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Zoom opensatellite:

Recent artists-in-residence, Heather and Ivan Morison, have just completed a new installation, Plaza, at the Vancouver Art Gallery. The structure, which bears many formal similarities to their Open Satellite installation Frost King, encloses the square surrounding the Offsite location of the Vancouver Art Gallery. It exists as both sculpture and architecture, critiquing the environment around it, while, characteristically of the Morisons, suggesting an alternative highly tangible and hopeful future.
Photo via Canadian Art

opensatellite:

Recent artists-in-residence, Heather and Ivan Morison, have just completed a new installation, Plaza, at the Vancouver Art Gallery. The structure, which bears many formal similarities to their Open Satellite installation Frost King, encloses the square surrounding the Offsite location of the Vancouver Art Gallery. It exists as both sculpture and architecture, critiquing the environment around it, while, characteristically of the Morisons, suggesting an alternative highly tangible and hopeful future.

Photo via Canadian Art

10.14.10 1
Islington Mill - Birthrites Collection Party

I’ve just returned from the Birthrites Party at Islington, where there was a positively vast range of people enjoying live music and art for the Birthrites collection.  You can still have your vote at the Birthrites site.  

The collection “is the first and only collection of contemporary artwork dedicated to the subject of childbirth. The collection aims to redefine visual language in contemporary art around the subject of birth, making women the protagonists, with more choice and a greater understanding of the process.”  

Islington Mill is a former mill housing studio spaces.  Their website is great, but not as great as going down and seeing the artists and people in action!  

The public vote for the birthrites collection is closing soon, so have your say today!

10.14.10 0
I have just eaten…

…two gargantuan slices of home-made orange and almond cake a la Michel Roux Jr.  Very nice recipe indeed.  Thanks Michel.

10.11.10 0
Check out Twitter and follow me for 15% off..

15% off my gorgeous artworks - for your home or business:

www.emilypitts.com

Great, Unique, Tactile, Individual, Sensory Artworks just for you and now with a special discount until the end of September.  

09.25.10 0
15% off my paintings online…

…only for my Twitter followers until 30th Sept!!

Follow me on Twitter: http://twitter.com/EPittsCREATIVE

and sign up on my website to get freebies, invites and more: 

http://www.emilypitts.com/category/shop/

Grab yourself that perfect painting before someone else does!!

09.25.10 0
These brownies look better than anything else on the planet….

http://austinsbrowniecompany.vpweb.co.uk/

09.17.10 0
Please vote for my art: http://birthritescollection.org.uk/#/online-vote/4543937029

To make it part of the Birthrites permanent Collection.

Thanks for your support.

Emily

09.16.10 0
Zoom Afterbirth 2001
Emily Pitts’ work featured on the Birthrites Collection site: 
http://birthritescollection.org.uk/#/online-vote/4543937029  
VOTE NOW to get your favourite into the permanent collection.  
I hope you like it! 

Emily

Afterbirth 2001

Emily Pitts’ work featured on the Birthrites Collection site: 

http://birthritescollection.org.uk/#/online-vote/4543937029  

VOTE NOW to get your favourite into the permanent collection.  

I hope you like it! 

Emily

09.16.10 0
Review Out in the City Pride Art Trail Event vs The Modern Lesbian

Review

Out in the City Pride Art Trail Event vsThe Modern Lesbian

 

The August Bank holiday saw the culmination of Manchester Pride’s celebration of LGBT life - ‘the Big Weekend’.  During the preceding week Manchester City Art Gallery hosted the Pride Art Trail - a whistle-stop tour of a series of selected artworks chosen and interpreted by members of Manchester’s LGBT community specifically for Pride, accompanied by a guide leaflet for gallery visitors.  

 

Having arrived slightly late to the event I skipped through the galleries, with the help of alert and accommodating staff who quickly located the group for me to join.  Throughout the hour-long session people in the galleries floated fluidly into and out of the group, lending the event a relaxed and enquiring atmosphere.  

 

The journey through the ages, expertly facilitated by Meg Parnell, Curator of Lifelong Learning at the Manchester Art Gallery, brought up key themes of public perception, legislative developments and the move away from repression to openness for LGBT people, amongst many other topics.  The chosen artworks were interpreted in a highly personal way by individuals, which really highlighted the validity of private and intimate readings and acted as encouragement for us to engage in a personal way with art.  

 

Evident from the readings of the artworks were the remarkable changes that have occurred during the last sixty years in particular, changing the face of LGBT life in Manchester forever.  The miscellany of readings explored at the event created a hugely lively and fun experience and, rather than arousing discord, culminated in the broad judgment that art develops multiple layers of interpretation - a palimpsest of LGBT history, which whilst not erasing the previous reading, gathers more meaning through time.  Essentially, however, the event posed more questions than it answered leaving an appetite for more.   

 

Attended by some 25 people, a handful of which were women and the remainder men, the size of the event fostered an atmosphere that valued personal contributions.  What resonated from the start to the end was the absence of a female discourse.  Whether this is due to the lack of pertinent women’s work being held by the gallery or the choices of a male dominated LGBT group, is unclear.  With this set aside, however, the event was highly informative in respect of presenting an incredibly personal evolution of life experiences for GBT men in Manchester.  

 

In counterpoint to the male dominated content of this event, I sought and found respite in  The Curated Place’s ‘The modern Lesbian’, exhibition at 52 Princess Street, supported by local businesses The Sweet Tooth Cupcakery and The Nip and Tipple amongst others.  The exhibition unwrapped some of the multiple identities of women within the LGBT community in Manchester through the graphical visual representation of the paintings, alongside a text description.  The images offer the beginnings of a challenge to conventional stereotypes about LGBT women, who are a series of individual minorities within the overarching LGBT grouping, which is so often overshadowed by male interests.  It was a great concept - to chart individuals and make a personal response from a uniquely female standpoint.  

 

Ultimately however, the presence of the two exhibitions could not have been further apart, with the women’s event taking place in a low profile venue much further from the city centre with discrete footfall and far fewer opportunities for mainstream viewings from the public, indicative of the marginalisation of women in general and expressly lesbian and bisexual women in context of the male dominated gay culture of canal street.  Perhaps a development from this could see interventions at the fantastic People’s History Museum and the City Art Gallery during next year’s Pride to bring LGBT women’s art critique and practise in line with men’s.  

 

 

Author:  Emily Pitts - Artist / Creative

09.13.10 0
Zoom You are my Firework  (Acrylic on Canvas)   2010 £105

You are my Firework  (Acrylic on Canvas)   2010 £105

09.07.10 0