Monday, December 13, 2010
START HERE take down Jan 2011
START HERE is remaining open until Wednesday 26 January, we've had fantastic feedback about the work since it opened in September. Work will be ready for collection the week beginning Monday 31st January 2011, I'll be in touch to arrange collection times.
In the mean time, have a fantastic break and all the best for the New Year!
all best wishes,
Leanne
Friday, October 29, 2010
Tuesday, October 26, 2010
Thursday, October 7, 2010
Tomorrow evening and next year
Tomorrow starts at 6.30, Level 1, Sackler Centre (as if you didn't know already!) lookin' forward to seeing you all.
It seems a long way off but next year on the 18th and 19th of January the display will be taken down, this is to give you plenty of notice.
Let me know if you wish to:
1.) Collect your work on the 21st 24th or 25th of January
2.) Help the environment by recycling your work (we take it down and recycle here)
See you tomorrow,
Leanne
Monday, October 4, 2010
START HERE is...on display
Start Here is now open to the general public, manny thanks for all your efforts and finishing touches, it looks GORGEOUS!
A special thanks to Lucy Alexander for all her support at the CSM end and here's to future collaborations.
Look forward to seeing you on Friday,
Leanne x
Thursday, September 30, 2010
Tuesday, September 21, 2010
Brutalism Reformed - Images
Better Late Than Never....
Hi Everyone,
I've finally managed to sign in to the blog and work out how to do a posting, so whilst it's a bit late in the day, I thought that I'd post some background about my project and some images for your info. I'm having trouble formatting the posting, so here's the background and I will post the images separately.
The project was called "Brutalism Reformed - Escaping the Grey Box and the inspiration was Brutalist and modern architecture around Moorgate, London. I am fascinated by architecture but I also have a personal connection to the buildings that inspired my designs. Before starting this course I spent several years working in offices around Moorgate, working long hours and having little time to appreciate my surroundings. Since I escaped the office my personal perspective and appreciation of these buildings has changed completely and I see a link between the profound change and regeneration that I have experienced with the way this area of London has transformed and regenerated during the post war period and continues to do so in the 21st century, which is why I chose it as the subject for the project.
The V&A collection and study resources were crucial to my research, in particular the Architecture Gallery, the RIBA Architecture Study Rooms, the 20th Century Gallery and the online image database and videos made by the V&A on the V&A website, RIBA Pix and Vimeo respectively.
As well as the primary photographic research that I did in and around Moorgate, I initially visited the Architecture Gallery. Following that visit I was completely fascinated by the wooden models by Le Corbusier and Erno Goldfinger and the huge impact that the warm tactile wood had on my perception of the buildings/models. The models seemed to create something completely different to the end product concrete buildings and were both interesting and beautiful in their own right. It was at this point that I decided that the outcome of my project should utilise this concept of reinterpreting architectural forms using different colours and tactile materials.
Many people see the modern buildings around Moorgate as brutal, masculine, oppressive or perhaps bland and conformist. I hope that the strong colours and soft materials that I used for my designs offer an alternative view highlighting the beauty and intriguing aspects of the architecture and transform the perception of these city buildings from hard and grey to vibrant and tactile.
As part of my on going research I visited the RIBA Architecture Study Rooms. The folios provided me with access to detailed plans, but also provided personal insights in the architects through various doodles and sketches that were kept with the plans. It was fascinating to see the changing representation of architectural designs from the beautiful hand drawn designs and watercolour elevation drawings of the 1920’s through to the computer generated designs and fast marker pen sketches of the modern era. Each form gave me different ideas for shapes, patterns and use of colour.
When I look at the final outcome of my project I think that my V&A research influenced my outcomes in two ways, one conscious and one subconscious. I hope that the cushions and the felt wallpaper samples in particular express the idea of reinterpreting architectural forms using tactile materials and alternative colours and secondly, I can see the subconscious influence of the early 20th century printmakers and designers whose work I have soaked up during my many visits to the 20th Century Gallery.
Enjoy the exhibition!
Meg
Wednesday, September 15, 2010
More information about 'Hide and Seek'




I'm understanting we have limited space.
Kind regards,
Hiroko
Thursday, September 2, 2010
The Living Factory.
The one and a half minute animation shows a dark, gloomy world inhabited by emotionless androids, creepy dolls and weird mechanical creatures. It symbolically illustrates the complex relationship between man and machine and the profound changes set off by the Industrial Revolution. You can watch the video here
Tuesday, August 31, 2010
My turn...
Wednesday, August 25, 2010
'ad vitam aeternam'- Dina A

‘ad vitam aeternam’ is the result of my contemplation of the Classical sculptural tradition using the process of covering.
The video piece, a 13 minute process of forming a featureless anonymous portrait by covering a head with buttercream icing, is a direct response to the Baroque era busts of the likes of Charles I, Charles II and Cassandra Sirigatti at the V&A. It communicates with the commemorative tradition of the portrait bust, which is focused on capturing the likeness of the sitter, and the way in which this tradition fails as time erases likeness. The sitter himself is forgotten and the portrait becomes an example of portraiture. Much of my time was spent in the Dorothy and Michael Hintze Sculpture Galleries, where the two rows of busts formed a ‘walkway’ of portraiture examples rather than a celebration of the individual. In the same way my work is an anti-commemoration, as I create a generalised portrait.
The piece deconstructs the processes of this long-standing sculptural tradition. By using a deeply temporal material- buttercream icing- to cover, I echo the temporal properties of marble; a naturally heavy, brittle material that is liable to internal weakness and breakage, which I discovered during my research at the V&A. Thus the reason why such pieces survive is through careful preservation and restoration. Though a neo-classical tribute in aesthetic, my piece is even more temporal than marble; by the end of the covering process the icing starts to melt off the model’s face. In producing it in such a way I have understood the significance of the gallery or curator to prolong the life of the artwork by displaying it.
Though a video piece, displaying it as an object is important to me. I would ideally want to show two monitors on two tall plinths with the videos at different stages, perhaps positioned on two sides of the doorway, echoing the display of portrait busts in public places.
(Dina, Sculpture Pathway).
Saturday, August 21, 2010
RUINED
My final project was a menswear fashion collection concerned with the aesthetics of decay and social impact of dereliction. The starting point was a derelict mansion near my home in Scotland; abandoned for over twenty years it represents a forgotten era now lost to our modern society. The decaying interiors influenced my choice of colour and texture, while wider research into the plight of the British Country House introduced an historic perspective. I introduced a contemporary dynamic by exploring the issue of campaigning to save historic buildings, contributing to the poignantly smart yet distressed character of my collection.
Clay and metal lexicon (phrase 2)
Hi, I'm Robert Cervera from Sculpture and the piece I'm showing is the result of a project called 'Hard/soft: a dialogue'.
The dialogue I refer to is one between order and flow, inorganic and organic, system and chance. My interest, though, lies in the interplay and overlap between those terms, rather than in their opposition. Many exciting things happen to materials when they evolve from one state to another (wet to dry, fluid to rigid). And many more happen in the dynamics between a hard material (like metal) and a soft one (like clay). To summarise, I'd say my piece is about materiality and perception (our perception about the properties of things).

The V&A collections were a great resource to find examples of these concerns, particularly the Contemporary Ceramics collection at level 6. For example, Fernando Casasempere's spectacular Form (2004) showed me how the collapse of a regular clay body can bring the tension between form and anti-form to life.
The way I displayed the work changed during our final show. I decided to take it as an opportunity to experiment with the space and the way in which people interacted with my piece. More than a closed, final piece, I see my work as a vocabulary of clay and metal elements - hence its title, 'Clay and metal lexicon (phrase #)'.
My intention is to adapt my piece to each new displaying context (where each new display becomes a new phrase), so its disposition may change for this V&A show. I will work with the space available, using floor space to position the different elements.
Friday, August 6, 2010
Hide and Seek

I also investigated the correlation between environment and children's emotions. I found spatial elements influence children's feelings and imagination. I researched the main emotions, curiosity and fear, which link lightness and darkness, as this kind of contrast is very common in fairy tales and children's book. I also researched V&A exhibition 'Telling Tales' to create two patterns of this game set.





































