Monday, 28 January 2013

Confirmed Artists

We are pleased to confirm our first seven artists....

Jessica Meek
www.jessicameek.co.uk

Jessica Meek studied textiles at the Royal College of Art. She creates geometric mixed media installation pieces with a focus on material combinations- hard and soft, natural and synthetic with processes both digital and hand-rendered to create an unexpected, unique aesthetic. She is co-founder of Nice Spread. 

Charlotte Brown
www.charlotte-brown.blogspot.co.uk


Charlotte Brown studied at Goldsmiths and the Royal College of Art. She lives and works in London. Her work has been exhibited internationally and resides in private collections.
  Her practice is object based, often intimate in scale and explores invested objects. She is currently using traditional techniques of casting and stitching to address innate human  
  experiences. Recent pieces have been made of lead, combined with knitted and embroidered silk and cashmere, and a series of etchings.
  Much of her work is informed by a reading of Freud’s writing. She employs found objects that have undertones of the bodily, of use, of everyday intimacy, as fetishes and relics.


Vickie Fear
www.vickiefear.blogspot.co.uk

Devon based artist Vickie Fear uses live sculpture to explore the crossovers in performance and sculpture, whilst blurring the boundaries between comfort and discomfort, the hidden and the exposed, stillness and movement. Vickie is one of the current artists in residence at Plymouth University, where she has been focusing on the fine line between protection and restraint and working on two live sculptures, including the new work she will be presenting at Nice Spread. Born in Bath Spa, Vickie studied Fine Art & Visual Culture at the University of the West of England, Bristol and has performed at The Bluecoat in Liverpool, Arnolfini in Bristol and as part of Hazard MMX in Manchester. Vickie is also Co-Director of Hand in Glove, an artist led group, which organizes, curates and supports events and exhibitions in and around Bristol.

Liam Herne
www.liamherne.com

Liam Herne is an artist from Watford, Hertfordshire who predominately works in performance, photography and video. He has shown his work in various locations over the UK. He currently works as an Art teacher in Hertfordshire and is studying an MA in Fine Art with Learning & Teaching in Higher Education at Kingston University.  At Nice Spread he will be showing the lastest of his Wrapped Up series.

Chloe Mashiter 
www.chloemashiter.co.uk

Chloe is a performer, writer and director with a particular interest in immersive and interactive theatre. 'Fortress' is her second interactive installation, following 'Faithful' at Open Arts Cafe this February. She has performed at Latitude Festival, the National Student Drama Festival and Edinburgh Fringe Festival, and with companies such as Future Cinema and Paines Plough. Her writing has been featured as part of the International Student Drama Festival and Lost Theatre's 5 Minute Festival. Chloe's directing credits include a Japanese tour of Twelfth Night and an original adaptation of the book Zombie Haiku; she also recently assisted on 59 Minutes to Save Christmas, Slung Low's interactive adventure around the Barbican Centre.

Heather Power
www.powerheather.com

Heather's work dwells in the city - exploring the urban environment and drawing upon its visual and material language. Her work aims to instigate dialogues about the city and our interaction with its spaces in relation to sculptural practice. Heather was born in Lima, Peru but lives and works in London. 

Necole Schmitz
www.necoleschmitz.blogspot.com


Necole's work involves using the body to inscribe and experience spaces.  This began with a desire to find a safe and confined space with in the public space of the gallery.  In past works she sought to create an encounter between herself, as the artist, and the spectator in space, through the mediation of technologies such as video and audio recording.  Using these technological devices within a constructed space to frame the interaction, her work seeks to generate a complicity in the interplay of subjectivities of maker and viewer.  This intimacy seeks to both replicate and reinforce the intimate nature of the space in which the encounter takes place. 


It's shaping up to be a really great show....and there are more to come!!

Wednesday, 2 January 2013

our kinda guy...

garbage dumpsters turned into living containers by philipp stingl

picture from designboom.com

proposals

We have lots of exciting proposals so far, keep them coming!

Don't forget, we are also looking for people who want to do something live in the space- performance art, talks on/around the topic of claustrophilia, contortionists, anything involving the audience.

This is a really open brief and we encourage you to be as bizarre as possible.

Monday, 10 December 2012

Inspiration


Possible starting points:

Agoraphobia /Bento boxes /Car parks /Dwarves /Egg shells /
Foucault (Michel) /Green houses /Hospitals /Igloos /Jelly/King Kong /Lavatories /Museums /
Nearness /Occupation /Perec )Georges) /Quotidian (the) /Race tracks /Sofa beds /Touching
/Umbrellas /Video /Wonderland (Alice in) /X-ray /Year planners /Zoos

GET INVOLVED


NICE SPREAD – CALL FOR SUBMISSIONS

Experiments in space

A one day party-installation-project at the Bussey Building, Peckham on 2nd March 2013
on the topic of claustrophilia.

Claustrophilia; an abnormal desire for confinement in a small space;
the desire to close windows, doors, drawers.

This is a call for talks, papers, installations, games, short plays and art work.

Mark Augé has written that “the three figures of excess [which] characterise the situation
of supermodernity” are an “-overabundance of events, spatial overabundance, [and]
the individualisation of references.” Nice Spread are asking if one of the symptoms
of supermodernity, and spatial overabundance in particular, is a tendency towards
claustrophilia. Has the increasingly limitless world we live provoked in us a desire for smaller
things, nearer things? Can we diagnose a growing need for boundaries, limits and lines, for
containers and curtailment?

We are looking for work that engages playfully and inventively with the topic. The day is a
collaborative effort between an academic and a textile designer so we are just as interested
in work that is tactile and architectural as we are in theory and criticism. We cite the
following as inspiration; The Life Aquatic for its cabin fever and cross-sections, The Shrinking
of Treehorne, Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close, Ernesto Neto, the Amazing Maize Maze,
Paul Carter’s Repressed Spaces, Mark Augé, Gaston Bachelard.

Deadlines for submissions

Artworks and Installations- 15th Jan 2013

Talks, papers, games, plays- 31st Jan 2013

Send proposals with images if relevant to spreadnice@gmail.com

Follow us on Twitter @NiceSpread