Wednesday 24 May 2023

Royal Academy Summer Exhibition 2023: Only Connect

 

The R.A Summer Show has taken place annually since 1769 – the year after the RA was founded with Joshua Reynolds as its President. David Remfry’s theme for the exhibition, which consists variously of works by Royal Academicians, invited artists and the public, is ‘Only Connect’. The famous phrase comes from E.M. Forster’s 1910 novel Howards End, at the moment when the protagonist Margaret Schlegel resolves to replenish the soul of the conservative, complacent Henry Wilcox (a man “afraid of emotion”), whom she has settled to marry. “Only connect! That was the whole of her sermon. Only connect the prose and the passion, and both will be exalted, and human love will be seen at its height. Live in fragments no longer.”
The R.A received more than 15,000 entries, below are 6 of the artists who were selected...
Above: Sarah Wood 

AboveSandra Turnbull 

Above: Karl Bielik 



AboveDavid Micheaud



AboveRussell Herron

Above:Harry Pye

 The RA Summer show runs from 13 June – 20 August 2023.


Thursday 18 May 2023

The Magnificent Seven in Cass, Islington Flag Ship

 

The Magnificent Seven exhibition is taking place at The flagship Cass Art Shop,
 66-67 Colebrooke Row, London N1 8AB


Above: Print of Francis Macdonald's charcoal drawing of Neil Young.



Above: Framed print of Adam and Eve by Harry Pye and Gordon Beswick


Above: 'Good Grief' by Suzanne Spiro

Above: 'Arcadian Landscape' by Gordon Beswick



Above: 'Inside the Outside' by Loretta Wall
 no.3. (oil & acrylic on linen 60x70cm)

Above: Yo Yo by Chris Tosic

Above: 'Lost and Found Gadgets Resting On A Tree at Chestnut Lake' by Cristina Calvache Quesada 



Monday: 10:00 - 19:00

Tuesday: 10:00 - 19:00
Wednesday: 10:00 - 19:00
Thursday: 10:00 - 19:00
Friday: 10:00 - 19:00
Saturday: 10:00 - 19:00
Sunday: 11:00 - 18:00





Wednesday 10 May 2023

The Comic Genius of Gene Wilder - an appreciation by Harry Pye

(Above: "Whatever Works" a.k.a. "Gene Wilder with Daisy the Sheep" painted by Rowland Smith and Harry Pye, 30cm x 40cm)

I became a big fan of Gene Wilder around about the age of 19. I had been suffering with anxiety problems which really brought me down. I remember seeing Gene's blanket scene in The Producers and laughing so hard at his charcter saying "Im wet and I'm hysterical, and I'm in pain" etc Somehow seeing him be so anxious and troubled and yet so loveable had a big impact on me - I was able to forgive myself for being such a bag of nerves. After graduating from Art School I started editing a zine called, Harry Pye's Frank magazine, which mostly featured interviews with musicians, artists and comedians I was into. One Summer I bought a 2nd hand copy of Halliwell's Film Guide and was shocked to learn that the films I'd loved Gene in such as The Producers and Willy Wonka had been flops at the box office and that most critics seemed to hate Wilder. Whilst interviewing people for 'Frank' I slipped in a few questions to see if I was alone in thinking Wilder was a comic genius...

Note: These quotes came from interviews that happened around September 1997...


Harry Pye: Do you think Gene Wilder is underrated?

Sean Hughes: "I think his level of success and stardom is just about right. The film of his I liked most was 'Stir Crazy' and the one on the train ('Silver Streak') brings back happy memories."

Harry Pye: What is your favourite Gene Wilder moment?

Jarvis Cocker: "Well I've got two actually. The first is from 'Willy Wonka' when he does that triple somersault, y'know, right at the beginning. And the other one's from 'Stir Crazy' when they ask him if he ever rides side saddle, and he says, 'that's the way I always ride'."

Harry Pye: Do you like the films Gene Wilder made with Richard Pryor more than the ones he did with Mel Brooks?

Dickon Edwards: "My favourite Gene Wilder moment is in Woody Allen's 'Everything You Wanted To Know About Sex But Were Too Afraid To Ask.' An Eastern European shepherd declares to Mr Wilder that he is in love with a sheep. Mr Wilder's subsequent pause and expression is a work of cinematic comedic genius."

Harry Pye: Is Gene Wilder a comic genius?

Melvyn Bragg: Interesting one - a curate's egg."

How good is Gene Wilder?

Mark Wallinger: Oh bloody hell, I mean he's pretty low down on the ist isn't he? A poor man's Woody Allen. I suppose his shaky hand in 'Blazing Saddles' -but this is the hand I shoot with - did make me laugh at the time."

Harry Pye: What do you like most about Gene Wilder?

Richard Herring: "The Producers is Wilder at his best - possibly Young Frankenstein too. Although, he is at his funniest when he tries to be taken serioulsy as a romantic lead. I like the way he has tried to stay looking young and just looks scary. And I like the way he's proved he's only human by making a string of terrible choices about which film to appear in. He's a lesson in the maxim, Over acting does not make a shit film good."

Harry Pye: Are you a fan of Gene Wilder?

Simon Hickson (from Trevor and Simon): "A moderate fan! I like 'The Producers'. I saw him recently in Laughter on the 23rd Floor. A good play. He was, effectively, Sid Ceasar Salad.


Above: A page from Harry Pye's Frank Magazine

Read an interview with Gene Wilder expert Brian Scott Mednick: HERE

Ron Frank has directed a documentary entitled "Remembering Gene Wilder" that features contributions from Mel Brooks and ALan Alda. More news soon.






Quentin Crisp Said

“I learned very early in life that I was always going to need people more than they needed me”

“However low a man sinks he never reaches the level of the police.”

“To know all is not to forgive all. It is to despise everybody.”

One should always be wary of anyone who promises that their love will last longer than a weekend.

“The British do not expect happiness. I had the impression, all the time that I lived there, that they do not want to be happy; they want to be right.”

“Fashion is what you adopt when you don't know who you are.”

“I don't think you can really be proud of being gay because it isn't something you've done. You can only be proud of not being ashamed.”

Rome did not create a great empire by having meetings, they did it by killing all those who opposed them. If at first you don’t succeed, failure may be your style.

There is no need to do any housework at all. After the first four years the dirt doesn’t get any worse.

The very purpose of existence is to reconcile the glowing opinion we hold of ourselves with the appalling things that other people think about us.

Never get involved with someone who wants to change you.

Why get married? For human beings, marriage is such an unnatural state. If you want monogamy, it has been said, you should marry a swan.

If love means anything at all it means extending your hand to the unlovable.

If there were no applause and no criticism, who would you be?

Mass-murderers are simply people who have had ENOUGH.




Sunday 7 May 2023

Tate Mates

 (Image 1) Above: 70 % Dom, 20 % Jaimie, 20 % Annie
(Iamge 2) Above: 75 Louise, 25 % Cristina

(Image 3) Above: 70 % Harry, 30 % Paul

Stick To What You Don't Know by Duglas et Le Documents

The upbeat track 'Stick To What You Don't Know' was recorded in Big Jelly Studios in Ramsgate in October 2021. In May 2022 Sean Read of Famous Times Studios in London, mixed in the new vocals provided by Duglas and Andrew from The BMX Bandits in Glasgow. Bass on the track is played by Keith Wilkinson of Squeeze. The drumming is by James Lawson. The lead guitar is played by Chris Tosic.

Above: Chris Tosic and James Lawson
Above: Keith Wilkinson
Above: Andrew Pattie
Above: Duglas T Stewart
Above: Harry Pye


Previoulsy Le Documents recorded:
And
"Whatever It Is I'm Against It" a.k.a. "Jo Mama's Farm"