved through layers of colouring with colour pencils. Some are cut out by hand and presented in boxed frames.
My studies aim to reflect aspects of the human practice and desires with the use of plants as multi-demensional representations. The reference point for my practice is a construct of nature-society relationship where I exploit plants as cultural symbols fostered to suit our milieu.
www.axisweb.org/artist/sinmuichongmartin
Gary Eastwood

www.garyeastwood.co.uk
Sally Elford

Sally’s popular prints are currently exhibited and sold in contemporary galleries and design led shops throughout the UK.
Since having some of her prints published in greeting card form by Art Angels, her work has gained a wider international following.
www.sallyelford.co.uk/prints
Rhona Garvin

www.rhonagarvin.com
Vicky Langdon

Graduate of Brighton printmaking MA
Printmaker’s council prizewinner 2009
I am a silkscreen printer working with paper and fabric prints. The subject of my most recent set of prints is the honeybee. The much-publicised disappearance of the honeybee prompted me to take a closer look at the insect itself. The co-dependent, hard working creatures, their symbolism of industry, and their ancient connection to the spirit world, as well as the mysterious phenomenon of their puzzling vanishing, equally fascinate me.
Previously I have made prints of urban birds, particularly the pigeon. I print images of pigeons with mutated appearance, which are also the birds with the most characterful expressions. For me the pigeons symbolise the city itself. I am overall interested in studying things that exist in the corners of our perception such as the pigeon or the honeybee.
"Our treasure lies in the beehive of our knowledge. We are perpetually on the way thither, being by nature winged insects and honey gatherers of the mind." Friedrich Nietzsche (1844-1900), German philosopher. The Genealogy of Morals, "Preface," sct. 1 (1887; tr. 1956).
Vicky.langdon@gmail.com
www.dewolfprints.com
plushpatterns.blogspot.com
Alison Swan

www.alisonswan.com
Justin Sainsbury

www.flickr.com/photos/jsainsbury
List of Artists for the February 2010 Exhibition.
Anja Lubach
Alex Dipple
Anna Kyriacou
Anna Tilson
Cassie Beck
Charlotte Squire
Deborah Batt
Emma Harding
Gary Burns
Jan Lee Johnson
Jane Denman
Jo Higgs
Julie Milton
Kate Osbourne
Lucy Jefferys
Luke Hutson
Mary Moox
Natalie Martin
Nicholas Wriglesworth
Phil Lyddon
Rob Macdonald
Robin Clare
Rory Walker
Toby Smith
Wendy Pye
Alex Dipple
Anna Kyriacou
Anna Tilson
Cassie Beck
Charlotte Squire
Deborah Batt
Emma Harding
Gary Burns
Jan Lee Johnson
Jane Denman
Jo Higgs
Julie Milton
Kate Osbourne
Lucy Jefferys
Luke Hutson
Mary Moox
Natalie Martin
Nicholas Wriglesworth
Phil Lyddon
Rob Macdonald
Robin Clare
Rory Walker
Toby Smith
Wendy Pye
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