Tag Archives: Brighton

Helsinki alternative travel guide for Hound magazine

10 Sep

More wordy goings on from  me. Back in May I went to Helsinki for a sight-seeing weekend away, and I loved the city so much that I wrote an alternative travel feature for Hound magazine. The mag is aimed at discerning young creative types, packed with musical interviews, reviews, fashion spreads, illustrations and features. The mag is free and distributed mostly in Brighton, but you can also read the publication online.

I provided some words and the photography, although there was also a lovely illustration by Ryan Humphrey. Time to pack your bags and go to Finland!

Helsinki Travel feature page 1 - Hound magazine

 

 

Helsinki Travel feature page 2 - Hound magazine

Playgroup festival eFestivals review

11 Aug costumes-playgroup-2011-46-of-58

Last weekend I was frolicking in a field with a large group of chums. I can’t tell you how much I wish I was still in Eridge Park, Tunbridge Wells, enjoying a very sunny Playgroup festival. Again I was reviewing and snapping away for eFestivals, and it was by far the most fun festival I’ve attended this year, purely because of lovely happy people who dressed up and made it so easy to produce some stunning photography. Take this lovely lady/white rabbit  for instance. Best Kodak moment I have taken all year. And there’s more where that came from.

Playgroup festival - White bunny

You can read the review here, and look at the rest of the photos here.

Welcome to Norfff Laaaandon….

11 Aug

Been a little while since my last post. I have been a busy Beeb lady, making films, updating websites and being a general media lush. It’s been brilliant. We are launching the Doctor Who competition next week so I will post up the videos that I have worked on over the last few weeks.

I have two weeks and two days on my placement and I still don’t know what I am going to be doing at the end of it. I have applied for jobs in both London and Brighton, and I have a few interviews. I am hopeful I will find something at the the end of my placement, but the uncertainty is making me nervous!

However, I have had to make the decision if I should stay in London or move back to Brighton. I do miss the relaxed Brighton lifestyle terribly, where I would have more time to write and enjoy beach life. But I have decided to give London a go, even if it is just for the next few months. I am going to take my friend’s room in Finsbury Park as she is moving to somewhere bigger nearby, while I hopefully get settled into London life.

I’m excited if a little uneasy about what the future will hold. Lets see what life has in store for me next. :)

Burt Brill & Cardens Brighton Graduate Degree Show – Preview

30 May

This is a preview feature on the Brighton University graduate degree show as featured in the June issue of the Verse. The last and most difficult piece I had to write for this issue. I estimate that I have written well over 10,000 words this month (not including the dissertation I completed the month before), so this was the most difficult 500 words I have ever had to write. Unless it is on a topic that I am really passionate about, I really struggle with the formal writing style that news writing commands. I guess I am getting a little too used to writing provocative tosh to flirt with one’s mind.

The real page laid out is here: Page 7, which also features Callum Kelly’s lovely review of the new Sea-life centre mural by Tunnel Vision.

Burt Brill & Cardens Graduate Degree Show

Grand Parade has been a hive of activity recently as final year students of the Faculty of Arts erect their degree shows. Every year, the building is transformed from a bustling teaching building of 25 courses to the largest

art gallery in the South East, showcasing the work of Brighton students. The title of this year’s show is Hook, Line and Sinker, revealing the time and patience involved for the students to put on a show of this level, and the sense of achievement that they will face after.

The show, sponsored by Burt Brill and Cardens Solicitors, gives over 500 students the opportunity to showcase their work to over 15,000 visitors. For many of these students, it is the first opportunity for their work to be seen and be purchased by the public. In some ways, the private view on the 4th June is as important as graduation day in July.

Brighton is well known for its forward thinking and eclectic artistic talent; previous arts graduates include Turner prize-winning artists Rachel Whiteread and Keith Tyson. Fashion graduate and founder of the Biba label Barbara Hulanicki returned to Brighton last November to give a rare talk on her life as a legendary fashion designer. More recent fashion graduates have also embarked on successful careers since leaving Brighton. Julien MacDonald was voted British designer of the year in 2001, alongside Gresham Blake who has now become a tailor to the stars.

Eyes are again on the Fashion graduates for the annual fashion show that taking place in the Sallis Benney theatre, which has always has sold out in advance. One student to look out for is Steven Woodward, who has already showcased some of his garments in London fashion week after entering a competition through Vogue.com. Highlights of the knitted Textiles show also point to Sophie Penn and Debbie Holman who have both won bursaries from ‘The Worshipful Company of Framework Knitters’.

Other popular shows include Editorial Photography, based in the Gallery, and Architecture, which has moved this year to the garden. The rest of the shows are based where the courses are taught: first floor houses the fashion and sculpture disciplines, the second floor showcasing the fine and performance arts, while the third floor is home to the majority of graphics, illustration and printmaking.

Third year Graphic Design students Pete Dungey and Miles Gould created the visually striking poster for the show. Responding to the open brief set at the beginning of the year to all graphics and illustration students, Dungey and Gould wanted to come up with a design that encompassed the release of tension that graduate students get at the end of their final show. The pair settled on a fishing theme with the idea that the final year show is about catching the attentions of the public.

Many students are hoping that their work will reel the public in to commission future work to kickstart of their artistic careers. However, it is not just the examiners that decide the fate of these students. The public can also vote for their favourite work to receive the Peoples Award. The winning student will receive a cash prize and local media exposure through Juice FM and Latest Homes magazine. Your vote also enters you into a draw to win an original artwork.

During this busy time, it is easy to overlook the degree show by students from the school of Historical Studies. That show is located just down the road towards the sea front, at Pavilion Parade. Third year students on these courses will also be putting on exhibitions, relating to their research for their dissertations completed earlier in the year. Their private view is a day later than the show at Grand Parade – on the 5th June. The exhibition will then be open to the public from 6th – 10th June.

The Great Escape 2010

18 May

Despite being recently voted by NME as the UK’s best festival, I still can’t work out the Great Escape. In the last 5 years is has been running I have attended three and will admit I find it hard work. The festival requires much planning, a central crash pad, a deep wallet and very comfortable shoes. The line-up is so overwhelmingly unknown to even the moderately clued up you are sometimes at a loose end as to who to see. But this is why it is a great escape, freeing yourself from what you know and discovering new music. The bands that blow you away are the ones that you had no idea about before the festival. 3 days and 19 bands later, my body is aching and my mind is whirling from all the fantastic music I have discovered.

My weekend started with Chateau Marmont aided by a light show at Digital, providing a futuristic dystopian horror soundtrack. Komedia provided the perfect venue to be romanced by The Dodos, before I settled in for a (slightly) drunken celebratory night at the Source vs Recommender party, featuring Mirrors, Foreign Office, The Agitator, King Charles & Pope Joan.

The Dodos

Friday started a little fuzzy but was rectified by the blissful Japanese inspired beats of Gold Panda. Unfortunately Life didn’t do him or the sardined crowd any justice; slightly roomier instead was Wolf Gang @ Coalition followed by Hurts straight after. I didn’t want to try my luck for Wild Beasts after seeing the huge queue, so I settled on the Moshi Moshi records party @ New Hero with everyone’s favourite boy-next-door James Yuill & Mirrors – they were getting around and were dapperly dressed every time.

Wolf Gang

Wolf Gang

Already missing out on a variety of daytime gigs due to deadlines and hangovers, Saturday was mission day and I was determined to check out the Alternative escape and the various street gigs, the first of which was Fenech-Soler. Adapt Barbers shop hosted a gig so intimate the crowd were feeling each other up, complete with free Mohawks and facepainting. Stagecoach were the first to wow with their bouncy grooves, but I quickly dashed to the Foundry to catch Kovak and their No Doubt-esque stylings, before dashing back to catch one of my favourite local bands Kinema with their geektastic homage to all things electronic.

Kovac

:Kinema

After a quick dash home to recharge my batteries, I stopped into Komedia to check out the eerily familiar Erland & the Carnival, perfect for a heart-breaking road trip across no-man’s land. Prince Albert hosted the psychedelic oddities of La Shark and the orient other that Is Tropical. I ran to catch the end of The Phenominal Handclap Band, before my feet gave in and told me to go home.

Erland and the Carnival

The Album you must buy next: The Dodos

Echoing on the familiar sounds of indie folk that have been doing the rounds on the blogs thanks to bands like Yeasayer and Grizzly Bear, this experimental San Francisco 3-piece took me back to the those adolescent days where I would daydream to Jeff Buckley on repeat, but with much needed oomph and guts. Percussion is where the wonder lies; wowing the crowd by playing a Glockenspiel with a violin bow. Their most recent album is reminiscent of The Shins, but check out the debut Visiter (yes, that is the way it’s spelt) to go on a mesmerising lovesick walkabout that dreams of a happy ending.

The next big thing: Fenech-Soler

If the ‘it’ factor consists of pop-tastic catchy songs, barrels of energy, beautiful faces and spangly costumes, these guys have got it in spades. Add to that their ability to make a remix so stunning it could get your Grandma doing the twist, and you have the recipe for something as hot as Cut-Copy and Friendly Fires. They even had a dancing flash mob and a confetti explosion for their relentless street gig – which was one of 4 they played at the weekend.

Fenech-Soler

The next band to see live: The Phenomenal Handclap Band

Playing rather appropriately at the refurbed Jam, this 70’s infused psychedelic-rock yet retro-funk band screams summer with style. Their energy so was infectious there wasn’t an um-bopper in the house. Everything about this 8-peice was so hot, my camera spontaneously combusted and I just had to give in and dance into a sweaty stooper like everyone else. Their record doesn’t do this band justice, they one to be seen live to be believed, loved and worshiped.

The big maybe: Hurts

This band appeal to people for two reasons. First you have the thirty-something crowd, who are nolstalgic for the 80’s when the new-romantics were well… new. With my generation being catapulted back into the 80’s not only stylistically but politically (thanks Dave) the theatrical power ballad may be making a comeback. While I was initially aware of them and pre-judged them as pretentious, particulary due to the ginger Paul Potts-esque singing statue at the back. However, throughout the gig lead singer Theo Hutchcraft came out of his shell a smidging and the crowd loved it. Hell, half of them were mouthing the words. But I am hoping for more Yazoo and less Spandau Ballet.

Hurts

Gutted to miss: Theophilus London and Oui est Le Swimming Pool

It wouldn’t be the Great Escape if you didn’t miss at least one act you wanted to see. The rumour mill is that both acts were great. Sigh.

I have also made a spotify playlist of some of the bands I managed to catch.

This peice will also be published in the May issue of The Verse, alongside Issac’s and Caroline’s review, and a Kovac competition. Check it out!

Page 10 – Music

Page 11 – Music

Brighton Festival 2010

10 May

Unfortunately due to exam peril, i am unable to attend any of the events going on in this years Brighton Festival. Last year I volunteered and invigilated some of the Anish Kapoor sculptures situated around Brighton, which I really enjoyed. This is a piece about the 2010 Brighton Festival, printed in the April issue of the Verse.

Brighton Festival 2010

Each year, Brighton Festival is always an unexpected, spellbinding experience. There is always a guarantee that the programme is going to contain a few hidden gems sandwiched between a sea of unknown cultural delights. Legendary artist and creative muso Brian Eno will curate this year’s festival so it is no exception, boasting 113 events, 16 exclusives and eight new commissions.

Eno is most well known for his involvement in the Glam Rock band Roxy Music in the early 70′s, most famous for the song Love is a Drug. When he left the band due to disagreements with the lead singer Brian Ferry, Eno embarked on his own solo projects, pioneering the beginnings of experimental electronic music. Many call him the inventor of the ambient genre, while others praise him further by calling him the father and an inspiration to anyone dabbling with a synthesiser. He has worked on albums for U2, Coldplay, Talking Heads, Grace Jones and Paul Simon among many others, although his management call him a ‘sonic landscaper’ rather than a producer. He hasn’t just stuck to music either. He also writes for the Observer and Prospect magazine, as well as working on many other multimedia projects.

The most famous of these is 77 Million Paintings, which is going to be situated in Fabrica for the duration of the May festival. This work, created in 2006, features geometrically arranged slides and light projections, constantly changing. Described by Eno as ‘visual music’, every viewing experience will be different due to the 77 million combinations. The church setting makes the viewing experience even more sacred. Fabrica are even installing sofas so you can make yourself comfortable; you may get transfixed for hours.

While this is one of the few free events being put on this year, it will undoubtedly be the most accessibly spectacular and is not to be missed. The only other free events take place on the final day of the festival, Sunday 23rd May. This will involve a family orientated street art and performance afternoon by Urban Playground at the Marina ending with a firework show, and a night-time circus extravaganza at The Level by No Fit State.

But what is Eno himself like? After watching a few documentaries and being lucky enough to hear him talk in the flesh, I can only describe him as intellectually stimulating yet challenging, captivating yet tangent travelling. Eno has said that Brighton is a special city that has a citizenship unlike any other in the UK, and he “wouldn’t have wanted to curate a Festival in any other city.” He has also said that the eve of his 62nd birthday “will be the greatest evening of his life”, when Afrobeat perform on the 14th May (Dome). His other personal highlights include: This is Pure Scenius! a four and a half hour experimental improvisational collaboration featuring Eno, Karl Hyde of Underworld, Jon Hopkins and Leo Abrahams; This is Acappella! a celebration of non-instrumental singing featuring Reggie Watts, as well as two talks that he is hosting himself on the on a variety of subjects that will flow into each other.

Eno has purposely organised events by groups and performers that you are bound to have never heard of before, so you arrive with no preconceptions of what to expect, forced to surrender yourself to an experience that you do not know where you will be taken.

Eno facts

Has made his own app for the iPhone for you to create your own experimental music, called Bloom.

He scored the music for Peter Jackson’s My Lovely Bones.

Eno created the music for the amazing PS3 game Spore.

Chris Cunningham

6 Mar

This is a short feature on special effects artist Chris Cunningham, which was printed in the January issue of the Pebble. He is also putting on one off rare visual show at the Brighon Dome on the 19th April, which I still need to purchase my tickets for…

Spotlight Artist – Chris Cunningham

This month, our spotlight becomes even more dark and twisted when as we go on a not-so jolly journey with visionary British Director Chris Cunningham, who will soon be gracing us here in sunny Brighton to prise open our doors of perception.

Born in Reading, 1970, Cunningham ditched art school and his early sculptural and linear convulsions of robots and humans to follow his director’s dream. Originally working in the special effects departments on projects such as Spitting Image and Alien 3, it was his work on the film Judge Dread, that caught the eye of Stanley Kubrick and got Cunningham headhunted to work on his 30 year headache: A.I. Cunningham was assigned the task of designing the android David, a role which Kubrick believed could of never be portrayed by a human. But when the project was handed to Steven Spielberg to direct in 1995, Cunningham designs were abandoned as Spielberg gave the role to Haley Joel Osment. Cunningham then turned his hand to directing music videos for British bands such as Placebo and Dubstar to cut his directing teeth on.

1997 was the year that Cunning ham received critical acclaim for the music video ‘Come to Daddy’ by Aphex Twin. This twisted nightmare saw schoolchildren with Richard James’ superimposed face creating havoc in the council estate that was also used by Kubrick in scenes of A Clockwork Orange, as well as a Grandma scarily tormented by possessed demon. Despite being banned by many video stations, along with ‘Windowlicker’ it has achieved cult status and has been voted the 17th greatest music video of all time by Q magazine readers. Another Grammy nominated achievement produced in 1999 was ‘All is Full of Love’, by Bjork, where two robots embrace among a mechanical assembly, which is on permanent display at the New York Museum of Modern Art.

While still falling back on music, directing videos for the Horrors and a forthcoming single for La Roux, he has distanced himself from motion pictures after attempts to adapt William Gibson’s Neuromancer and Philip K. Dick’s A Scanner Darkly failed to materialise. Cunningham has more recently become a multi-disciplinary, working on his own short films and music, funding these projects which the occasional advertising assignments for Sony, Levis and Gucci. Before the rise of Youtube his films were generally hard to view, but (excitedly) Cunningham is due in April to do a very rare audio visual performance at the Brighton Dome, showcasing old and new work. Tickets are available via the Dome website, or their ticket hotline. Even for students it’s pricey at £14, but with the aid of some special guests he will show us what he does best, blowing our minds with psycho-sexual imagery that even the darkest depths of our imagination wouldn’t dare to dream.

Face off at Factory Brighton

7 Feb

Last night a few of the girls and I stumbled up to Phoenix, where the launch night of FACTORY was being held. Featuring music from the folkily fabulous and always colourful The Half Sisters, this art event was curated by Victoria Melody, who was performing her work Face off in the main foyer.

The work consisted of her taking your picture and then scrutinising your facial features through American E-fit software to compile your criminal profile. Watching your face go through an avatar-isation as she scrolled through the typical features is a very unnerving process. Supposedly those with receding foreheads are more likely to be criminals, and I luckily possess sunken ’psycho’ eyes. One thing is for sure, you are likely to not look anything like your criminal e-fit. I find it a very disturbing thing that even as individualistic as Brightonians can be, we can be categorised right down to the shape of our nose.

Icle reveiw of the evening and Eleanor Whiteman’s photography will be featured in the the pebble. Not quite sure what to say yet, as I am still trying to work out how many canaries were harmed in the process of making ‘that’ jumper worn by a member of Passiondale, and if Jimmy Saville is actually a genius.

Anish Kapoor – 2009 Brighton festival special

30 Jan

Every May, a guest curator descends upon the streets of Brighton to create cultural magic. 2009 was the turn of sculptor Anish Kapoor, which sent most of the artist community in a devilish fever. As well as writing for the Pebble, I also volunteered for the project organised by Fabrica, which involved invidulating several of his sculptures that were strategically placed around Brighton. It was a great thing to be involved with and I managed to take some great snaps of C-Curve which was situated at the downs. This was published in the May 2009 issue of the Pebble.

Brighton festival special – Anish Kapoor

The Brighton Festival, now in its 43rd year, is very lucky to have Turner prize winning artist Anish Kapoor as its guest artist director. Born in India, he is one the most prestigious and influential sculptors of his generation, producing simple yet engaging curved forms that are often shrouded in mystery. The pieces he has lent to the Brighton festival are no exception. Seven works are on display until the festivals finale on the 24th May, two of which are specially commissioned and entry to most of them is free. But what is exactly on display?

Sky Mirror – Pavilion gardens

Many of you have probably already walked past the crowds in the pavilion gardens wondering what all the fuss is about. This circular concave disk is made from £1,000,000 of stainless steel and is one of the smaller versions in a series of sky mirrors that have been previously housed in Nottingham and New York. What Kapoor is trying to explore here is the notion of the ‘void’ where things disappear into a vortex of nothingness. The positioning of the mirror has been specifically designed so that if you stand directly in front of it but behind the fence (the corner where the flower bed meets the grass) you can see birds disappear when they fly over the sky. The mirror is viewable 24 hours a day, but the specific timing (and weather conditions) greatly affect your experience of the piece, so I would recommend seeing it more than once, to witness the act of transformation in different forms. Festival guides will be present between 12pm and 8pm.

C-Curve – The Chattri

This is another famous piece of work that has been seen in other places before the festival. The Chattri site held a special significance for Kapoor, as Indian soldiers that fought for Britain during the First World War were hospitalised in the Dome and are cremated here. The memorial was built here in 1921 to honour their memory and represent the protection of the dead.

Supposedly when Kapoor visited the site, crows took flight as he approached the Chatteri and it reminded him of cremation sites in India, so he instantaneously knew that this site would be perfect for this piece and would provide a whole new meaning; death, reflection and remembrance.

To get up to the C-Curve, you need to catch either a 5 or 5A bus to the Ladies Mile Pub in Patcham, walk up to the Horsedean Recreation Ground, and there is a signposted track up to the Chatteri. Like the Sky Mirror, C-Curve is viewable 24 hours a day, Festival guides will be present between 12pm and 8pm.

Dismemberment of Jeanne D’arc – Old Market – Circus Street

This is the main work of the exhibition, commissioned for the festival and specifically realised in an old fruit and vegetable market that closed down in 2005. Showing his progression from previous exhibitions, this work incorporates Blood stick (2005), and is a part of the progression towards a major show at Grand Palais in Paris in two years time. As you walk around, you eventually come to realise the mounds, limbs, and 2 ft pit resemble a dismembered female body. The title pays homage to Joan of Arc, the young woman who led the French Army through many victories against the English in the 13th Century, and was burned at the stake when she was just 19. What Kapoor has done here is transformed a once derelict building into an almost sacred site. The rich bloody reds of the stone and gravel in one sense are barbaric, but can also imply sensual sexuality, in its raw form. And with the space itself, Kapoor has resurrected its purpose and meaning, the same way the story of the Joan of Arc was been frequently transformed throughout history.

The Muncipal Market is open from 12pm – 8pm, Festival guide will be available and entry is free.

The Festival also features Blood Relations and 1000 Names (1979 – 1980) are housed at the Fabrica Gallery on Duke Street, open from 12pm – 8pm, which are some of Kapoors older peices. Imagined Monochrome is located in the Basement, and is viewable by ½  hr appointments only, which cost £12. Not very much can be revealed about this piece, other than you will receive a massage and you will see something that you didn’t expect…

What is important to remember when looking at Kapoors works is although there is very little metaphorical stimulus to work with and your interpretation of what the works mean may be different from the person standing next to you, but this is the intended effect. Many of these works have been placed in different locations previously, so the meaning for Kapoor changes with every new place, so it will do for you too. For Kapoor, meaning is developed through the creation process, and the way that people interpret works in different ways depending on the way you look at it can only be a good thing. By being minimalistic, they encourage you to think. So when placed in a beautiful site of culture and rich history that is Brighton, and looked at with fresh eyes, these sculptures are transformed into different objects that can be easily enjoyed by all.

http://www.brightonfestival.org

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