UK
Cardboarders’ Collective
Dates:
*Extended until Sunday the 1st of August*
Location:
Dungeness
Open Studios, Dungeness,
Kent TN29 9ND
*
Updated 27th June 2021
Below you will find images from each exhibiting artist.
These are a glimpse of individual takes from each member of the collective.
This is the first time ever (as far as we are aware) of artists working together with cardboard, in order to mitigate the soul-destroying effects of the plague!
Press release, project description, bios and statements follow, below these images.
Andrew Ashton
Andrew Revell
Matt Rowe
Why cardboard?
Paddy Hamilton
explains.
During the dark
days of lockdown, I noticed three things:
1.
The house was filled with packaging, more of which arrived daily.
2.
Art materials were becoming more expensive.
3.
The need to ‘carry on’ making and conjuring up work as before seemed unnecessary.
I thought: ‘What is it that surrounds me?’ then decided to embrace that which I had a lot of. So: cardboard.
Distinctive, warm,
freeing, reliable, standardised, malleable, exotic, sturdy, strong/rigid,
ubiquitous, reassuring, clean, durable, friendly, versatile, anticipatory,
authentic, nostalgic, textural, universal, tinted, stylish and ‘boxy’.
Cardboard as a
creative medium has a long and distinguished history in art. The movement known
as arte povera elevated ‘poor materials’ for very good reasons. See: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arte_Povera
Cardboard was a
preferred medium for Toulouse Lautrec, Degas, Braque, Rauschenberg, Tapies et al.
As I started to
explore ‘the cardboard’, I noted other artists became
interested and supportive of the obviously freeing processes resulting from
this focus. From this grew the UK Cardboarders Collective, with cardboard
itself as the primary manifesto…
Exhibitors:
Andrew Ashton
Artist and curator
of this exhibition
Statement – The Amazon Housing Project
I have always been intrigued by the models that architects make to
illustrate a proposal for a building project. I wanted to use Amazon cardboard
packaging to produce my own small scale architectural sculpture, based on the
idea of imaginary architecture, created from waste cardboard. I have called
this series of work “The Amazon Housing Project”, what I wanted to achieve (I
think) is to:
1)
Make Sculptures of imaginary housing.
2)
Reflect on Amazon as a multinational company.
3)
Recycle, in a creative way, the cardboard
packaging used by Amazon.
4)
Enjoy the different qualities of cardboard,
building with it, its texture, printed graphics and colour.
5)
Give a “new life” to a throwaway material.
6)
Think about affordable housing.
I’m also experimenting with making pulp out of Amazon packaging,
in a sense returning it to its original state and creating something new from
it.
I teach Art History, make Ceramics, Sculpture, Paintings and
Constructions.
Recent exhibitions:
Fountain Gallery East Molesey – Ceramics
Folkestone Triennial Open Exhibition – Paintings
Dungeness Open Studios – Ceramics and Constructions
***
Marc Christmas
Photographer and visual artist
I live on the South Coast and alongside my practice
as an artist I currently lecture in photography at Higher Education level.
I work primarily with historical photographic
processes (salt prints, albumen, photogenic) with uncertain outcomes. Employing
large format cameras and experimental, analogue techniques.
This is a Cardboard panic attack!
I champion the beauty of cardboard, the found and
reused, and its plainness.
These works explore pure photographic aesthetic explorations on the surface through the
structure, and manipulations of the texture itself, instead of preserving all
of its visual recognisability. Transforming its visual quality into the
photographic imagery. Using traditional photographic materials, chemistry and
processes.
***
Fraser Donachie
Artist
My name is Fraser. I suffer from a strong sense of ‘imposter
syndrome’; I rarely regard myself as an artist. However, I achieved an art
O-level in 1982 and enjoy printmaking and painting.
Cardboard’s disposable nature makes it vulnerable
to guilt-free abuse. So I’ve tried to treat it with irreverence and disdain. I
love the simple childish pleasure of cutting cardboard with a large pair of
scissors. I’ve been using very traditional high quality materials to date,
which breeds preciousness. Using this humble, invariably brown, material has
injected a new freedom into my making and I thank it for that.
***
Helen Gillilan
Artist
Helen
Gillilan was born in Cornwall and attended the Foundation Course at Plymouth
Art College in the 1970s. In the mid-nineties she resumed her art education –
studying Theatre Design at Rose Bruford School of Speech and Drama in London.
She
hosted her first solo show at Bridport Art Centre, followed by inclusion in
several group shows at SW galleries. In 1993 she travelled to Chile as Field
Artist with a Raleigh International Expedition – with another solo show at The
Collaton Gallery before moving to London to study theatre design in 1995. She
continued to paint and show through her college course at Spitalfields Art
market and a solo show at Greenwich Theatre.
After
college she worked with Paddy Hamilton at his London studio and then the pair
moved to Dungeness and established Dungeness Open Studios. After her mother’s
death in 2001, Helen purchased lovely Ocean View, Dungeness and opened her
studio gallery there in 2016. Work can be viewed at the gallery or online at ocean-view-studio.com.
Cardboard
I
didn’t see myself as a constructor until I was called upon to build model boxes
for theatre designs – and at first, I was daunted by the prospect. Then I
realised that I could include all manner of found and everyday things to make
the elements that I needed – a little pram fashioned from a favourite face
cream tube, chairs and tables in 1/25 made from found pieces of wood or
cardboard...Cardboard – The Mainstay – and these models in entirety were the
expressions of undercurrents, shadows, the unspoken and implied
metaphors.
This
winter I tackled lampshade making, which I had wanted to do for ages, and found
that backed paper was an effective building material for them. As a natural
progression...I leapt at the chance to show with the UK Cardboarders’
Collective...Good timing!
***
Paddy
Hamilton
Fine
Artist
Born in Kitwe, Zambia. Formative years spent in Botswana.
Education - Manchester Polytechnic (Foundation)
and Chelsea School of Art. Founder of Dungeness Open Studios. Works on and with
the endless fascination of Dungeness Beach.
Has shown extensively in the UK and internationally.
See above for intentions re: this exhibition.
***
Martin Heron
Sculptor
Born in Co.Tyrone, Northern
Ireland, leaving in the mid 80’s to attend art college in Liverpool.
For the past 25 years I have
focused on making art for public spaces throughout the UK and Ireland working
across art forms to engage communities in the creative process. A member
of Royal Society of Sculptors and The London Group, one of the UK's longest
running artist-led collectives.
Currently working on a large,
commissioned project for Knowsley Council to produce major landmark sculptural
works for four gateway locations around Prescot. The works are
linked to Prescot’s heritage with connections to the Shakespeare North Theatre
currently under construction in the town.
Previous commissions and
exhibitions include award winning bronze work at the Alley Arts Centre in Strabane,
Northern Ireland along with public commissioned work across the UK. Work has
been exhibited in various galleries and alternative venues in the UK, Europe
and Canada.
On working with cardboard:
Drawing and experimentation have formed
the backbone of my practice so this opportunity to explore cardboard and make
work for this exhibition has provided an interesting challenge and one I am
still working through.
I have mixed feelings about cardboard thus
far.
It is not a material I would usually turn
to unless building some clunky play armour for my son or a den/tunnel system for
him to crawl around in. These things are never precious and tend to get
battered very quickly!
At the moment I am lost in cutting,
slicing, tearing and drilling the stuff with varying degrees of success.
Possibilities unfold the more I explore so
am expecting some unusual outcomes for consideration.
***
Andrew
Revell
Sculptor
Typically my first “sculpture” memory was made in clay; a very elegantly
modelled Brontosaurus, however the second was a cardboard Tiger, fashioned from
various domestic discards – an altogether more characterful boxy cubist fella,
slathered in black and yellow tempera with smartie disc eyes!
Then the die was cast; material and method stuck from an early age
and the role of “Constructor” became the modus operandi for my life to follow.
Whether hacked-at cartons or fancy acid free sheets the humble card is my
preferred material for the exploring, rendering and solving of three
dimensional problems – despite having absorbed the world of digital 3d
modelling for commissions and designs, at some point there will be a series of
cardboard models in the real world – that childhood facility to sort it out
with a craft knife and some tape never fails to find a variation or pull a
complex project together.
Of course, for over a year we have been tethered to our homes and bubbles, I’ve
been lucky as an artist that this suits me to a degree, but my foraging for
objects and metals at the stockholder and scrapyard
has been curtailed – replaced by a new material source in my hallway, a
familiar stack of cartons and packets from the post bringing the books and
records to get me through the lockdown.
Inspired by my other Cardboarders I’ve been getting stuck into this pile of boxes
to transform it into some sculptures, but this time not in the service of a
problem-solving maquette medium but an opportunity to play
and improvise in the spirit of that boxy animal long ago.
Graduating from Art College in Gloucestershire some 30 years ago Andrew’s 3d
career embraces medical sculpture, product design, public art commissions, a
parallel life as a theatre carpenter and sculpture
tutor. Since 2008 he has worked from ACAVA studios in Acton, London,
regularly exhibiting and undertaking commissions. He is represented in the UK
by Noon-Powell Fine Art.
***
Matt Rowe (aka Go Go Whippet)
Artist
Matt
Rowe’s background in contemporary art and craft ensures that specialist
creative skill sets can be tailored to suit any audience, working
either to a brief or self directed.
Go
Go Whippet workshops deliver engaging themes and activities that
encourage participants of all ages to generate ideas and discussion
through making.
With over 12 years' experience of developing and delivering professional
engagement strategies, Go Go Whippet is able to provide consultancy on
approaches to community cohesion in areas of urban regeneration.
Matt explains his approach to cardboard:
Early memories of
creativity are interwoven with the pleasure of receiving an empty cardboard
shoe box or cereal packet.
Securing these
basic materials provided a resource with infinite construction possibilities.
While inspecting, grading
and preparing cardboard for construction, I distinctly remember the moment I
discovered the fascinating printer’s calibration marks hidden beneath the glued
sections.
Like a rare
Byzantium gemstone, their rarity in contrast with the volume of the cardboard
elevated them beyond the rest of the material.
In honour of their
scarcity and undisputed beauty, I have crafted a crown worthy of their cardboard
majesty.
***
Bridget
Wilkins
Artist-in-training
and administrator at Dungeness Open Studios
For this show my intention was to create work that evokes
the sense of being pushed in a certain trajectory by external forces such as
the weather or the pandemic.
The benefits of working with 95% cardboard are that
it offers limitless scope to create something that doesn’t conform to the
traditional practices of paint, printing and sculpture. It is a friendly medium
and a non-competitive art form that can be enjoyed without peer pressure or
competition.
Selected exhibitions:
Southcoasters: The Old Lockup Gallery, Cromford, Derbyshire.
August 2016.
Various: Dungeness Open Studios. Ongoing.
Some thoughts:
Cardboard is an intrinsic part of our lives which is largely
overlooked and under-appreciated. We tear through the cardboard to seek out the
treasures it holds within. We toss it aside, we burn it, we stamp on it, we rip
it up.
With this show we celebrate cardboard. It’s versatile, it’s
reliable and it can be transformed from something disposable into something
thought-provoking, striking and near-permanent.
Note: all works in the show are made to be linked by a loose and
friendly directive – to be constructed using 95% cardboard_
Link to PDF of press release:
https://documentcloud.adobe.com/link/track?uri=urn:aaid:scds:US:7b93f9fc-5857-402e-8450-7d8098ed47ed