Im Pleased to say I will be exhibiting three drawings as a part of QUEERFEST Norwich this LGBTQAI+ month. Further detials below and linked!
art
Post Cards from the Edge Viusl Aids NY
Pleased to be taking part in this years Postrcards from the edge a benifit for Visual Aids New York @ Berry Campbell Gallery. Please buy to benifit an amazing charity !
MK Calling Milton Keynes Gallery
To celebrate 25 years at the heart of Milton Keynes’ art and culture scene, we are working in partnership with five local community groups to co-curate this year’s open call summer exhibition.
This year’s MK Calling features artworks spanning sculpture, painting, photography, installation and film. Over 120 established and emerging artists explore themes including identity, inclusivity, possible futures, heritage, and significant moments across five thematic gallery spaces.
Over the past year, MK Gallery has been collaborating with learners from: MK SNAP, a Milton Keynes-based training provider for learning-disabled adults; The Visually Impaired People (VIP) Group, a group of friends living with sight loss in the local area who have met through different local support organisations; Unknown Collective, a group of under-26-year-old creatives who have previously engaged with MK Gallery’s programme; Members of the Middle Eastern Cultural Group, a platform which provides social activities and language tuition to people from Middle Eastern communities living in Milton Keynes; and adults from Q:Alliance, a registered charity that provides support, information, and empowerment for the LGBTQ+ community in Milton Keynes and surrounding areas.
Featured artists: ANDI, Aoccho, Nuha Al Hashimi, Theresa Alix Wren-Enayati Rad, Moe Asari, Sadie Aston, Polly Bates, Sophia Bharmal, Nazira Bibi, Benjamin Bird, Helen Birnbaum, Jared Boechler, Thomas Eke, James Bristow, Anna Brownsted, Roisín Callaghan, Daura Campos, Sophia Chapman, Gayle Charlotte Dallas, Clair Chinnery, Paul Chisholm, JMC Anderson, Helen Clarke, Ladina Clement, Liz Clifford, Sue Cohen, Patrick Ayre and Barbara Ayre (MNID Collective), Allistair Covell, Davies Monaghan Klein, Urban Fabric Architects, Ingrid McLaren, Khulood Dami, Sarah Davis, Vera Doarme, Imo Dunkley, Steve Dutton, Dionne Elizabeth, Deborah Fielding, Darcey Fleming, Sofia Fox Barton, Abie Franklin, Lucy Gregory, Dimitra Gkoutzou, Basak Cansu Guvenkaya, Thompson Hall, Alethia Hayden, Carol He, Cara Heath, Manuel Hechavarria Zaldivar, Mark Houghton, Nour Huda, Yang-En Hume, Kàren J Clements, Ella Jackson, Gity Jamei, Daisy Jones, Helen Jones, Margaret Keeton, Sagar Kharecha, Kishwar Kiani, Simon King, Kyle Kirkpatrick, Akrivi Koukouli, C L Davies, Kwinnie Lê, Alana Lake, Jamie Lee, Dene Leigh, Olana Light, Yingfei Lyu, Chris Madeley, Ana Maria, Lima Dimitrijevic, Zehra Marikar, Nicola McEvoy, Nhlonipho Mchunu, Lois McKendrick, Georgina McNamara, Ryoji Morimoto, Guy Morris, Melanie Mosaics, Tahira Noreen, Rosa-Maria Nuutinen, Chinwe Osaghae, Stella Ouzounidou, Sharon Paulger, Hannah Pickett, Melissa Pierce Murray, Deirdre Porter-Hanson, Reaa Puri, shunshun qi, Gill Quinnell, Ghosson Rahhal, W. B. Randall, Eliza Rawlings, Tina Reid, Elsie Roderiques, Rekha Sameer, Kathy Santiago, Mat Scott, Maheen Sheikh, Ellie Shipman, Sarah Simonds, Ricardo Sleiman, Yasmin Conway, Jenny Staff, Emily Stapleton-Jefferis, Ruth Switalski, Sebastian Thomas, Lisa Tilley, Emma Ogawa Todd, Mita Vaghela, Ruqaya Wajdi, Siao-Chen Wang, Matt Waruszynski, Sarah Watts, Emma Wilde, Alexa Wright, Natasha Wysocki-Douglas, Xinan Yang, Soon Yul Kang.
MK Calling 2024 is generously supported by David Lock Associates, Milton Keynes Community Foundation and Paul Hamlyn Foundation.
Personal Structures, European Cultural Center, Venice
EUROPEAN CULTURAL CENTER/
PERSONAL STRUCTURES 2024/
PALAZZO BEMBO/VENICE, ITALY/
IN THE CONTEXT OF THE 60TH VENICE BIENNALE
EXHIBITION:
AMERICAS. LAND OF DREAMS
CURATED BY MILAGROS BELLO, PHD
APRIL 20-NOVEMBER 24, 2024
"Americas: Land of Dreams" curated by Dr. Milagros Bello, is presented in the European Cultural Centre/ Personal Structures 2024/Palazzo Bembo/Venice, Italy, focuses on the intricate complexity of artistic practices of the Americas and beyond, pointing to how the artists have creatively crystallized their experiences across different social, cultural and anthropological geographies. It reviews multifaceted aspects of the Human Condition, from reveries to apocalyptic, non-objective, and abstract; the works project a vision of critical contemporary Humanity. Artists rooted in narratives of their native or diasporic territories, whose work in various mediums across different geographies, contribute to pressing questions of our time. Embark on a voyage through the fictional cosmos of Magaly Barnola Otaola, Meg Cogburn, Sergio Cesario, Eliana Barbosa, Ricardo Carbonell, Paul D. Chisholm, Sylvia Constantinidis, Mercedes Inaudi, Matt Jacobs, Oksana Kirpenko, Esteban Machado Diaz (Roselle Gallery), Karina Matheus, Clark Medley, Vered Pasternak, Beatriz Sanchez, and Raul A. Vargas.
Dr. Milagros Bello
Curator
EXHIBITION ADDRESS
EUROPEAN CULTURAL CENTER/PALAZZO BEMBO
Riva del Carbon 4793 3014 Venice, Italy
April 20-November 24, 2024
Opening April 20, 2024
MK CALLING MILTON KEYNES MUSEUM OPEN
Pleased to say on of my works will be included in the MK Calling Summer show this year at The Milton Keynes Museum…. watch this space for more info….
Postcards from the Edge Berry Campbell Gallery NY
Get ready! Postcards From the Edge 2024 is almost here—and it's going to be one of our BIGGEST exhibitions and sales to date.
Starting Jan 20, 2024, you can snag over 1,500+ original artworks from famous, established, emerging, and new artists from around the world... all for only $100 a piece!
Can't wait to see the work? Join us for our famous preview party on Friday January 19th at Berry Campbell Gallery! This is your only chance to see all artworks before the sale begins! See below to get tickets to attend the preview in-person or online.
Note: If you're a 2024 contributing artist, you should have already received a complementary invitation to the preview party via email. No need to purchase tickets. A full list of contributing artists is available here.
Questions? Email postcards@visualaids.orgKaren Abato
Colton Ackerman
Alexander AD
Jack Adam
Sue Adams
Denise Jones Adler
Monika K. Adler
Olga Adler
Miri Admoni
Robin Adsit
Ann Agee
Farley Aguilar
Sabriah Al-Bahish
Sahar al-Sawaf
Angelo Alamia
Michelangelo Alasa
Dylan Albans
Julie Albert
Norman Alcantara
Susana Aldanondo
Herve Alexandre
Joseph Algieri
Naji Alhasani
Dominic Alleluia
Bill Allen
Carol Alonge
Serkan Altinoz
Cynthia A. Alvarez
Miguel Alvarez
Jennifer Amadeo-Holl
Ron Amato
Kiley Ames
Paul Anagnostopoulos
Kyle Anderson
Stan Anderson
Chad Andrews
Stephen Andrews
Adina Andrus
Victor Angelo
Leonardo Anthony
Rosaire Appel
Jan Apple
Ivy Kwan Arce
Leora Armstrong
Richard Arnold
Andranik Aroutiounian
John Arsenault
Isabel Arter
Josh Ascherman
Jamie Ashman
Nora Ashwood
Dianne Athey
Dotty Attie
Daniel Atyim
Julie Ault
Eva Avenue
Jordan Awori
Adjoyi Ayawavi Reine
Shoukoufeh Azar
Mr. B
John Baber
Adam Baer
Felipe Baeza
Steven Baines
Bela Balog
Effy Banks
Isabella Bannerman
Lillian Bannister
Lauren Barack
Stephanie Barber
Gerard Barbot
Amanda Barker
Anastasia Barker
Tara Barnes
Jill Baroff
Michael Baroto
Paula Barr
Kate Barrengos
Maggie Barrett
Savanna Barrett
Miguel Barros
Lb Barry
Marie Cresilda Basilio
Peggy Bates
Jennifer Baumann
Ria Bauwens
Allan Bealy
Jonah Bealy
Claire Bean
Jeremy Bearer-Friend
Carrie Beckman
Matthew Bede Murphy
Sarah Bedford
Sheri Lynn Behr
Evelyn Beliveau
Logan Bellew
Susanna Beltrandi
Lois Bender
Wayne Bennett
Kathleen Benton
Emily Berger
Gregory Bergeron
Kayla Bernard
Katherine Bernhardt
Stephanie Bernheim
Herman Bernstein
Tom Bianchi
Esther Bigfoot
Melinda Billings
Annaliese Bischoff
Joann Bishop
Rhona Bitner
Ana Black
Gio Black Peter
Christa Blackwood
Nancy Blair
Kathy Blankenheim
Caroline Blum
Christopher Blyth
Diana Bodea
Chris Bogia
Linda Bond
Doug Boney
MJ Bono
Jorge Bordello
Freddy Borges
Joanna Borkowska
Katherine Borkowski-Byrne
Jake Borndal
Kevin Bourgeois
James Bowles
Eileen Boxer
Daniel Boyer
Solomon Brager
Roger Braimon
Susie Brandt
Oona Brangam-Snell
Michelle Bratsafolis
Nancy Brett
Norbert Briar
Marijke Briggs
Melinda Briggs
Robert Brokl
Jonathan Brooks
Hedwig Brouckaert
Patrick N. Brown
Gloria Defilipps Brush
Robert Buckley
Eli Bundy
Matthew Burbridge
Paul Bureau
Ella Burgess
Helen Burgoyne
Kathe Burkhart
Amy Burns
Tom Burr
Nancy Burson
Patricia Burson
Karen Butcher
Steve Butcher
Ira Byelick
Jeffrey Caballero
Carlos Caban
Adriana Cabrera
Shannon Cahalane
James Callahan
Kit Callahan
Celia A. Calvo
Ana Sofia Camarga
Sherry Camhy
Jennifer Camper
Candystore
Suzanne Caporael
Marina Cappelletto
Angie Cardona
John Carlos Keasler
Dana Carlson
Joel Carlson
Curtis Carman
Claude-Marie Caron
James Carroll
Jandy A. Carvajal
José Carlos Casado
Frank Casden
Mary Ann Castle
Kathleen S Catanese
Mimmo Catania
Joe Cavallaro
Jonathan Cerullo
Spencer Chalk-Levy
Michael Chandler
Henry Hung Chang
Andrew Chapin
Sunny Chapman
Khalil Charif
Jana Charl
Stephanie Chavarria
Louis Chavez
Kat Cheairs
Janice Checchio
David Chen
Eric Chengyang
Paul Chisholm
Kristen Chiu
Joan Chiverton
Young Cho
Sandy Chuchat
Adam Chuck
Monica Church
Vincent Cianni
Maya Ciarrocchi
Bodea Ciprian
Rob Clarke
Alex Clausen
Tucker Claxton
Marion Cloaninger
Stephanie Cobb
Ann Cofta
Joseph Cohen
Yvette Cohen
Heather Colby
Todd Colby
Danielle Cole
Isabella Collazo
Lin Collette
Liz Collins
John Collyer
Anna Colombia
Peter Combe
Pate Conaway
Jackie Conley
Ruth Conner
Siân Cook
Kym Cooper
Marcia Cooper
Pam Cooper
Donna Corbani
Emily Jane Corbett
Carlos Cordero
Michael Corey
James Cornwell
Daniel Correa Mejia
Alison Corrie
Anne Corrsin
Joshua Corteza-Holliday
Lyra Costin
Marianne Coughlin
Jon Courtier
Scott Cousins
B Shawn Cox
Stephen Cox
Emma Coyle
Peter Cramer
Giles Crawford
Fred Cray
Bill Crisafi
Patricia Crotty
Janos Cseh
Rod Cuellar
Augustina Cueto
Jody Culkin
James Cullinane
Colleen Cunningham
Precious Currence
Judy Cuttler
Peggy Cyphers
Vincent D'Arata
Carol Dameron
Johnny Damm
Carin Dangot
Maks Dannecker
Andrew Davis
Dennis Davis
Kate Davis
Kenneth Davis
Robert Davis
Zekio Dawson
Annie Dayton
Francisco De La Barra
Lorenzo De Los Angeles
Monika De Vries
Deboraw
Blase Decelestine
Elisa Decker
John Defaro
Melissa Dent
Abdoul-Ganiou Dermani
Robert Derosa
Jane Waggoner Deschner
Alexandria Deters
Eric Dever
Shari Diamond
Gustavo "El Gus" Diaz
Jeffrey Digangi
Simone Dilaura
Lesley Dill
Terri Dilling
Danielle Dimston
George Dinhaupt
Claire Dinsmore
Andrew Disalvo
Philippe Divine
Laura Dodson
Greg Domres
Jeannette Done-Lagemann
Julia Donnaruma
Jena Doolas
Elissa Dorfman
Chris Dorland
Josh Dorman
John Douglas
Caissa Douwes
Francine Douwes
Kirsten Doyle
Michael Doyle
Mary Driscoll
Abby Dubow
Antwan Duncan
Kyle Dunn
Corey Durbin
Chad Durgan
Joan Dworkin
J Dylan
Jordan Eagles
Jarrett Earnest
Severn Eaton
Tim Ebneth
Isabel Eckstein
Martha Edelheit
Melissa Eder
Chris Edwards
Logan Edwards
Frank Egloff
Rei Egusquiza
Hank Ehrenfried
Jane Ehrlich
Marius Eid
Kokou Ekouagou
Noor El-Dehaibi
Phillipsia Emanus
Joy Episalla
Mitch Epstein
Patricia Erbelding
Noah Erenberg
Sam Erenberg
Helen Esberg
Robert Escalera
Shawn Escarciga
Rubén Esparza
Kale Esposito
Greenworldx2 Eva Mantell and Joel Beck
Todd Evan
Ayana Evans
Franklin Evans
Holly Eystad
Ute Faber
Andy Fabo
Pilar Faci
James Fackrell
Edie Fake
James Falciano
Karine Falleni
Alyssa Fanning
Emma Fanning
Tara Fannon
Nadine Faraj
Neil Farber
Amy Faris
Madie Farmer
Adriana Farmiga
Edward J Farrell
Samuel Farrier
Felicity Faulkner
Ivan Faute
R. A. Fedde
Giles Feinberg
Stephanie Feingold
Joao Felino
Elise Ferguson
Brendan Fernandes
Gustavo Fernandez
Neil Fernando
Miguel Ferrando
FFFF00 #
Clara Fialho
Luc Fierens
Janet Filomeno
Hannah Fink
Avram Finkelstein
Elise Fischer
Clint Fisher
Doerte Fitschen-Rath
Christopher Flach
Lola Flash
Pamela Flynn
Robert Flynt
Luliana Foghis
Laura Fong
Howard Fonda
Alexandra Fongaro
Emma Fonseca
Jean Foos
Alison Ford
Craig Ford
Christina Forrer
Julian Foster
Claire Fox
Francine Fox
Ginny Fox
Mark Fox
Maria Fragoudaki
Terri Fraser
Jeanne Fredac
Irwin Freeman
Timothy French
Jerry Frost
Sheva Fruitman
Cosmin Fruntes
Chie Fueki
Mitsu Fukushima
Daisuke Fukusho
Kurt Fulton
Erin Fussell
Pep Sales Gabarda
Jeff Gagnon
Marie Gagnon
Sara Galletta
Beth Galton
Rosalie Gancie
Osmani Garcia
Victor-Raul Garcia
Milton Garcia Ninja
Gunner Gardner
Henny Garfunkel
Joy Garnett
Jeff Gauntt-Quiceno
Chadwick Gay
Paul Leroy Gehres
Stephen Gemberling
Johannes Christopher Gerard
Mildred Grace German
Amanda Gerulski
Cris Gianakos
Cooper L Gibson
Victor Giganti
Sandrine Gigon
Sally Gil
Brett Gingold
Eric Ginsburg
Ann Giordano
Edward M. Giordano Jr.
Daniel Marcellus Givens
Judy Glantzman
Elizabeth Glaessner
Camilo Godoy
Jo Going
Larry Mark Goldblatt
Ken Golden
Kevin Golden
Michael Golden
Romeo Gómez López
Kathleen Goncharov
Angel Gonzales
Mateo Gonzalez
JP Gonzalez-Torres
Theresa Gooby
Angelica Gordon
Monique Gordon
Shoshana Gordon
Mon Graffito
Amanda Jane Graham
Paul Michael Graves
Zach Grear
Robert Greco
Joanne Greenbaum
Rodney Greenblat
Joan Greenfield
Carole Wagner Greenwood
Thomas Greenwood
Michela Griffo
Sonya Gropman
David Gross
Elizabeth Gross
Laura Grothaus
Noima Group
Victor Grozny
Lois Gruberger
Yikui (Coy) Gu
Roselyn Guaman
Edgard Guanipa
Calum Gunn
Laura Gurton
Carlos Gutierrez Solana
Victoria H. Chang
Simone Haack
Hans Haacke
Ira Joel Haber
Theresa Hackett
Anne Haddox
Patricia Haemmerle
Leo Hainzl
Valerie Hallier
Peter Halpert
Sandra Hamburg
Marianne Hamel
Jane Hammond
John Hampshire
Inness Hancock
Wilson Hand Kidde
Stevie Hanley
John Hanning
Erik Hanson
Kim Hanson
Philip Hare
Hilary Harkness
Sharon Harper
Brian Harriman
Imani Harrington
Howard Harris
John Harris
Jonathon Harris
Michele Harris
Steven Harris
Barbara Harrison Caban
Emily Harrison-Ach
David Greg Harth
Edgar Hartley
J. Hartz
Michael Harwood
Dean Haspiel
Gregory Hatch
Shaun Haugen
Yolanda Hawkins
Toru Hayashi
Brian Healey
Grace Healy
Ray Hecht
Annabelle Heckler
Jeffrey Heiman
Karl Heine
Neddi Heller
Thomas Hellstrom
David L. Hendershot
Maxine Henryson
Brittany Hensley
Anna Henson
Laurie Henzel
Ed Herman
Matthias Hermann
Leo Herrera
Isis Herrera-Nunez
Andrea Herrick
Chuck Hettinger
Robert Hickerson
Halona Hilbertz
Seth Ruggles Hiler
Dawn Hill
Tom Hill
Bryan Hillstrom
Rose Hillstrom
Kevin Hinkle
Juan Hinojosa
Dion Hitchings
Hunter Hodkinson
Philip Hoffhines
Judith Hoffman-Corwin
Patty Hogan
Nicholas Holliday
Diane Holmes
Margaret Honda
Stephen Honicki
Kate Hopkins
James Horner
Char Horton
Arufa Hossain
Tina Howard
Anderson Howard Burke
Joel Hoyer
Keryn Huang
Andrew Huff
Kate Huh
David Humphrey
Scott Hunt
Dylan Hurwitz
Elaf Hussein
Laura Hussey
Magnus Anderson Husum
Tram Huynh
Daria Iaconi
Perry A. Iannaconi Jr.
Xandra Ibarra
Suzlee Ibrahim
Kasia Idzkowska
Johnny Irizarry
Nicole Isabelle
Carmen Isasi
Ian Ivey
Sandra Jackman
Emily Jacobs
Linda Jacobs
Elisabeth Jacobssen
Noormah Jamal
Nicholaus Jamieson
Xylor Jane
Eric Janke
Karin Janssen
James Jaxxa
Anna Jekel
Debra Jenks
William Jensen
David Jester
John Jesurun
Tom Jezek
Gladys Jimenez
Jim Joe
Sonja Jofo
J Johnson
Logan Johnson
Matt Johnson
Nikki Johnson
Tiffany Johnson
Will Johnson
Constantine Jones
Darrell Jones
Sal Jones
George Jordan
Michael Joseph
Julia Justo
Marcus K Garcia
Alex Kalamaroff
Mona Kamal
Joseph Kaminski
Nicole Kammer
Isabella Kang
Ellen Kantro
Arika Kaosa
Amy Kaps
Kel R. Karpinski
Elaine Karton
Nina Katchadourian
Laura Kavanaugh
Janusz Kawa
Alexandra Kazakova
John Keasler
Margie Kelk
John Kelly
Patricia K Kelly
Matthew Kennedy
Claude Kent
Julie Kent
Brian Keogh
Leslie Kerby
Esme Kerr
Lila Kerr
Karen Kertesz-Skylar
Padma Kesraj
Donna Kessinger
Tracey Kessler
Michael Keufterian
Mehrbano Khattak
Khyal !
Emma Kilroy
Justin N. Kim
Kiki Kim
Sophia Kim
Clifford Prince King
Laura Sue King
Gale Kiniry
Jill Kirschen
Andrew Kirschner
Joe Klaus
Bernhard Kleber
Pamela Hird Klein
Ariel Kleinberg
Tom Klem
Elisabeth Kley
Ria Kmeťová
Lucretia Knapp
Barbara Knight
Knock Knock Duo
Su Knoll Horty
Michael Koch
Wayne Koestenbaum
Tom Koken
Sheryl Ruth Kolitsopoulos
Maria Kollaros
Iris Kollida
Jared Konopitski
Maia Konowitz
Sandra Koponen
John Kotula
Gregory Kowalsky
Tzvetnka Koykova
KK Kozik
Joyce Kozloff
Aaron Krach
Veronika Krämer
Claudia Kreiss
Lisa Kreuziger
Rachelle Krieger
Sharon Krinsky
Balbir Krishan
Larry Krone
Dg Krueger
Debra Kruse
Anna Maria Krycia
Anna Kuchel Rabinowitz
Katharine Kuharic
Kulov
Catherine Kunkemueller
Carole Kunstadt
Helene Kusnitz
Ivy Kwan Arce
Narkiss0S Kykn0S
Jorge L. Moncayo
Joseph La Piana
Stephen Lack
Reinier Lacsamana
Scooter Laforge
Eva Lake
Mercuri Lam
Teresa Lamb
Katerina Lanfranco
James Langford
Claire Lanini
Yngvar Larsen
Amy Laskin
Zoe Lassoff
Kent Lau
Joseph Laurro
Nanette Laverdiere
Blev Lavoux
Louise Lawler
Claudia Lazar
Cristina Lazar
Lucien Dante Lazar
Charles Ledray
Irene Lee
Jessica Lee
Kang Seung Lee
Michael Lee
Gina Lee Robbins
Alicia Leeke
Ace Lehner
Cary Leibowitz
Jonathan Leiter
Diane Lempert
Cec Lepage
Dominique Letellier
Levani (Levan Mindiashvili)
Joel Levasseur
David X. Levine
Barbara Leven
Rebecca Levi
Richard Levine
Mehryl Ferri Levisse
Heather Levy
Judith G. Levy
Ian Lewandowski
Margrit Lewczuk
Joe Lewis
Bruno Leydet
Zichen Li
Siobhan Liddell
Eddie Lidoli
Edward Lightner
Clarence Lin
Jane Lincoln
Julie Lindell
Karen Lindsay
Markus Linnenbrink
Elliott Linwood
Stephen Lipman
Sandra Lippmann
Jackie Lipton
Andy Liu
Yuyi Liu
Elizabeth Livingston
Sean Livingstone
Nico Lliev
Bones J. Lo
Inverna Lockpez
Olive Loew
Zachari Logan
Benoît Loiseau and Eugenio Rebolleda
Nan Lombardi
Cara London
Daniel Long
Cyriaco Lopes
Roxanne Lorch
Damian Lordanov
Dean Loren
Edward Love
Lucia Love
Leslie Lowe
Christopher Lucore
Uschi Lüdemann
Laurel Lueders
Andre Lukin
Ken Lulewich
Eveline Luppi
Anna Lustberg
Fionnuala Lynch
Noah Lyon
Noah Lyon
Kyle Macdonald
Ian Mack
Keith Maddy
Jason Cole Mager
Pooneh Maghazehe
Cathleen Mahan
Veronica Mahoney
Marcelo Maia
Artimisia Mailarta
Marisa Malone
Joe Mama-Nitzberg
Dianna Mammone
Criselda Manalo
Marufa Manan
Hazel Manheimer
Annabel Manning
Katherine Mar
David Marchi
Tara Marchionna
Liz Margolies
Franco Marinai
Elena Marini
Luis Mario Tavales
Aulistar Mark
Majella Mark
Sherrie Mark
J Markco
Thom Markee
Norma Markley
Paul Marlow
Shelley Marlow
April Marque
Xavier Marrades
Liz Marraffino
Beth Mart
J. Kent Martin
Kaitlin Martin
Naomi Martin
Pamela Martin
Trevor Martin
Walter Martin and Paloma Muñoz
Anthony Martino
Lauren Martino
Susan Masarek Wilson
John Masterson
Frank Mastropaolo
Joan Mastropaolo
Whitney Matheson
Katarzyna Mazurek
Lauren Mcarthur
Peter Mccaffrey
Scott Mccarney
Brynn Mcclelland
Stefana Mcclure
Cathy Mccullough
Mame Mccutchin
Glynnis Mcdaris
Joyce Mcdonald
Kevin Mcdonald
Frank Mcdonough
Sarah Mceneaney
Esther McGowan
Emma Mcgrath
Jason Mcgregor
Anne Mcinnis
Carina Mclaughlan
Hogan Mclaughlin
Cindy Mcmath
G.E. Mcmillan
Doug Mcnamara
Graeme Mcnay
Maureen Mcquillan
Michael Meads
Tammi J Meehan
Meagan J. Meehan
Elizabeth Meggs
Julie Mehretu
Jackie Meier
Erica Meimei
Brad Melamed
Robert Melzmuf
Maria Merrill
Ann Messner
David Meyer
Lucas Michael
Nicole Michaud
Jason Mickle
Anthony Mikkelson
Jose Ney Mila Espinosa
Nestor Millan
Avianna Miller
Caitlin Miller
Holly Miller
Isabella Miller
Tracy Miller
Marilyn Minter
Dave Mishalanie
Davey Mitchell
Dick Mitchell
Michael Mitchell
Je’Jae Cleo’ Mizrahi @Mx.Enigma
Gloria Mizutani
Sibylle Möndel
Ivan Monforte
Margaret Montgomery
Andrés Monzón-Aguirre Ortiz
Gwendolyn Moon
David Moore
Kevin Moore
Steve Moore
Allinson Morales
Rodrigo Moreira
Robert Morgan
Zoe Mork
Leo Morrissey
J. Morrison
Bruce Morrow
Pol Morton
Arezoo Moseni
Chris Moss
Carlos Motta
Adrienne Moumin
Eva Mueller
Regi Mueller
Christoph Mügge
Sebastian Mügge
Aaliy Muhammad
Frank Mullaney
Mark Mulroney
Thérèse Murdza
Joanna Murphy
Matthew Murphy
Ryan Sarah Murphy
Christopher Murray
Heather Murray
Maureen Murray
Karen Musgrave
Jeff Musser
Nick Naber
Edie Nadelhaft
Paloma Navares
Carlos Navarrete
Irwin Nayman
Scott Neary
George Negroponte and Virva Hinnemo
Doris Neidl
Pax Nelson
Frank New
John Newman
Kelly Niceley
Sophia Nicholls
Saskia Te Nicklin
Eiko Nishida
Chuck Nitzberg
Chloe Scout Nix
Brenda Noiseux
Jan Nolte
Emily Nomer
Bryan Northup
Chaden Noureddine
Irina Novikova
Emma Noyes
Mercedes Nugent-Head
Brian Numme
Justin Liam O'Brien
Susan O’Brien
Erin O'Flynn
Hunter O'Hanian
Ryotaro Ogawa
Helen Oji
Hidir Ok
David Olenick
Janet Olivia Henry
Jill Olm
Alexander Olmo
Farhiyo Omar
Andrew Ooi
Catherine Opie
Roberto Ordonez
Matthias Oro Bruce
Yari Ostovany
Yuko Otomo
Asma Ounine
Joe Ovelman
Nicholas Overholt
Tyler Matthew Oyer
Andrés Oyuela
Andre Pac
Andre Pace
Alexandra Pacor
Arturo Padilla
Starr Page
Kristen Palazzo
Cristiano Pallara
Sarah Palmer
Libby Paloma
Sachin Pannuri
Chantal Paquin
John Paradiso
Justine Xica Paratore
Claudio Parentela
Mary Pargas
Christopher Parker
Ivor Parry
Blake Paskal
David Partridge
Vidhi Patel
Emma Paterson-Dennis
John Paul
Bridget Pavalow
Cole Pawlowski
Steven Craig Paxton
Pamela Pearce
Matt Pearson
Zino Pece
Sophie Peetz
Marc Pelletier
Manuel Pellón
Suzanne Pemberton
Sahir Peña
Manaure Peñalver
Asafe Pereira
Jorge Perez
Beto Pérez
Connie Perry
Nandini Persuad
Gilda Pervin
Gio Black Peter
Kate Petley
Rick Petrea
Mario Petrirena
Scott Pfaffman
Diane Phares
Marc Phares
Clarence Philbrick
John Phillips
Noah Pica
Claudia Piehler
Liana F. Piehler
Opal Piggott
Matt Pipes
Joe Piscopia
Maja Planinac
Plastic & Son
Jennifer Ponds
Mitchell Poon
Pope.L
J. Lauren Popma
Lawrence Porter
Katherine Powers
Sigita R. Praneviciene
Mel Prest
Diane Pribojan
Clifford Prince King
J. John Priola
R. Prost
Melodie Provenzano
Carol Prud'Homme Davis
Amanda Procaccino Prunty
Max Puchalsky
Adam Putnam
CQ Quintana
Fraser Radford
Bill Ragals
Brenda Rainey
Francisco Javier Ramirez
Madey Ramirez
Rachel Ramirez
Daniel Ramos
Renee Ramos
William Rand
Jessica Rankin
Michelle Ranson
Nathan Rapport
Heather Rasmussen
Beverly Rauntenberg
Jack Ready
Prospect Reda
Rob Redding
Peter Rednour
Rosemary Rednour
Calvin Reid
Leah Reid
Agustin Rein
Naomi Kawanishi Reis
David Reisman
Richard Renaldi
Ernesto Renda
Ana Rendich
Rowan Renee
Erica Resnick
William Reue
Monica Rex
Cristofer Reyes Espinal
Adrienne Reynolds
Eric Rhein
Fredrick Ribet
Madeline Richard
Gail Richardson
Anne Richter
Karen Rieloff Oteiza
S.L. Rika
Andrew Ringler
Jasmin Risk
Timo Rissanen
Fares Rizk
Alexander Robateau
Greg Robbins
Dale Roberts
Daniel Roberts
Elizabeth Roberts
LJ Roberts
Marie Roberts
Raine Roberts
Jordan T. Robinson
Walter Robinson
Peter Robinson, Jr.
Sur Rodney Sur
Arthur Rodrigues
Stephanie Rodriguez
Kellie Rogers
Kyrie Rogers
Tori Romania
James Romberger
Dan Romer
Chris Romero
Natalie Rosbottom
Adam Liam Rose
Diane Rosen
Kay Rosen
Bonnie Rosenstock
Andrei Rosetti
Luqman Rosnan
Steve Ross
Courtney Rossy
Arnold Roth
Elizabeth Rothschild
Mary Rouncefield
Amy Routman
Willyum Rowe
Dirk Rowntree
Emily Royer
Johnny Rozsa
Jamila Rufaro
Isabella Rupp
Arlene Rush
Barbara Rushkoff
JK Russ
Tajh Rust
Tim Ryan
Patrik Rytirangas
Darkreconstruction S I
Tom Sachs
Richard Saja
Patricia Salat
Jess Saldaña
Memo Salvan
Paul Sammut
Ginny Sampson
Jeleiny Sanchez
Georgie Sánchez
Rafael Sánchez
Matthew Sandager
Daniel Sander
Laura Sanders
Gianna Sanfiorenzo
Phyllis Sanfiorenzo
Toni-Lee Sangastiano
Arlene Santana Thornton
Fefo Reyes and Carmine Santaniello
Jonathan Santlofer
Nelson Santos
Mary Sarian
Farid Sarudin
Benjamin Saulnier
Hal Saulson
Nicollette Savattere
Andreas Savopodos
Andreas Savopoulos
Carol Savopoulos
Christoph Sawyer
Roberto Scala
Dan Schapiro
Ann Schaumburger
Peter Schepper
Espie Schiavo
James Schlechter
Gary Schneider
Ruth Schneiderman
Sarah Scholz
JP Schuiteman
Larry Schulte
Lars Schumacher
Susanne Schumacher
Susan Schwalb
Laura Schwamb
Richard Schwamb
Anne Schwartz
Francesca Schwartz
Jessica Anne Schwartz
Phyllis Schwartz
Celina Sciuto
Carl Scorza
L Scully
Sorin Scurtulescu
Greg Seagrave
Jenna Sedlack
Alexandro Segade
Nelson Segarra
Jan Seifert
Nina Seigenfeld
Tommy Sepagan
Braun Serra
Andrew Seto
Kang Seung Lee
Jacqueline Sferra Rada
Labdhi Shah
Mary Shah
Sanjana Shahani
Penko Shaitanov
Ted Shan
Julie Shapiro
Kate Sharkey
Russell Sharon
Donna Sharrett
Wendy Sheasby
Will Shellhorn
Bronwen Shelwell
Kate Shepherd
Leslie Sheryll
Shikeith
Kwet Yung Shim
Soon Young Shimizu
Soon-Hee Shimizu
Ethan Shoshan
Kou Shou
Gabriel J Shuldiner
Rick Shupper
Howard Siegel
Nathaniel A. Siegel
Robert Siegelman
Elena Mary Siff
Toni Silber-Delerive
Luis Silva
Patricia Silva
Sasha Silverstein
Laurie Simmons
N. Arms Simon
Zulaika Simon
Kelley Simons
Adrian Sorin Sinescu
Arthur Kay Singleton
Val Sivilli
Rebecca Skelton
Barbara Slitkin
Louise P. Sloane
Andrew Small
Wendy Small
Lena Smart
Constance Smith
Kiki Smith
Mark Addison Smith
Mary Smith
Vic Smith
Snappy
Sílvia Soares Boyer
Claudia Sohrens
Deanne Sokolin
Bishakh Som
Jeremy Sorese
Fredson Sossavi
Mario Sostre
Isai Soto
Sandrina Sparagna
Maria Spector
George Spencer
Sigrid Sperzel
Gary J. Speziale
David Spiher
Kandi Spindler
Michael St.John
Joseph Stabilito
Jonathan Stangroom
Christopher Stanton
Janice Stanton
Michael Stark
Barry Steely
Laura J. Stein
Shauna Steinbach
Oriane Stender
Peter Stephens
David Samuel Stern
Robert Stern
Ann Steuernagel
Jon Steven Walters
Allyn Stewart
Andreas Streicher
Lisa Studier
Judith Sturm
Emma Suelter
Lieh Sugai
Sunny Suits
Homo Superiorr
Valery Sutherland
Mia Suyeoka
Vermillion Swan
Marisa Swangha
Marc Swanson
Amy Swartele
Darren Swazo
Liz Sweibel
Bob Szantyr
Sarah Sze
Sarah Sze
Jordan T. Robinson
Tabboo!
Stipan Tadic
Youssef Taki
Luciana Tamas
Sienna Tan
Therese Tan
Chris Tanner
Michael Tarbi
Charles Tavares
Susan Taverna
Charlea Taylor
Kim Rae Taylor
Ski Taylor
Steed Taylor
Idalja Temmer
Ralph Tepel
Mari Terauchi
Polina Tereshina
Astrid Terrazas
Robin Tewes
Poramit Thantapalit
Jerry the Marble Faun
The New York Board Of Taste
Poppers The Pony
Charles Theonia
Karen Thomas
Patrick Thomas
Amy Thompson
Martha Thorn
Anna K Thorsdottir
Susanne Tierney
Tret Tierney
Vincent Tiley
Jonny Tingle
Francine Tint
Narong Tintamusik
Shira Toren
Antoine Touze
Basia Tov
George Towne
Ronald "Remy" Trail
Thang Tran
Suzanne Treister
Li Trincere
Lee Ann Tristano
Kenji Troelstrup
Kate True
Linda Trunzo
Janet Tsakis
Janaina Tschape
Margaret Tsirantonakis
Christine Tucci
Alex Tudela
Lida Turner
Neysa Turner
Sean Turner
Coleen Tyler
Zoe Uhr
Gene Underwood
Joanne Ungar
Triangle Head Universe
David Uricoli
Jennifer Utter
Brian Uy
Agostino Vaccaro
Clover Vail
Teressa Valla
Juliana Vallejo
Marguerite Van Cook
Gabby Van Der Marz
Annina Van Sebroeck
Caroline Van Sluijs
Connie Van Winssen
Isaac Vancuren
Ria Vanden Eynde
Jose Miguel Vasquez
Albert Velasco
John Velo
April Vendetta
Baillie Vensel
Conrad Ventur
Claudia Vess
Karim Vickery
Roey Vilnai
John Paul Vincent
Tony Vita
Anthony Viti
Kazaan Viveiros
Onna Voellmer
Amanda Vogl
Don Voisine
Kristin Volk
Sarah Vollmann
Heinrich Von Kesseler
Panagiotis Voulgaris
Falcon Vrána
Maxx Wade
Carole Wagner Greenwood
Michael Walden
Kara Walker
Lee Lee Walker
Gerry Wall
Jina Wallwork
James Walsh
Zachary Waltke
Zoe Waltke
Clair Walton
Kim Wan
Melissa Wang
Phillip Ward
Tom Warren
Jack Waters
Darren Waterston
Jude Waterston
Michael Watson
Patrick Webb
Tenesh Webber
Jonathan Weinberg
Louise Weinberg
Michelle Weinberg
Yuko Weiner
Jordan Weitzman
Charlie Welch
Lela Shahrzad Welch
William Welsch
James Wentzy
Kurt Weston
Kelli Whelan
Whitney Whitaker
Lili White
Rodney White
Van Wifvat
David Wightman
Emily Wilford
Chris Willcox
Forrest Williams
Michael Kelly Williams
Pat Williams
Vernon Williams
Anthony Wills
Barbara Jaye Wilson
Laura Sharp Wilson
Martha Wilson
Trevor Winkfield
Justin Winslow
Pam Winters
Paul Wirhun
Athena Wisotsky
Stephanie Witchger
Scot J. Wittman
James Wodarek
Amanda Wolf
Larry Wolf
Kevin Won
Lauren Wong
Lily Wong
Ed Woodham
Kelly Worman
Holly Would
Doug Wright
Jimmy Wright
Kobina Wright
Jan Wurm
Rob Wynne
Saint Alphonse X
Le Xie
Alina Yakirevitch
Lynne Yamamoto
Carrie Yamaoka
Zackery Yao
Frances Yeoland
Plamen Yordanov
Snejana Yordanova
Laurence Young
Sally Young
Wayne Young
Frederique Zacharia
April Zanne Johnson
Gloria Zapata
Cayce Zavaglia
Deborah Zavon
Tony Zaza
Jody Zellen
Yuan Rong Zhang
Charlyn Zlotnik
Interview with Metafora Arts Barcelona
LIFE AFTER METÀFORA
Interview with Paul Chisholm
Paul was a student at Metàfora during the Academic Year 2010-2011. It has been a pleasure see his work develop since. Soon, he will be opening a solo show at The Art Fund Prize Gallery, The Lightbox Museum, Woking, Surrey, England.
We asked about his experience on the Metàfora Studio Arts Program, his professionalising process, and of course, about the exhibition taking place between the 7th to 19th November.
What do you remember about your stay at Metàfora, and in Barcelona?
I remember it being the most magical of years. A chance to dedicate oneself fully to their practice, exploring new avenues, directions all under the umbrella of a critical discourse with like-minded artists from across the Globe many of whom are still best friends. Barcelona has a certain vibe and a buzz which reflected deeply in the work I created during that time.
In what ways has your experience at Metàfora helped you become the artist you are today?
At the time of applying to Metàfora I was considering a Masters in London. However I desperately wanted to get out of the rat race which is London and explore Europe. Metàfora really consolidated my practice to which it is today combining painting and conceptual sculpture. The course allowed time for experimentation, trying ideas out and ultimately I made several of my most iconic pieces whilst on the course. The course offered something which I don’t think many U.K colleges can offer…a truly international perspective, a highly conceptual approach and with a lot of 121 tuition and the chance to learn about Art therapy too!
How has your art developed since?
Since leaving Metàfora I lived a few years in Palma de Mallorca where I had an exhibition at Waka. Unfortunately in 2013 I moved back to London but eventually enrolled on an MA at Chelsea College of Arts in 2018. This really supercharged my practice in so many ways, connections, opportunities and a deep re-think of my practice. I now regularly dontate my work to the Terrence Higgins Trust annual Auction at Christies, London where my work has sold for double digits in aid of the charity. I have given talks on my practice in relation to Keith Haring at Tate Liverpool and all sorts of great great platforms which as a young artist at Metàfora I could only dream of. Never give up on your dreams keep creating, exhibiting and applying for things and even when no one else will give you an opportunity make one for your Art! I now live just outside of London in the countryside where I have a large studio subsided by the local council. This enables me to push boundaries in my practice, experiment and dream of sunny days in Barcelona! Art is a journey enjoy it!
(above) Mc Whimsical (below) Screw You, Virus Face
What is your upcoming exhibition about?
My exhibition is entitled The Lost Boys and mostly reflects upon the Aids & HIV epidemic both personal and political. The exhibition will include works made at Metàfora to the present day. This is my first solo Museum show. Which is so exciting! This body of work has been in my mind’s eye for many many years and will survey my practice surrounding these issues. In fact, as an alumni of Metàfora I was lucky enough to be invited back to do a talk on Arts Activism and the Aids Crisis in 2012. This gave me the chance to consolidate and present my research to a new cohort of Metàfora students… What a great opportunity Jette gave me! This area of research has fuelled my practice ever since…. These professional opportunities Metàfora gave me are the foundation for wanting to go on to do a PHD!
How did it happen? Can you expand on your professionalisation process?
My upcoming show is funded via a Developing your artistic practice grant by The Arts Council England plus grants from The Oppenhiem Johns Downes Trust and Visual Aids In New York. Applying for Arts grants is so important in being able to make the work you envision and see it exhibited and get things off the ground. Wherever you are based in the World there are Artist grants you can apply too which will with perseverance make your ideas a reality. Just remember rejection is a part of the process and never give up! It took me eight long years to get ‘Mc Whimsical’ a work I made and created at Metàfora off the ground in Barcelona and at the time it was a small scale installation eventually in 2019 I exhibited 101 creatures from the work in a Gallery in Hoxton U.K. Think big never give up… Dreams can, and do come true…
ABOUT THE EXHIBITION
“The lost boys”
at The Art Fund Prize Gallery,
The Lightbox Museum,
Woking, Surrey,
England
Between November 7th -19th 2023
Open daily 10am-5pm.
Entry is free.
+++
The Artist will be present on the 7th of November 1pm-5pm,
and again on the 19th of November 1-5pm
+++
For more information contact
the Artist mrpauldavidchisholm@gmail.com
or the gallery peter@thelightbox.org.uk
thelightbox.org.uk | mrpauldavidchisholm.com
The title of this exhibition comes from J. M. Barrie’s 1904 play Peter Pan, or The Boy Who Wouldn’t Grow Up but refers in the context of this exhibition to the boys who simply couldn’t grow up because of the Aids/ HIV crisis. Although this exhibition refers to Boys throughout its context it is no way limited by gender as this affects us all.
‘A stitch in time saves nine’, meaning if you sort out a problem immediately it may save a lot of extra work later; if you’re lucky! The AIDS crisis and those affected are not so lucky and it took seven long years for any ‘Art’ (Anti-Retroviral Medication) to come in effect and it was another 9 years- 1996 until this medication slowly became effective and in ‘the everyday cushions’ these concerns are played out. These cushions are rough in nature but soft at hand and are a labour of love and frustration, each stitch is a direct sign of life; a life the artist thought he would not live after his diagnosis of HIV in 2007. With each word a contradictory or opposing word appears on the cushions scattered across the gallery floor alongside these are black pencils that lie with red tips alluding to both blood, the black death and an artist’s career that may have been cut short like so many others in the 80’s and 90’s. Each pencil is varnished with anti-viral glitter this coating both suggesting protection against viruses and a reminder of ever present danger. This steri-coat varnish is often used in hospital settings, without the glitter of course! However each glitter shard stands as another star burning bright and a reminder of those who we have loved and lost.
On the wall hang two poems created using Chat GPT, one which the artist asks to create a poem about the lost boys due to the Aids Crisis’ and another ‘the Lost Gay boys due to the Aids crisis’. With each the artist raises questions upon the fact that a Virus knows no boundaries gay or just a boy. It’s interesting to note the change in language used by the AI when instructing it to use a label such as ‘Gay’. Either way the work ends with making the Artist cry.
A soft sculpture entitled ‘My magical mental illness power’ is covered with 101 red ribbons and Nazar badges – the Turkish amulet which deflects the evil eye. The red Ribbon was created as a way of remembrance by a group of 12 Artists in 1991, from the New York Arts charity Visual Aids. (A charity which the artist often exhibits with and is awarded arts grants by) Coupling both of these symbols of hope, remembrance and protection within the context of mental health the artist questions the ongoing stigma associated with HIV and AIDS, whilst simultaneously creating a sculpture which empowers those affected both those lost to history and those struggling today.
In a self-portrait from 2017 the artist has placed a badge on the heart and it states ‘ Over 1 million people die of AIDS each year that’s the population of Amsterdam gone’ This statement came from a poster when the International Aids Conference was held in Amsterdam in 2018 (The Artist splits his time between the City and Surrey, England). Just imagine… ‘That’s an entire city in silence every year, year on year’… Aids is not over…
On the opposing wall a large print of Paul Chisholm’s iconic ‘I’m Tired’ poem stands which was read aloud at the Keith Haring Art and Activism conference at Tate Liverpool in 2019. This work juxtaposes the AI generated poem giving a more human take on our collective consciousness. Ultimately the work ends by saying ‘I’m Tired but never too tired to keep creating Art which someday somewhere may touch another’s soul …’ And I think this exhibition is a testament to that.
About Paul Chisholm
Surrey based artist, Paul Chisholm presents a body of paintings and sculptures from his Lost Boys series which is inspired by the boys lost to the HIV epidemic throughout the decades and related suicide. It also points to stigma faced by those boys affected by HIV within modern day society.
Paul Chisholm (1983) was born in Canterbury, England and brought up in Royal Leamington Spa, Warwickshire. He studied a BA in Fine Art at Nottingham Trent University (2004) and Metàfora Studio Arts , Barcelona (2011) before doing his MA in Fine Art at Chelsea -College of Art in London (2020). In 2023 he was nominated for the Queer Britain Art Prize. This exhibition is funded by an Art Council England Developing your creative practice grant.
SOAS OPEN STUDIOS
I’m pleased to say I will be opening my studio as a part of The Surrey Artists Open Studios 3rd-18th June 2023 come and take a look…..
Sotheby's Institute of Art Charity Auction May 2023
Bletchingley Arts Festival
I am pleased to say I have been asked to give an Artist’s talk on my life and practice at the opening of the Bletchingley Arts festival Art exhibition. More details below: Last year’s inaugural BletchFest Art Exhibition at Grange Meadow Bletchingley. successfully attracted interested visitors over a weekend in May. Local artists, working in differing media including paint, ceramics and photography successfully displayed and sold their creative works while Uncle Stubble2 , using spray paints ,gave a live demonstration of his art to admiring onlookers as he produced an 8 foot square mural. Giving local artists of all levels of abilities, some exhibiting for the first time, the joy of seeing their talents appreciated was a gratifying experience.
This year’s event, to be held over the 13th and 14th May with a preview event on the 12th features many more artists with added media such as decorative metal and wood crafts. The exhibition expects to showcase the art of wood turning along with many other examples of visual and creative arts. An exhibition can and should be a festive experience too and the sweet sound of music provided by local musician Nigel Chatfield will entertain as visitors browse the many unique artworks and creative crafts on offer.
As with all BletchFest’s events the focus is on the community. Both in providing a platform for local artists to showcase their talents and encouraging community engagement with the arts in its many varied forms but at the same time, supporting local community charities. This year’s BletchFest Art Exhibition sees Renewed Hope and Ukrainian Support Charities offering their own creative arts along with Bletchingley Skills Centtre. With some children’s activities to keep them entertained as you browse, taking the opportunity to admire and perhaps acquire unique original art, and a licensed bar in the Pavilion providing refreshments and snacks the BletchFest Artists and Artisans Exhibition promises to be both exciting and entertaining and at the same time relaxed.
Entry to the event is free! The doors open from noon to 6pm on Saturday 13th May and noon to 4pm on Sunday 14th May. So come along and appreciate the abundance of artistic talent we have in East Surrey.
Visual Aids New York Postcards from the Edge
I’m pleased to say one of my works will be available to purchase as a part of Visual Aids Postcards from the Edge fundraiser at Ortuzar projects in New York. Raising vital funds for this amazing charity. They have given me both the most amazing opportunities to exhibit in N.Y and several Artist grants over the years. Their work in normalizing HIV and Aids is needed now more than ever please support them in anyway possible.
https://www.ortuzarprojects.com/
Our Home Ukraine Fundraiser Exhibition Oxford
My Work is currently on display at St Johns College Oxford until the 2nd of October as a part of the Our Home Exhibition. I was invited by Kristi Krayst a Ukrainian Artist currently living and Volunteering with me at my studio.
50% of all sales go towards the Ukraine Fund.
Please see below for more details and installation view.
New Studio & winner of the golden ticket
Im pleased to say the opening yesterday at Bletchingley Castle went super well. The winner of the golden ticket was Tony Elias a member of the board of trustees at Bletchingley Parish Council. The exhibition is on view until the 3rd of October by appointment only please telephone 01883740435. Bletchingley is close to redhill station which is twenty minutes by train from either London Bridge or Victoria stations and ten minutes by car from Gatwick airport.
Iwould qlso lie to ublicly thank the Parish council for unanamously voting for my new studio which is at 78a High street, Bletchingley.Surrey.
Sothebys essay on the lost children of Paradise
Reflections on the Many Faces of Public and Private Selves Through Paul Chisholm’s The Lost Children of Paradise (2018).
Text by Wil Ceniceros
Contemporary artist Paul David Chisholm (b. 1983, Canterbury, UK) started his art education in Nottingham Trent University (Class of 2004) before completing a Master’s in Fine Art from Chelsea College of Arts (Class of 2019). His artistic practice includes painting, sculpture and performance art, and it is through these various mediums and their subject matter that he creates a visual language exploring themes regarding his homosexuality, sexual abuse trauma, mental illness and politics. Among the artworks Paul Chisholm became widely known for is his sculpture Viral Load 2010, a black dildo covered with glass-headed pins which he created as a response to his HIV diagnosis and referred to by the media as ‘the world’s most painful sex toy’. Chisholm has donated artworks to charity organizations such as the Terrence Higgins Trust who have auctioned the pieces at Christie’s auction house in London to help support people living with HIV across the UK. In 2011, Chisholm’s artworks Fuck Me I Have Love & H*I*V was exhibited alongside Felix Gonzalez Torres, General Idea in the New York exhibition ‘Mixed Messages,’ a benefit for the US-based non-profit organization Visual AIDS, which raises awareness and dialogue around HIV/AIDS. The most recent 2019 Terrence Higgins Trust auction at Christie’s featured Chisholm’s oil on canvas painting, Lost Boys (2017), which alludes to the boys lost to HIV, AIDS and related suicide deaths while exploring the “juxtaposition between public and private selves and the battle to survive.”
Although much of Chisholm’s artwork can be seen as recognizing the progress made in HIV research and treatment, his artwork serves to reminds viewers of the persistent stigma associated with the disease and reveals the need to continue raising awareness on the subject matter. Anchoring Paul Chisholm’s recent body of artworks is a series of clown paintings, which transport us into a journey that includes a dark and invisible, yet omnipresent reality Chisholm has been experiencing. In the clown paintings, we see Chisholm extending his exploration of the themes of ‘public and private selves’ previously seen in Lost Boys (2017) and he creates a new visual language through the figuration of portrait-like clown faces. It is these themes of ‘public and private selves’ that are relevant to all human beings regardless of age, gender or background and which make Paul Chisholm stand out as a noteworthy contemporary artist.
How can an artist represent the dark and invisible world of individuals living with HIV, trauma and mental illness? In 1949 Theodor Adorno pronounced that “to write poetry after Auschwitz is barbaric,” a hyperbolic rejection to the aestheticization of all forms of post-traumatic expression. Instead, Adorno suggests that art ought to be transformed “from the harmonic and knowable to the jarring and irresolvable”1 and argues that “mimesis in its physiological, somatic dimension is Angleichung, a becoming, or making
1 Theodor W. Adorno, “Cultural Criticism and Society,” trans. Samuel Weber and Shierry Weber, Prisms (Cambridge: MIT Press, 1981), 39.
similar, a movement toward, never reaching a goal. It is not identity, nor can it be reduced to nonidentity together as nonidentical similitude and in unresolvable tension with each other.”2 Contemporary artists such as Cindy Sherman (b. 1954) and Susan Coe (b. 1954) have found mimesis useful to represent trauma “and the resulting frustration with memory that is neither transparent nor orderly.”3 Similarly, contemporary artist Paul Chisholm uses his artwork to elucidate and simultaneously dissolve the stigma and social marginalization felt by himself and others in similar situations. Through mimesis, or the uninterrupted interplay between past and present, Chisholm invites the viewer to understand that his paintings as representations pale in comparison to the individual and collective albatrosses around our necks that we carry every day.
Chisholm’s clown paintings consist of a series titled The Lost Children of Paradise (2018), in which the clown is used as a metaphor to make visible his exploration of identity, and the process of mythmaking. Inspired by the 1945 French epic drama Les Enfants du Paradis, this body of work was started in December 2018 while pursuing a MAFA degree at the Chelsea College of Arts in London. Through the highly stylized clown paintings, the artist explores connections beyond traditional associations of comic relief, and instead reminds the viewer of the individual and collective frailty and weakness in human beings. In his essay on The Lost Children of Paradise, Chisholm explores representing the need to mask sexual identity stating that “for a Queer Artist like myself we have always had to make magic happen. Life was never simple, we always had to be inventive [and] put on our mask and face bravely a heteronormative society.” The clowns are also a metaphorical representation of Chisholm’s identity as ‘the artist,’ exploring the role he takes on as an entertainer. He refers to the series as alluding to the clown images as fascinating “because of his ability to mask in make-up and flamboyance his true sadness, he performs and entertains very much like an artist does. A vagabond, an outsider and a fool dedicated to his Art.” In addition, he states that the portrait-like paintings represent the personifications of society riddled with the “veneer of instability, this gloss, this shine, this vision of ourselves and how we present our beings to the world which is so crushingly hopeless, we buy, we shop, we consume, like automated robots looking for the next kick.”
Central to understanding the clown series is Chisholm’s intellectual and aesthetic depth include understanding the process of layering which he uses to create a vocabulary to explore the hybridity between the subjects and the themes. Through the use of curved lines, dripping paint, and incomplete/broken lines, Chisholm illustrates a vocabulary that reveals the complexity of the subject (self, viewer, society) and the themes being explored (mental illness, trauma, HIV). In the subjects/clowns, Chisholm interweaves traditional references about clowns as jovial, amusing figures. Acting as a self-portrait for the artist, the clowns’ exaggerated smiles allude to the artist’s inner turmoil whilst
2 Andreas Huyssen, “Of Mice and Mimesis: Reading Spiegelman and Adorno,” in Visual Culture and the Holocaust, 32.3 Janet Marstine, “Challenging the Gendered Categories of Art and Art Therapy: The Paintings of Jane Orleman,” in Femenist Studies 28, no. 3 (fall 2002), 632.
dealing with depression and anxiety which he feels must be masked in order to be taken seriously in society and the artworld. His use of curved lines in the clown’s curly hair and his exaggerated smile help create a psychological sense of comfort and ease corresponding to the symbol of the clown as a harmless, approachable figure. Simultaneously, the verticality of the painting and the largesse of the figures suggests a sense of dominance and strength which confer onto the clown a double meaning that oscillates between having an air of comfort and menace. In A Portrait of the Artist as a Clown Upside Down, the upside-down clown takes the figure and myth of the artist/clown as a jovial, comical figure and subverts it. Further evidence of the layering includes by appropriation of Georg Baselitz’s upside-down painted subjects to allude to emotional distress. The artwork is exhibited resting on two side-by-side, identical backwards ticking clocks referencing “Untitled” (Perfect Lovers) (1991) by Félix González-Torres, which serve as abstracted substitutions for bodies while acting as a metaphor for love.
Additional layering can be seen in the foreground, where Chisholm appropriates artistic processes that have inspired him such as the dripping paint tracery. Here we see Chisholm paying homage to Peter Doig who painted a tracery of snow-covered branches in his landmark painting Architect’s Home in the Ravine (1991) which act as a veil to draw the viewer closer to the painting. In his clown paintings, the tracery of dripping paint takes on a more emotional connotation conveying a sense of melancholy. Upon closer inspection one notices Chisholm’s use of gestural brushstrokes which gives the viewer an insight into the artist’s exploration of representing his anxieties and frustrations. In keeping with the aforementioned allusions to myths and roles we take on, and alongside an environment filled with avarice, artifice and apathy, the foreground tracery also reads as a tool to depict the emotionally incarcerated and grotesque individuals we run the risk of becoming when we conform to social norms for acceptance. Implicit in the clown paintings is also an indication that escape from the strictures of society are unobtainable. The clowns’ asymmetrical and distorted facial features disorient the viewer further developing a language of despair, while through his use of drips in darker tones of red paint take on a morbid sense, akin to splatters of blood as if making the subject appear as a damaged individual.
Through the clown series, Chisholm masterfully chose the idea of portraiture to explore the challenging nature of surviving trauma and mental illness. Philosopher Philippe Lacoue-Labarthe argues that the self is “unrepresentable” and that (self) portraiture forces us to face the illusion that a portrait depicts the self as a unity, however it also fragments, dislocates and evokes terror.4 Through the broken lines scattered throughout the clown paintings, Chisholm expresses the illusory self as unity and depicts a sense of fracturing or disruption having taken place. Further, the clowns are painted alone, without friends or family members, speaking to the feeling of isolation often felt by individuals living with mental illness, trauma.
4 Philippe Lacoue-Labarthe and François Martin, “Retrait” of the Artist, in Two Persons, trans. Mira Kamdar (Lyons, France: Editions MEM/Artifacts, 1985), 66, 69
Chisholm’s clown paintings can be further read as offering his clown portraits as testimonials of his past and present experiences. It is worth emphasizing that “a testimonial is more than a confession; while a confession merely declares, a testimonial questions. A testimonial demands that a survivor use the personal voice so that [he] cannot be discredited as passive victim. A testimonial is a position that directs attention from the survivor to the cultural norms that condone trauma.”5 The child-like style of painting and the use of highly made-up, masked clowns closely associated with entertainment, allow Chisholm to further blurs the boundaries between art and art as therapy. In this vein, Chisholm is able to access repressed memories of himself as an individual and as part of society, which require addressing, but also disrupts the voyeuristic pleasures of fetishization and objectification of an individual suffering in silence. In the process, he offers art as a form of de-pathologizing symptoms and behaviors and offers hope through the act of painting to reclaim a sense of control and self-determination in the present.
As an emerging artist, Paul Chisholm faces some of the same challenges as many of his peers in the pursuit of professional success. Among these challenges is questioning how an artist’s work engages in a discourse relevant to the here and now. Yet, despite the heavy context and overtly sexual/political nature, the clown work has been greatly successful with many collectors buying Chisholm’s new body of work. His multilayered clown paintings can be appreciated as Contemporary Art since they offer interpretations and explorations of that which is not seen yet is astonishingly real and relevant globally. Although Chisholm has foregrounded his clown series of artworks with his personal experiences, the paintings’ larger importance lies in enhancing our understanding of how art can represent visual dialogues between identity and self, past and present, personal and political.
5 Shoshana Felman, “Education and Crisis, or the Vicissitudes of Teaching,” in Testimony: Crises of Witnessing in Literature, Psychoanalysis, and History, ed. Shoshana Felman and Dori Laub (New York: Routledge, 1992), 5.
Artist Talk @ Tate Liverpool
I was delighted to take part Keith Haring conference Art & Activism at Tate Liverpool. Invited by Ted Kerr of the New school in New York as a part of ‘What you don’t know about AIDS could fill a museum’ published by ‘ONCURATING’
CHELSEA MA FINE ART SHOW
Art in the Castle May 11th
PAINT! @ White Conduit Projects, London
PAINT!
Lelia Bryon
Paul David Chisholm
Sheefali Asija
Youngeun Kim
PRIVATE VIEW: Friday 8th March 6-9pm
OPEN: Saturday and Sunday 9-10th March 12-6pm
The concept to put on a show of paintings simply for the medium of the material is so old fashioned it’s practically antique stated Laura Cummings in a Guardian Article in 2013. So in that vain of thinking we bring you the new fashion……
Paint! What is the state of Contemporary painting today? Well these four Artists from Chelsea College of Art put on a diverse range of styles and ways of making to explore exactly this issue. When asked Is Painting dead? Yawn stated Charles Saatchi in 2009. Ten years later and that statement still rings true. What a stupid question to ask…. !
Chelsea College of Art is World renowned for producing some of the biggest names in Contemporary Painting today and these four students are well on their way too.
Some 100 years earlier a rather well known painter stated “Paintings have a life of their own that derives from the artists soul” Vincent Van Goth
Paint in its very simplest form is pigment and a binder but once transformed by the Artist it becomes something else something magical inexplicable and a source of wonderment. It is as Van Goth said the Artists soul.
Each of the artists in this exhibition have something unique to say a different perspective on painting, its medium, its message and its soul……
Paul Chisholm has said of his paintings that its a process which allows his soul to explore and express his deepest fears and emotions. His current series “ Clowning around the jokes on us? explores exactly this issue.
Shefali Asija goes on to say Science fills me with awe and captures my imagination and gives me a philosophical view of life and with my painting i explore its ability to capture these qualities to engage viewer curiuosioty and to get them to think about the nature of existence.
Lelia Byron’s perspective is I paint stories of people and places both real and imagined. Everything in this world has a story: objects, people, and places. I am a lover of stories and a storyteller myself. I paint individuals, but I also see my work as an exploration of the universality of human dreams, needs, struggles, and joys.
Youngchen says As a painter, do i express openness? When a painter agonises over how to select an object and express it, the object is not the object of reality. It is an object that everyone knows but the object in my painting is the subject of my own thinking at that moment of expression.
So all in all Painting as a medium and as a message encapsulates the whole of the human spirit. Painting is very much alive !!!
White Conduit Projects opened in Central London location at 1 White Conduit Street N1 in November 2014. It is showcasing Japanese artists and designers alongside British and international artists in a programme of innovative exhibitions across a variety of media.
Postcards from the Edge @ Bortolami Gallery New York
VISUAL AIDS PRESENTS THE 21ST ANNUAL POSTCARDS FROM THE EDGE BENEFIT FRIDAY, FEB. 22 – SUNDAY, FEB. 24, 2019 AT BORTOLAMI IN TRIBECA Participating artists: Laurie Simmons, Marcel Dzama, Marilyn Minter, Catherine Opie, Barbara Hammer, Kiki Smith, William Wegman, Mary Heilmann, and many more! Image credit: Postcards from the Edge 2018, Steven Rosen Photography PREVIEW PARTY: Friday, February 22, 2019 from 5:00 – 8:00 p.m. BENEFIT SALE: Saturday, February 23, 2019 from 10:00 a.m. – 6:00 p.m. & Sunday, February 24, 2019 from noon – 4:00 p.m. New York, October 24, 2018 – Visual AIDS is pleased to announce the 21st edition of Postcards from the Edge, the organization’s first annual benefit event of the year for 2019. Widely known as one of Visual AIDS’ most exciting benefits, Postcards from the Edge provides an opportunity for the public to purchase original pieces of postcard-sized artwork by both established and emerging artists for only $85 each. The 21st annual sale will be held from February 22nd to 24th, 2019 at host gallery Bortolami, located on 39 Walker Street in Tribeca, New York City. Each year Visual AIDS calls on artists from around the world to create and donate a 4” x 6” piece of original artwork.
This year, acclaimed artists such as Stephen Andrews, Nancy Burson, Kathe Burkhart, Geoff Chadsey, Paul Chisholm, Moyra Davey, Marcel Dzama, Adriana Farmiga, Avram Finkelstein, Judy Glantzman, Barbara Hammer, Jane Hammond, Mary Heilmann, Joyce Kozloff, Julie Mehretu, Marilyn Minter, Catherine Opie, Kiki Smith, Laurie Simmons, Barbara Takenaga, William Wegman, Rob Wynne, and 2 others will be joining a wide range of talented artists in submitting new works in a variety of media including painting, drawing, photography, collage and mixed media. Over 1,500 postcard-sized artworks will be on display, and each will be uniformly priced at $85. All works are displayed anonymously, with the artist’s identity revealed only after the work has been purchased. Postcards from the Edge continues to draw a dynamic crowd of contemporary art enthusiasts as well as the general public. The fundraiser has attracted an impressive following with many eager fans camping overnight to ensure that they are one of the first guests through the door on the first day of the sale. The two-day Benefit Sale of postcard-sized art begins on Saturday, February 23, 2019 from 10:00 a.m. – 6:00 p.m. and continues through Sunday, February 24, from noon – 4:00 p.m. Admission to the Benefit Sale is first-come, first-served with the suggested donation of $5 each day. The Preview Party will be held on Friday, February 22, 2019 from 6:00 – 8:00 p.m. Admission includes 2 raffle tickets for the chance to win first choice of any postcard that evening. The party will also include a silent auction of art and VIP passes allowing the highest bidder to bypass the line on Saturday morning. Advanced ticket purchase will be available soon at www.visualaids.org. The Preview Party is the only chance to see the entire exhibition. No sales. All postcards are $85, but as a way for Visual AIDS to show its appreciation, anyone who purchases four postcards will receive a fifth one for free. On Sunday, guests who purchase two works will receive the third for free. Whether the works purchased are created by a famous or newly-discovered artist, all collectors walk away with a piece of art they love, knowing the money raised will support art programs raising AIDS awareness. History of Visual AIDS’ Postcards from the Edge 2019 will mark the 21st year of Visual AIDS’ Postcards from the Edge benefit, and the impressive 21-year run of this event is a testament to its effectiveness as a fundraising tool. Visual AIDS first held Postcards from the Edge in 1998 and has since raised about $800,000 via this annual fundraiser.
Since the event’s conception, over 20,000 postcard-sized works have been donated by artists from around the world. Noteworthy artists who have participated in past years include: Louise Bourgeois, Cindy Sherman, Leon Golub, Sol LeWitt, Barbara Kruger, Frank Moore, Elizabeth Murray, Nancy Spero, Yoko Ono, Tom Wesselmann, and many others. By participating in Postcards from the Edge, artists and collectors support the mission of Visual AIDS, enabling the organization to produce contemporary art programs that promote AIDS awareness and support artists living with HIV. About Visual AIDS Visual AIDS utilizes art to fight AIDS by provoking dialogue, supporting HIV+ artists, and preserving a legacy, because AIDS is not over. Visual AIDS is the only contemporary arts organization fully committed to HIV prevention and AIDS awareness through producing and presenting visual art projects, while assisting artists living with HIV/AIDS. Visual AIDS is committed to preserving and honoring the work of artists with HIV/AIDS and the artistic contributions of the AIDS movement. For additional information on Visual AIDS, please visit www.VisualAIDS.org
Arts for Education @ House of Vans
Blue Dot Generation presents ‘The Arts for Education’ at House of Vans. A 4-day immersive event of art, photography, performances, documentaries, panel discussions, sport, fashion, workshops and music, aimed at educating us all on the damage we are doing to the oceans.
About
This event is an opportunity for old, young, green and non-green audiences to engage and and their own connection to the planet through creative education. BDG is a sustainability platform promoting the use of the arts for education. By engaging local communities and inspiring international audiences it will transform the relationship between humans and the blue planet. Blue Dot Generation brings together artists, scientists and entrepreneurs who are exploring solutions to the problems our planet is facing. Science and art are both human efforts to understand, explore and describe the world around us, to communicate and share a vision of the world in different ways. Blue Dot Generation aims to harness these powers to educate and engage communities and inspire a change in how we treat the planet.
Our venue, House of Vans, is where “Of the Wall” lives. It’s a place where imagination lets loose over concrete bowls, art installations, workshops and concert stages, inspiring every person who runs, rolls, or stomps through its door. Located in Chicago, Illinois and Waterloo, London, as well as pop-ups around the world, House of Vans is home to the creativity that moves us.
In the vaults under London’s busiest station, Blue Dot Generation will bring the ocean to the city. Driven by their passion to make a difference, Blue Dot will change people’s habits by helping them visualise the seriousness of the challenges all living things are facing. Although London is far from the sea, this immersive event will transform the relationship between humans and the oceans.
See ArtRabbit for more info