Tuesday 17 November 2009

PREVIEW: Henry Bruce, Experimentalist or Artist? Tuesday 24th November, 6-9pm





Henry Bruce.
Experimentist or Artist?

It is not that Henry Bruce does this because he sees himself as an 'Artist' of any particular sect, but that his natural curiosity and his attempts to deconstruct and re-design everything around him, in order to find more understanding for himself, makes him so.
He has a deep animalistic affiliation with nature, recognising its grandness, its imperfect perfection; and its antidote - the machine, technology and all its elements. His materials - metal and plastic jiving against wood and bone - describe the harsh and imposing feelings these represent, playing on their similarly natural origins and birthplace. Resurrecting bones, bought to life in sculpture, he questions the balance between life & death, love & hate, organic & manmade, growth & destruction. Henry Bruce is reaching to fathom such extremes of the spectrum to gain a deeper understanding of his own mortality and fantasy. His fetish to peep inside the workings of lust and evolution, nurture and damage, culminates in this body of heartfelt work.
His daily walk between the two beasts, nature and technology, impregnating one with the other, examining the destruction of nature to make it more aesthetically pleasing, more humanly palatable, is what Bruce kicks against. Once known as "the boy of few words", and not without his own inner battles, this work pinpoints just a few of the places his argumentative imagination has lead him.

Show to run: Wednesday 24th November - Sunday 13th December '09

Tuesday 20 October 2009

PREVIEW: Solo show of Sculpture by Daniel Sodhi-Miles,



A Solo show of Sculpture by Daniel Sodhi-Miles

Preview: Tuesday 3rd November '09, 6-9pm
Show lasts: Wednesday 4th November - Sunday 22nd November '09

Is a self taught carpenter and sculptor.

Daniels work is ever evolving, often beginning with simple primary forms and numbers and shifting gradually. His work is primarily concerned with love and the interconnections within his life to others. Many of the objects he creates appear calm and aesthetically pleasing, yet the processes used in their creation are often incredibly noisy, dusty and aggressive. Most of these pieces are born quite violently and very rapidly as the act of working upon them is an acute focus of intent upon the material gradually relenting to the final caress of finishing touches.
His work seems able to cross some of the supposed boundaries between art and craft as he tends to use many traditional and some may say obsolete skills and tools alongside computer aided design and manufacturing processes to create contemporary interventions and objects.

He lives and works in Cornwall.

www.danielsodhi-miles.co.uk

Tuesday 29 September 2009

PREVIEW: Recent Works by Rhonda Whitehead, Tues 13th October, 7-9pm


Recent Works by Rhonda Whitehead

Exhibition : Tuesday 13th October until Sunday 1st November 2009

Rhonda Whitehead is returning to London for her solo exhibition at the Muse at 269. She last exhibitited in London at the art fair in Islington in 2007.

All works included in the exhibition are from the last ten years, She now lives and works on the Norfolk, Suffolk borders. Since leaving London she has been professionally active having 6 solo exhibitions. Two at the Grapevine Gallery, Norwich reviewed enthusiastically by the critics Christopher Smith and Mary Rudd. Two at the AWD gallery Halesworth, Suffolk and two in Cambridge. One at Clare Hall Gallery and one at Kings Arts Centre. Her painting Venice Ochre won first prize at the
Byard Open exhibition in 2006 in Cambridge. She has also taken part in various mixed shows and open studios exhibitions.

Her preoccupation with colour and structure remain constant in recent works in oil on paper and oil on canvas, drawing a link between the forces in nature and the patterns of weathering and erosion on structures and buildings. In 'Italian city buildings', colours appear flattened onto the canvas revealing what is there ---- peeling surfaces, spidery scratchy writings in the paint ---- all executed with a generous freedom.

Open daily Wednesday to Sunday 12 noon -- 6pm or by appointment
‘The Muse’ at 269 Portobello Rd LondonW11 1LR
For more information email info@themuseat269.com
www. rhondawhitehead.com

Sunday 13 September 2009

Human Nature by Susan Eyre, Tues 22nd Sept - 10th Oct '09



Susan Eyre


‘Human Nature’

Private view: Tues 22nd September '09

Show runs: Wednesday 23rd September - 10th October 2009


Susan Eyre completed a BA in Textiles at Goldsmiths College, University of London in 2007. She lives and works in London and from the Ochre Print Studio, Guildford.



In her practice Eyre is interested in the search for the sublime within the man made environment.

Working with textiles, silk-screen print, digital print and a technique of cutting and heat fusing materials she creates both two and three dimensional pieces which combine and contrast natural and synthetic fabrics to echo themes within her work.



Eyre invites the viewer to look beyond the un-romanticised reality of urban life to discover an illusory world that is inauthentic yet familiar. Reflecting on personal and shared cultural influences she engages with fantasies of secret gardens, archetypal romantic scenes and ideas of paradise to construct her landscapes. Images absorbed from advertising media, film and fiction are regurgitated into her work exposing the collective vision of a perfect natural world as illusion. Ambiguously desirable these false landscapes acknowledge an urge to create a space that is a haven of beauty and harmony. Inspired by a prevalent nostalgia for a utopian idyll amid the fragmented and synthetic experience of nature, her work explores the gap where reality falls short of aspiration.

Monday 7 September 2009

Portobello Film Festival, Group Graffiti Show, Tues 8th Sept, 6-9pm




The Muse at 269 is very pleased to be collaborating with the Portobello Film Festival for the fifth consecutive year. This year we will be exhibiting the work of skilled and talented graffiti artists SEIZE, CODEFC, SNUG and SOLO alongside the MUTOID creations of JOE RUSH.

This show will run from 9th September to 20th September 2009 with a launch event on the evening of 8th September from 6pm to 9pm (bar open till 12pm)

Tuesday 4 August 2009

PREVIEW: 'Ephemeral Shoals' by Farrah Fortnam, 18th August, 6-9pm



Ephemeral Shoals by Farrah A. Fortnam

Farrah is intrigued and inspired by the movement of nature, particularly the sea; the vivid beauty of reefs and the dancing motion of their shoaling fish.

Her recent trip to Australia’s Great Barrier Reef made a lasting impression on her. Along with seeing the life, beauty and fragility of the reef islands, came the acknowledgment that, with warming and high sea levels, this ephemeral underworld may disappear in our lifetime. She wants to capture this transient beauty, just for a moment, in her paintings. For her, it will last forever.

Farrah’s Persian ethnicity has also had influence on her work, from rich, bright colours and intricate patterns in fabrics to Islamic calligraphic art. She also have a fascination with henna art (mehndi), a natural plant based dye that is used to decorate women’s hands and feet, mainly for wedding occasions.

Sunday 12 July 2009

PREVIEW: No average contents, Photographs by Andrew Brooke, Tuesday 28th July '09, 6.30-9.30pm


“No average contents” Photographs by Andrew Brooke.

An accidental collection of matchboxes that built itself. As objects that had passed through my life they evoke memories of experiences, some good and some bad, some happy and some sad. Each one is related to a person, a time and a place in my life, however brief or protracted, significant or insignificant. Behind each one there is a story. As certain as a match being struck burns, something happened.

When I started to photograph these matchboxes they took on a new sense to me. They opened doors in the imagination, no longer did they just evoke stories that depended on having been there; as memory blurred fact and fiction they became keys to stories for everyone to imagine or remember. Stories of no average contents. Did I really ever have dinner with Quentin Crisp?

________________________________________________________________

Andrew started his working life as a runner in TV commercials production, at first working with advertising photographer and commercials director Barney Edwards, a job that required technical proficiency and adept production skills. Via a long trip to Africa, short sprees in various jobs within TV commercials and a stint in New York, he found work at RSA Films in London as a Production Manager, where he met David Bailey. After two years Andrew moved to work independently of RSA Films as David Bailey’s producer for nearly five years before leaving to pursue his own course.

This decision led him eventually to film school in Paris, to explore a more creative path, breaking from production to work with both film and photography, as a cameraman, director and photographer.

He has traveled extensively and worked on documentaries, short films, feature films and commercials. He has taught at the International Film School in Paris and guest lectured at France’s premiere film and photography university, Louis Lumiere. In recent years his photographs have been sold through galleries, bought for private and corporate collections. He combines his personal photography with commissioned work, and filmmaking.

This is his first exhibition and more of his work can be seen at www.andrewbrooke.com

Show runs from Wednesday 29th July until August 16th '09.
The gallery is open daily Wednesday to Sunday 12noon to 6pm or by appointment

Friday 12 June 2009

PRIVATE VIEW: Artists in Residence - Cecilia Sandrini, Tuesday 30th June '09, 6-9pm





CECILIA SANDRINI INTERVIEW

Dan Richards: Last time I was here you were drawing in pencil. You had a whole line of books and you were drawing the spines and focusing in upon all the details - you were excited about that and said that people didn’t always see the graft in your art and that you worried about that sometimes so here you were, grafting with the minutiae of book spines in pencil - traditional media - because, somehow, to yourself or other people, wanted to prove a point.
Cecilia Magdelena Sandrini: Yeah.
DR: So how are the paintings of the big streamers on the roof going?
(We both laugh like drains for several minutes)
How’s that working out for you? I see that you’ve still got the linear lines, the verticals going on...
CMS: Well, that’s for - I’ve split the space into three areas:
At the beginning its quite traditional; lots of drawings, cityscapes. Pretty much - if I could draw it from the roof then its been drawn. I like the roof. Text and image in the corridor and then, at the back, I’ve got all the stuff to do with the ribbons, some projection and then that (gestures to the painted, beach hut-like lines of the streamers) is running across one of the walls - as an installation piece rather than an actual piece of work.
DR: What’s the distinction between ‘installation piece rather than an actual piece of work’?
CMS: In as much as I don’t think it exists on its own.
DR: Without the show?
CMS: Yes. It completes the show though I’m not sure I have strong opinions about the piece itself.
DR: Like a transient title or a brand - something to draw people in.
CMS: Yeah - although it will be at the back so no-one will see it unless they’re already in.
DR: Right.
(laughter - ho ho)
So. Streamers on the roof.
CMS: Well, they’re ribbons.
DR: Yes, well, you can call them what you like.
CMS: When I ordered them, I ordered ribbons.
DR: Could you have ordered streamers?
CMS: Not on the website I bought from but there were other websites.
DR: So... ribbons. Where did the idea for that come from?
(As I ask, the coloured strips rear up and wave like an octopus startled by a fan heater)
CMS: Sitting diagonally from Clive Anderson on a train.
DR: Right. Was he wearing a deck-chair suit?
CS: He was working and he made me feel like I should be working too so I got out my notebook and I started making notes and eventually, by the end of the journey, I had this. In my head... and in my notebook.
DR: So it was a case of - ‘Clive’s working! Do something! Draw lines, Jesus! Colour the bastards in! Anything! Dear God!!’ - and that’s how it happened?
CMS: No. I liked the freeform nature of the idea, the ambiguity.
DR: Its ambiguous, its colourful, quite jolly and joyous - it has certain connotations with the seaside and circus... some people might mistake the ribbons for streamers...
CMS: Yes! That is a possibility - it could happen! Its nice experimenting. Its good to hang it out on a Saturday - over the street - see the reaction of the people below.



DR: All the work in the show was made in the last six months, is that right?
CMS: Yes. I started on January the 6th. Although there is some old work downstairs in the studio, it was in the last show, and it won’t be in this show. Everything happened in the last six months... mostly in the last three (clearly sensing chastisement in my quizzical look) I was experimenting! I experiment a lot... I had some wire and some paper... it was like Blue Peter down there.
DR: ‘Something I made earlier’ – that’s the title.
CMS: That is a really good name! (Wistfully) I could have made badges, Ahhh.
DR: How has living in the Big Smoke affected the work you’ve made? How has it changed and progressed since the Norwich Judge Me stuff?
CMS: The three themes of the show are the same as I’ve always worked with - I’ve always been interested in architectural work although perhaps that has evolved in a more illustrative direction whilst here; text and image - less computers this time, mainly been bashed out on a typewriter and with a pen... I like typewriters. I like the way that every time you write something it looks slightly different... seven different attempts and copies that get so far and then falter because I’ve put a 6 where an O should be. Although frustrating at the time, it is quite nice not having a delete button.
DR: Have you kept all those mis-spelt copies?
CMS: Yeah. Really, in regards to my hoarding, that’s the kind of stuff I should throw away but its being kept for the moment; the problem is, if its flat, its very easy to keep hold of. If it’s box-shaped, easier to throw - you can’t just stick it in a folder.
DR: What’s your work ethic like?
CMS: Get up. Have a coffee and a cigarette - start work.
DR: Are you goal orientated or more trenchant than that?
CMS: For small projects such as drawing, the plan will be to be done by the end of the day. If its a bigger thing lie the pencil work then, well, the limit I gave myself for that was seven days. For this ribbon wall painting the limit is five days.
Also, with the ribbons, I’ve had to wait for a sunny, windy day - which is...
DR: A wait.
CMS: Yeah. I’ve had sunny days... I’ve had windy days
DR: I’ve had days...
CMS: But a lot of them have been useless. Every time I work or do something outside I always say ‘Never again’ then end up doing something else outside - always weather-dependent...
DR: Never work with children or animals outside... or streamers.
CMS: I quite like being outside. That’s probably it; and I work a lot. Not all of it is successful but it’s the process - the learning curve.
DR: I wanted to talk to you about this idea of progression.
CMS: There are definitely themes running through my work - from and since art school:
Play - installations, interventions, performance, breaking down the third wall and moving outside. Also, apart from Judge Me, my work is usually quite colourful. Judge Me was daylight white but the reflections leant it different colours. Architecture and Text & Image. That’s the show, really - they’re the things I keep getting drawn back to.
DR: How do you define architecture? Is it the linear lines again, the structure?
CMS: The thing with architecture - now its drawings but it used to be photographs - interesting angles, mixtures and juxtapositions, noting styles and details that I’m not used to seeing on a daily basis. For this exhibition I’ve been drawing.
DR: From the roof?
CMS: They’re all from the roof.
DR: Did you see that as a way of tying the work in to the location and geography of your residency?
CMS: Partly, but also the convenience of being able to draw - to be able to go to the toilet without having to pack everything up, to be able to have a cup of coffee…

Friday 22 May 2009

PREVIEW: Alice Hall, Artist in Residence - Solo Show, Tues 9th '09, 6.30pm to 10pm



ALICE HALL
Paintings
Artist in Residence - Solo Show
10th - 28th June 2009
Wednesday to Sunday
12 noon - 10pm

PRIVATE VIEW
Tues 9th June
6.30pm to 10pm

London has been Alice's main inspiration during the past two years, and particularly during the period at The Muse. Through working in situ she aims to optimise the atmospheric outcome, aspiring to capture the fleeting light and seasonal change of the distinctive London scenes.

Her enthusiasm for painting in oils, and their buttery qualities, mean she is not afraid to exploit the contrasting lean and impasto qualities of paint.

In her drawings from which she derives much enjoyment and satisfaction, she aims to reduce her quotidian surroundings to a spare and selective commentary

Friday 15 May 2009

PREVIEW and LIVE EVENT: RECYCLED, 2nd June '09, 6-9pm, SPLODGE ELECTRONICA (LIVE MUSIC), 7th June '09, 11am-11pm


RECYCLED
The Muse is pleased to present a show of images and sound opening on the 2nd June as part of a collaboration between Damian Rayne (visuals) and Martin A. Smith (sound/projection). For the week of the 2nd we will present a projection installation with sound in the studio leading to a full day of music on Sunday the 7th.

The rest....

'The Muse at 269 & Drawing room events'
present....

SPLODGE ELECTRONICA
Experimental and Ambient
Live music at The Muse
On Sunday June 7th
(free session) 11am-6pm

Picture this....it's a dreary Sunday morning and echoes of Saturday night are seeping from every pore. All you want is a comfy sofa, a decent fry up and a box set of The Wire. Instead, we offer a decent fry up, a comfy cushion and a set of boxed wires producing the latest in ambient and soothing sound frequencies.

Please join us at any stage of the day to relax, surrounded by three projections of cosmic imagery provided by 'Recycled', whilst sipping a bloody mary or freshly squeezed orange juice...whatever your state of mind requires.

Performing experimental and ambient live music will be:

Tim Hooper

Kailas Elmer

Bridge Fazio

Martin A. Smith

Then...

'LOOSHE LOUNGE SOCIETY'
presents:
Supper jazz party from 7:30 - live music with supper included. £12 on the door



The Drawing Room offers Sunday lunch for £9 including a glass of wine. Marvellous cocktails and standard brunch a la carte served all day.

Friday 8 May 2009

Jin Han Lee, Tues 12th May, 6-9pm



Private View: Jin Han Lee
Beyond and Within
PREVIEW:

Tuesday 12th May 2009, 6-9pm

EXHIBITION:

13th May to Sunday 31st May 2009
Open Wednesday to Sunday 12pm-5pm, with restaurant open until 11pm

Entry Free



Jin Han Lee
The broad explanation of Jin Han Lee’s practice is awkward and strange relationship between layers by using masking tape. Tension and spontaneity are repeated between sharp images and layers. By using “masking,” Lee is making something, which is not a picture in a picture. The method is to paint over masking tape, then, remove the tape so the masking is a drawing. The act of painting is not just putting the colour on, but the taking off of the masking, to cut through that colour.


Also, Lee made viewers not be able to assume the order of each layers, and this leads unexpected tension/ spontaneity. By doing so, her painting is deliberately confusing. Her painting spans from past to present. This is ‘a’ past, ‘a’ past representing ‘the’ past. Viewers are able to see the subject and each element of painting is emerged to each other but recognizable individually. This is ‘ a’ painting representing ‘the paintings.



Jin Han Lee’s private activity beyond the surface of the painting is open to public view by leaving traces from repeated accumulating layers. Full exposure of her intimate activities to public view dramatically reinforced intimacy. It is back to front, beyond to within.

Wednesday 22 April 2009

PREVIEW: Fragment by Jane Grisewood, Tues 28th April, 6-9pm



Private View: Fragment by Jane Grisewood
PREVIEW:

Tuesday 28th April 2009, 6-9pm

EXHIBITION:

Wednesday 29th April to Sunday13th May 2009
Open Wednesday to Sunday 12pm-6pm, with restaurant open until 11pm
Entry Free



JANE GRISEWOOD

Jane Grisewood is a New Zealand-born artist and part-time lecturer based in London. She worked for many years in book publishing before returning to university to study fine art. After graduating with first class honours, she then gained her Masters in 2002 at Central Saint Martins, University of the Arts London. She is currently completing a practice-based PhD exploring the line and the process of drawing at UAL where she also teaches experimental drawing, alongside running workshops in East Anglia and London.

Jane has been short-listed for The Observer Student Artist Competition and received several awards, including two from the Arts Council. Among a wide range of exhibitions is Edge at the Jerwood Space, Aftermath at Ensign Gallery in London, Marking Time at Firstsite in Colchester and a collaborative live performance drawing, Line Dialogue, at the 2008 Liverpool Biennial. Residencies include the Artist Space at Firstsite and The Centre for Drawing in Wimbledon.

Grisewood’s work explores themes of time and transience, place and memory through works on paper and canvas, photography, performance and writing. Overlaps and drifts between these different media and the use of repetitive processes form a link between the act of making, retracing memory and recording movement. Drawing is the key activity in her work, and the ‘line’ is a consistent subject throughout her practice, providing a way of marking a temporal presence, while also tracing its passing. For her the line is a fluid and multi-layered means of recording – a journey – a process of moving ‘between’.

Recent work marks time and presence through live performance drawing, exploring notions of movement and repetition, mark-making and temporality.


The ‘Marking Time’ series…beyond the process-driven undertaking, these works offer a beautiful abstract landscape of sorts, a geological mapping of a moment.

… she investigates the in-between spaces, recording through drawings, notes or photographs interventions that capture a moment in time whilst simultaneously tracing its passing.

Katharine Stout
Curator Tate Britain and Associate Director of The Drawing Room, London.

www.janegrisewood.com

Monday 6 April 2009

PRIVATE VIEW: Holly Pereira,'Same, Same but Different', Tuesday 7th April, 6-9pm



Holly Pereira’s work investigates how we create, perceive and maintain identities; cultural, racial and familial. Pereira explores her Singaporean heritage through the lens of half- ang mo (or white Westerner) while investigating notions of female stereotypes, roles and characters, and in particular that of the Asian woman.

She is fascinated by the weird, the unusual, and the bizarre. Taking references from German fairy tales, Kung Fu films and the popular press, she creates images that are both disarming and slightly disturbing.

This current collection of work is the result of a three month residency in the Post-Museum in Singapore. The title “Same Same but Different” refers to a South-East Asian maxim of how cultural differences and divides do exist, but essentially we are all humans; we are all the same.

Friday 20 March 2009

PRIVATE VIEW: URBAN SCRAWL, Tuesday 24th March 2009, 7.30pm



PREVIEW:

Tuesday 24th March 2009, 7.30pm

EXHIBITION:

Wednesday 25th March to Sunday 5th April 2009
Open Wednesday to Sunday 12pm-6pm, with restaurant open until 11pm
Entry Free

URBAN SCRAWL

From the promoters of Upfest, we present Urban Scrawl, a diverse mix of urban artists from across the UK, displaying new bodies of work in Portobello's one and only Muse Gallery at 269.
Featuring:

Agent Provocateur
Andy Council
Avian Security
Dan Kitchener
FarkFk
Nik Ill
Myne
Spqr and the long awaited new print releases from Levi C and Snik.

Upfest was born not to long ago at the beginning of the summer following the Cans Festival in London and inspired bythe SuperCans event in Southampton. It began in Bristol, which has always been intrinsically linked with the Urban Art Scene, being the home of Graffiti’s leading proponent, Banksy.

Opening night includes live street painting and music from London's notorious DJ Benedict Smith. Come along with an open mind - this is going to be one of this year's shows that you won't want to miss.

Tuesday 3 March 2009

PRIVATE VIEW: STILL HERE, Artists in Residence Retrospective 2009, Tues 10th March '09, 6.30-9pm


PRIVATE VIEW:
STILL HERE, Artists in Residence Retrospective 2009, Group Show, Tuesday 10th March '09, 6.30-9pm

DATE:Tuesday 10th March 2009, 6.30-9pm

EXHIBITION: Wednesday 11th March to Sunday 22nd March 2009
Open Wednesday to Sunday 12pm-6pm, with restaurant open until 11pm
Entry Free

The Muse at 269, 269 Portobello Road, W11 1LR
Nearest Tube: Ladbroke Grove, Bus: 52,23,7,70

The Muse at 269 are pleased to welcome back those artists who have exhibited with us over the last few years. We look forward to meeting up with them again and seeing how their work has developed since we last saw them. Here is also another chance to have a look at the work of our current artists in residence.

Artists who will be showing include:

Evy Jokhova, Masaki Yada, Corinne Charton, Cinnamon Heathcote Drury, Rose O'Gallivan, Cecilia Sandrini, Alice Hall, Anne Windsor, Patricio Bosich

Monday 23 February 2009

PRIVATE VIEW: PRIVATE VIEW: Vivian Zarvis, 24th February '09, 6-9pm

Vivian Zarvis
"Carousel" - Paintings & prints

PRIVATE VIEW: Tuesday 24th February, 2009. 6.00 - 9.00pm

Wednesday 25 February - Sunday 8th March, 2009.
Open 12.00pm – 6.00pm Wednesdays to Saturdays.
Entry Free.

The Muse at 269, 269 Portobello Road, W11 1LR
Nearest Tube: Ladbroke Grove, Bus: 52,23,7,70

Vivian Zarvis is an American in London, whose advance figrative work is motivated first by color. Color and Vivian's strong visual sense of her own personal history to the present, is well represented in this mixed exhibition of painting and prints .

Vivian works and lives in Portobello and has found inspiration within the small urban artist village of Portobello, breathing life into the sprawling great city of London, personalities is an everyday event. The Friday Market is particularly fun, teeming with inspirational and individual people and life.

Vivian believes science and art must go hand in hand for balance in ones life.


Note to Editors:
A dynamic place where collaborations with the community, private corporations and artists flourish, The Muse at 269 continues to pursue its goal to be the local artistic hub of West London

Saturday 31 January 2009

PREVIEW: Djinnesque by Tony Ellwood, Tuesday 3rd Feb 2008. 6.00 - 9.00pm

| The Muse at 269 | | www.themuseat269.com |


Djinnesque – Tony Ellwood


Tuesday 3rd February, 2009. 6.00 - 9.00pm

Wednesday 4th February - Sunday 22nd February, 2009
Open 12.00pm – 6.00pm Wednesdays to Saturdays.
Entry Free.

The Muse at 269, 269 Portobello Road, W11 1LR
Nearest Tube: Ladbroke Grove, Bus: 52,23,7,70

Djinnesque is a reference to the Genie or Djinn, a fiery supernatural creature of several mythologies both western and Arabic. These creatures have many interpretations from protective forces to demonic ones seeking to encourage the human to dabble in their dark side or make wishes- generally based on ego driven desires that once granted, prove to be less than desirable. Leading to the phrase" Be careful what you wish for you just might get it" Genies tricked humans by giving very literal and sometimes randomly placed fulfillment of their wishes. Such as granting someone power and leadership, only to find they have been made a powerful leader who is loathed and dies badly and alone. Not so desirable. Or being granted life eternal, only to realize the burden of time, that real eternity can be. The genies could shape change and be beautiful women who would lead you astray, while seeming to be everything you ever wanted. Prompting the allusion to the dangers of a beautiful woman.


As protective forces genies were created by the gods to handle the day to day woes of humanity, thus freeing the gods for bigger challenges. So a genie could shape change, reside in small spaces and turn into something that could assist its master to handle battle or negative opposing forces of any kind; thus protecting the master from having to go it all alone.

In these images Anthony Ellwood wanted to explore the multi-faceted aspect of the feminine and show many of her faces and guises, both appealing and confusing; at times extreme and perhaps even otherworldly. By leaving the viewer unsure of the intentions of these creatures, that Djinnesque quality is assured. Here anything could happen!





Note to Editors:
A dynamic place where collaborations with the community, private corporations and artists flourish, The Muse at 269 continues to pursue its goal to be the local artistic hub of West London

Information:

The Muse at 269 Portobello Road, London, W11 1LR
Tel: 0207 792 8588
Damian Rayne: damian@themuseat269.fsnet.co.uk
Katie Heller: katie@themuseat269.com
Anne Windsor: anne@annewindsor.co.uk
www.themuseat269.com.



The Muse at 269 Portobello Road, London, W11 1LR T: 0207 792 8588 info@themuseat269.com


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Monday 5 January 2009

PRIVATE VIEW: Artists in Residence - Alice Hall and Cecilia Sandrini, Tuesday 13th January '09, 6-9pm

Artists in Residence -
Alice Hall and Cecilia Sandrini
           
Tuesday 13th January, 2009. 6.00 - 9.00pm

Wednesday 14th January - Sunday 1st February, 2008
Open 12.00pm – 6.00pm Wednesdays to Saturdays.
Entry Free.

The Muse at 269, 269 Portobello Road, W11 1LR
Nearest Tube: Ladbroke Grove, Bus: 52,23,7,70

The Muse are pleased to invite you view the work of their new artists in residence. We look forward to watching their styles develop over the next eight months and welcome you to the gallery to come and see the changes yourself.
Cecilia Sandrini is a reactionary artist, focusing her attentions on communicating her worried message. Trained in sculpture, influenced by advertising and graphic design, interested in politics and protest art, her work currently has two distinct modes of production. Some works have been sophisticated commercial fabrications that display and allow prolonged thought over text (Judge Me 2008) whilst others are simply written in paint or pen directly and instantaneously onto a surface (Leave your weapons 2008). Sandrini considers that the work is not meant to be viewed as a conclusion, just a starting point for debate, for conversation.
Sandrini presents work and documentation created predominately during the last half of 2008 before she begins the first half of 2009 and her residency at Muse at 269 Portobello Road.