Tag Archives: Aly Helyer

Sandra Crisp wins Print International Prize, David Minton exhibits in ko-ax drawing at Mascalls Gallery & Aly Helyer is selected by Paul Noble for Creekside Open 2013

Paul Nobel installing Creekside Open at APT GalleryIn fact, This ‘Me’ of Mine was installed at APT Gallery when Paul and Ceri were selecting for the CREEKSIDE OPEN. It was all very mysterious and sequestered and by all accounts a marathon effort to whittle down the entries to make their selections. But select they did; both shows are sure to be fantastic and well worth a visit to APT Gallery. Congratulations to Aly Helyer for being among the selected artists!

CREEKSIDE OPEN 2013
Selected by Paul Noble
 
A.P.T Gallery
2 – 26 May 2013
Gallery open  |  Thursday to Sunday from 12noon to 5pm  |  Free entry
 
Opening Reception and Prize Giving  |  Saturday 4 May 2013  3 to 6pm  |  Paul Noble will award three prizes of £500 each
 
 
Cos Ahmet  │  Andrea Artz  │  Helen Ashton  │  ATOI – Amy Thomas and Oliver Irvine  │  Marta Bakst  │  Aglaé Bassens  │  Dominic Beattie  │  Jessica Blackwood  │  Allan Boston  │  Shane Bradford  │  Denise Bryan  │  Lindsey Bull  │  Richard J Butler  │  John Butterworth  │  Laura Bygrave  │  Emmanuelle Camus  │  Jane Cattlin  │  Christopher Clack  │  Paul Cole  │  Stephen Cooper  │  Gemma Cossey  │  Emma Cousin  │  Daniel Crews-Chubb  │  Alex Crocker  │  Blue Curry  │  Nicholas Dedics  │  Aidan Doherty  │  Claire Dorsett  │  Richard Ducker  │  Andrew Ekins  │  James Epps  │  Luci Eyers  │  Hayley Field  │  Craig Fisher  │  Gordon Flemons  │  Grant Foster  │  Mariano Gana  │  Natsue Golden  │  Stewart Gough  │  Helen Grant  │  Luey Graves  │  Kate Groobey  │  Neil Haas  │  Julia Hamilton  │  Aly Helyer  │  Lesley Hilling  │  Nicky Hirst  │  Andrew Hladky  │  Luke Humphries  │  Bruce Ingram  │  Benjamin Jenner  │  Frank Jennings  │  Andrew Kerr  │  Caroline King  │  Amanda Knight  │  Alec Kronacker  │  Tamiko Kusuhara  │  Simon Leahy-Clark  │  Caterina Lewis  │  Lana Locke  │  David Lucas  │  Lorrain Mailer  │  E J Major  │  Enzo Marra  │  Maslen & Mehra  │  Jan May  │  Oliver McConnie  │  Andrew Miller  │  Stuart Moller  │  Ebrel Moore  │  Eleanor Moreton  │  Ange Mukeza  │  Amy Owen  │  Nicholas Owens  │  Matthew Pagett  │  Jitka Palmer  │  Kyu Eun Park  │  James Parkinson  │  David Pike  │  Ruth Piper  │  Justin Piperger  │  Tom Pitt  │  Emily Platzer  │  Nick Powell  │  Jasmine Pradissitto  │  Katherine Reekie  │  Reka Ritt  │  Dai Roberts  │  Tania Robertson  │  Carole Romaya  │  Sam Rountree Williams  │  Michal Rubin  │  Melanie Russell  │  Anna Salamon  │  Lizi Sanchez  │  Margot Sanders  │  Ed Saye  │  Andrew Seto  │  Fay Shin  │  Claire Smith  │  Sophia Starling  │  Christy Symington  │  Shubba Taparia  │  Mia Taylor  │  Ernesto Torres Alarcon  │  Rebecca Townrow  │  Stella Tripp  │  Vanesa van Vlerken  │  Pepe Vives  │  Robin von Einsiedel  │  David R Watson  │  Gethin Wavel  │  Ashley West  │  Paul Westcombe  │  Tisna Westerhof  │  Caleb Whitefield  │  Lucy Whitford  │  Sarah Kate Wilson  │  Damian Wojcik  │  Diana Wolzak  │  Robert Worley  │  Eric Wright  │  William Wright  │  Yi Xin Yan  │  Guimi You
 
 
CREEKSIDE OPEN 2013
Selected by Ceri Hand
 
A.P.T Gallery
6 – 30 June 2013
Gallery open  |  Thursday to Sunday from 12noon to 5pm  |  Free entry
 
Opening Reception and Prize Giving  |  Saturday 8 June 2013  3 to 6pm  |  Ceri Hand will award three prizes of £500 each
 
 
Eve Ackroyd │ Tony Antrobus │ Miriam Austin │ Juan Bolivar │ Allan Boston │ John Brennan │ Agnes Calf │ Melanie Carvalho │ Cordelia Cembrowicz │ George Charman │ Martyn Cross │ Mark Davey │ Rose Davey │ Anita Delaney │ Adam Dix │ Geoff Dunlop │ Dexter Dymoke │ Andrew Ekins │ Annabel Elgar │ Rita Evans │ Gordon Flemons │ Grant Foster │ Cadi Froehlich │ Sofie Grevelius │ Hannah Hewetson │ Vicky Hodgson │ Emilia Izquierdo │ Paul R Jones │ Robin Kirsten │ Maria Konstanse Bruun │ Alex Lawler │ Bethan Lloyd Worthington │ Alex March │ Enzo Marra │ Nigel Massey │ Georgina McNamara │ Clare Mitten │ Gorka Mohamed │ Doireann Ni Ghrioghair │ Alejandro Ospina │ Justin Piperger │ Alicja Rogalska │ Melanie Russell │ Rachel Russell │ Miho Sato │ Lisa Selby │ Elizabeth Shuck │ David Brian Smith │ Christine Stark │ Callum Sutch │ David Theobald │ Abbi Torrance │ Ashley West │ Jack West │ Hannah Wooll │ Isabel Yellin │ Fantich and Young
 
A.P.T Gallery
Harold Wharf
6 Creekside
Deptford
London SE8 4SA
 
 
Art in Perpetuity Trust
Registered Charity No. 1045363
www.aptstudios.org       
 
 

ko-ax drawing invitation

David Minton is selected for ko-ax drawing at Mascalls Gallery in Paddock Wood. With descriptions like, ‘A landscape cut into a discarded envelope; dress-making pins tracing the line of a child’s ball; a baby’s first waking gestures caught with a fleeting pencil line,’ it promises to be an interesting look at contemporary drawing in Kent.


5Ways Filmstrip 4 and The Bigger Picture in Print International 2013And Congratulations! to Sandra Crisp for winning the 2013 Print International Prize at Oriel Wrecsam Gallery, North Wales. Her three pieces, [Imprint] Soft_Terrain (inverted), 5Ways Filmstrip 4 and The Bigger Picture, which is of course part of This ‘Me’ of Mine, were chosen from amongst the 40 other international printmakers in the show. Well Done!

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Molly Behagg is inspired to share work, Sandra Crisp is selected for PRINT INTERNATIONAL 2013 and short-listed for ISEA 2013 in Sydney, Aly Helyer exhibits in ‘A House of Many Windows’

(c) Molly Behagg

(c) Molly Behagg

Through a Twitter call for artists to share work inspired by This ‘Me’ of Mine, Molly Behagg has shared two series, Vertigo and Thaw. Molly’s “work is concerned with notions of the self as transitory and unfixed. [She is] interested in the relationship between reflective surfaces and the presence of the viewer in a space. Partial images fascinate me, often occurring naturally created by light, water, mirrors and glass, they allow glancing moments of clarity before disappearing.” Molly also has an article on identity and place in the current issue of Engage 31 magazine called: Museums of the Self . Find out more about Molly’s interests and vision on the INSPIRATION page. If you have been inspired by This ‘Me’ of Mine, contact me. I would love to share your work or text too.


The Bigger Picture (c)2009 Sandra Crisp

The Bigger Picture, (c)2009 Sandra Crisp

Sandra Crisp is on such a roll she’s making thunder! Sandra has just had three works selected for the seventh biennial PRINT INTERNATIONAL 2013 at Oriel Wrecsam Gallery, Yale College in Wales. Professor David Ferry RE FRSA has selected ‘The Bigger Picture’, featured here on This ‘Me’ of Mine, 5Ways Filmstrip4′, and ‘Imprint, Soft Terrain (inverted)’, which can be seen in our interview, Memory Surfaces. EXHIBITION:13 April – 8 June 2013
Opening Event: 2 – 4pm Saturday 13 April 2013 

Sandra has also been short-listed for the 19th International Symposium on Electronic Art for her film ‘Mapping London’s Subterranean Rivers’ to take place in Sydney Australia. Presented by the Australian Network for Art and Technology (ANAT) and held alongside Vivid Sydney – a festival of light, music and ideas – ISEA2013 will showcase the best media artworks from around the world and provide a platform for the lively exchange of future-focused ideas.


An X Lover, (c)2011 Aly Helyer

An X Lover, (c)2011 Aly Helyer

Aly Helyer has work coming up in A House of Many Windows, curated by the super Day & Gluckman curating team.

The portrait, the mask, the ownership of identity and the burden of historical portraiture can all be mined from the depiction of a person…Often the figure is eradicated in contemporary art practice. Landscapes are barren, sculptures reject the hint of human intervention with pristine finishes, white cube galleries are a clinical platform. Immediately an emotive layer is added through the depiction of a person. Identity infects and affects works of art, how we read them and how they are produced. In this exhibition nine artists who work with the body as subject through paint, sculpture, collage and photography present a myriad of responses to our relationship with ourselves.

A House of Many Windows will be at Collyer Bristol Gallery in London, March 6 to June 12, 2013, opening March 6, 6 to 9pm.

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David Riley’s Updated TUNC, Aly Helyer in ‘Soul Meat’, Sandra Crisp Wins Eaton Fund Grant, David Minton: Cradling of Loss

Twitter user names: coded and transcribed (c)2013 David Riley

Twitter user names: coded and transcribed, (c)2013 David Riley

David Riley has updated his Twitter piece for This ‘Me’ of Mine. The list of followers has grown so much since he first conceived of the piece, it required some rethinking for presentation. I’m delighted with the new results! David plans to update and grow this work with each venue installation of the tour. So if you haven’t yet followed @codedimages here is the link so you can add your twitter name to the list and become part of this artwork. See the virtual Twitter User Names – Coded


Sinnerman (c)2013 Aly Helyer

Sinnerman, (c)2013 Aly Helyer

Aly Helyer is exhibiting in ‘Soul Meat’ curated by Lee Maelzer, at Lion and Lamb Gallery until Feb 16.

“These painters take a dark look at the body and the mind – a conflict between the intellectual and the spiritual, with the corporeal and all it suggests resulting at times in comically grotesque hybrid mutations….”

“If it’s true there exists a realm, in the relations of soul and body, where cause and effect, determinism and expression still intersect in a web so dense that they actually form only one and the same movement which cannot be dissociated except after the fact…”

Michael Foucault from Madness and Civilization

See more of Aly latest work on her website.


Eaton Fund logoSandra Crisp has been awarded a grant from the Eaton Fund.

“The grant will be used to fund the printing and framing of a large format digital print ‘The Bigger Picture’ for forthcoming UK touring exhibition This ‘Me’ of Mine 2013. This kind assistance is extremely welcome at this point in my career as the costs involved in producing such large works for public exhibition have proved to be extremely challenging in recent times.”

Sandra Crisp

Read Sandra’s ‘Thank You’ to the Eaton Fund.


Pigeon and Line, (c)2011 David Minton

Pigeon and Line, (c)2011 David Minton

David Minton is preparing for a solo exhibition at Trinity Town and Country Foundation Gallery in Tunbridge Wells.

See Cradling of Loss 26 Feb to 9 Mar.

“In David Minton’s drawings and paintings flowers die, birds fall to earth, the work arrives; the making of the images is a cradling of loss. These works are small instances of tension created from the impossibility of description, the incompleteness of experience, the wish for resolution. In the making, the physicality of paint, the elegance of line, offer tactile comfort.”

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Aly Helyer wins Audience Choice Award for Exeter Contemporary Open 2012

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exeter contemporary open 2012
Audience Choice Award – Winner Announced

The winner of the Audience Choice Award for Exeter Contemporary Open 2012 is Aly Helyer.

Hundreds of visitors to the exhibition have been voting for their favourite work and Aly’s rich and colourful paintings representing creatures of the unconscious were a clear winner. On hearing the news, Aly said:

‘I’m thrilled! Being a painter is, by its very nature, a solitary existence, so for people to connect with my work on any level is so important to me. I’m thankful to Exeter Phoenix for offering me the opportunity to exhibit and get this kind of feedback.’

aly helyer
Aly Helyer’s ‘An X Lover’ and ‘Tender Pervert’

Aly will receive the £200 prize, which is sponsored by Exeter Natural Health Centre.

‘Exeter Natural Health Centre is delighted to be sponsoring this award and Aly Helyer’s beautiful, vibrant works are well deserving of the prize.’
Ali Morrish, Exeter Natural Health Centre

The winning artwork can be seen at Exeter Phoenix until 1 November and entrance is free.

Congratulations Aly!

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Anchors of Observation

Strange Fruit (c)2007 Aly Helyer

Strange Fruit (c)2007 Aly Helyer, ink on paper, 67 x 101 cm

I first worked with Aly Helyer in April 2011.  She was one of three winners of the 2010 Core Gallery Open; the other winning artists were Tom Butler and Marion Michell.  The prize was an exhibition of their work called Extra-Ordianary, and extraordinary it was.  I co-curated this exhibition with Rosalind Davis.  During the artists/curator dialogue each artist made a PowerPoint presentation discussing their backgrounds; that was when I saw Aly’s Strange Fruit – I melted where I stood.

The simplicity of process, pouring and puddling ink, combined with a personal trust in the power of artistic creation gives these works a complex psychological tension.  Aly made a series of these images during a time of personal difficulty.  They carry the innocence of child’s play and exude human turmoil.  They are delicate, fragile and vulnerable but with a captivating presence and force.

I knew immediately I wanted to exhibit this work.  I asked Aly at the end of the dialogue session if she would like to exhibit them in a show I was putting together and she said yes with no further hesitation.  Elation!  Now I had to put a show together.  I didn’t know what it would be about or who the other artists would be, all I knew was I had Aly and I was thrilled.

Hot Lady (c)2010 Aly Helyer

Hot Lady (c)2010 Aly Helyer, oil on linen, 56 x 42 cm

Jane Boyer: Are you working with specific ideas of individuals in mind when you locate the ‘eye’ or ‘mouth’ and develop the portrait from there or is it purely fictional?

Aly Helyer: No I wouldn’t say specific individuals, although when a painting is finished something about it can remind me of someone I know or once knew. Mostly though they feel very familiar as if I’ve known them all my life, but this is the first time I’ve truly seen or recognised them.

JB: How does memory function in this approach for you?

AH: Everything is filtered through memory whether directly observed or not, nothing is objective, we all see and remember things differently, but I am also interested in an older shared memory, a universal memory. A friend took me to see the Tito Bustillo cave a few years back and it was incredible how these drawings and paintings from thousands of years ago had the power to trigger something deep in my own memory, there was an amazing connection, a familiarity there.

 “It was the first time everything I was making was made on the floor, it was very much process based another first for me, just pouring inks and watercolours and letting them find their place…I wanted to surprise myself, searching for something I hadn’t seen before, emptying my head of all the crap, all the people, even myself as far as this is possible. Gradually something resembling heads started to appear, lots of them and it was as if they were having conversations with each other. This was my journey back to painting.”

Happy Family with Sheep (c)2007 Aly Helyer

Happy Family with Sheep (c)2007 Aly Helyer, watercolour and ink on paper, 31 x 23 cm

JB: How did this experience, which we see examples of in Strange Fruit and Happy Family with Sheep, affect your work overall?

AH: It was a very difficult period of my life; the studio slowly became a safe place for me to have some fun, to start experimenting and it was the first time in my life I hadn’t worked from observation. It was a very liberating time for me, this way of working and the openness it allows is still very much with me now.

I see Happy Family with Sheep as a kind of ending, closing a chapter of my life; it came out of obliterating an early piece of work, but it also contains the seeds of some of the processes that you see in later works. Strange Fruit was really the catalyst, the first work I made without any anchors.

JB: Your method, if we can call it that, has moved from outward observation to inward intuition to letting the painting develop on its own terms.  Is this significant for you?  Does this relate at all to how you see your own position in the world?

AH: Initially it was very important to move away from outward observation, it came out of necessity for me, and I had to close myself off from the real world for a while although outward observation is creeping back into the work acting as little anchors.

I think it was [Philip] Guston who said something about searching for the technique, and the technique becoming inseparable from the object, an interlocking of image and paint, so yes the methods or techniques that I use are incredibly important as they allow me to get closer to this way of working, sort of trapping the image that I arrive at. The act of making paintings is a way of me trying to figure out my place in the world and how I relate to it.

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­­­­­­­Aly’s suggested reading:

James Elkins – What Painting Is

Herschel B. Chip – Theories of Modern Art

Giles Deleuze – Francis Bacon: The Logic of Sensation

Jane’s suggestions:

David Sylvester – Francis Bacon The Human Body

Rudolf Arnheim – Art and Visual Perception

Samuel Beckett – Three Novels

T.S. Eliot – The Wasteland, Prufrock and Other Poems

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Mistress (c)2011 Aly Helyer

Mistress (c)2012 Aly Helyer, oil on linen on board, 77 x 62 cm

Aly was invited to be part of The Perfect Nude, curated by Phillip Allen and Dan Coombs who asked over 100 artists to make paintings of the nude in hope the show will create a rich network of images that will establish a context for representation of the body in contemporary painting.  This exhibition, opened at Wimbledon Space in January and travels to Phoenix Gallery in Exeter later this month:

Thursday 29th March – Saturday 12th May 2012

Open Monday to Saturday 10am – 6pm (closed Bank Holidays)

Phoenix Gallery | Exeter Phoenix | Bradninch Place | Exeter EX4 3LS

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