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Legacy Wall Update
A while ago, I posted about this project : Olympic Legacy Wall that I am doing with Kirk Hallam Community Technology and Science College.Last time I posted, I was about to go into school and work with the Year 10 GCSE art students to make the clay tiles which we were then taking plaster casts off which will become stamps. Like a silly person, I didn’t take any photographs that day (I was generally up to my eyeballs in clay or plaster, so I didn’t want to get my iPhone all dirty – well any more so than usual!).Thankfully, hopefully there will be some images later on to show you. Just before I started the project, I met a local photographer, Deborah Selwood of Gecko Studios Photography – anot only lovely, but also talented lady! Deborah was interested my work, and how I often use scientific imagery, but when she heard about the Legacy Wall decided she’d like to document it. So when we were making the tiles, we were under the watchful eye of the digital camera lens… I’ve not seen the results yet!More recently, I’ve been working on the templates for the ceramic pieces that will form the art work itself. Not only is this piece going to be large, it will be heavy, sited outdoors and in a public space – there are a lot of things to consider not only the design but the overall construction, which I will be getting fabricated at a local firm in Ilkeston.So, where is this art work going? Here’s the wall, taking from the view of the all weather pitch. For those of you who know the area, its the Derby Road end of the new Sports Hall, the original school buildings are there in the background ( for you former ‘Comp’ students like myself, you can just see the original gym!)Rear View of KHCTSC Sports Hall It can be quite difficult to ‘explain’ how the piece is going to look, especially when its not something that I have made before. And especially when it’s this scale… and this is going to be BIG! It will probably the biggest work that I have made so far. Well, I am not so much making it – the Year 10’s are doing most of that! Anyway, I did a mock up for the college to make sure they were happy with the idea. This isn’t the exact shape, and although the background is the right sort of colour, its not the finished design – but it gives an indication of what it will look like I hope.Mock Up of the Olympic Legacy Wall To get an idea of scale, those bulkhead lamps are sited at around 8 feet up the wall…..
More to come soon!
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Olympic Legacy Wall
Okay, okay, I’ve been wanting to tell you about a forthcoming project for so long now, but I’ve been holding it in….Over the coming weeks, I will be working with KHCTSC (Kirk Hallam Community Technology & Sports College) to produce an Legacy Wall for their new sports building that opened last year. KHCTSC were one of 42 schools selected for a pilot scheme to engage with the London 2012 Olypmics – promoting the values, linking communities and so much more – see here for some informationToday I met with some of the Ambassadors – students from Y10 that have been working hard on these projects, to select some images that will form part of the final design. Earlier this year, the college ran a challenge both at ‘home’ and with primary school pupils in the area, to design silhouettes based on the theme of what the Olympics and/or its values, means to them.This week I will be working with art students to take these images and make moulds, or ‘stamps’, that will be used to create texture on a large sculptural ceramic wall piece. The overall design is still to be finalised, but I was thrilled when the young ambassadors like two of my suggested ideas.My challenge will be, not only to help the students create the sections of this overall finished piece, but overseeing the whole project, from technical design aspects, to frame work, to installation – wish me luck!No images of this one to show you yet, but for those of you thinking you might have heard me mention the school before, well, yes I have. It was their sixth form building, the Lakeside hall, that I designed my degree show piece for, which I am proud to say hangs in the prominent stairway – and I get to see it quite often.I am thrilled to be working with the school again – if you know me personally, you will know I am quite loyal and proud of my local community and the school holds a place in my heart as I went there (a few years ago) – I am one of those who can honestly say I thoroughly enjoyed my school years.It’s quite a turnaround really – as a student, I was part of the “Mural Squad” – we ended up doing several large scale painted pieces, some of which graced the school corridors, but some went further affield – we did a piece on the “Three Kings” for Derby Cathedral, and a maze wall mural for a Derby hospital waiting room amongst others – and now I am back there again, a little older and wiser, but still creating large wall art!