Hands On: Art, Stripped Down

Art is an essentially practical pastime. THE ART DIFFerential, thus, felt it was about time we got our hands dirty. The first installation of our Hands On blog series took us to 10 Feet Tall to take part in one of the weekly life drawing classes.

A Sketch from the 'Tiger and Huntress' life drawing session at 10 Feet Tall

A Sketch from the ‘Tiger and Huntress’ life drawing session

Life drawing is a keystone of artistic practise. Despite that, it is still an enigmatic part of the trade. Those who have studied any variation on fine art will have been subjected to many a dry and institutionalised life drawing session, and those who are unfamiliar with the practise are likely to perceive life drawing sessions as awkward and uncomfortable.

However, the sessions at 10 Feet Tall are an entirely different breed. Veterans of illustration and artistic amateurs alike occupy the bar’s atmospheric third floor, putting pencil to paper in an uninhibited creative outpouring.

The sessions are the brainchild of Andy Lamb, co-ordinator of Cardiff Life Models. Now in their second year of working at 10 Feet Tall, Andy has welcomed “artistic talent ranging from all ages, backgrounds and skill.” The warm, relaxed environment is far removed from the rigid, institutional classes available elsewhere.

Models offer diverse sessions, at times dressing up and performing different scenes. In fact, the session THE ART DIFF attended was constructed by a model who was celebrating her birthday that day. In homage to the occassion, she posed as a huntress in battle with a tiger, scenes complete with stuffed tiger toy. The atmosphere was almost tongue-in-cheek (without detracting from or demeaning the creative processes at play) and amicable chatter was encouraged throughout, as is sampling the bar’s extensive drinks menu. All of these elements build a refreshingly relaxed and productive artistic environment.

A life drawing sketch produced at the 10 Feet Tall sessions, image courtesy of Andy Lamb and Cardiff Life Models

A life drawing sketch produced at the 10 Feet Tall sessions, image courtesy of Andy Lamb and Cardiff Life Models

No artistic experience or materials are needed, just come along with an open mind and a willingness to draw the human form, says Andy.

The classes take place at 6pm every Tuesday evening, at a small cost of £5 that Andy puts towards paying the life models and providing art materials.

In talks with Richard Higlett

It is just over a week since Cardiff Contemporary 2014 closed its metaphorical doors. As an Arts Council Wales project that Richard Higlett worked in close conjunction with, you’d think the forty-seven-year-old Warwick born artist would be left with time on his hands. You’d be wrong.

Cardiff Contemporary

Cardiff Contemporary closed its metaphorical doors just over one week ago

Higlett can now focus on his personal creative output. “At base level I class myself as a practising artist,” he said, although Richard added, “I mean, I don’t like to think of myself as an artist; I just make things and other people decide that.”

Richard “came to art late in life”. After giving up a career in carework he completed his MA in Fine Art at Cardiff Metropolitan University (formerly UWIC) in 1999.

“I’d always made art but I went into full-time education when I was 25. I had been a stress engineer with an office, car and £12,000 a year. It was 1989 and that was a lot of money but it was like ‘Wow, this doesn’t matter, what do I really want to do?’”

Wally French Archive

An artwork created using found objects and reclaimed paintbrushes – The Wally French Archive

Higlett’s artistic practise itself is a very intriguing notion. Richard said, “I have an alter ego called Wally French who is my sort of commercial wing. He makes work – I talk about him in the third person – that is like an alternative pathway of twentieth century art. It relates to twentieth century conceptual art but its done in a very Outsider Art, Folk Art way. He’s quite popular.”

“The idea of Wally is that he’s a suburban landscape painter. The back of his house in the 1940s used to be trees and fields and he’s now surrounded by housing estates. So he paints on things around his house to reclaim the landscape. Landscapes on frying pans, Mills and Boon paperback novel front covers, paintbrushes, knife handles, there’s a series of suitcases – I did objects in suitcases – so it’s that idea of wanting to reclaim the objects of your circumstance.”

Wally French said “Some people say I’m a fictional person but that depends on whether you believe in fact or fiction. Some people say I’m an outsider but that’s dependant on knowing what is inside.”

Higlett also opened up about some of the greater issues in the art sphere that affect practising artists, such as centralisation. When asked, Richard explained the localisation and density in numbers of major commercial artists in London by saying “There is a very particular type of artist who lives in Cardiff. We’re all of a similar sense of aspiration; a soft ambition so to speak. I don’t think there are many artists in Cardiff who are very ruthlessly ambitious.”

Courtesy of Cardiff Open Studios

Courtesy of Cardiff Open Studios

Alongside Richard’s successful art practise, he is an influential figure within Cardiff culture. He started ArtCardiff in 2007 and in conjunction with the project, initiated Cardiff Open Studios. That year, Higlett also co-founded Mermaid and Monster. He went on to co-found Goat Major Projects in 2012.

Richard begins these initiatives because he sees gaps in the Cardiff’s art scene: “What’s missing, you know? Two, maybe three, commercial galleries the size of Bay Arts that could sell contemporary art? Now that Tactile Bosch has gone what opportunities are there for artists leaving college? That’s missing. What’s the relationship between the college and the indigenous art scene? Very poor. There isn’t a great deal of crossover. That’s lacking. It’s about what’s missing and what you can do to try and fill those gaps.”

Richard initiated Cardiff Contemporary in 2005. “The point of Cardiff Contemporary was to create a situation in which art is everyday and has potential for things that you wouldn’t necessarily see normally.

Cardiff Contemporary Reveal Conceal 2014

Reveal/Conceal 2014, courtesy of Cardiff Contemporary

“The agenda this year was to embed the festival in the psyche of the local authority and to get them to realise the benefits of free access to the visual arts. [It gives] the opportunity for people to think creatively as part of a general plan to make Cardiff better.”

No wonder Cardiff Contemporary has become part of the annual cultural furniture of the city. It proved popular with both the arts community and the wider spread of residents and visitors. However, when asked about how the festival was executed Higlett stated, “If anything there was too much work, too much going on, too many things to see. But it’s all a learning curve.”

Regardless, Cardiff Contemporary has an economic payoff, as Richard explained:

“For a relatively small Arts Council Wales investment, compared to other costly events in the city – like fireworks and hanging baskets – you get something that had a massive impact on tourism and animated a community.”

Funding is guaranteed until 2017 and planning has commenced for #CC2015. “Cardiff Contemporary has a ripple effect,” Richard proclaimed. “It’s a very small stone but it’s a very dense stone. The weight of it positively affects the way the city is perceived.”

Richard works regularly at Chapter in Canton and also has a residency studio there. If you wish to find out more about any of the issues raised in this article, he is available to speak to in person, in his role as a live gallery invigilator.

Richard outside Chapter, Canton

Richard outside Chapter, Canton

He welcomes conversation in this context, saying, “I work here as a live guide invigilator because I like it and its regular money. It’s nice just to watch people. It’s useful for understanding how people negotiate work and how you can curate and place works, as an artist. It’s good to find the hidden narrative in how people negotiate space, really.”

You can also visit his website and blog to view some of his artwork or tweet him.

 For a closer look at some of his projects and initiatives he is involved in, follow the links below:

Goat Major Projects

Artes Mundi

Mermaid and Monster

Arts Council of Wales (Consultant)

Cardiff Open Studios

Aasobe Design Studios @ The Norwegian Arts Centre

The Norwegian Church Arts Centre; host to Aasobe Design Studio's artist showcase

The Norwegian Church Arts Centre; host to Aasobe Design Studio’s artist showcase

A new exhibition, Art Alchemy, has opened today at The Norwegian Church Arts Centre. The Aasobe Design Studios have descended onto the space to showcase three artists’ work. Ahmed Salahuddin and Penelope Rose Cowley excel in their field of digital artwork, creating some aesthetically fantastical pieces for the exhibition. In pleasant contrast to their works, Kathryn Edwards’ Cardiff landscapes and landmarks offer a charming perspective on the Welsh capital that supplies the backdrop to these unusual, contemporary creators.

Obama On Acid - Ahmed Salahuddin, digital art (2014)

‘Obama On Acid’ – Ahmed Salahuddin, digital art (2014)

Ahmed Salahuddin, founder of Aasobe Design Studios, works largely in digital art to create – in his own words – “psychedelics without psychedelics” that opens the mind of the viewer beyond the mundane. He said, “You will trip out.” I can vouch for this.

Ahmed practises Ho’o Pono Pono, which translates as looking within oneself for answers rather than to external forces. Thus, Salahuddin’s work takes on a resolutely spiritual tone. Aspects of science, religion, philosophy, anthropology, fractal geometry and sacred geometry apply to all his art. While that may sound like a daunting list of academic abstractionism, truly his works manifest in an awe-inspiring, occasionally humorous and frankly, beautiful aesthetic which can be appreciated standing alone, as well as in context of the depth of meaning they offer to viewers.

Obama On Acid - Ahmed Salahuddin, digital art (2014)

‘Obama On Acid’ – Ahmed Salahuddin, digital art (2014)

A piece from the Art + Science series by penelope Rose Cowley depicting brain matter

A piece from the Art + Science series by Penelope Rose Cowley depicting brain matter (2014)

Penelope Rose Cowley’s work amalgamates the sciences and the arts, manifesting in some of the most interesting aesthetics I’ve seen for some time. Her current project is entitled Massive Dynamic Art. The pieces on display at the Norwegian Church are from the Science + Art series which explores the workings of the brain and thus, the mind. These artistic depictions of brain functionality are created using both MRi and DTi scans, in conjunction with Cutting Edge Science and Technologies at Cardiff University. They are now acknowledged, after having been shown previously at the National Museum of Wales and Cardiff Science Festival, as ‘a new super hybridity of contemporary fine art’, putting penelope at the forefront of the digital and visionary arts movements.

Penelope will be at The Norwegian Church all week to demonstrate some artworks and discuss her innovations with visitors.

Penelope Rose Cowley - Science + Art series

Penelope Rose Cowley; Science + Art series (2014)

It often transpires that the smaller the exhibition, the more there is for viewers to gain from their encounter with the artworks. This is certainly true of Art Alchemy. The opportunity to speak to artists firsthand about their works is invaluable and the space at The Norwegian Church lends itself to total immersion in the pieces on display. The exhibition is absolutely worth a visit, to support your local artists and experience a moment of fantastical transcendence.

If that can’t tempt you then the views over Cardiff Bay and the culinary delights on offer at The Norwegian Church Cafe are sure to persuade. Or check out alt.Cardiff’s preview of the showcase. The free exhibition is open 11-4 on weekdays and 10-4 this weekend. Art Alchemy runs until Sunday 9th November so be sure to pencil it into your diary this week.

Cardiff Open Studios Weekend

Saturday and Sunday passed by in a haze of Cardiff back streets, sporadic rainfall and an unbridled display of raw artistic talent: The Open Studios Weekend returned to our city. In conjunction with Cardiff Contemporary 2014, the Open Studios was perfectly illustrative of this year’s theme, Reveal/Conceal. Armed with our free interactive yellow maps, hundreds of art enthusiasts hit the streets in search of that ever elusive space: the artist’s studio.

Courtesy of Cardiff Open Studios

Courtesy of Cardiff Open Studios

Pontcanna and Canton play host to an artistic hub, aptly referred to by one artist – Lydia Niziblian of Printhaus Workshops and Studios – as “the Bermuda Triangle” of art in Cardiff. Numerous workshops, collectives and studios are positioned within these suburban streets, just off Llandaff Road and just a few steps from Chapter. Particularly impressive was the display of Alun Hemming’s Backwaters collection of metalwork and sculpture at the Oriel Canfas Gallery. Its an absolute must-see that is being showcased until the 9th November. I was lucky enough to catch Alun at a quiet moment, upon which point he talked me through his career trajectory, right through to his current works, also showing me his private workspaces. This kind of insight into the working day of an artist is something the public very rarely get to experience, and is why an event such as Cardiff Open Studios Weekend is so imperative in bridging the gap between creators and their audience.

Alun Hemmings private workspace @ Oriel Canfas Gallery, Canton

Alun Hemming’s private workspace @ Oriel Canfas Gallery, Canton

Three of Alun Hemmings artworks @ Oriel Canfas Gallery

Three of Alun Hemming’s artworks @ Oriel Canfas Gallery, Canton

An assortment of prints by Alun Hemming: Mountain, City, House, Flint, Heart, Cell, Chromosome

Prints by Alun Hemming: Mountain, City, House, Flint, Heart, Cell, Chromosome

The works on display at the participating studios were not just limited to the fine arts, however. I got a chance to speak to Martin Smith of Kings Road Studios who specialises in the tranquil art of Chinese brush painting. The Kings Road Studios accommodates sixteen artists in total, all with their individual styles and aesthetics. Joseph Forster, a landscape abstractionist painter spoke eloquently of the local art scene in Cardiff, saying that once you become involved in the scene “suddenly you realise there’s a whole art world out there, as if a veil has been taken away from your eyes. What you thought to be a wilderness turns out to be a forest.”

Jan Williams' workspace @ Kings Road Studio

Jan Williams’ workspace @ Kings Road Studio

Alun Rosser's workspace @ Kings Road Studio

Alun Rosser’s workspace @ Kings Road Studio

A psychedelic piece by Andy Fung @ Kings Road Studio

A psychedelic piece by Andy Fung @ Kings Road Studio

Further to that, Printhaus Workshops and Studios are home to a diverse range of creatives, from those who specialise in jewellery design, to illustration, to print art. The newly refurbished site is a gem that regularly hosts all manner of arts happenings on-site.

Lydia Niziblian, jewellery designer and creator, in her studio @ Printhaus

Lydia Niziblian, jewellery designer and creator, in her studio @ Printhaus

Not only was this an incredibly stimulating insight into the working minds of Cardiff’s practising artists, it also offered a newcomer such as myself the opportunity to explore the surrounding areas of Cardiff. The only problem I came across over the weekend was the sheer volume of places and people to view and meet, with an overwhelming twenty-five participating sites in total. Of course, this in itself is a commendable display of the artists in South Wales coming together in support of the arts. The weekend is the brainchild of Richard Higlett, an acclaimed artist in his own right, who has been a powerful advocate of the arts in Cardiff.

Not only was it a pleasure to meet so many talented individuals and witness works being created firsthand in their organic spaces, the whole experience also served to consolidate something I have believed, after studying art and art theory for some years: Whoever said artists should flock to London to live and work clearly hasn’t experienced the wealth of production being nurtured into existence right here, in the Welsh capital. I am looking forward to uncovering more of these great characters and their work in the future, via the pages of THE ART DIFFerential.