Sarah's eco lights have been exhibited at shows in London, Milan, Paris, LA and locally in Nottingham, her original hand crafted sculptures are finally starting to take off - even world wide!
Showing posts with label research. Show all posts
Showing posts with label research. Show all posts
Monday, 25 February 2013
Sarah Turner
Sunday, 24 February 2013
Sue Bulmer

Although she has lived in Nottingham for 23 years, her love for art began when she was growing up in the North East. Sue lived on a farm with her parents and would often draw or make little sketches of the chickens there, which is when her passion for the natural world began, her motivation was the changing colours and the texture of the seasons.
A lot of the pieces that she creates have a lot to do with with her upbringing, her recent ink illustrations express a lot of love which she explains is to do with her being extremely close to her 3 sisters. Also, having lived in a 200 year old cottage filled with vintage finds, she found wealth of material to spark her creativity within her own home. She felt the comfort of being at home gave her the ability to express the sentimentality in her work, she describes her work as 'down to earth' and the whole reason as to why she draws what she does? Because she loves it!
As well as doing her beautifully designed illustrations on paper / card, she also transfers them on to textiles, and sometimes uses other media in her work such as watercolor, stitch or different inks. Her mood and current interests dictate her work quite often which makes her pieces quite subjective and fluid. Sue always looks for new idea where ever she goes, may it be to the shops, a quick walk or something rather exciting! She will never be with out a sketchbook in hand to keep up with these heart warming, sweet illustrations.
Labels:
art,
artist,
bird,
blackandwhite,
college,
cute,
design,
drawing,
illustration,
illustrator,
love,
project,
research,
sketch,
suebulmer
Gillian Lee Smith

Drawings & Paintings
In the beginning of her new artistic career, Gillian studied costume design, she used a variety of media to create these beautifully painted a drawn pieces, from pastels to paints, pencils, acrylics, oils and much more. Trying to express her experimental work, she would use a lot of anything she could find. Soon enough, Gillian had bigger ideas that she wanted to perceive, and turned these fantastic art pieces into little sculptures of dolls, and just like the paintings and drawings, they each shared a story behind them, which is what inspired Gillian to create all these wonderfully dark and spectacular pieces in the first place...
Her Inspiration
When Gillian was creating all of her art pieces, the drawings, paintings and the dolls, she had a story for each of them. The designs were all created from her imagination, however there was a story that inspired her ideas and she knew exactly how to express them through her art pieces. Gillian has to work part time so she can sustain her art career at the moment, she works in care homes looking after the elderly. Some of the people that she works with suffer with dementia, she uses objects and story telling to try and stimulate their memories throughout their lives, some have happy stories to tell her, however some unfortunately have more darker stories to tell, but all of what she hears inspires her to create her fantastic pieces. 
Dolls
With Gillian's head full of imagination after working as a nurse, and then with dementia sufferers, she wanted to go beyond paintings and drawings, she wanted to bring the characters in these stories to life, and went on to pursue this by creating wonderful little dolls. Each doll is different, they take hours and hours to create and have such amazing detail painted on to their fabric based bodies. Gillian explained that ''The dolls represent memories and story telling, they are very personal. They show things we try to hide, secrets and fears''. The dolls have had such a positive response, growing in demand, she managed to sell more than what she thought. Although they took off really well, Gillian has gone back to focusing on her experimental 2D paintings - not because she didn't want to keep creating her wonderful dolls, but, she explained that ''It's easier to sell art than dolls. People seem to connect more with paintings than they do with sculptures''. Although she managed to sell many of the dolls, they came at a smaller price compared to her paintings, and she already sacrifices a lot of time and luxuries, which she would like to gain back at this current time.
With Gillian's head full of imagination after working as a nurse, and then with dementia sufferers, she wanted to go beyond paintings and drawings, she wanted to bring the characters in these stories to life, and went on to pursue this by creating wonderful little dolls. Each doll is different, they take hours and hours to create and have such amazing detail painted on to their fabric based bodies. Gillian explained that ''The dolls represent memories and story telling, they are very personal. They show things we try to hide, secrets and fears''. The dolls have had such a positive response, growing in demand, she managed to sell more than what she thought. Although they took off really well, Gillian has gone back to focusing on her experimental 2D paintings - not because she didn't want to keep creating her wonderful dolls, but, she explained that ''It's easier to sell art than dolls. People seem to connect more with paintings than they do with sculptures''. Although she managed to sell many of the dolls, they came at a smaller price compared to her paintings, and she already sacrifices a lot of time and luxuries, which she would like to gain back at this current time.

Wednesday, 13 February 2013
Stefanos Lazaridis
Stefanos Lazaridis (28 July 1942 – 8 May 2010) was a stage designer, best known for his work in opera. Originally intended for a business career, he studied stage design in London, and was quickly in demand in theaters and opera houses, working with other directors. Originally his style was lavish and naturalistic, but he changed to a less traditional style, after working in the ENO and elsewhere. He occasionally directed operas, and was for a short time director of the Greek National Opera.
The Mikado
This is the stage that Lazaridis designed for Gilbert and Sullivan’s most popular operetta, The Mikado. Everything is set at a white scale which shows how simple one colour can be, yet so elegant and appealing at the same time. Perhaps the focus is more so towards the characters and the costume designs, rather than the stage and scenery, however, it being white like a canvas lets the music and drama display the colours on the stage for you. The quality of a set designed like this is that it is very well lit up and expresses a clear positivity. This production was first performed in 1885, so when trying to relate to something that occurred in the past, a common technique to portray this is the absence of colour. Using black, white and grey shades symbolize something to be aged in the past, as that's how television and photographs were first viewed. I think this is a really effective set because the white scale lets your imagination get to work and visualize your own colours for the stage, the audience make their own interpretation of the scenery and can allow them to change with each scene or mood change.
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