
Edge of Mon / Ymyl Mon
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Archive
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Venue:
Oriel Ynys Mon Gallery -
From:
July 05, 2008 -
To:
August 10, 2008 -
Location:
Wales
Bonington Building, Nottingham Trent University, Nottingham
7 – 12 June 2008
With less than two weeks to go before we launch our show, it has been a hectic time of making work and making decisions about the look, publicity and logistics of the event. We met with our technician a few […]
Opening night went well. I'd never been to an opening night before, and it was really busy. I managed to hear the prizes announced, and I went to see a couple of people's work, but didn't get round much more […]
June Post I decided to write a final post here. I think the blog has run its course. Continuing to write here might turn a bit counter productive now I've moved away from the intentions that I started with. I […]
Not a lot to tell this week, I seem to be in the middle ground, I have done the prep I have got works started and I just need to get on with them. I have to resist the temptation […]
Through an uncomfortable series of emails with the same institutions that I had earlier had difficulties with, I ended up interviewing the Leicester Council of Faiths in a meeting room in the New Walk Museum. My reasoning for this was […]
You know that feeling you have when you just 'can't put your finger on it'? I'm really enjoying that feeling today.
The degree show has been and gone and we are packing up and evacuating the studio. Trois Elementos are in full swing at the moment, making new work, well mulling it over anyway and organising a show, coming soon to […]
It has been an interesting few days; some bits very good and other bits that make me feel I should review the direction that things are moving in. What has been good? I have enjoyed the opportunity afforded by clearing […]
Spent the day in the studio fiddling with slide viewers , tracing photographs and filming my celestial machine, actually a bit of wood with some holes drilled in it. I'm supposed to be going to the Whitstable Bienniale tomorrow but […]
The continual shaving of UK arts budgets, cuts in mainstream grants programmes linked with escalating overheads and news of an ever-deepening economic downturn arent good news for visual artists who depend largely on winning freelance contracts and getting good responses to their project proposals.