Collect 2019

Collect 2019 - Style&Co

–  Collect is an event that is one of the highlights of my year.  It’s so exciting to get the opportunity to see so much beautiful Craft and meet talented makers from all over the world.  This years show, yet again was filled with so much to see it was totally mind blowing.  I had decided just to photograph the special things that caught my eye.  But, as ever, I got carried away and it’s been an immense job, editing the hundreds of photographs, to select just a few.  

I have selected some of my highlights. Artworks that I found either beautiful or interesting and hope you will enjoy seeing some of the amazing work on show.

I have chosen my favourite crafts and put them into sections for you to browse.  Starting with the experimental ‘Collect Open’ and then continuing with a selection of Glass, Ceramics, Metals and Wood.

Collect Open

Collect Open presents 15 new works by 17 artists and makers.  Presenting work that is ambitious and risk taking.  Themes are personal and Universal.  They include:- shining a light on threats to our natural world, religious and gender politics and the contemporary relevance of ancient civilisations in craft practice.

In support of Global wildlife we had ceramic artist Charlotte Mary Pack.  On Dec 4th 2018 she spent Conservation Day hand-sculpting 100 Elephants in porcelain.  Each piece represents one of the 100 Elephants that are killed everyday to supply the Ivory trade. Mary is hoping to raise awareness and challenge the public’s opinion on ivory.

Charlotte Mary Pack Collect Open

Last Year Mella Shaw was highlighting the issue of Plastic waste in the ocean and this year it’s the turn of Louis Thompson and Sophie Thomas.  Their installation was quite striking with colourful handblown glass, with found glass and found Ocean plastics. 

American Mary O’Malley’s Barbecue setting was created to portray cultural confusion.   American everyday items are decorated as  Chinese exports in the style of the blue and white decoration of Ming Dynasty Qinghua porcelain.  Showing the traditional chinese crafts,  cheapened and commercialised for American culture.

Louis Thompson and Sophie Thomas
Mary o'Malley

Tina Vlassopulous is concerned with social interactions and friends and has created a long table on which she seats abstract ceramic sculptures that represent the personality of each of her friends. 

Featuring glass,  Susan Kinley’s installation reflects the landscape of Cornwall.  Fragments of imagery are layered within kiln-formed and water jet cut-glass. Mapping the contours of lichens and ancient stones.

Tina Vlassopulous - Collect Open
Susan Kinley

Janine Partington’s work ‘Marking Time’ is a personal response to her father’s Alzheimer’s disease.  Marks of time and fragments of memory lost, are carved into acrylic painted leather.

Sara Peymanpour created her Hejab art installation to challenge the traditional concepts of culture, image and product utilization.  The golden headpiece represents the hejab that has been has been imposed on Muslim women, by tradition and her personal rebellion against it through-out the years.

Janine Partington
Sara Peymanpour

George Winks displayed a unique, experimental Cabinet.  Inspired by the architecture of Victorian Railway Stations. 

Temper Studios - George Winks

GLASS

It’s wonderful to see such beautiful work from some of the top Glass Artists.  Some fabulous new creations from Peter Laycock, Tim Rawlingson, Louis Thompson and Bruce Marks on the London Glassblowing stand.  It was good to meet Tim Rawlinson and hear him explain how he achieves the wonderful effects inside his glass.

Peter Layton - London Glassblowing
Bruce Marks - London Glassblowing
Tim Rawlinson London Glassblowing

At Vessel Gallery other top Artists were on show.  Enemark & Thompson topped their facinating pink orbs with Cherries.  James Devareaux has embedded silver and gold designs inside his translucent shards.  I have featured Eliot Walker’s work on our London Art Fair review and it was good to see some more unique glass sculptures from him.

Enemark & Thompson -Vessel Gallery
James Devereaux - Vessel Gallery
Eliot Walker - Vessel Gallery
Neil Wilkinson
Vicky Higginson - Craft Scotland
Steffan Damm
Myung Nam An - Cube Gallery- Eye-Series Ceramic
Tessa Eastman Multiple glazes Stoneware - Cynthia Corbett Gallery
Simone Perrotte Camoflage - Maison Parisienne
Lara Scobie Craft Scotland
Theis Loretzen Joanna Bird
Claire Lindner - Enchevetrement vertical
Zheng Zhilong - China Design Centre
Vezzini & Chen Peter Ting
Vezzini & Chen - Peter-Ting
Vanessa Hogge and Olivia Walker -Vessel Gallery
Hiattori Makiko - Joanna Bird Gallery
Ikuko Iwamoto - Golden Pearl
Myung Nam An - Cube Gallery
Matt-Smith - Cynthia Corbett Gallery
Caroline Smit - James Freeman Gallery