The Month in Mood Board - storytelling, size matters & sassy networking

From shrinking mammoth wardrobes to accidentally generating a B-movie monster, June was focused on the humungus. And the surreal.

I met some colourful peeps at the Blogtacular conference. Watched Bates Motel - which did a funky origami thing with stories and time.

I saw my hometown through a French photographer’s eyes. And, I exhibited some art in a railway waiting room...

Why don’t you cover a big cork bulletin board in bright pink felt, banded with bamboo, and pin with coloured thumb-tacks all your various enthusiasms as your life varies from week to week?
— Diana Vreeland
Mood Board June 2018.jpg

 

SEVEN Go Large at #LAT2018

Every June Leigh is taken over by artists. Hairdressers. Churches. Banks. Boutiques. Even personal car hire dealerships become galleries for one week only. Leigh Art Trail 2018 was SEVEN collective's second year showing our A5 sketchbooks at Planet Leasing.

But this year, we also got to share our work with curious commuters as the tall white walls of the station waiting room became our number two venue. So, we took the opportunity to go large - A2 to be precise.  

The concept: to show just how one starting point - vintage timetables - could lead in seven unique and unexpected destinations. The question is, where will we go next?

 

Retelling Psycho's Backstory - back to front, sorta...

Hopefully, we won’t wind up at the Bates Motel - although Psycho seems to be a recurring theme for me personally.

This time it’s in the form of the box set, which is billed as a “contemporary prequel” to Hitchcock’s classic. And when it says ‘contemporary’ it means, yes, ‘contemporary’:

...I would not have done the show if it was period… Then I think you can really feel the pressure to be living literally in the shadow of the movie and that felt way too confining.

Said Bates Motel creator Carlton Cuse.

nd the concept is already confined enough by it’s inevitable ending:

Turning Bates Motel into a contemporary story gives the creative team the space to choose the directions they want to follow for the characters.

Suggests a Screen Prism piece.

[T]here’s a sense that the Bates family’s “present-day” life is colored by the past.

Which seems weird, because that past is also the future, but really when you watch it’s kinda not.

To me, the series has a whiff of the true crime documentary about it. While Psycho (the film) was told largely from Norman’s warped point of view. In fact Mother’s voice is the harpie-esque harrangue-ing in Norman’s own head.

BM, on the other hand, takes its time to unravel the tangled web that is Norma and Norman’s relationship. Norma, here, is a sexy, funny, determined, deeply damaged, single mum.  

We watch her juggle work, her troubled kids, unwelcoming neighbours, corrupt police, her past, and, of course, the ever threatening highway...

 

What If Your Mistakes Became a Monster?

Of course, it’s always easier to watch “all those innocent victims” from the comfort of your sofa. From TV murders to the tea-time news, we thank our lucky stars that wasn’t us.

But what if your actions here could literally be felt over there?

Because this is the theme of Colossal.

Starring former Princess of Prada Anne Hathaway, as an out of work writer with a drink problem who gets dumped, Colossal starts out looking a bit rom-com.

But when she returns home and reunites with her childhood chum things wind up going all Godzilla. And not in the way you think. Because the people getting terrorised by that world-famous radioactive T-Rex are in Seoul. Whaa?

Film critic, Mark Kermode, puts it thus:

After much nervous head-scratching, Gloria concludes that she is somehow controlling this beast. Is she a delusional paranoiac? Or are her personal problems being played out in super-size fashion, with catastrophic results?

A very unique take on a very well worn theme, whatever the answer, methinks.

 

Heat Wave Wardrobes - a mini style revelation 

Of course, the whole carbon footprint problem was another message you could read into Colossal. Something I’m frequently wrestling with when it comes to my wardrobe.

As summer got a helluva lot hotter my planned capsule collection was just a tad too warm. Simply going sock-free wasn’t going to cut it. Everything had to be light, light, light.

And so, I had to rethink. The thing is, people - and fashion - seem to imagine that less is more when it comes to sun.

But has anyone seen Southend seafront at 5pm on a sunny Sunday afternoon? It looks like a Hieronymus Bosch painting, that’s what. But with more pork crackling pink skin.

My solution? Men’s tops. Why? They come in cotton. They’re loose. They have sleeves. And, you can find them in many a charity shop.

 

Blogtacular! - a colourful conference for ladies who do their stuff online  

Speaking of wardrobes attending Blogtacular came with a style request:

Wear something beautiful.

And, so my fave 80s Etam dress - with red socks and silver shoes - it was. I could wax lyrical about the wonder of this dress but we’re actually here to talk about a monster conference.

Colourful. Creative. And crammed with juicy content Blogtacular:

[I]s a place for people who create vibrant and original content to discuss their work, fill their minds with new ideas and to collaborate with fellow bloggers and indie business owners.

Full of friendly and uniquely fashionable females this a web-focused conference which is as dedicated to great graphics as it is to meaningful messages:

No matter what you do online; if you love great quality content and beautiful design you’ll find yourself at home at here.

 

Southend Through a French Eye

They say home is where the heart is, but it’s often the place we most take for granted. Remember Dorothy?

Which is why it was eye-opening to see our hometown through the photographer Franck Gerard’s lens.

The Nantes-based French artist and photographer first visited Southend in 2016 to study our estuary, no less. Which is when local paper The Echo caught his imagination.

So, this June he was back at Metal, as artist in residence, working on a project with that very publication:

Of course the newspaper is for news, but I had the idea for the newspaper to include a photograph every day, something giving news of a poetic situation, to go into the paper every day. Take a picture of today, for tomorrow.

The result? Charming. Funny. And often kinda surreal. As Franck explained at June’s Future Park:

[Y]esterday I took a photo of a man sitting on a bench at the seafront, holding an ice-cream, looking at it, like Hamlet, ‘to be or not to be?’ you know? As if it were ‘to eat or not to eat?’

He went on:

But I like the ambiguity of a photo, the surreal and the reality which exists in it. Do you see the same? I don’t know. And that is the reality.

The Month in Mood Board - creative adventures, being enough & Margaret Rutherford

Midsummer came to a hot head with the Leigh Art Trail - where I exhibited some of my artwork along with the SEVEN Collective.

This was promptly followed by a mini break, in the protective darkness of the living room, featuring Some Like It Hot and Cat on a Hot Tin Roof - aptly enough...

Why don’t you cover a big cork bulletin board in bright pink felt, banded with bamboo, and pin with coloured thumb-tacks all your various enthusiasms as your life varies from week to week?
— Diana Vreeland
Blog Pin Board Creative Adventures Leigh Art Trail June 2017.jpg

Some Like It Hot - or how to avoid the heat

For those who don’t know…

Dressed as women to escape the mob Jack Lemmon and Tony Curtis soon see how the other half live.

They hot foot it to Florida with a girl-band featuring “Jell-O on springs” ukulele player Sugar Kane - aka Marilyn Monroe shimmying in some eye-popping dresses.

Lemmon is soon pinched, then picked up, by a serial marry-er millionaire.  While Curtis is courted by a bull-headed bellboy who looks all of twelve and sees ‘no’ as a challenge.

"That's the way I like 'em, big and sassy," 

he says. Agghh...

The funniest woman [not] alive?

Eccentric and dotty are words oft used to describe actress Margaret Rutherford. An original national treasure famed for playing ‘older spinster aunt’ types even Time magazine called her the “funniest woman alive”.

To me her on-screen self acceptance and quick wit makes her irresistible. As Miss Marple in Murder, She Said she deals deftly with misogynistic comments from young and old alike:

Alexander (a teenaged boy):

"You know, it isn't just that you don't look like Jayne Mansfield. You're not *my* idea of a maid, either."

Miss Marple:

"Well, quite honestly, I don't think *you're* everybody's idea of a boy."

This month she turned up on TPTV in The Smallest Show on Earth (also featuring Peter Sellers). I’m not sure that film made the best of her though - try Blithe Spirit or The Importance of Being Earnest for a glimpse of her greatness.

Choose your own adventure

Adventures conjure up Indiana Jones style quests. Or man-size discomfort in far flung places.  But Morwhenna Woolcock (aka the Creative Adventurer) writing in July’s Psychologies magazine, says:

“Adventure is everywhere - if you know where to look for it.”

The trick, she found, was to make “the adventure wrap around my life.” This year she’s visiting one British island a month. She also went off on a 21 day pilgrimage following in the footsteps of her namesake saint.

All this is food for thought:

“Start by following the crumbs of curiosity and see where they lead you,”

she says.

In fact anyone who’s been Alain de Bottoned (or is just really well read) will know that Xavier de Maistre tailored his adventures to fit within the confines of his bedroom - because, well, he was literally confined there (duelling apparently). So, really there’s no excuse.

And, even more helpfully Morwhenna gives us some creative prompts to get us looking at everyday things through the eye goggles of adventure. Why not step into nature and create a sound map for starters? The whats, whys and whatyoumecallits can be found on the Psychologies website.

SEVEN did Leigh Art Trail

Our starting point: the sea. Our destination creative adventure. (There seems to be a theme here…).

This June saw the SEVEN Collective’s first creative journal exhibition at the twentieth Leigh Art Trail.  LAT sees selected local artists - and some out of area guests - apply to show their work in participating shops and businesses.

Situated in Planet Leasing visiting Trailers were invited to get interactive with our creative journals, consider using the creative prompts we used for themselves, and even dabble in our community sketchbook.

‘Stage fright’ and blazing sun aside (I must have vampire ancestry) it wound up being a real pleasure to meet interested people and talk creativity.

See what people said in the #LAT2017 piece I wrote on the SEVEN website here.

Marisa Peer says: you're enough

“In my 25 years as a therapist, I’ve discovered that the root of so many modern problems — hoarding, excessive drinking, compulsive shopping, and overeating — come right back to a need to fill the inner emptiness of not feeling “enough” with external things. The more you tell yourself you are enough, the more you’ll believe it. It sounds so utterly simple—and it is—and all you need is the commitment to do it and the belief that it will work.”

Watch Marisa in her talk The Biggest Disease Affecting Humanity: “I’m Not Enough" here.

The Month in Mood Board - inspirational listening, identity & Essex witches

So, the merry month of May came and graced us with her pole-dancing antics. The sun played peek-a-boo. And the calendar continued it’s countdown.

This month marked the run up to the long-awaited Leigh Art Trail - the first time I’d shown actual artwork I’d put some real soul into to a real live audience in eons.

But before me and my SEVEN collective cohorts revealed our creative sketchbooks this stuff happened...

Why don’t you cover a big cork bulletin board in bright pink felt, banded with bamboo, and pin with coloured thumb-tacks all your various enthusiasms as your life varies from week to week?
— Diana Vreeland
Blog Pin Board Magic On Being Charles .jpg

 

In 2017 - “...museums make no sense and are gone in a week …”

Danny Wallace... is a Man is a column in Shortlist magazine - one of them giveaways they do at train stations - and it always makes me chuckle. This month a visit to a pop-up museum, of dairy products no less, caused Mr Wallace to muse on the modern ‘museum’:

'Pop-up’ does not say eternal cultural significance...

he writes.

Hundreds of plastic bananas hang from the ceiling, as joyless zombies plod around, tapping blankly at their phones.
I don’t think I’m in a museum at all. I think I’m in some kind of Instagram alchemy laboratory.

He continues:

… [A]ll I can see see is little gummy bears stuck on the walls and the disembodied head of a statue …

And...

Why is that there? And are gummy bears dairy?

 

Charles the III - on the Beeb

I’ve worked in a museum or two, including the Imperial War Museum, London, where I once answered the phone to the late Tim Pigott-Smith - who plays Charles in this Shakespeare-inspired play. “Tim Pigg-ott?-Who?” I said. Charming.

I couldn’t identify members of Dad’s Army in the flesh either - sorry Bill Pertwee.

Speaking of identity there’s oft been a rumour that the Prince, when or if, he ever attains the throne will change his name. The first two King Charleseses were executed and deposed in that order.

What would Shakespeare make of that? Well, a Charles not-by-any-other-name would spark a constitutional crisis this play supposes.

 

Witchy Writer Syd Moore - did a talk at the Forum

While at the other end of the social spectrum: Syd Moore’s new novel series wonders about the witchy women of Essex’s murky past and their connection to the present day Essex Girl.

Because Witchfinder General Matthew Hopkins - he of Vincent Price Hammer Horror fame - oversaw the killing of more witches in Essex than any other English county. Whether Essex was home to more marginalised people - the disfigured, disabled, old women with no legal voice - than other counties is unclear.

But Syd believes that witchy prejudice is definitely haunting the present in the form of the often derisory Essex Girl epithet.

 

On Being - a podcast with big questions

I also stumbled across On Being and Krista Tippett - the podcast’s effusive and eloquent host - and fell head first into a rabbit hole of ideas and discussions.

On Being opens up the animating questions at the center of human life: What does it mean to be human, and how do we want to live? We explore these questions in their richness and complexity in 21st-century lives and endeavors. We pursue wisdom and moral imagination as much as knowledge; we esteem nuance and poetry as much as fact.

Assemblage Drawings - SEVEN do some tracing

And, so it was the last ‘official’ SEVEN workshop. Each artist had taken a turn to lead the group in an idea-generating technique we’d enjoyed from our original Creative Journal course.

We approached Assemblage Drawing like this: tracing random images from magazines, before layering them one upon the other. The abstract image was then coloured or / and collaged, as desired.

Like most other things, assemblage ain’t nothing new. Apparently those Cubists began it and the Dadaists and Surrealists ran with it - post-WWI the world was also post-sense so randomising everyday objects seemed to, well, make sense. Can it do the same for a post-truth world? The answer is...