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The studios don’t run themselves and it has taken time to catch up on admin and meetings etc. The website is looking pretty though, with colourful jpegs from Sheila and Sarah who have forthcoming shows at the Tarpey and Mostyn Open. www.harringtonmillstudios.co.ukWe are also preparing for Chicago to come to us in October, the Go/c/Art Gallery show in June and our exhibition to Gotland, Sweden in August. A few of us will be going to Visby to install the show and attend the pv. Apologies for late entries about Chicago… Alison and I were given a guided tour of the paper and books department at Columbia College. It houses world class faciliities where traditional methods of book binding and letter press are used creatively with new tecnologies and offset printing. V impressivehttp://www.colum.edu/Academics/Interarts/book-and-paper/index.phpUniversities are big business in Chicago with over 20 institutions and occupying some serious real estate. It is worth mentioning Lincoln Park zoo which is free to the public. We went on a cold, grey day during school hours when visitors were easily outnumbered by animals. In the summer I expect it is a different story. http://www.lpzoo.org/


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Chicago cont… We purchased a CTA pass giving unlimited travel by rail and bus for $20/week. Bargainous. Bus stops are on every corner of the block so navigating is easy. (2 airports are also served by the trains too). http://www.transitchicago.com/ We also walked. One day the pedometer said 18000 steps. After meandering around the city we walked along the lakeside path from Millennium Park to Navy Pier in the cold and rain. We were pleased to reach our destination which warmed our bodies but offered little comfort to the soul. Navy Pier was full of uninspiring souvenirs and a food court serving the usual. The Art Institute Chicago is free from 5-8pm on Thursdays. We joined the queue 20 minutes early. Memorable pieces included a drawing by Cy Twombly, Bad Times by Philip Guston and one of Lee Bontecou’s complex canvas constructions. Completed the day soaking up the light from Chagall’s stained glass window. Highly recommended. http://www.artic.edu/aic/ Beer in Chicago was a big surprise. Local breweries are crafting beers with personality and names like Krankshaft, Fat Tire and Green Line. I would have tried more but at 5%+ I’m a bit of a light weight. The last day was spent at Art Chicago, the international fair of contemporary art. The range was enormous as Art Chicago shared the same floor as NEXT which represented emerging artists. The scale and range of work left us pleasantly exhausted.http://www.artchicago.com/


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Places we saw and things we did in Chicago: The Garfield Park Conservatory – built 100yrs before the Eden Project and an unexpected oasis just 10 mins on the green line from Down Town Chicago. (Me and Alison got our sketchbooks out)http://www.garfield-conservatory.org/ Arcade Fire In The Suburbs at the UIC Pavillion. Wow! Visually compelling and the music was quite good too.http://www.uicpavilion.com/ The Cultural Centre with its magnificent Tiffany Glass dome and amazing mozaics. Awesome. We visited a couple of times including on Monday during a recital. Millenium Park2 works of public art stole the show in Millenium Park – Anish Kapoor’s ‘bean’ and Crown Fountain by Jaume Plensa. Cloud Gate (the bean) is a huge masterpiece reflecting a moving salad of people and skyscape. It is pure genious reminding me of those crazy fairground mirrors bringing out the child in everyone from 1 – 100. It’s also refreshing to see digital public art on a 50ft scale in ‘Crown Fountain’ See http://explorechicago.org/city/en/millennium/art.html MCA on Tuesday is free and we spent a good part of the day there. Saw a major show by Jim Nutt, a Chicago based artist and someone I wasn’t familiar with. His work is totally bonkers and v engaging. The colours are delicious. I didn’t get to see the Turner prize 2010 so it was good to see Susan Phillipsz ‘We Shall Be All’ commissioned by the MCA. Haunting and thought provoking. http://www.mcachicago.org/index.php


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It’s always a bit tricky posting a blog retrospectively but I was without the internet for the last week and I was also being blown away by my experiences in Chicago. The real world was far more exciting than the virtual one. The 15ft x 8ft drawing inspired by the neighbourhood was finished on time. Alison and I didn’t plan the work but we did make decisions about the process. For instance we didn’t want a drawing of 2 halves so we decided to swap places every 30 minutes. We masked sections so they remained clean and sharp. Making the first marks was also less daunting. The process became more and more organic as the drawing developed. We used steps to get to the top and lay on the floor to work at the bottom. As we only had 27 inches between paper and window our friendship could have been compromised. However, there was no tension and we just got on with it – laughing, discussing and getting very mucky! A failed project might be difficult but losing a friend would have been tragic. The public responded positively with taps on the window and thumbs up. Three teenagers demanded to be drawn and Alison duly obliged. Pressure! Fortunately they were pleased with the result. I used plastic animals as reference to create anthropomorphic beings which also caused amusement. Mary Ellen is keen to involved the neighbourhood so this interaction was very welcome. The preview was great. We met artists, locals and Eduardo. Eduardo was so inspired by the drawing he decided to come to the PV – his first. He came on his own and stayed most of the evening. The next day we had to take down the work and install David and Sooky’s photos. A quite different exhibition but one which HMS could be proud of. Their exhibition was also listed in Chicago Reader :)


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