Open Doors & Brick Box Exhibition…
In my previous post I showed images from the Prince Charles visit two days before the actual start of the exhibition – well these images are from the Friday evenings show where all the Artwork had been hung and placed.. the bar open and sculptured ice-cream was eaten – Unfortunately, I missed that bit ![]()
available for downloading and using for editorial use – anything else then let me know
also please feel free to add tags of artist of those ones I’ve missed via the gallery page - http://gallery.runnycustard.co.uk/opendoors_sw9
Related Reading:
Portrait of an Artist…
my friend Emily from Owl Knit You who has several exhibitions under her belt (or should that be web?) let me take some portrait shots of her with her webs – I used some budget portable lighting soft box, umbrella and two flash guns with trigger kits.
We only had a small space to do this in so it was a tight fit and awkward but I rather like the finished shots – I still have several to retouch but here’s one of the finished items…

Emily Portrait - Owl Knit You
Related Reading:
ArtSmacked exhibition – ‘Painting without Paint’ at Aviary Gallery, Hackney
My friend Owl Knit You (Emily Wilson) has an exhibition of her webs (now updated with wire and maps!!) at the ArtSmacked curated exhibition at the Aviary Gallery 458 Hackney Road, E2 9EG.
I went to the private view on Thursday 3rd February 2012 and took a couple of images (the lamp and gas fire images are just me messing around and not part of the exhibition!)
The Artists:
Lewis John Brooks (England) Mixed Media
Bel Lefosse (Brazil) Installation & Object
Christabel Lindner (Canada) Video, Mixed Media
Bill Millett (Scotland) Photography
Sujata Sengupta (India) Design
Emily Spence (USA) Fabric Design
Sorcha-Mai Stott-Strzala (England) Video
Nataliia Taranukha (Ukraine) Painting/Sculpture
Sarah Kate WIlson (England) Mixed Media
Masaki Yada (Japan) Painting
I managed to miss taking a few images of some of the artist but you can make an appointment to view up to the 10th February.
Visit ArtSmacked and Apiary Gallery for more information.
Related Reading:
Private View at Open House W12 Pop-up Exhibition.
I went to the Open Doors Pop up exhibition which featured Owl Knit You – Emily Spence’s web installation and prints at her first show!
Lots of other Artists were there and creators of the pop up who decided they wanted to create a platform for artists to show their work and also help people create and understand their own communites.
I took a few pics which can be seen in this slideshow below which also shows a few abstract shots of Emily’s Web!
Unfortunately, a couple of images from other artists didn’t come out very well but hopefully the other people taking photos would have got those as well!
I had several favorites… click ‘more’ to see individual images and links (if supplied) cont…
Related Reading:
Textile Web Epidemic in London!
Whilst I’m floating around Emily’s ‘Owl Knit You‘ website I thought I’d share her fluffy bits with you – hopefully she won’t mind.
Emily is from Pittsburg and finished studying a MA last year in London – feeling somewhat lost in London (as most people do – it is the place to congregate when you have no roots… just like me!) she decided to embark on a creative project that would help her feel more connected… and how connected can webs be?
Webs can either be comforting (as long as you are not terrified of spiders… but let’s assume the webs are spider free and were created with warm fuzzy feelings). They can make us feel cocooned in a safe place or they can feel like traps that are impossible to get get out of leaving you with a sense of fatigue from all that fighting for freedom – or hopelessness that you are on your own with no connections to anyone or anywhere!
Emily started off with small webs that she yarn bombed around London… (all photos by Emily Wilson @Owl Knit You unless otherwise stated).
In Emily’s words:
“Graffiti is rather like marking your territory. It’s leaving a mark for others to find and identify with or against. It’s a bit like a conversation between the maker and finder. For me, it’s identifying myself and claiming my existence the foreign city in which I find myself living. It’s about becoming a Londoner. “
she even web bombed a police horse (I would never have the guts to even ask!!)
She then moved onto installations of larger web structures
Her next plan of action is to create a social workshop at the IndieTracks festival.
you can read the interview for IndieTracks here: http://indietracksblog.blogspot.com/2011/07/workshop-interview-3-owl-knit-you.html as well as hear more on her blog and Facebook group: https://www.facebook.com/pages/Owl-Knit-You/148062365243204
you can keep up with Emily at her website http://owlknityou.com http://hellopixy.wordpress.com/
https://twitter.com/#!/owlknityouxo
http://www.tumblr.com/tumblelog/owlknityou
http://www.flickr.com/photos/hellopixy/
Related Reading:
Clara: The Final Word for Now: via Owl Knit You
Obviously Emily is my biggest fan… and equally I’m a fan of hers!
via Owl Knit You
Related Reading:
Webby yarn tagging…
I have an American friend who is feeling a little alienated during her stay here in London – I’ve tried explaining that is what London is about (just kidding) but she decided to embarked on a creative journey to help her connect to London.
I don’t know if many people have heard of Yarn bombing and yarn Graffitti
“Knit graffiti” is an international guerrilla movement that started underground and is now embraced by crochet and knitting artists of all ages, nationalities, and genders. Its practitioners create stunning works of art out of yarn, then “donate” them to public spaces as part of a covert plan for world yarn domination. by Yarn Bombing
Graffiti (singular: graffito; the plural is used as a mass noun) is the name for images or lettering scratched, scrawled, painted or marked in any manner on property. Graffiti is any type of public markings that may appear in the forms of simple written words to elaborate wall paintings. Wikipedia
In Milly’s own words on her blog about this endeavor:
ReCLAIMation of the City
Graffiti is rather like marking your territory. It’s leaving a mark for others to find and identify with or against. But for the maker and the finder, it’s a bit like a conversation. For me, it’s identifying myself and claiming my existence in a city that can seem very cold and one in which I rarely feel like I belong. And I hope for the finder, they feel less alone. Alex noted that one thing that’s nice about this project is that each piece is a little out of the way, a little out of sight. So the people who are more likely to see it, are more likely to enjoy it. Serendipity.
Here’s Milly hanging up one of her webs on the South Bank of The Thames:
visit her blog here










