Tamara’s work will exhibited 31st May.
Kat Hudson: Resurrection
‘Resurrection’ by Kat Hudson - Oil paint on 1m x 2m wooden canvas. Following on from Kat’s Living Dead series (shown last Summer at The Retro Gallery) ‘Resurrection’ is a celebration of the collective voices of our community, standing up against segregation and hatred fuelled by our current political climate. The piece and ideas behind it were a catalyst for group exhibition and club night FAT LiP which will be returning to VFD very soon.
See more of Kat’s work on her website: kathudson.co.uk and on Instagram @kathudson
VFD's Queer Magic NTS Podcast
Broadcast on NTS radio originally in January, the podcast of the show is now available to download. Turn on, tune in, queer out...
Holly Silius in collaboration with Tate Britain 'Late at Tate'
With a background in Fine Art and a degree in Special Effects Make-up, multi-disciplinary artist Holly Silius’ work effortlessly spans the worlds of fashion, music, theatre, film and TV.
‘I was invited by the Tate Collective to collaborate on an event with Tate Britain called ‘Late at Tate’ which encourages a younger, wider audience to go to the gallery, via collaborative workshops incorporating live performances from artists and musicians.
‘Late at Tate’ is part of Circuitprogramme, led by Tate and funded by Paul Hamlyn Foundation. Circuitprogramme is a national programme that engages young people in the arts with a focus on encouraging those with least access to galleries and museums.
The event where these works were originally created used iconic sculpture, Rang Baranga, by British Pakistani artist, Rasheed Araeen, for inspiration. During the event, I gave live body painting demonstrations, and my self body print canvases were also projected around the inside of the Tate.
The canvasses were inspired by Yves Klein body prints - their colours inspired by Rang Baranga.
The geometric body painting images were created in collaboration with model Lily Newmark and photographer Simon Emmett.’
Alex Margo Arden: The window By the museum entrance
VFD's World Aids Day tribute 1 Dec - 4 Jan
The Window By The Museum Entrance is a three-part window installation presented by Alex Margo Arden, opening on World Aids Day 2016 and continuing throughout the month of December. Through the window period of display, the work exists as a shifting temporary memorial – shoes appear, disappear and multiply. Scaffolding which is used to hold up ceilings pushes at the boundaries of the space while holding up the space. The supporting structures are illuminated by fairground lighting, while piles of empty Ruby Slippers accumulate. Eventually the red glow of this scene is masked by a construction billboard print depicting amassed ruby slippers which encompass the entire window. This is in turn is removed to reveal an array of connected fibreglass bells lying on the ground – until a final chime of a silent bell is heard.
In her installation, Arden directly references Act Up’s SILENCE=DEATH (1987) originally shown in the window next to the entrance of the New Museum. Like Act Up, Arden uses processes of repurposing, reframing and recirculating to underscore their political agenda.
Alex Margo Arden is an artist based in London. Her recent projects include Trailing Off (ICA), You Can’t Smell When You’re Sleeping (Mathew NYC) Interjection Calendar Project (Montez Press), Gathering Place (AND/OR). She recently graduated from Goldsmiths, University of London where she won the Hamad Butt Memorial Prize for exceptional promise. She works across sculpture, performance and smell production.
www.alexmargoarden.com |
alexmargoarden@gmail.com |
Kirsten Roe: One Soft Hand
One Soft Hand is the most recent project of textile designer Kirsten Roe.
After graduating with a BA in Textile Embroidery from The National College of Art and Design, Dublin, she started to transition her focus from womenswear to art pieces. One Soft Hand was born out of a love of all things hand-shaped. After some sketching, colour and texture research, each piece is sewn, stuffed and embellished by hand. The possibilities of colour, shape, texture and embellishment make this theme something fantastic and interesting to explore through both painting and making. The pieces themselves are inspired by charms and protection for the owner. One Soft Hand brings fun, hand-sewn soft furnishings and art to the contemporary home.
Instagram @__onesofthand__ Email: onesofthand@gmail.com
Ash Ferlito: Felt Like
The latest resident artist in VFD's street gallery is Ash Ferlito. Ash's work, Felt Like, will be installed here for the month of October, exhibiting simultaneously alongside her work, *Coming in Hot, at White Cubicle Gallery. Ash Ferlito is a curious observer with a lust for life. Synthesising thoughts and feelings with imagery is a way to slow the spinning of wheels and reflect on the weird, wonderful, horrible world she's confused and euphorically charmed by. Working with painting, sculpture and video, the materials shift in response to ideas and environment, the novelty of new materials provides great freedom. Personal narratives underpin the work but you are free to make up your own. Freedom is important!
bio:
Ash Ferlito (b. 1979) was raised by sea otters in the foggy clime of Northern California. She is a graduate of the Tyler School of Art, Yale University and is a member of the Skowhegan Class of 2012. In 2015 she completed the DNA Residency in Provincetown, MA. She has also been awarded residencies at the Vermont Studio Center and the Cyprus College of Art. In 2014 she was a teaching artist in residence at UNLV. She lives and works in New York City.
www.ashferlito.com
(*Coming in Hot is curated in collaboration with John Walter and is generously supported by Arts Council England’s Artist Development Fund).
Dr Noki presents The Sustainable Art School
Dr Noki’s House of Sustainability presents The Sustainable Art School (S.A.S.)
The S.A.S. fashions textile reinventions via sustainable redesign and up-cycling.
The S.A.S. is seeking to recruit the best, and most hardcore fashion students - those that focus on the underground before it goes well overground.
Behind this Dr Noki installation is the S.A.S. studio, where front-line customisation education will take place in the creation of Noki’s signature Magazine Gown, the original piece from 1996 in the Noki archive, lovingly crafted in a warehouse in a, then, backwater place called Shoreditch…
(pictured: Christeene wears Dr. Noki)
SIGN UP FOR CLASSES:
Dr Noki, Shoreditch's "Mash Up" pioneer and customisation expert, will be available for one-to-one tuition in sessions building custom NOKI originals. All garments will be custom-built with full NOKI hardware, and signed authentication certificate.
WHAT: Dr Noki’s one-to-one sustainable customisation sessions
WHERE: VFD, 66 Stoke Newington, N16 7XB
PRICE: £150 (full day rate)
DATES: To be announced
CONTACT: email info@vfdalston.com to register interest and receive further info
Noki: May VFD Window Installation
May New VFD Window Project up now by Noki. Noki is a textile collage artist known as the Pioneer for the term "Mash Up".
Noki is best known for creating body collages from the branded product in a fashion context. Unwittingly evolving the "sports luxe" movement. He has recently used flat canvas to portray his "culture jam" message and to go back to his original art roots.
Noki's work has been featured in the original Dazed and Confused Gallery, This Way Up Gallery-Old Dragon Bar, The V & A Museum-Friday Lates, Moma (New York-Superhero Exhibition), Talks during Vienna Art Week, Original Modern Art Gallery (Redchurch Street), he also teaches Sustainable Design Philosophy at Universities Worldwide.
Noki will be giving a talk at VFD on Tuesday 24th May at 7pm, explaining the Noki Evolution through Collage.
Check out our website for details.
****
Hello Window Shopper!
What you are looking at is 20 collages, to celebrate 20 years of Noki Pioneering "The Modern Mash Up Philosophy" having started in an empty Shoreditch warehouse landscape in 1996.
All work is for sale, check out details below.
An interview with Fashion Designer and latest Window Project Artist Eden Loweth.
We spoke to our latest Designer and Artist Eden Loweth before his PV last Thursday and his window up for the month of April. How do you describe your work?
So when I'm thinking about clothing I never thought of clothing to be about wearing something thats masculine or feminine, as a man who just picks clothing up off a shelf that I like, so when it came to doing my own work I really kind of focused on looking at fashion through a Queer gaze, the idea of it not being through a male or female canon, that is something more bigger than that, so all my work takes references from the people around me, but also referencing people like Derek Jarman, and really interesting Queer artists . I have done a lot of research into him and the way he worked and I find that really inspirational.
I work a lot with my partner as well and we kind of bounce ideas off each other, and it acts as a constant method of criticking it, so everyday we are talking things over and it takes a lot of kind of standard pieces of clothing and trying to make them into something that everyday any man or women would want to wear, but making it into something a bit more interesting and saying something new to say.
I hate this idea of genderless clothing that's out there at the moment which is basically black and white stuff, or really boring stuff. I'm not doing something thats genderless, but something different to a masculine and feminine item.
Do you define yourself as an artist?
No, but I think art comes into what I do, I'm really a firm believer that fashion is fashion, and fashion is a business and thats it's primarily means is to put clothes on peoples backs, but at the same time I don't want my business to become something thats fast fashion , I can't deal with the idea of having to churn out things at a rate that gets beyond doing a collection a season.
I want to do something thats contained within that and says everything I want to say within it. Art definitely comes into it, a lot of my references come from artists and I always produce mini films with my boyfriend and with even things like the window I try to collaborate with people I find interesting and work with concepts that are not just me creating the clothes.
Your window at VFD this month is up for April, what is the philosophy behind it?
I think it's looking at several things, I think it's focus is on a bag that is from my graduate collection that is coming up in a couple of months, and that really is one of the main shapes inspirational. So there these blob like shapes inspired by the Matisse cutouts and queering the handbag and making it into something thats kind of not recognisable as an item of clothing or a bag.
So that forms the focus of it but then I worked with a set designer William Farr and we built this idea of creating a set that was using luxurious and non luxurious materials in different ways so the linings of the window is silk, but then the whole of the base is lit up with this glass sand that we have made in different ways so from thousands of broken wine bottles, so its kind of taking the mundane and turning it into something more luxurious and a bit more like what you would see in a Cartier window.
Why did you do it at VFD?
I just think you know, VFD acted as a really big part of me developing both my creativity and also personally. I came to London and I didnt know anyone and I had a very sheltered life and education. I had been taught at home for most of my life so I didn't really experience having many friends in my own circle. I didnt know many people my own age, so then so when I started coming here it really opened my eyes and I met my partner here and it opened my eyes to a whole different experience, and for me this is one of the primary places which was a starting point for everything Im doing now and it would be very different if I had not discovered it, so for me to do it is amazing.
Are your collage pieces crucial to your work?
Yes, so I kind of when I'm doing anything I never design by doing really accurate skecthes, its just not the way I work, I'm more a person that does a lot, hundreds of abstract drawings really quickly with ideas in my head and probably people look at them and not really see clothing but I know what they were, and then on top of that then I'll do collages that are more visual that represent it. I work quite a lot with my boyfriend on those as well because its good with things like collage to try and get other peoples views. I only ever use two or three images at once. I'm not really into this whole fashion collage thing, I'm more about laying down different images on top of each other and seeing how it works, then they form the basis of what I do with my collection and things like the window.
Where do you like to go out?
Obviously VFD, I started very early going to Sink The Pink's, now I really found myself wanting something thats a bit more artistic in a way, I became friends with Charles Jeffrey (Designer/Loverboy) and then heard about here (VFD) and I think there is not really anywhere else that engages me as much as here (VFD) does.
The Queen Adelaide I also really like what they are doing (formerly The George and Dragon, now on the other side of Hackney Rd), and I have down a couple of nights there before and I think its been really interesting and I think it will become another haven and is a really interesting space to use. So I would say places like that, and I really like going to lots of exhibitions.
Do you have a favourite item of clothing?
I would say at the moment I'm getting really obsessed with wearing this blue coat ( I like it!) I found it on a £1 rail somewhere and its actually really nice and it has this weird pleated back, like a Brownies uniform, but that formed a big part of my collection and is turquoise blue. It's almost a mix between oppression blue and ceruleum blue, and I found it because I was wearing this coat doing the rest of my fabric sourcing so I thought blue would be a really good colour, so its really formed quite a key role, and I also wear these Wales Bonner jeans all there time, I'm not wearing them today, but I always wear them, and I just live in then at the moment, they are quite baggy and comfortable.
What will you be doing after the window and your final collection, future plans, aspirations?
So my graduate shows on the 7th June, so between now and then I'll be finishing the collection and once thats complete hopefully I will be able to do my own line, and if not work for one of my friends.
In one word how would you describe yourself?
Thats a difficult one, I would say that as much as I try and be kind of quite forthcoming and easy to be out there and be confidant, I'm quite a shy person when it comes down to it, so I'm quite happily reserved.
What track or music are you listening to at the moment?
The whole of Fleetwood Macs Albums, like everything, its really amazing.
Is performance a part of your work?
Performance art plays a really big part, I am doing my whole dissertation on performance art, used within fashion, so its really something that I have referenced quite heavily. I'm a massive fan of Marina Abromovich and I worked on her 500 and 1/2 Hours show at the Serpentine, but it really made that whole concept of using something like performance art in fashion, like Galliano in the 90s used performance as a means of showing their clothes in a kind of different way, it wasn't straight up and down the runway. I think its really interesting so I always pull load of references in my own show, I want it to be something thats more than straight up and own boing graduate fashion week I want it to be something that's a bit of a statement.
Hint of what the show will be like?
It's going to be shown as a part of a press show, so I'll have my own slot in the press show, its going to be performative. I have had a sound scape made for it as well, so the models will interact with that and will all have different personas and its based on their own individual preference to what they are wearing, so we have really worked hard at fitting the looks to the models personality and it's looking into each person as queer in their own way, so it's really identifying what suits best and how they feel wearing the clothes, and will be perceived in the way they behave on the catwalk.
Favourite film?
There are two different ones, sometimes I go through these phases with getting obsessed with action films, I love Angelina Jolie in Salt, she's amazing! But also the my mums favourite film which I use to have to watch as a child Carousel, I really like old classics.
Eden Loweth, Eartly Delights, Window Project, April 2016
Eden Loweth: Earthly Delights, 'Blob Bag' Window Project: April 2016
The latest monthly Window Project at VFD by Eden Loweth. Eden Loweth: Earthly Delights
'Blob Bag' Cotton velvet, silk, silver chain, hardware.
The window environment engages the onlooker with a questioning approach to appropriating luxury; Velvets and silks interact with crushed glass and paper, fashion through the Queer gaze.
Menswear designer - Eden Loweth
@eden_loweth
edenloweth@icloud.com
Set Designer - William Farr
williamfarrstudio@gmail.com
A beautiful portrait for the new Window Project with Earthly Delights and Eden Loweth
[embed]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aEQg70sE2Us&feature=youtu.be[/embed] By Thomas Barratt
PV Thursday 31st March, FREE. Window up for the Window Project for the month.
Window Project Apply
VFD Window Project is a community run exhibition space bringing innovative and thought provoking work from Artists who need a platform to show their work. We need to know how your content relates and engages with both the public and VFD.
Please be aware in your proposal that the content is suitable for being across from a school.
If you are interested in applying, please send a proposal of your work with visuals and how you would use the window space to present.
Email info@vfdalston.com
If the piece sounds good, we will get you in for a meeting.
This is a free collective, and we do not pay artists for their work or materials.
The work will be up for a month, you must facilaitate the set up and take down.
The first Thursday of the month, the artist that month will have the club downstairs for a PV of the piece.
Dimensions of space and details
Black back drop/cloth
Glass window
Tiled floor
Wood walls
Suspended ceiling (cannot be used)
Size:
Glass front window
2.5m length/3.4 width
Depth (floor to back drop)
1.7m
Walls (side)
2.5 length/1.27m width
Back drop
2.24m length/3.27m width
You Are Here:Book
The collaboration You Are Here who showed in the VFD Window Exhibition Space have a book out.
This is a collection of photographic nudes about reclaiming our cities and personal power.
Check out the website
You Are Here: March Window 2016
This is a collection of photographic nudes about reclaiming our cities and persona power. it is a call to be consciously present in the moment. To be aware of our internal world as well as the cities and world that we live in by raising consciousness of the connected and interdependent ways that we exist in our towns and communities.
We invite everyone to connect with their personal power and top take ownership of their environment wherever you choose to live.
This project is about reminding all of us "YOU ARE HERE". It's and external message worth repeating and internalising until it becomes "I AM HERE" an unshakeable feeling of belonging.
View the full collection of work and learn more about Collaborators Vincent and Gerard at:
Share your own images and experiences at:
https://www.facebook.com/events/1758422247712243/
Opening night party Thursday 10th March, 6.30pm. FREE.
John Walter: Exhibition, February 2016
Dark Side of the Moob' is a new installation by John Walter in the window of Vogue Fabrics Dalston that incorporates vinyl lettering, a neon "bugchaser" image drawn from the artist's lexicon along with pom-poms, pool floaties, jewellery, an R2D2 cake mould, blue-screen fabric and a flying booze guitar. The installation typifies Walter's interest in word play, shonky production values and humour. Biography:
John Walter is a London based artist who works in a wide range of media including drawing, painting, performance, video, music and sculpture. His installations seduce visitors using colour, humour and hospitality. The term ‘maximalist’, which best describes his work, refers to an additive practice that values the relationships between things rather than their qualities in isolation. He is currently completing research for 'Alien Sex Club' as part of a PhD in architecture at The University of Westminster in London. Recent exhibitions include ‘Alien Sex Club’, Ambika P3 London and Camp and Furnace Liverpool 2015, ‘Courtship Disorder’, White Cubicle Toilet Gallery 2015, ‘Turn My Oyster Up’, Whitstable Biennale 2014, 'Trance Time', MODEL, Liverpool 2014, Lily & Mim', 60 Schoolhill Aberdeen 2014, The Rococo Riots', VITRINE Gallery, London. 2013, 'The Oil Baron’s Club', Smart Gallery, Aberdeen 2012. http://www.johnwalter.net
The Ultra Ego-Indrek Galetin Window at VFD-January 2016
Three of Indrek Galetin’s pieces are shown in the exhibition window at Vogue Fabrics Dalston in London. The exhibition runs from Friday the 22nd January until the 8th February, 2016 and features Galetin’s ‘The Ultra-Ego'.
Artist's statement
The Ultra-Ego
In this photo-story photographer Indrek Galetin and performance artist/drag queen Maxi More (James Cawson) explore the Ultra-Ego.
When James was little he loved dressing up, he loved painting and playing. He understood that playing and make believe sat next to the real world, he had no delusions of actually being a princess, a robot or a monkey but the self-consciousness that grew alongside his prepubescent body told him to put these recreations away, look like a boy, get that GCSE and don't stand out! It wasn't until, in adult life, James was pushed to the brink by mental stress, financial struggle and trauma. He once again turned to the power of playing make believe. He now spends his life balancing between what the world expects of him and what he wishes to expect in his world. James embraces beauty, and takes on challenges with full belief in the power creativity has to transform one’s self. Now the lines blur more than ever between what is reality and what is make-up.
Taken over the space of one afternoon, the pair had no goal but to capture images of Maxi’s gradual transformation. Gathering together varying materials and make-up, Indrek and Maxi avoided setting boundaries or restrictions on what they wanted to see through the lens. The focus was on the process, not on the outcome.
Turning away from the notion of drag as creating another persona to live through, Indrek and Maxi believe the recreation of drag empowers a larger, more genuine self, a self that is ever-present, to break free from the usual physical and social limitations contemporary life sets on our identity.
Not focused on a single visual to form imagery with, Indrek and Maxi embarked on a journey, and the images that document this journey show an evolution of the self, from internal and intimate to outward facing, ready to surge forth. It is in the transitionary space we see glimpses of a powerful creature, who sees no distinction between opulence and grunge.
To Maxi, all is filled with potential and through experimenting with varied cosmetics, clothes, fabrics and fibres, Indrek and Maxi see the building blocks of an ever increasing complexity of character, the shadows that lurk inside Pandora’s box, the ultra-ego.
Dr Noki's Sas-New December Exhibition window up at VFD.
The amazing designer Dr Noki brings his classic designs to our exhibition window this month. Check out his page below http://www.facebook.com/drnoki/
Emily Howard VFD Window-November 3rd 2015
OTHER-Window at VFD, 2015.
OTHER is an Independent DIY Gallery founded to support a free radical creative community.Long Description What OTHER does
OTHER inverts the traditional concept of a gallery and instead uses the structure of an independent record label. OTHER pays for an artist’s prints to be made, OTHER market’s/promotes the artist and their work and then sells their work for them, leaving the artist free to just create. The artists takes on no risk and it is OTHER’s responsibility to sell the artist’s work. OTHER splits any profits fairly with the artists, giving the artist a better deal than any other gallery can. OTHER is an events based collective and this is central to OTHER’s commitment to stimulating a free radical community as well as to bring art back to the public in a re-energised way. Mission OTHER is an independent D.I.Y gallery intent on providing a platform and space for young artists to create, market and release their work. OTHER is dedicated to supporting a free radical artistic community in real life, not online, that aims to break away from the hegemony and dogma of elitist galleries that have stifled and repressed artistic freedom. OTHER intends to bring artists, of all different mediums, in dialogue and support of each other in order to end the segregation of the arts. It is OTHER’s desire to bring art back to the public and out of its privatised prisons. Soon Many Shall Know. Email info@othergallery.co.uk Website http://www.othergallery.co.uk