Artists’ supplies

new-adobe-photoshop-image-green-and-stone.jpg
GREEN & STONE OF CHELSEA

Established 1927

EXTENSIVE RANGE3 OF QUALITY ARTISTS MATERIALS

Including:

Oil Paints by Jacques Blockx, Michael Harding, Winsor & Newton, Bruno Charvin and Sennelier.

Watercolours by Winsor & Newton and Schminke.

Acrylics by Golden, Rowney and Liquitex.

Primed and Unprimed Canvas.

Ready made Canvasses in Cotton and Linen.

Easels in Oak, Beech and Walnut.

Balanced Palettes in Mahogany.

Open 7 Days a week - Mail order service available.

259 Kings Road, Chelsea, London SW3 5EL

Tel: 020 7352 0837 Fax:020 7351 1098

Email: <sales@greenandstone.com>

http://www.greenandstone.com/

10% discount to members

Arts Hub

http://www.artshub.co.uk is an online platform for creative industry jobs, arts news, and events and classifieds listings.

Arts Hub is free to join and covers the whole of the arts, from theatre, dance, film, tv and radio through to history and heritage, writing and publishing, design, music, fashion and the creative industries.

We have one of the largest listings of arts and creative jobs in the UK and provide a weekly jobs e-bulletin to our nearly 20,000 members. Also once a week we send out a news e-bulletin full of reviews, columns, breaking news, features and competitions for our members.

We’ve been in the UK for about 5 years now, and our sister websites in the US and Australia make us a global force.

Summer Event July 2008

new-adobe-photoshop-image.jpg

The London Adventure

EDWARD BURNE-JONES
‘Magnificent Dreamer’ was presented by Antony Clayton on Saturday 26th July, 2008.

“I mean by a picture a beautiful romantic dream of something that never was, never will be – in a light better than any light that ever shone – in a land no one can define or remember, only desire – and the forms divinely beautiful.”

A group of us attended the summer event this year on a warm, muggy day. We met at the entrance to Kensington Central Library in Hornton Street, W8, opposite the Town Hall. Thanks to Antony Clayton’s erudite presentation the weather didn’t preoccupy us although I couldn’t help wondering how all those wan, women with luxuriante hair, in voluminous attire managed to endure the heat. Anthony took us on a walk stopping at places where Burne Jones had lived or had been a visitor and we visited Melbury Road where once there was a thriving artists’ colony. The walk concluded at the site of Burne-Jones’s house and studio the Grange. The tour lasted approximately two hours and we ended with tea, cakes and relaxed conversation in a local tea shop. Everyone enjoyed the afternoon.

Antony Clayton is the author of ‘Subterranean City’, ‘London’s Coffee Houses’, ‘Decadent London’ and ‘The Folklore of London’.

http://thelondonadventure.co.uk/

Zara Schofield received the RASA Graduation prize

thy-kingdom-come-1.jpg

We haven’t had the pleasure of talking to Zara yet but we are looking forward to asking her about her work which can be seen in the gallery. There is something graceful and elegant in the objects that she produces which are eye catching and amusing. We wonder how much mischief is intended in the mix of the spiritual and earthly iconography? Watch this space and we will soon learn from the artist herself.’

A Brush with Words: Study for Still life with Music Chair

a6a-possible-red-bird-sangster.JPG

Continuing in our look back at the art and poetry exhibition, ‘A Brush with Words’, here is ‘Study for Still life with Music Chair’ by Michael Sangster, which inspired the poem ‘Titleless’ by Charles Johnson.

Titleless (for Study for Still life with Music Chair)

This dish of water

shows the slant of the

chest of drawers it’s on

The tiltedness of our bedroom world

takes a dropped marble direct every time

to the window wall

I see and say water: wine

and water? Blood

and Water? Dirty water?

Water for tame bird

seeming lame bird facing the window

shadow held behind as if a broken wing

Bird that came

to watch us pack/unpack

these lyre-backed chairs full of eyes,

uncrease the curtains,

shake out daisies

Charles Johnson

A Brush with Words: Sea Change

mi-mott-001.jpg

Oil/Mixed media on board 23″ x 19″

Continuing in our look back at the art and poetry exhibition, ‘A Brush with Words’, here is ‘Sea Change’ by Miranda Mott which inspired the poem ‘Where the Dark Is Rising’ by Rita Carter and ‘Magic island’ by Trevor Innes

Where the Dark Is Rising
(for Sea Change)

Dynamo
ringed in the fish-eye
diver’s head
coal black
neophyte

Where the dark is rising

thought-fishes dart
a scion into a cloud burst
embryo tree

Rita Carter

Magic island
(for Sea Change)

A joining axis wheel,
china blue on white,
beneath the green tree
makes a path scross the sea

Where three fish swim
through a dark-eyed moon.
something holds this
all together, more

than a Norse dream. The tree
is placed in a cloud. The dark
sky recedes around.
Ferdinand is buried somewhere.

He’ll return to find love
and his father on an island where the tree
holds no monster but a wheel.
Happy endings can be found.

Trevor Innes


Artists’ supplies


bird-and-davis.jpg

15% discount to members

bird & davis ltd

45 Holmes Road, Kentish Town, London NW5 3AN

t: 020 7485 3797 f: 020 284 0509

w: www.birdanddavis.co.uk e: birdltd@aol.com


A Brush with Words: Brief Parting

 

eric-seeley-001.jpg

By Eric Seeley ‘Brief Parting’ oil painting

Continuing in our look back at the art and poetry exhibition,
A Brush with Words, here is Brief Parting, by Eric Seeley and Tricia Torrington.

In Praise of Blue
(For a Brief Parting)

Because there was a blue heat
Sweating our bodies to slow burn
Because there was a pure moon
Edging the sun to a swift end
Because there was a wide bay
gritting its teeth to our soft skin
Shadows enveloped us
So that we hid ourselves
Now the hills will neve be too high again
And loose limbed beaches never
So stretched, tanned, warm again,
We had seven blue days
because it was a week where we lost time
I will always lose time remembering…
Tricia Torrington

More of Eric Seeley’s work can be seen in the gallery

Sharing Our Past

cast-corridor-ra.jpg

The Cast Corridor 1887 ‘Passing the Long rest’ from the Magazine of Art 1887

Rita Carter would like to thank those of you who have already responded with reminiscences for the book titled ‘ An intimate Portrait of the RA Schools’. We are gradually receiving some very interesting pieces from members and also evocative photographs. Please keep these coming. Your stories might seem unremarkable to you but each one forms a part of the era in which you studied at the Schools and adds depth to the picture as a whole. Some of the letters have been brief but heart-felt; you do not have to write pages and pages. However if you want to make a contribution but feel stuck here are some suggestions to get you started. Send your contribution to The Royal Academy of Arts, Reminiscences, RASA, The Friends’ Office, Piccadilly, W1J OBD or by email to membership@rasalumni.org

1. Recollections of your first day and first term.2. Surroundings; interior & exterior impressions of the building.3. Names of Keeper, Curator, tutors and students.4. Photographs/portrait drawings etc of yourself or others as they were then.5. Any visual records of what the studios and their contents looked like.6. Teaching style and methods in contrast with previous teaching.7. Typical sights and sounds experienced on a daily basis; timetable, routine etc.8. Significant events; humorous, traumatic, transformative experiences.9. Attitudes to smoking, drinking, musical trends, fashion etc.10. Artworks by yourself or other students that trigger associations or significant ideas.Many thanks to Paul Bartlett for his help and advice.

A Brush with Words: Icarus

icarus-2.jpg

Sally Scott, ‘Icarus’ Sandblasted and Engraved Flash Glass Disc
22″ diameter; slate base 7″ x 27″

Continuing in our look back at the art and poetry exhibition, A Brush with Words, here is Icarus, by Sally Scott and Tricia Torrington.

Tonight
(for Icarus)

Tonight I would give you a list of things
not to forget…

Keep land in mind, your feet
tipped to the magnetic -

I wish it was tonight we could become
extraordinary

for the sky is bright enough with all
its winking heroes

Orion, Perseus, the shield of Achilleus -
and the Wain,

keep that in mind, that group of stars
that turns always

on the same point, the only ones that never bathe
in the sea -

Tonight I would have you remember Homer’s
“weariless sun”,

It is love that attracts us like moths.
But how it burns.

Tricia Torrington

« Previous PageNext Page »