Saturday 1 March to
Saturday 12 April
Featuring Diana Worthy, Ben Brierley and Jack Sawbridge
Talk and Tapas event Saturday
15th March at The Beetroot Tree Gallery.
I’ve never seen an alpaca, let alone sniffed one, but as I
put my face close to one of Diana Worthy’s textiles, I’m transported to the
heat of Spain and surrounded by the warm, comforting smell of her pet alpacas.
Diana uses the fleeces from her animals to create wall
hangings in wild and wonderful designs - each reflecting some aspect of nature. This one is a flat fish.
Many of the pieces use warm colours: showing fires on the hillsides of
Andalucia, bonfires with alpacas looking on, and bright Spanish flowers. http://www.dianaworthy.crevado.com
Ben Brierley, ceramicist, is also featured. In a glass display case, under lock and key, sit a dish that shines like the back of a cowrie shell and three beautiful cups. They appear normal
enough - they certainly don’t look as though they’re going to walk off when your back is turned. However, the free-range pieces on the floor, with their
vertical spouts and little round feet, look almost naughty.
They remind me of
the scene in Beauty and the Beast
when the teapots dance. Why aren't they contained like the non-animate cups? They look too boisterous to
be left unguarded.
The third artist showing work at Of Heat and Chaos is Jack Sawbridge. His wood and glass pieces are based on the aging, creaking joints
of ballerinas. Each piece has a blown-glass blob lit from within, held by wooden
structures that look like polished tree roots. One piece reminds
me of a woman carrying a pile of shopping. She’s squeezing her lit-up glass so hard
that it’s erupting over and under her arms. Other pieces have guitar strings,
that can be tightened or loosened, attached to the wood or glass, representing tendons and ligaments.
In one piece Jack has tensioned the strings so
that when you pluck them, the note drops down like a sigh.
I love the warmth and humour of this exhibition. I’m not
alone in the feeling that, once the gallery doors are shut at night, the wet-felt
alpaca flatfish will smile and blow bubbles, the ceramic vessels will potter
about wildly, and the light and wood pieces will flex and turn, giving off
musical notes and squeaks. In the morning, the shapes will look almost the same
as the day before. Almost.
Book your place online at http://art-classes.thebeetroottree.com/talk-and-tapas/eid2155
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