Plymouth College of Art degree show unveils the latest student work

Plymouth College of Art show 2010

Students at Plymouth College of Art unveiled their work has been unveiled to the public.

Family, friends and VIPs from the creative industries arrived at the college for a private view of the degree show to see the work of graduating artists, designers and makers of the future at the annual showcase of degree students’ final projects.

From fine art to fashion; ceramics to computer games; glass blowing to jewellery and sculpture; animation and film; graphic design and illustration; all creative disciplines were celebrated in the exhibition.

The Tavistock Place, Regent Street and Studio 11 campus buildings have been transformed again into a gallery bursting with art, which is free and open to the public until Friday, July 2.

A prize presentation took place with entrepreneurs and lecturers from the creative sector presenting awards to the most successful and promising students.

Steve Maynard, who picked up the prize for Fine Art Practices, built on the success of his work with his grandmother’s piano, which was hauled across Bodmin Moor. His latest work has been described as having a strong sense of locality; a south west flavour peppered with irony.

Janey Pointing, who won the award for Applied Arts worked at a stud farm and was unemployed as a single parent for years before starting College.

“At 16 I wanted to find my specialist area within the arts, but I didn’t know at that point just what it was going to be,” she said.

“If someone had told me it would be glass blowing I would probably have laughed at them!”

Janey won a Dartington Glass Scholarship and is going straight into employment with a company called Silver Tree Crystal in Somerset which produces handmade English crystal goblets and perfume bottles, which are sold in London and Dubai.

Her latest body of work Lunar Series is focused on creating contemporary sculptural vessels, using the sphere, which represents many things and is ‘worldly, tactile and has a beautiful purity within its form’.

Elizabeth Davey won a prize from the Plymouth College of Art Corporation. She recently lost her husband after caring for him throughout his illness. She also suffers from epilepsy. Some of her work in the degree show explores what it is like to regain consciousness after an epileptic fit. Due to problems with her shoulder she has had to learn to paint with her non-dominant hand.

Lizzie said: “I work with acrylic, emulsion and oil based paints. After a period of grief and continuing bereavement, my work has taken me into new areas.”

Prize winners are: Alexandra Lidster, Jemma Girdler, Laura Colmer, Martin Watts, Janey Pointing, Christine Sinclair, Sarah John, Corrie Warburton, Kelsey Fox, Amanda Buckley, Patricia Bruen, Sean Page, Steve Maynard, Diana Davydova, Donna Howard, Kelly Smith, Robbie Doran, Kate McLean, Steve Barrett, Serena-June Horgan, Sandy Litchfield, Rebecca Dodman, Elizabeth Davey, Euan Barker, Nicola Crabb, Oliver Alexander-Jones, Ian Clark.

The degree show opens to the public on Friday, June 25 and runs until Friday, July 2. Extended opening hours are offered so people can see the show during the evenings, until 8.30pm during the week, and from 9.30-4.30pm on Saturday.

(image: part of the art work promoting the Plymouth College of Art degree show)






Comments are closed.



Award-winning theatre explores rehabilitation, re-offending and penal reformAward-winning theatre explores rehabilitation, re-offending and penal reform

An award-winning theatre production entitled Release is premiering at Dartington Hall on Thursday, 24 to mark the launch of… »

Secret city gallery opens to the public this weekend in PlymouthSecret city gallery opens to the public this weekend in Plymouth

Foundation students at Plymouth College of Art are putting the final touches to their work before an end-of-year show opens… »

Tate backs bid to open a school for creative innovation in PlymouthTate backs bid to open a school for creative innovation in Plymouth

The Tate added its weight to the growing body of support behind Plymouth College of Art’s bid to establish Plymouth… »

Sinopticon: contemporary chinoiserie in contemporary art (review)Sinopticon: contemporary chinoiserie in contemporary art (review)

There was a giddy sense of occasion as our party of seven academics in search of culture and free drinks entered the atrium… »

Cornucopia of inspiraton and imagination – the Appledore Visual Arts FestivalCornucopia of inspiraton and imagination – the Appledore Visual Arts Festival

The annual Appledore Visual Arts Festival is a cornucopia of inspiration and imagination, a four-day celebration of the… »