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.

Pin Board September '16 - the month in mood board

September, with it's back to school mood, came and went in a flash of misty-ness. Turns out Misty the comic for girls is returning from the publication grave; while the Grain Chimney disappeared from the Estuary skyline on a frustratingly misty morning in a 'puff of smoke'.

The Estuary itself became the inspiration for an arts festival and the Vogue centenary celebrations marked by the NPG at the beginning of the year were revisited in a revealing documentary. I rewatched The 39 Steps and wondered what happened to Margaret in my own Wide Sargasso Sea moment. Plus, I attended the first in a series of talks held at Tracey Neuls’s shoe store-meets-schoolroom.

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
September  pinboard mood board

Misty Lives! - '80s horror comic for girls returns

My mum used to buy me Misty annuals from the market. I loved the covers and their promise of gothic glamour, ghosts and age-appropriate gore. Pat Mills (of 2000AD fame) took the title from the Clint Eastwood film Play Misty For Me; while his other inspirations were Carrie and Audrey Rose.

Last Moments -  an Estuary landmark is blown up 

Misty was also the outlook the day the tallest concrete structure to be demolished in Britain came tumbling down. One moment the 801 foot tall (244 metres) Grain Chimney was veiled in mist the next it was a languorous trail of dust. An eerie silence. Boom. Bewildered birds rose from the grey sea.

Estuary 2016 - a 16 day event inspired by the Essex / Kent coastline

Points of Departure featured 28 contemporary artists at the paint-peeling, pleather-furnished Tilbury Cruise Terminal. We watched John Akomfrah’s Mnemosyne a film fusing: Greek myth, Windrush newsreels and the bleak midwinter; and listened to a beautifully compelling audio, Waterborne, describing the decomposition of our drowned bodies while we contemplated the water; and men piloting boats waved at us...

Rebelliousness & Conformity - a lesson in standing up & out

London Design Festival heralded a series of talks held at the Marylebone Tracey Neuls store. Attendees sat at school desks, between suspended shoes, to hear Caroline McHugh, self-described “Glaswegian, Buddhist cult leader” (in style), TED speaker and Chief Emeritus of Idology, talk to Tracey about individuality and what a well designed shoe can really do for you.

The 39 Steps - rewatching Hitchcock’s classic

Richard Hannay, the 'Hitchcockian hero' caught in a web of intrigue and handcuffed to a furious blonde, has a brief interlude with a Scottish crofter’s young wife with a poignant yearning for ‘adventure’ she’ll never have: “Well, is it true that all the ladies paint their toenails?” she asks of London life.

Vogue Doc - celebrating 100 years of the British style bible

Brogue, as it was known, was established due WWI shipping restrictions and paper shortages. Documenting the lead up to the centenary celebrations / issues we got a sneak peek into UK Vogue life. The best bit? When Fashion Editor Lucinda Chambers compared her ‘Tigger’ working style to that of editor Alexandra Shulman’s ‘Eeyore’ - excellent.