Wednesday, 7 December 2011

ART IS FOR LIFE, NOT JUST FOR CHRISTMAS...

I don't know, every single gallery space, market stall and 'pop-up' shop seems hell bent of getting us to buy art for Christmas, growinn just a tiny bit tired of all the hard sell...

We had one of the bigger established gallery businesses in our street send one of their staff out with a bucket of paste and a whole load of big flyposters demanding "This Christmas buy art, not crap", only to have the gallery owner on the other side of us take offense at said gallery's flyposting on his wall and tip the bucket of glue over said gallery worker's head... Police were called, posters ripped down, gallery people retired to their galleries to sell their Christmas art and a strange tension echoed down Vyner Street. The poster he paisted on our wall soon had a black leafheart growing on it (well these things do grow rather quickly...). Art isn't just for Christmas though is it? Surely it needs constant love and attention, it needs good light and consideration, art is for life isn't it?

ART IS FOR LIFE, NOT JUST FOR CHRISTMAS...

Coming your way on 20th December, a two week group show and events to take us through the holidays, through the now traditional (street art) painting outside day that is boxing day and on through the New Year burning our way straight in to 2012....

Late night opening Christmas party private view (who knows why they're called private views, everyone is welcome), 6pm until at least 9pm on Tuesday December 20th

While everyone else is busy flogging art for Christmas, we're carrying straight on through with a group show, the Cultivate Solstice/Christmas party and more (we didn't say we didn't like Christmas, just all the almost cynical sell sell sell... maybe we'll have a free art Chrismas exchange?)


As you know, our now famous "Art Is For Life" slogan was created by Clarissa Baldwin, Chief Executive, in 1978, sadly it is still as relevant today as it was back then. The longstanding campaign aims to raise awareness of the consequences of treating art as gifts or toys. Every year hundreds of thousands of children plead for the latest fad or top toy on the market, only to discard them a few weeks after Christmas when the novelty wears off. Unfortunately, the same perception is also apparent with art. We are continually seeking to change this.


Art is for life, not just for Christmas.

We could have just closed the doors for three weeks, but that really isn't the Cultivate way, is there anything worse than an empty art gallery with locked door? We considered a number of options, we talked to an artist about painting it all, he talked a good talk but turned out to be a flake... Two days ago we decided that we'd just fill the walls with exciting art, put up another group show and fly in to 2012 with our walls full of inspiring paintings, and invite everyone to come see what we have, join in with our events, just use the time to do creative art-full things rather than sittting around watching bad TV, eating unhealthy food and wondering what people made of that art you bought them for Christmas....

Artists are being invited, entertainment booked, wine mulled and.....something a little more than a pop up Christmas art market in out gallery if you know what I mean... And it might just be our one and only New Year in the street, come celebrate with us....

"What is Cultivate and how did it come about?" An interview..


Did this e.mail interview a few weeks ago, well someone sent in the questions, I replied, and not a word of response since, who knows what happened there? I'm sure there's some perfectly understandable reason for the lack of response, but rather than let it all go to waste, I'll post the answered here, some of it is already out of date, what with the Something Blue show already over at Cultivate and plans already moving on, but hey, I though the answers gave a little more background with regards to the Cultivate project and what we're trying to do... (that photo there is of the Mia Pfeifer film projected on our front wall on December First Thursday)



Hi Sean,
I really like what Cultivate is all about though so would love to help spread the word via this. Let me know if you think you could answer a few lines on each - if you have time to do it this week we could do it to help promote Something Blue next week, if not we can do it in a couple of weeks time.


What is Cultivate and how did it come about?

Cultivate is essentially just another London gallery space, the full name is Cultivate Vyner Street. I'd like to think we're doing things slightly differently to most galleries, for a start we are essentially a (very) small group of artists doing it ourselves rather than gallery people trying to make money out of artists. Part of the motivation was the frustration with the way artists are currently treated by far too many gallery owners in London, the almost cynical gallery hire prices in any significant area, the commissions, the restrictions, the way gallery people try and control everything for their own ends. We found it a better option financially to rent the space and try and run a gallery for ourselves and our fellow artists than pay the outrageous hire prices others are asking in order for us to put on a even week long show in other spaces in the street (or in Redchurch Street or Brick Lane or any other significant East London art street…) We also felt that most galleries were rather conservative in terms of the number of shows they did put on, that we weren’t being excited by what they were doing, they way they hide behind closed doors and don't seem to welcome people in any friendly kind of way, the way the same shows hang around for ages, we just wanted things to happen a little more on our terms rather than theirs. It isn't by accident that we've chosen to land ourselves right smack bang in the middle of Vyner street and everything that Vyner street stands for in terms of the East London art scene. At the moment we have the space for six months, we may carry on, we may stop, we may take the Cultivate name and ideal somewhere else, it may take another form. Part of this is about understanding the process from the gallery point of view, rather than just moaning about it we thought we'd take in on and see... What is Cultivate? For now Cultivate is a small artist-run gallery space in Vyner Street, East London.

What is the cultivate space working on next?

Well we currently have a two week group show called Something Blue in the gallery, twenty two artists and their rather diverse blue creativity, this is a follow up to the rather well received Red group show we put on a couple of months ago, as well as the Something Borrowed show curated rather beautifully by Twinkle Troughton and Tinsel Edwards last month. Alongside the Something Blue show, we have the first showing of a film called Immersed In My Dream by Mia Pfeifer this coming First Thursday December 1st. The film will be projected, on a loop, on our outside wall for the whole of the evening. We then have an installation work from an artist called Jaye Kim opening on on December 9th, and that is followed by a two day group show from a group of artists called the Meenan Sisters opening on December 12th. The Meenan Sisters are followed by another group show put together by another group of interesting artists, this one is called Add Mixture and opens on December 15th for four days. No intention of slowing down for the holidays, keep watching for details of Christmas and New Year events, we want to fit in a painted vinyl records show at some point, we plan an art show fund raiser called This Is How He Draws A Dog for the start of the year then we kick in with the 3x3 shows in January. The 3x3 shows are three week long shows that will take place in the first three weeks of January, starting on January 6th, we plan three week-long shows where we showcase three artists each week, each artist taking a wall each, three artists each week for three weeks. Then the VV collective take over the space for a week long group show of portraits that opens on Last Thursday... then on to February First Thursday and through to the first week of March and what will possibly be our last week in the space... unless we carry on...

What would you advise someone hoping to catch a glimpse of the art world in East London?

Well I guess First Thursday is the evening when pretty much every space is open, that is a decent starting point, an exciting vibrant night but it does get awfully crowded. First Thursday is as much a social event and a chance to network (and drink the free wine and beer) as much as it is a chance to really explore the art. First Thursday is a good way of seeing what is about and then picking out what you want to go back to have a proper peaceful relaxed look at. Vyner Street is good on the weekends when there's usually about a dozen of the many galleries open, there's galleries and art spaces everywhere in East London (as well as the walls and the streets themselves), there's always something new to find - just went out for a pint of milk and found a one day show going on at Ground Floor Left, hard to avoid art over on this side of town, these are exciting time. Things are always going on, art is everywhere in East London, just keep your eyes peeled. In some ways I think First Thursday is the worst night to go exploring, I much prefer the other Thursdays when there aren't so many crowds and there's still lots to discover and pretty much always a dozen or so galleries having opening late nights. We had a great opening last Thursday at Cultivate, meanwhile Wayward opened a show next door and the Mowlem Street gallery just down the road had an opening (as did Fred, but they do tend to keep themselves at arms length and not want to advertise or have much to do with the likes of us). We do like to publish details of other Vyner Street (and surrounding area) openings, events and such on our Cultivate Facebook page (unlike some galleries, we don't see other events as competition, the more happening the better is the way we see it). Facebook pages are great sources of information as far as art is concerned, vital for art actually, especially when it seems so difficult to get a listing in places like Time Out (we can’t get them or the Whitechapel gallery people to list anything of ours on the official First Thursday website but we do note that this month they’re using a photo of the crowds outside Cultivate to illustrate how busy First Thursday is).

Best way to glimpse East London art? Take a weekend walk along the canal and see what’s gone up on the walls this week, then take a turn by the bridge at the top of Vyner street and come see what we all have to offer in the galleries (big and small, that big black door on the Wilkinson gallery may look unwelcoming and they may look like they don’t actually want the public in their space but the art is always good…)

What's happening this first Thursday?


Well this December First Thursday we have the Something Blue group show on, we open the show is the last week of November - lobster claws, blue apples and all kinds of things... we also have the showing of a new Mia Pfeifer film projected on a rather large scale on the outside of the gallery for three hours on the Evening of First Thursday. January First Thursday (I know there isn't an official First Thursday in January, but we're still there and everyone is welcome) we have the first of the 3x3 shows, but like I just said, it really isn't all about First Thursday, we like to think we have something to offer on every Thursday and not just once a month. Every Thursday, or every weekend or every Friday afternoon or... For instance, two Thursdays ago we had a great event called Free Art Thursday, we had about 30 artists leave about 100 pieces of art on the street outside the gallery, or on the outside walls outside, lots of people came along, the only rule was that they could only take one piece, we staggered the putting out of the art so there was a healthy flow of work all night, we had street artists, yarn bombers, we had amazingly big pieces of complex canvas work... First Thursday, second Thursday, last Thursday, every Thursday. Come see Something Blue…


What price art was one of your first shows and it caused a stir by being a very different way of exhibiting and selling art whilst engaging the viewer. What was the idea?

Yes, What Price Art was one of our early shows, another Thursday night opening and a weekend event. The idea was, in some ways, an attempt to explore the vulnerability of the artist in terms of gallery prices, survival and the harsh reality of money, the simple complicated act of putting a physical price on your creativity. For one weekend we handed over all control to the viewers, the rule was that we could not price, suggest, argue, negotiate oursleves, the viewer (or potential buyer) named the price and that was it. We asked people to respect the idea but yes, someone could have cleared out the gallery straight away for a couple of pounds if they had decided to pay 1p a piece and do just that... Artists were just invited to come and join in, word was spread and the event was open to everyone, even though it was a bit of a last minute thing, we had lots of people taking part both in terms of the artists and the people coming to the gallery. The pricing of art and the selling environment is something that interests me anyway, questioning the price of art is something I’ve been addressing for the last couple of years with art left on the street, art left in other galleries, sold on market stalls alongside fruit and veg, sold via ebay to the highest with opening prices of 1p and such, I’ve organised reasonable priced art fairs in galleries, we did the Stinging Netil earlier this year – an event where we hired a whole East London market for a day, all the stalls and the infrastructure, we had about 40 stalls and about 60 artists selling art – I could go on about these ideas and the notions of a piece of art being of no more or less worth that say a CD or…

So yes, the What Price Art show at Cultivate was met with all kinds of reactions, emotions and responses. Some artists bough serious pieces that they clearly valued lots, others brought what you might consider throwaway pieces, others reacted directly with hand painted dollar bills and such. We had a couple of artists back out when it came to actually putting their work on the walls, they just couldn’t do it, which I think was fair enough, no one was forced to put their art on the walls. Some people wanted to put suggested prices on their art but that really wasn’t the idea, indeed we got asked so many times by people who wanted pieces, to suggest a price or at least hint at something, people coming in to the gallery found it really difficult and some said they found is all rather intimidating to name a price. Quite often people just couldn’t do it, when they did they were very defensive and almost apologising as they named a price . Most pieces did sell for reasonable fair prices, a couple of pieces went for more than expected, one piece sold for 1p, I think that person just wanted to see if I would really let him buy it for 1p, I did. We had people coming in saying they had £20 in their pocket and had come down with the intention of buying one piece. By the end of the weekend we’d sold around thirty pieces and we ended it with maybe too many of my own pieces on the wall to fill in the spaces left by sold art. I was happy to sell my work at whatever price people wanted to pay, if that’s what they thought it was worth then so be it, I sold one big canvas for £5, the canvas itself probably cost me more than that to buy, but fine, the person seemed to really want it and said she honest could only afford five pound, and yes, I am up to my eyes in debt and everyday is about survival both for me as an artist and Cultivate as an art space, but that was fine, she was happy, I was happy. I did find myself getting very angry inside as I sold a big Maria Slovakova piece for £7.50, I was rather shocked to find I wanted to yell at the person buying it, had to walk away and calm down, how could the person stand there and pay so little for beautifully crafted piece of art, it wasn’t a small piece of work, it was pib canvas with hours of work put in to it (I ended up giving Maria one of my pieces I knew she really liked by way of apology even though she was really fine about it and fully understood what we were doing). We had one woman almost in tears as she nervously worked up to paying £20 for a Joanna Rose Tidey print, she said she loved it but that’s all she could afford, she came in again a few weeks later saying she felt guilty and wanted to pay more, I wouldn’t take any more money but we did share an excellent hour talking about art and how intimidating galleries can be and how she liked the relaxed feel of Cultivate, she’s been in several times since on her way home from work or brought in co-workers during her lunch hour, brought me some food in the other day… We’re rather enjoying the adventure so far, What Price Art was one of several highlights, had so many long chats and debates with people over those four days.

And did any reactions surprise you?

My own very angry reaction mostly, an almost violent angry reaction to someone buying a the big Maria Slovakova piece that only just managed to keep to myself. I was surprised by the number of people who couldn’t deal with naming their own price, by how emotional they got, how intimidated some people seemed to be, or confused, one or two got rather angry when I wuld name a price. I wasn’t surprised by a couple of the more corporate galleries in the street who thought we were “devaluing art” and “messing with the rules a little too much” and that “artists should stick to making the art and galleries should stick to business of selling that art for them”. There were some surprising reactions to What Price Art, indeed we’ve had some very interesting reactions and conversation all the way through this Cultivate experience. Vyner Street is an interesting place, all you working artists should come experience the ups and downs, the highs and lows…

What in your opinion are the challenges facing artists and galleries today?

Well there are so many challenges, galleries need to respect artists a little more, artists need to understand what goes in to running a gallery (we’ve certainly learnt a lot), galleries need to think about a bit more unity, a healthy art scene and vibrant clusters of galleries are a good thing, it isn’t about competition, there should be room for everyone. I have to say I’m a little disappointed with the attitudes of some of the other galleries in Vyner Street, a bit more unity would be a good thing (although things are nowhere near as bad here in East London as they were in West London where the attempt to replicate First Thursday with a West London First Wednesday seem to completely fail. We found ourselves virtually pushed out of West London by the small group of galleries who seemed to want to control everything in a very negative way, I found being based in West London and trying to get things going a rather depressing fight, my year in East London has been rather positive in as many ways and West London was negative. I’d say the main challenge is for everyone to pull together and keep things evolving, keep it fresh, vibrant and exciting and not to take any of what we already have here in the East for granted, so easy for people to be cynical about East London and the art scene but I find it positive and exciting. I do fear that good things we do have going on here in East London won’t last though, the creeping signs of gentrification along with rent price hikes and business rate increases forcing people out of their studios and galleries “because of the Olympics that will benefit us all”. Had a very disappointing chat with the owner of the building where Cultivate gallery is housed about how the rent will have to go up “significantly” if we want to carry on, “well you are getting lots of people in, you must be doing well and the Olympics are coming and blah blah…” enjoy these times while you can, we might just be about to become victims of our perceived success. Gentrification is closing down art spaces, we’re all going to be priced out of London soon. In the meantime everyone needs to pull together and keep it all evolving. We’re finding running a gallery to be an exciting thing, we’re really enjoying discovering artists and showing their work, 90% of the experience had been very rewarding so far, but it will be a challenge for us to keep it all going…

Wednesday, 30 November 2011

Urban Curations, new layers, First Thursday crowd photos and three months in...

I meant to keep this blog far more active and pass on the experience of the Cultivate gallery experiment and such, never enough hours in the day. We expected it to be a lot of work but it really has become a full on eight day a week affair that sucks up every waking hour. No such thing as time off or a break, a non stop operation of sorting, booking, hanging, looking after, administrating, and the occasional massive ego who really has no idea what goes in to keeping the doors open on a shoestring budget.

We've had the doors open for almost three months now, in fact it will be three months ago tomorrow that we first picked up the keys at 3pm, cleared out all the rubbish, the old beds and everything else, and opened the doors three hours later at 6pm for September First Thursday. So three months have passed and we enjoy our fourth First Thursday evening tomorrow. We're in the second week of our Something Blue group show. new art is being added to our walls for the second week of the blue show, 23 artists and their interpretations of the title. We've had nine events or shows or exhibitions during the first three months of Cultivate and I'm guessing we've shown the work of around 200 artists (rather proud of that fact actually).

I think we can say we've created quite a buzz down Vyner Street, indeed we see the official Whitechapel/TimeOut First Thursday website is currently using a photo of Cultivate and the crowd at our gallery to illustrate how popular their event is. Shame we've not be able to get them to list any of events or even respond to us thus far.. I guess it is all about the little galleries and new spaces feeding new energy in to things like First Thursday and the general East London art scene - went to a great show in a recently opened space in E8 called Ground Floor Left last night and today I've been delivering a piece to the Artefacto Galeria in Netil House here in Hackney ready for the opening of a show called Urban Curations


The big Vins and Eva canvas that has been evolving and evolving and that was last seen in my solo show at Cultivate earlier this month, now has another layer on it and a new Wilfred exploding with colourful leaf noise at the foot of painting The piece will be on show for a month at the Urban Curations exhibition that opens this Saturday evening December 3rd and then runs from December 5th until January 3rd, rather looking forward to the opening on Saturday night , there looked to be some rather good work waiting to be hung when I battled the high winds and delivered my piece earlier today

That big piece is two and a half metres high, don't really get a sense of the size from that photo up there. Rather like working on bigger pieces...

Right then, time to get on with the Something Blue publicity and booking in the next shows and getting us through the Christmas and New Year period with the Cultivate doors still open and art still glowing on the walls...


Monday, 28 November 2011

I wonder what I’ll paint for you tonight...


I had a good day yesterday, spent most of a very blue sky filled Sunday at the gallery, most of the time painting outside the front door while people came in to see the current Something Blue show we have on. Even the news that the gallery rent is to go up 'significantly', because "you're clearly doing well here and the Olympics is coming and the council is putting up the tax to pay for the Olympics, everything is going up to cover the cost of the Olympics but you'll be OK, you'll make loads of money out of people coming to the Olympics won't you, Vyner Street is really coming to life again, it is going to cost you more money to stay here, it such a good space you have, the rent will have to go up blahblahblah..." We never said we saw it as anything more than a six month experiment anyway.... Landlord needs to remember who it is putting a big slice of that life back in to the street and that the space was empty for months before we took on the challenge...

Anyway, yesterday was good, not even the idiot dishing out the abuse because we won't give him the gallery for three weeks for nothing so he can... nah enough of him. The biggest downside of this gallery experiment so far is the small handful of artists who think they're something big but don't actually seem to have any kind of body of work, who think they're doing you a favour by allowing you the honour of showing their work... Maybe he should go talk about the rent increase with the landlord and explain to Mr Landlord that there should be no rent because said artist deserves everything for nothing because he's an 'important artist" ... We're only just keeping this all alive as it is. Amazing how some people think just by calling themselves an artist they become more important than the rest of humanity and the world owes them a living... Tough thing keeping a gallery open and the walls exciting on a budget of nothing, tried explaining the maths but no, rich boy "art terrorist" thinks he had the right to our walls to do what the hell he wants with no consideration for others ans when we say no it doesn't quite work like that, he can post a load of rubbish about how... nah, enough. Most of the artists involved in the space so far, have been excellent, committed realists who love what they're doing and understand the harsh realities, the spirit and how we're trying to do it just a little differently...

Anyway, yesterday was a good day, not everyday you get to play one of your all time favourite records on the radio with one of the makers of said record sitting opposite you... It was a pleasure to have Gaye Black (AKA Gaye Advert) on the radio show talking is such an excited way about the art show she has curated and well as her musical enthusiasm and current love of black metal. The show, Punk and Beyond is on at the Signal Gallery in East London, loads of people from bands you love with their art, people from Crass, Devo, Subhumans, Husker Du, MC5 and loads more. We'll have a podcast of the interview/radio show up on line later, lots of interesting bits about how the exhibition at Signal came together and such

I met Gaye when she dropped by Cultivate a couple of weeks ago for Free Art Thursday, (with her friend Tina, from a rather good band of times past that we covered in Organ, a band called Suicide Milkshake). Must secretly say I was delighted when Gaye picked up one of the pieces I'd left out for Free Art Thursday. I probably shouldn't say it, don't want to embarrass anyone, but hey, I'm a fan, I loved The Adverts and especially the glories piece of musical energy that is One Chord Wonders (Gary Gilmore's Eyes always hit a spot as well, looking through someone else's cornea and all that, that song ran around my head lots in the eye hospital, sitting there waiting for someone to fall off their motorbike so I could have a piece of their eye they didn't need any more) .

So we got talking about the Punk and Beyond exhibition she was/is curating and what Punk and Beyond was all about (well we talked more about black metal bands...), so we invited her to come talk on our radio show on Resonance FM...

So yesterday was a good day, radio days are always good, and days down at the gallery when so many positive people come in to look and chat and ask and share are good. Great chat with Gaye both on and off air, the excitement of pulling together an art show, the difficulty of herding the artists, of having to trust the Royal Mail, of hanging the show in the right way and how draining it all is... and how exciting it all is... what a buzz showing other people's art is... well when the art and the people making it are worth the effort... sometimes it is just thankless stress..

So yesterday was a good day. Gallery doesn't open on Mondays, today is mostly about sorting out the next shows, doing the book keeping, the publicity, catching up with emails from artists, people interested in the artists, arguing with landlord about penalising the hard work we've put in to making Cultivate work by throwing the rent up over 30% and blaming it all on the Olympics and the fact that Vyner Street has a buzz again... and hopefully finding time to paint

Yesterday was a good day...

I wonder what I’ll paint for you tonight
Something heavy or something light
Something to set your soul alight
I wonder how I’ll answer when you say
‘We don’t like you – go away
Come back when you’ve learnt to....

Wednesday, 23 November 2011

GETTING READY FOR SOMETHING BLUE...

Getting ready for tomorrow's open of the Something Blue group show at Cultivate. We're nearly three months in to our Vyner Street experiment.

Today was spent waiting for the twenty one other artists taking part to deliver their pieces. Always good to unwrap the arriving art and see it all in the flesh. Putting together a show based on website images is always a little bit of a risk.

Didn't waste the waiting time, fresh blue flavours of Montana Gold and something blue painted and just maybe ready to go on the gallery wall tomorrow.

Sold three pieces of hand painted seven inch vinyl to the van driver delivering art from one of the other people taking part in Something Blue, I like unexpected things like that...

Something Blue is a show where artists have simply been asked to submit their interpretations of blue. This is a follow up to the rather successful Red show we put on two months ago, as well as Twinkle and Tinsel's Something Borrowed show that the two girls put together at Cultivate for last month's First Thursday....

Monday, 21 November 2011

TO HER, Trillion Green, Elizabeth Soyer and the story behind a painting...

I sold a piece called To Her at my recent show of paintings. The buyer ask me if I could write down the story behind the piece that I told at the gallery, along with some information about my work. The piece is mixed media on canvas, 60cm x 90cm... (I'm off to deliver it later today...)

SEAN WORRALL - TO HER. - Painting, mixed media on canvas, 2010.

Sean Worrall's current body of paintings explore the notions of new layers reclaiming those things that are left decay, notions of Trillion Green and the Captain's Table, the idea that our cities will eventually be covered and lost in new layers, first in the short term as we use them as a street art canvas then as nature paints her leaf shaped beauty.
Sean's paintings explore the taking back of old walls, the growing over, the freshness of new leaves, new marks, old surfaces, always growing, new weathered marks over old faded marks, new layers, new leaves, fresh leaves, new growth over old, new shoots, new paint over old, new street art on old city walls, new art over old walls, layer over layer, the covering up, the taking back of unloved surfaces, spaces reclaimed both my human hand and nature's growth.

New graffiti, nature's leaf graffiti, growing on walls, over old concrete, Kensal Green cometary, grown over, new leaves growing under, new marks on old marks, rain marks, rain drops, new leaves over old leaves, new street art marks obscuring old man-made marks, green shoots, instant shapes of spray paint, red shoes, green rain, Montana Gold, To Her....New leaves, revealing the old, evolving, regenerating, the taking back, plant life, street art, plants as street art, plant shape as pop art, organic graffiti, found things painted on, grown on, green shoots and buds taking back...

TO HER is a painting created in late summer 2010 ahead of a show of work at the Dissenters Chapel, Kensal Green Cemetery. London - a place alive with fresh growth over old, new leaves over old stones... The painting is a celebration of painter Elizabeth Emma Soyer and Alexis Benoist Soyer's monument of worship to her, it is also a celebration of Her, pagan notions of the goddess, of green..

TO HER is also a monument of worship To Her, Painter Elizabeth Emma Soyer (nee Jones), that is to be found in Kensal Green Cemetery...

"Elizabeth Emma Jones was born in London in 1813. In 1836 she married Alexis Benoist Soyer the famous Chef de Cuisine of the Reform Club, Pall Mall, London. She died on the 29th of August, 1842, aged twenty-nine. She showed talent from a very young age and first exhibited at the Royal Academy in 1823, at barely ten years old. This highly accomplished artist focused on portraiture and studies of nature. Her works were popularised through engravings and she went on to exhibit at the Paris Salon from 1840-42. Her reputation in France stood higher than even her native country. She was regarded as unusual and precociously gifted. Her works were admired because they were said to have been marked by great vigour and breadth of light and shadow."

Elizabeth Soyer died during child birth in 1842. A "said to be devastated"
Alexis Soyer had the grand pedestal tomb erected in 1844. Designed by her husband Alexis, a leading (early celebrity) chef and dietician of the 19th centur. Carved by Pierre Puyenbroeck of Brussels, the monument had a permanent gas powered eternal flame that burnt until the 1930's when apparently someone at the cemetery company worked out they were actually paying the gas bill. The monument fell in to (what some would say was) beautifully natural decay until cleaned and restored by Friends of Kensal Green Cemetery in 2009.

Kensal Green is an inspiring place (especially the overgrown parts), the idea of Trillian (or the Captains Table) and the leaf growth taking back man-made objects in such an organically beautiful way... leaves wrapped around crosses, words on stones weathered away, fading in a way street art on buildings never quite does... layers and layers to visually peel back and explore.. words, shapes, leaves, lives... To Her in so many ways...

Wednesday, 16 November 2011

FREE ART THURSDAY... PRESS RELEASE


CULTIVATE VYNER STREET PRESS RELEASE - NOVEMBER 2011

FREE ART THURSDAY...

Free Art Thursday on the street outside of Cultivate, come leave some free art, come get some free art.

Free Art Thursday will happen on Thursday afternoon/evening, November 17th, at, in and around Cultivate Vyner Street.

Cultivate is an artist run space, we've planted our flag right in the middle of the East London establishment art road that in Vyner Steer. This is not an accidental planting, rather than joining in with the continual humming note of artist moan about how they're treated by London galleries, a small group of us thought we'd go on to 'their' patch and do it ourselves. Thought we'd find out first hand about the reality of running a space as a functioning commercial gallery. We've survived two and a half months and a number of rather successful shows so far including the Wahat Prive Art event where buyers set the price, the 22 hours event that saw is take over the place, empty it out of al lthe junk, paint the walls and get a packed group show open for September First Thursday with 22 hours notice...

"Cultivate is fast becoming the First Thursday place to be, right on the corner in the middle on Vyner Street, the recent Red and Something Borrowed shows were a triumph" (Resonance FM)

Cultivate will be open late on Thursday 17th November for the current two week "Sean Worrall - Paintings" show, other galleries in the street have openings/private views on on the night of the 17th, Set Aymot has an interesting looking show at Gallery Twenty One, just over the road from Cultivate), Sean is well known for leaving bits of art on the street, in the trees, on buses, trains - painted pieces of vinyl, canvas pieces. A number of other artists have been joining in outside the door and on the window ledges of Cultivate in recent weeks and so... let's get it a little more organised with the first of what we hope will be several events called FREE ART THURSDAY


This Thursday we'll have art left outside Cultivate (or just inside if the weather is bad) as well as around the street near the gallery. Artists are encouraged to come join in and leave pieces, people will be encouraged to come take a piece (no more than a piece each please, don't grab it all, leave some for others), Sean will be leaving a load of painted pieces of cardboard, canvas, vinyl (records) and such, we'll announce other artists involved as they declare themselves part of the event, we'll start at 5pm and carry on until 9pm or later if we need to (anything left over we'll cleaned up and we'll give away the next day or over the weekend at the gallery).

We have about 20 other artists confirmed now, the list is growing by the hour as the word spreads... watch the websites and facebook pages for updates...

Come join in...

Marina (Cultivate / Organ magazine)
020 3222 5042

www.cultivatevynerstreet.com
http://facebook.com/sean.worrall1

FREE ART THURSDAY



Free Art Thursday will happen on the street outside of Cultivate, come leave some free art or come get some free art.

Cultivate is a gallery right in the middle of the frontline East London art-filled gallery-laced road that is Vyner Street,(London E2 9HE)


Free Art Thursday will happen on Thursday afternoon/evening, November 17th, at, in and around Cultivate Vyner Street, while my "Sean Worrall - Paintings" show is on and open for a Thursday late night at the gallery (and while other galleries in the street have openings/private views, Set Aymot has an interesting looking show at Gallery Twenty One, just over the road from Cultivate).

We'll have art left outside Cultivate (or just inside if the weather is bad) as well as around the street by the gallery. Artists will be encouraged to come join in and leave leave pieces, people will be encouraged to come take a piece (no more than a piece each please, don't grab it all, leave some for others), I shall be leaving a load of painted pieces of cardboard, vinyl (records) and such, we'll announce other artists involved as they declare themselves part of the event, we'll start at 5pm and carry on until 9pm (anything left over we'll clean up and I'll give away the next day or over the weekend).

Come join in, spread the word and come join in...

Cultivate is an artist-run space, we're trying to shake things up just a little.... come be part of it...

www.cultivatevynerstreet.com

Tuesday, 15 November 2011

East London solo show, November 2011


Busy times, blog neglected again, solo show already entering the second week down Vyner Street, this Thursday we expand out to the street as well as the filling the gallery walls inside



Monday, 3 October 2011

CALL FOR ARTISTS: LITTLE BENEFITS @ CULTIVATE VYNER STREET, EAST LONDON


CALL FOR ARTISTS: LITTLE BENEFITS @ CULTIVATE VYNER STREET, EAST LONDON

- if you wish to be considered, and want to be involved then please get in touch...

A benefit show to run from Oct 20th to Oct 30th 2011
We are now entering our second month in the Cultivate gallery space. As you may or may not already know, this is a six month project (that may just evolve to be something longer term if we can survive?). We’re a small group of artists doing it ourselves rather than just accepting the London gallery system and moaning about the way it all works. Cultivate is about trying to do things just a little differently while also trying to understand things from the gallery point of view.

Little Benefits will be our sixth busy show in the excellently situated space right in the middle of one of the busiest art streets in East London. . We’re doing all this gallery running business ourselves, we don’t have any funding or backing. The reality is we have to pay the rent cheque at the end of each month. It will be tough to survive the winter months, it is important that we do survive right in the middle of what has become the establishment of Vyner Street, that we challenge things just a little rather than just accepting the way the galleries run things. So we need you artists and creative creatures to come help us (and while you help us, help yourselves by getting some work on the wall of a gallery that’s right in the middle of one of East London’s busiest art streets).

From the opening Thursday night of Little Benefits on October 20th until October 30th we want the pack our walls with a very busy vibrant exciting group show of smaller affordable pieces of work.
We want the work on the walls to be on sale at no more than £100 per piece.

We’re looking for artwork that’s no bigger than 30cm x 40cm – paintings, prints, canvas pieces, drawings - just as long as it something we’re happy to show on our walls (we will be picky, the art has to be right for the space and the space has to be right for the art). There will be a small fee of £10 per piece we hang - this is the benefit element of the show. We won't be taking any commission for any work sold. I do rather think this is a fair and reasonable deal for all involved, little benefits for everyone...

Artists who want to be involved should get in touch with j.pegs of work and such for more details
Please send j.pegs, weblinks and thoughts to us via info@cultivatevynerstreet.com

www.cultivatevynerstreet.com

Sean

Thursday, 29 September 2011

CULTIVATE VYNER STREET AND THE ONGOING STORY OF THE OPENING OF A GALLERY


Well this running a gallery space in the middle of what is now, I guess, the East London art establishment, is proving to be very interesting indeed. One month in to the six month project now and we're having a very interesting time, Lots of positive reactions from artists, visitors, art viewers and such, and fair to say just a little touch of hostility from those engaged in the business of art around about us - bigger galleries who tell me there are set ways of doing things, those who seem to make thier living 'advising' artists from their Vyner Street offices and such. I don't know, if it was me on the street and a new gallery had opened and put on four really interesting shows in the first month or exisitance then I might just make te effort to cross the road and have a look and say hello? Let's not start off on a negative note though, so far we've had a very positive very interesting expereince and as we prepare for our fifth show opening and our second First Thursday event, we're feeling rather pleased with how it has all gone..

So yes, we got a little fed up with the way things were going in terms of having to crawl through financial hoops in order to show our work. The outragious prices a big proportion of the decenty placed galleries seem to charge for hire or commission they take. And so rather than just go on moaning about it, we gathered together everything we could and opened our own space right in the middle of it all and set out to try and do it a little more reasonably. Let's try and understand the reality of it all from the gallery people's point of view rather than just constantly complain about it all. Of course we have bills to pay, the landlord wants his rent payment at the start of each month, we have no funding, and we're certainly not rich kids. Trying to exist as artists in this city means we're on first name terms with bailifs and such. This is not a funded self-indulgence, we can't exist if we don't at least break even. We have to run this properly, this has to be a commericial venture

Been frantically good so far, we signed the paper work on a Wednesday afternoon, picked up the keys the next day, Thursday, the first Thursday of the month. We put the word out the nght before and put out a call for artists to come help us get a gallery open and a show sorted out and hung in 22 hours. The call went out at 8pm on Wednesday, the keys were our at 3pm on Thursday, the sapce was cleared, the old beds removed and a quick brush on the walls and such, thankfully the space had already been a gallery, the walls were white enough for a last minute show, so at 3pm a dozen artists started to arrive with paintings and sculptures (we found a plinth on the dump at the end of Vyner Street, clearly the art gods were with us as we rushed to open for First Thursday and everything that that involves in Vyner Street.

First Thursday was a buzz, we felt good about the art we had up, we had a constant flow of people all night, things got rather eventfuloutside our front door what with the unexpected band playing in the van and all the naked men covered in honey and red food colouring... Exciting start

One month is, tired eyes, blistered feet, loads of debate, lots of postive art, the work of around 30 artists hung on the walls so far. A show called What Price Art? where the public have named their prices and we've not had any say, another show Called 22 Hours that documented the opening and hung the work of the artists from that frantic First Thursday in a more considered way. A show called Interim where Steven Rawling invited debate on the process of making/showing art as he worked in the space for ten days.

This coming weekend myself and a painter called Emma Harvery will work in the gallery while our work and the work of others hangs on the wall and people are invited to come in and view/chat/sit... Then we hang our next show on Wednesday and we open again for First Thursday with Red.

I intend to blog about the last month and continue the gallery blog as we go along, lots has been learnt, lots of questions have been thrown up, lots to blog about

Tuesday, 13 September 2011

WHAT PRICE ART?

WHAT PRICE ART? A WEEKEND SHOW @ CULTIVATE, VYNER STREET.

Opening night, Thurs 15th Sept, 6pm – 9pm, then 11.30am – 6pm Fri 16th- Sun 18th Sept.


SEAN WORRALL invites YOU to take part in WHAT PRICE ART?

...
An invitation extended to fellow artists to take part and also for those who visit galleries and buy art to take control..


THE SHORT VERSION - A whole laod of art on the gallery walls, buyer sets the price and takes it away, pay as much or as little as you see fit should you wish to buy a piece...



THE LONG VERSION -

My intention is to pack the walls of our recently open Cultivate Vyner Street gallery space with both my own paintings and hopefully the art of other invited artists.

Following on from the 22 Hours show that took just under a day to pull together and that officially opened the new Vyner Street space this week, this new show is being pulled together at the start of this week and will open on the evening of Thursday 15th September. The show runs until 6pm Sunday 18th Sept (at which point we start putting Steven Rawlings’ Interim show in for Monday 19th and his eleven day working residency)

The whole Cutivate Vyner Street project is based a small group of artists questioning how galleries work. We’re doing this by running out own gallery space right in the heart of things in one of the most significant art streets in East London. We don’t have grants or funding for this, we’re as short of money as most any other working artist, we have to make commercial decisions to keep this space alive and financial survival is as much an issue for us in these tough times as it is for any gallery space. Rent must be paid or the doors close. We’ve taken on the gallery for six months, we opened on September First Thursday with 22 hours notice.


WHAT PRICE ART?

What Price Art? is about exactly that - gallery prices, the way things work, the vulnerability of the working artist in terms of survival, in terms of paying the bills, in terms of the way things work with galleries. The show is about the pricing of art, about art in galleries, about leaving art on the street, about street art, about the art dealers, the collectors, the price tag and people’s reactions to that tag, about how people interact with commercial art galleries. Who buys art? What is the point of a commercially run gallery?

The gallery will be full of art for three days, I hope that there will be more than just mine - people can just come and enjoy it, view it, explore it, or if they want to, they can buy it. The buyer sets the price, the gallery and the artist have no say in the pricing process. They buyer states the price, the piece is taken off the wall and the transaction takes place, the buyer takes the piece away and a new piece goes up in place

What’s going to happen? Will artists be brave enough to join me and put their art on the walls and plinths? If they do will it just be their throwaway pieces that they attach little value to? Will it just scribbles on cardboard – perfectly valid if that’s the case – or will it be the big expansive pieces they’d show at other galleries in a ‘conventional’ way with a ‘conventional’ price tag? Things they do attach more value to? What will I do when it comes ot hang? Will any other artists want to take part or will that just want to know what happens? Can it be pulled together in a week anyway?

And what of the viewers, the visitors, the people who come to galleries? Will they be comfortable with setting the price? Will they take away a big piece and pay just a penny? Will they offer ‘normal’ gallery prices? Will they just reject the whole idea, or will they just not want the art on sale anyway? What’s going to happen?

The whole event will be documented, buyers will be given the chance to opt out of the documentation if they wish.

Artists are invited to come be involved. We will, as a gallery, be as picky as we would with any show. We will invite artists we already know to come be involved and allow them to bring whatever they wish, artists we don’t know or haven’t worked with yet can contact us and if we like what we see the invite will be extended for them to bring along anything they wish to include. The gallery will charge a 20% commission on all sales (unless a piece sells for less that 5p). I have no idea what will happen, what price art? 

Monday, 12 September 2011

RIGHT SMACK BANG IN THE MIDDLE OF IT ALL

Well now, blog neglected again since those piano adventures... Let me see, there's been Red Italian Show paintings at the London Fetish Fair, more art left on walls and streets, more leafgrowth, te big Vins and Eva piece in Vyner Street and we opened a gallery...

Right smack bang in the middle of it all in East London, Vyner Street to be exact. It all happened very quickly. We managed to get the doors open for September First Thursday. We got the keys at 3pm on First Thursday and managed to clear out the gallery, get a show up and open the doors on time at 6pm for First Thursday. Since then there's been no time to sleep...

The gallery space is called CULTIVATE, VYNER STREET. We officially opened on September 8th, right now I'm doing most of the fronting/running of the space. I see it as an ongoing evolving art piece in itself. We followed the First Thursday events with a show about the opening adventure. The show, 22 HOURS officially opened the gallery on the evening of September 8th, that show is replaced this week with a show called WHAT PRICE ART

Lots more in a bit...

Tuesday, 28 June 2011

PAINTING PIANO'S IN THE CITY OF LONDON SUNSHINE


Well painting piano was eventful fun, few little problems with officialdom at the start but once the paint started to flow and the leaves started to grow, all went rather well. There's a big set of Facebook pictures here, with work in progress, passing players, piano-playing office workers and more Painted the piano in St Mary Le Bow, right outside the church in a busy square in the heart of the City Of London yesterday, off now to paint one in Ledenhall Market Arcade, a beautiful looking Victorian Arcade once again in the heart of London. That's a photo of yesterday's finished piano after a few hours in the boiling hot sun...

Friday, 24 June 2011

Showing with the Art Shop Collective this weekend




Showing some more work as a guest of the Art Shop Collective this weekend. I shall be showing (and hopefully selling, even artists have to eat) some small pieces of canvas, painted vinyl and such. This is the last stand for the AAA Gallery/space, the building is being pulled down and replaced by more expensive flats that no one from the area can afford to rent... Come enjoy some art down by the canal in East London...

"AAA Magazine presents Art Shop Collective: the return of the pop-up for the weekend of Saturday and Sunday 25/26th June, 11am until 7pm both days

A collective of around 25 artists specialising in a range of artistic disciplines. Offering for sale an assortment of work suitable for every pocket. In keeping with our ethos of both celebrating and supporting creativity, there will be Live music, Live performance art, .... tea and complete with complimentary food stuffs".

www.arthurandalbert.com

AAA STUDIO
50 ACTON MEWS
(JUST BY THE CANAL OFF KINGSLAND ROAD), Dalston/Shoreditch border in East London, five minute walk from Haggerston Overground train station and not far from Dalston

THE STINGING NETIL – A REASONABLE PRICED ART FAIR


The Stinging Netil is taking up lots and lots of my time at the moment, just like Organgrinding really!

THE STINGING NETIL – A REASONABLE PRICED ART FAIR, GATHERING & MUSIC EVENT IN EAST LONDON…

THE STINGING NETIL is an artist-run reasonably priced art fair happening in London Fields, London, E8. We’re taking over the already established Netil House Market and create a gathering of artists – fine artists, street artists, print makers, art enthusiasts, collectors, people who just want to come out and enjoy looking at some new exciting – we’ll have traditional market stalls alive with very reasonably priced art, we’ll have live art, food art, a music stage with bands playing all day. An art fair, an art mart - not just an art fair though, a creative gathering, a place to interact, network, be pro-active…

WHERE: It all happens in Netil House car park on Sunday July 10th, just off fashionable Broadway and right by the always busy London Fields park in Hackney, East London, E8. The event will run from 11am until 8pm.

ART: Expect to find 25 or so traditional market stalls, being run by the artists themselves, all packed with very reasonable priced fine art, canvas paintings, prints, street art and more – art and creativity from a whole cross section of vibrant exciting London artists. Each stall taken by an individual artist, a group, a collective or a small London gallery.

MUSIC / PERFORMANCE: Alongside the art stalls, we’ll have a music/performance area with experimental bands, folk flavoured bands, art rock, country anarchy, alternative musical colour and who knows what. We’ll have performance, we’ll have food art, live art, paste-ups and all kinds of interesting things to hear, see, touch and eat…

TIMES: The Art Mart opens at 11.00am, Sunday morning, the first band will play at Midday, and we’ll have music and art flowing until 8pm

TRAVEL: Netil Market is five minutes walk from London Fields overground railway station (12 minutes from Liverpool Street), the area is also very very well served by many buses, for full travel details see the Stinging Netil pages on the Organ site at
www.organart.com

Friday, 10 June 2011

just discovered where the pianos are...

just discovered where the pianos are... I shall be painting two pianos, live painting out on the street, or in this case a rather historic London market hall and an equally historic churchyard The two locations are, Leadenhall Market, EC3 and St-Mary-le-Bow Churchyard, EC2. Two excellent locations. I was invited to be involved a few weeks ago, just got the details through... Recycling old pianos, well pianos that still live as working pianos, but painting on them, right up my street(art)... I shall be painting live on location on 27th, 28th and possibly 29th of June... come along and play while I paint...

http://www.colf.org//exhibitions/Classical-Music-Contemporary-Music-Dance-Street-Arts-Jazz-World-Music/42-Play-Me-Im-Yours.cfm

Sunday, 5 June 2011

COLOUR REDUCTIONS...





A set of four paintings done yesterday, June 4th 2011. Four pieces on 40cm x 50cm canvas with spray paint. Reducing previous pieces to just shapes and markS rather than the previous layers of colours upon colour...

Friday, 3 June 2011

AAA Collective show/art shop goes on this weekend...



Well now, the morning after the AAA collective First Thursday show. Things were chaotically DIY and the organisation was at times 'interesting', somehow the show all came together almost on time and did rather like the way everyone pulled together and let's do it ourdleves spirit of it. And it was a pleasure sharing an early Summer evening by the canal in East London with some positive pro-active people, some good art and some going ahead and doing it without some gallery owner exploiting things or dictating direction... This nothing new of course, collectives and artists pulling together and doing it themselves, did enjoy dipping a toe or two in the (canal) water with the AAA group though...

The show continues this week end in the gallery space by the Canal in Dalston/shoreditch, Acton Mews, London E8, just off the Kingsland road, by the bridge and the car wash. The gallery/shop is open this Saturday and Sunday, 11am until 7pm. Some of thr artists will be there, I expect people will be painting and such (I will be for some of the time)

Thursday, 2 June 2011

Old 78s left on an East London street....


A whole plie of old 78s, there they were just waiting in the side of the road by the rubbish bin, waiting to me taken home and painted on. Getting them ready for tomorrow's show at AAA Gallery with the Art Shop Collective... June 1st 2011. Fine some on sale, fine others left by the canal. Twelve painted today..

Love the quality of these old 78rpm singles, the labels are works of art on their own. Do wonder who they belonged to, someone's much loved early 1950's collection just left out on the street in East London next to a recycle bin. A big part... of someone's life just left on the pavement. Hope they don't mind me painting on them, better than them being just forgotten about and thrown in ot a landfill of something (the material can't be recycled in any conventional recycling way). They really are beautiful things...



Saturday, 28 May 2011

THE ART SHOP COLLECTIVE - FIRST THURSDAY




I will be showing some work alongside this rather pro-active collective... Down by the canal in East London, down by the canal in E8 (I like painting by the canal). Happening this Thursday as part of East London First Thursday...


AAA Magazine presents Art Shop Collective: A pop-up gallery shop that shall be celebrating this FirstThursday

27 artists specialising in a range of artistic disciplines. Offering for sale an assortment of work suitable for every pocket.

In keeping with our ethos of both celebrating and supporting creativity, there will be Live music, Live performance art... and a fully stocked bar complete with complimentary food stuffs.



AAA Magazine presents Art Shop Collective: A pop-up gallery shop that shall be celebrating this FirstThursday

27 artists specialising in a range of artistic disciplines. Offering for sale an assortment of work suitable for every pocket.

In keeping with our ethos of both celebrating and supporting creativity, there will be Live music, Live performance art, ....and a fully stocked bar complete with complimentary food stuffs.

www.arthurandalbert.com

AAA STUDIO
50 ACTON MEWS
(JUST BY THE CANAL OFF KINGSLAND ROAD)


AAA STUDIO
50 ACTON MEWS
LONDON E8 4EA
(JUST BY THE CANAL OFF KINGSLAND ROAD)

Thursday, 26 May 2011

BLACK (LEAF)HEARTED SWIRL BUILDING....

An effort must be made to blog, two blackhearted pieces from yesterday, one on canvas one of what was once red vinyl and more work on the big 8ft tall canvas that was found left on the street just before Christmas, started painting leaves on it on New years Eve, layers have been building up, still a work in progress, far from finished...



Wednesday, 25 May 2011

EVA'S SWIRL...




I know, not keeping the blog flowing, too busy painting (and Organ-grinding). This big 8ft tall canvas was left outside the studio at the start of May, I've talked about people leaving unresolved work here before, people are picking up on the idea...

There's a photo of what it looked like is what before I touched it. and what it looks like now I've added a layer or two of leaf growth and a swirl and such. I do know who left the original piece for me to work on, need to check if the artist wishes to be named before I do...



Thursday, 14 April 2011



THINGS LEFT ON THE FLOOR.... Haven't found a used unwanted abandoned canvas (or records or...) on the street for days now, however this morning there was a nice inspiring pile of pieces deliberately left and waiting outside the studio though... "Paint on these" was the message left... Several good looking pieces painted on some kind of black hardwood floor covering material, and a great big fold up piece of canvas that's just been painted blue... I rather like these small pieces as they are but that really isn't the point of these collaborations, reworkings, remixings, paint-over recycling ideas. As I've said before this is art that others feel is unresolved or unfinished or that they've taken to a logical conclusion and.... these have been left here on purpose, therefore I am obliged to work on them or with them...

Friday, 25 March 2011

the notions of art as object with no real status


I’d like the notion of buying my paintings and pieces to be like the buying of a CD: it’s cheap, it’s art and hopefully it changes your life (or at least your day, or your week) just a little. Rather like a CD the object has no real status. Something evolved and created for and from the moment (or moments) I painted it, for that moment you enjoyed it. Something with none of the boundaries the coldness of galleries and gallery prices can throw up. This isn’t a comment on how other people do things, just the way I want to enjoy my creative process right now. I don’t object to galleries or having my work in galleries, but I do enjoy the notion of taking the financial status away and the piece of art having no real financial status. Art on market stalls, art left on the street, sold on ebay for 1p. I have been leaving a lot of art on the streets over the last two years, people often complain that they never have a chance to find anything and that the process is a little hit and miss…

Tomorrow, Saturday, I shall once more be painting at my stall on Netil Market, Hackney, London E8 (by London Fields park and just by the railway bridge in the little carpark by Netil House and Mare Street). Pieces of work will be on sale at prices ranging between £1.00 and £30.00. if you think they should be cheaper say so, gave quite a few away last week (will paint for food or cups of coffee though… )

And now I shall go enjoy this glorious weather and paint outside the front of the studio…