Category Archives: United Kingdom

Introducing some of the artists

I am excited to kick off our new Heat Exchange 2 project and look forward to the sharing of ideas, the dialogue and the feedback from you all. It is fantastic to create this dialogue amongst artists, who are located all over the globe, sharing a passion for this wonderful medium of enamel.

Elizabeth and I thought of beginning the conversation by introducing ourselves and some of the artists, who we visited or worked with in the last couple of months.

Beate and Elizabeth in Beate's workshop on the Gower
Beate and Elizabeth in Beate’s workshop on the Gower
Elizabeth working in her workshop in Bristol.
Elizabeth working in her workshop in Bristol.
Elizabeth Turrell and Beate Gegenwart
Elizabeth Turrell and Beate Gegenwart planning Heat Exchange 2

 

Beate visiting Christine Graf in her workshop in Munich during Schmuck.
Beate visiting Christine Graf in her workshop in Munich during Schmuck.

 

Christine Graf in her workshop.
Christine Graf in her workshop.

 

Jessica Turrell and Christine Graf at Christine's exhibition at Schmuck in Munich.
Jessica Turrell and Christine Graf at Christine’s exhibition at Schmuck in Munich.

 

Beate visiting Catherine Fairgrieve in her workshop at Coleg Sir Gar.
Beate visiting Catherine Fairgrieve in her workshop at Coleg Sir Gar.

 

Elizabeth and Kirsten Haydon in the workshop at RMIT in Melbourne.
Elizabeth and Kirsten Haydon in the workshop at RMIT in Melbourne.

 

Gudrun Wiesmann working in the Kuenstlerwerkstaetten in Erfurt.
Gudrun Wiesmann working in the Kuenstlerwerkstaetten in Erfurt.

 

I am looking forward very much to this new project. I have just completed a 3D Printing residency at Cardiff Metropolitan University, which was very exciting and might lead to new opportunities. I will talk about this in my next blog.

Beate Gegenwart

Beate Gegenwart is an enamelist and educator originally from Germany who lives and works in Wales, UK. Her studio is located on the beautiful Gower peninsular and she is a Honorary Research Fellow at Swansea School of Art (University of Wales Trinity Saint David). Her large enamel works exhibit an expressive interplay between polished stainless steel and fields of delicately applied and inscribed enamel. She is currently supported by a major production grant from the Arts Council of Wales.

Finally ready and installed by Beate

Before thinking about a ‘Heat Exchange 2’, I thought I would like to add some close ups of what happened to the ‘Companions’ to the Blog.

 

One of the ‘Companions’, which at this stage is fired with the grip coat only. The stainless steel blackens in the kiln. The next layer is a ‘sieving layer’ of small motifs. This is followed by a layer of wet process white enamel.

 

This is the same piece after finishing.

The blackened stainless steel is polished back to a silver surface. The enamel areas are gently abraded to reveal the motifs and sgraffito marks. The laser engraving is the final layer to complete the ‘story’.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Hanging the 9 ‘Companions’.

 

 

 

 

 

Beate Gegenwart

Beate Gegenwart is an enamelist and educator originally from Germany who lives and works in Wales, UK. Her studio is located on the beautiful Gower peninsular and she is a Honorary Research Fellow at Swansea School of Art (University of Wales Trinity Saint David). Her large enamel works exhibit an expressive interplay between polished stainless steel and fields of delicately applied and inscribed enamel. She is currently supported by a major production grant from the Arts Council of Wales.

Enamel meets Aerospace: Heat Exchangers Numbers 1-6

 

 

Heat Exchangers No. 1 – 6   2012

Copper, Bronze, Silver, Stainless Steel,

Enamel and Diamond Dust

 

 

 

 

 

Stephen Bottomley

Stephen Bottomley trained at the Royal College of Art (1999-2001) having also studied at West Surrey College of Art and Design and the University of Brighton, with a key period working within Rhode Island School of Designs’ metal programme (USA 1998). Stephen established his first studio in 1990 in Brighton with a Prince’s Trust Grant, exhibiting his work regularly in exhibitions and at outlets like Electrum Gallery and Dazzle. He started regular associate lecturing work around the South East coast in 1992. After twelve years lecturing and leading several courses at Hasting College of Art, with the University of Brighton, he relocated to Sheffield in 2004. Between 2004-2007 Stephen divides his time between his jewellery studio and his close involvement with both academic life and the jewellery industry, being both course leader for Metalwork and Jewellery at Sheffield Hallam University and also the fourth Chairman of the ‘Association for Contemporary Jewellery’ (ACJ). Between 2007 and afour year project researching the patterns and textiles at the Fortuny Museum, Venice and a solo shows in Venice and back at Hove Museum and Art gallery in 2008, he relocated to Scotland taking the post of Head of Jewellery and Silversmithing at Edinburgh College of Art (eca). In 2011 eca become part of the world class University of Edinburgh. Jewellery is represented by the Crafts Council and held in collections by the British Museum, Royal College of Art and the South East Arts Crafts.

Surface & Substance

Surface & Substance International Contemporary Enamel Jewellery exhibition curated by Jessica Turrell – Ruthin Craft Centre  Denbighshire, Wales. 19 November 2011 – 15 January 2012

Brooches – Elizabeth Turrell

These wearable pieces are forms of an in-memoriam marker, a silent message that may elicit a feeling of melancholia or disquiet. I hope they may encourage conversation. In the pieces that use image and text – there is more than you see – parts are hidden.

Materials and process are a significant part in the thinking and making of this work – that chemical bond of glass on metal. It is the inherent qualities of this material that attracts me at a sensory and aesthetic level.

Using thin white pre-enamelled steel – a functional factory produced material – gives me a bland surface with none of the usual preciousness associated with enamelled jewellery. I am entranced by the different qualities obtainable by piercing and altering the white surface to reveal the qualities of the steel substrate. I like the limitation set by this single material.

These pieces are an attempt to transform and extend the traditional concept of vitreous enamel on metal: the glassy, the decorative, and the perfect surface. This material seemed best suited to express and clarify my intentions.

 

A lot of drawing

Just like you, Melissa, I have been fascinated by the black ‘halo’ surrounding liquid enamel on steel and many pieces have been built around it, polishing the surrounding steel back to a silver surface. It is so very frustrating though that sometimes the ‘halo’ is beautiful and jet black, at other times thin and frayed. My theory is that it depends on the particular batch of steel, the iron content, how it is rolled etc. (And of course, how I feel when I work and apply the enamel)

The below is an example of a piece from ‘Playing with Fire’, perfect edge.

 

 

 

 

 

I have never been able to achieve the same, although I am trying to embrace the serendipity of the kiln and the material. The results for Drawing, Permanence and Place were rather different.

And a close-up:

Any advice would be great.

 

 

 

 

I have begun drawing, drawing, drawing. First on paper, then in Illustrator. I have been looking through my photographs from the arcades in Paris, still loving the strange netting on the roofs and curved ceiling lights.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

I am ‘circling’ around many ideas; at the moment I am thinking of an installation of many multiples. I will write more about the concepts underlying the work in a future blog, for now I would like to give a brief visual flavour of what i am thinking.

Here are my first experiments, in paper:

 

 

 

 

 

 

and water jet cut in pre-enamelled steel. They will change quality once they are ‘properly’ enamelled.

 

 

 

Beate Gegenwart

Beate Gegenwart is an enamelist and educator originally from Germany who lives and works in Wales, UK. Her studio is located on the beautiful Gower peninsular and she is a Honorary Research Fellow at Swansea School of Art (University of Wales Trinity Saint David). Her large enamel works exhibit an expressive interplay between polished stainless steel and fields of delicately applied and inscribed enamel. She is currently supported by a major production grant from the Arts Council of Wales.

the new recruit..

Hello fellow exchangers,

Fashionably late to the party, but great to be here!

Enamelling in Bristol, 2006

My name is Stephen Bottomley and I live and work in Scotland. I teach at Edinburgh College of Art www.eca.ac.uk in the Jewellery and Silversmithing department and enamelling is an important part of my practice.

 

First introduced to enamel back in 1988 at Farnham College by Jane Short, I was immediately fascinated by the material and process and have increasingly integrated it into my work over the past two decades. I began to approach enamel with less ‘awe’ and more ‘bravery’ through teaching it at art school a few years later. Teaching is always a two-way experience and my enamel came to be influenced by many of the highly skilled ceramicists I worked with on the multi-disciplinary course in Hastings I worked at for 13 years.

Time spent working in Bristol with Elizabeth and artists visiting her and Jessica between 2006-10 was an incredibly valuable time. Sharing god practice and ideas was so very important then, so I suppose this is a chance to try it in a different media on line now.

A couple of moves up the UK since then I am now living happily in Edinburgh and enjoying the challenge of a busy department, the inspiring company of inquisitive students and the company of fellow makers (like Elizabeth and Jessica Turrel and last year Mellissa) who visit us and share their skill and knowledge so generously. Together we all work and play and along the way build a culture to contribute to contemporary enamel and this very special art form.

 

Last week I travelled to Ruthin, in Wales to see the ‘Surface and Substance’  exhibition devised and organised by Jessica Turrell. It is a real gem of a show! I’ll post some images and text next.

I am really looking forward to being part of the Heat Exchange and have already learnt interesting things from the blogs I have read so far and about your special interests.

Flame on!

Stephen Bottomley

Stephen Bottomley trained at the Royal College of Art (1999-2001) having also studied at West Surrey College of Art and Design and the University of Brighton, with a key period working within Rhode Island School of Designs’ metal programme (USA 1998). Stephen established his first studio in 1990 in Brighton with a Prince’s Trust Grant, exhibiting his work regularly in exhibitions and at outlets like Electrum Gallery and Dazzle. He started regular associate lecturing work around the South East coast in 1992. After twelve years lecturing and leading several courses at Hasting College of Art, with the University of Brighton, he relocated to Sheffield in 2004. Between 2004-2007 Stephen divides his time between his jewellery studio and his close involvement with both academic life and the jewellery industry, being both course leader for Metalwork and Jewellery at Sheffield Hallam University and also the fourth Chairman of the ‘Association for Contemporary Jewellery’ (ACJ). Between 2007 and afour year project researching the patterns and textiles at the Fortuny Museum, Venice and a solo shows in Venice and back at Hove Museum and Art gallery in 2008, he relocated to Scotland taking the post of Head of Jewellery and Silversmithing at Edinburgh College of Art (eca). In 2011 eca become part of the world class University of Edinburgh. Jewellery is represented by the Crafts Council and held in collections by the British Museum, Royal College of Art and the South East Arts Crafts.

MA Degree Show Work

Hello fellow exchangers!  My name is Kirsty and I graduated from Edinburgh College of Art with an MA in 2010.  I am interested in the contrast between the indeterminate results of patina and the controlled process of workmanship.  My work focuses on transient beauty and impermanence; combining shards of decay with contemporary structure.  Here are some images of my degree show work:

An organised messIntrigued by the effects of time and decay, especially places and objects that have fallen into a state of disrepair I explore this condition of neglect in enamel, playing with both control and unpredictability. The resulting work is unpredictable and unexpected; a product of a process deliberately out of my control. Undetermined paintings of rust-coloured patterns, created by nature and left to chance, are trapped within liner frameworks. By isolating sections of a surface, much like the viewfinder of a camera, or the framing and judgement of the photographer, the viewer is compelled to focus on the unusual natural beauty framed within.

This collection of jewellery focuses on the beauty of surface decay and the resulting work appears as a series of snapshots of surfaces frozen in time.

Kirsty Sumerling

featured in our first Heat Exchange exhibition in 2012.

Recent work and a snapshot of my workshop

The pieces above were created for two exhibitions in August 2011:  ‘Momentum’ in Craft in the Bay, Cardiff, which brought together a very interesting group of artists who all use digital technologies at some point in the creation of their work. All also shared a passion for the ‘hand-made’ and the beauty of the artefact. For this exhibition I focused on the laser, aiming to create works of ever increasing intricacy. The other exhibition ‘Drawing, Permanence and Place’ was exhibited at the Kunstverein Coburg in Germany. The main focus was on drawing adding permanence with the richness of vitreous enamel. It was a wonderful exhibition with an exciting breadth of works by very varied artists. I am sure there will be more from Elizabeth Turrell and Jessica Turrell who also took part. Two catalogues accompanied the exhibitions with major essays and statements by the artists. Should anybody like to see all the images and texts, please e-mail me and I can send you a PDF. Here I concentrated on drawing in relation to the water jet cutter.

Questions relating to place, location and by extension dislocation and movement, are a continuous focus in my work. I am interested in the space ‘in-between’, speaking of distance, borderland and a positioning of identity. Language occupies an important part in this inquiry, the idea of the ‘translator’ and the use of the ‘mother tongue’ as orientation, home and dwelling rather than physical location.

It is the fragmentary nature of a nomadic existence that underlies much of my work, the fragile theoretical armature by which all kinds of personal narratives and pictorial elements are joined together from many sources, written and visual as well as from direct observations.

Both recent exhibitions took as their starting point Walter Benjamin’s writing and, in particular, the ‘Arcades Project’. For Benjamin the Paris arcades represented one of the fundamental early examples of the continuous interpenetration of inner and outer space. It is this simultaneity of outside and inside, past and present, found elements and texts that inspired my wish to research his writing. I spent some time in Paris walking, observing, photographing, sketching and generally gathering visual imagery.

There is still much to do and to discover. I am thinking of naming my project for Phoenix ‘Heat Mapping’, further exploring Walter Benjamin, but also working more with the laser and engraving the enamel after firing and stoning, taking further my experiments such as in the image below.

Finally, an image of me sitting in front of my ‘pin wall’. I cut everything in paper first before committing to the laser or water jet.

And my workshop

 

 

Beate Gegenwart

Beate Gegenwart is an enamelist and educator originally from Germany who lives and works in Wales, UK. Her studio is located on the beautiful Gower peninsular and she is a Honorary Research Fellow at Swansea School of Art (University of Wales Trinity Saint David). Her large enamel works exhibit an expressive interplay between polished stainless steel and fields of delicately applied and inscribed enamel. She is currently supported by a major production grant from the Arts Council of Wales.

Introducing…

We’d like to introduce the artists participating in Heat Exchange. Below is an image of each of their works.

Elizabeth Turrell - United Kingdom
Beate Gegenwart - United Kingdom/Germany
Melissa Cameron - Australia
Jessica Turrell - United Kingdom
Kathleen Browne - United States
Inari Kiuru - Australia/Finland
Gretchen Goss - United States
Christine Graf - Germany
Astrid Keller - Germany
Kirsten Haydon - Australia
Young-I Kim - Germany
Agnes von Rimscha - Germany
Naoko Inuzuka - Australia/Japan
Barbara Ryman - Australia
Katrina Tyler - Australia

Melissa Cameron

Melissa is a jewellery artist from Australia living in Seattle in the US. Her works can be found in the National Gallery of Australia as well as the Cheongju City Collection in South Korea. Her enamel works typically display subtle enamel incursions amidst precise laser cut stainless steel layers.