I do like it where I live. It's an area with an immense community spirit and lots of creative energy. Once a summer, the two amalgamate and we get a couple of weeks of open artists' houses, studios, galleries, events, and happenings called the E17 Art Trail.
Armed with the official guide, a tightly planned schedule and comfy shoes, Marco and I tried to cram in as much art as we could this year. But even though we spent one solid day during each weekend being amazed and inspired, I still feel like we only experienced a fraction of what was being shown.
All the artists on the Trail are local, but not all the studios are usually open to the public. My favourite venues were the ones where you were invited to enter a private home, you never knew what to expect once the artist opened their door to you. Other times, the art was to be found in shops, cafés or pubs that I hadn't been to before, or on streets that I'd never walked down, and following the map to all the spots we had marked felt like a treasure hunt at times.
I took some pictures of what we saw (hastily, with my phone), and it was a good way to keep track of my favourite exhibitions. Where I can, I will link to the artist, so you can look them up if you like their work.
Bright papercuts by Urszula Wojciulik and book lights by
Joby Williamson. Those can be bought for £60 a piece, I have been reliably informed. Of course I'm thinking about it...
One of my favourite exhibitions was
The Ex Warner Project, a catalogue of images and memories from people living in the historic housing estate that makes up my area.
We found Amanda Doidge's
Experimental Ceramics in a shed at the back of a garden. The artist took the time to explain all the intricate meanings of her delicate ceramic pieces to us, talking about butterflies, psychology and human nature.
At the beginning of the Art Trail, Walthamstow got its own set of
Little Free Libraries, each designed by a different artist. I now have one just around the corner from where I live!
We had a mini-movie experience complete with popcorn and a complimentary DVD of short films at a
local filmaker's house.
These drawings and paintings by
Carl Harris are a recurring fixture on the Trail. I've not been able to buy an original (oh, do I want to!), but I do own a framed Catboy poster.
Another thing I would have acquired right there and then if money hadn't been an object: a plate designed by
Raewyn Harrison. She used traditional patterns and moulds to make modern pieces of ceramics with raw edges. The hornbill on the right is made from paper, each feather was a work of art. It was part of the
Encyclopedic Taxonomy museum display by Daniel Vincent.
This web was suspended from the trees at
The Makers Yard. This place is a small artist enclave hidden behind houses and only accessible through a garage door. There were lots of
nooks and crannies to explore, it feels like a little creative paradise.
A tree re-imagined by
Julie Caves, and an interactive greenhouse installation, Waves by Nicolette Murin. The paper doilies have been treated with iron salts that may reveal captures of touch and movement when washed off. Visitors were asked to hang them up during the open day.
Broken Homes by
H Locke. Tiny drawings inside egg shells.
This is
Saskia Huning's beautiful home. She is a decorator, specializing in mural restoring and preservation. She has used the walls in her house as canvases for her art, trying out and recreating designs she has worked on for customers.
The mural on the left is one that Saskia recreated in a
school. The original had been permanetly lost after being painted over.
We went to see
Dr. Knit in his Knitting Laboratory. Each of his creatures has a
story...
We stopped to have lunch at a
café that last Sunday of the Trail, and discovered that they were also hosting a small
exhibition.
A church fittingly hosted an exhibition around angels. Here is an angel wing by
Kirsten Schmidt and William Morris, angelified by
Emma Scutt.
© Text & Photos - Annika - All The Live Long Day (unless otherwise stated).