ARTISTS OPEN H O U S E S M AY FESTIVAL 2023 The UK’s first, and now the largest, event of its kind will be throwing open the doors of homes and studios across Brighton & Hove and Sussex this month. Artists Open Houses (AOH) encourages audiences and artists to connect in a multitude of self-curated, non-traditional art spaces. Around 200 houses and studios will be displaying some of the area’s finest creators and makers. “Everyone is exceptional in one way or another!” says Festival Director, Judy Stevens. “AOH embraces the entire community, welcoming artists of all ages and at all stages of their careers: school children, university students, emerging artists, residents of seniors’ centres, neuro-diverse artists, artists with mental health issues and with learning disabilities; also established artists and those with national and international reputations.” Run in parallel with Brighton and Fringe Festivals, AOH’s ethos is wholly inclusive. It encourages participation from artists and makers of all ages, at all stages of their careers and from all parts of the community, including school and college students and artists who might otherwise be excluded or marginalised from the mainstream.
of city-wide schemes as part of Brighton Fringe. Artists Open Houses was then established in 2004, producing a brochure uniting all the individual trails and creating an identity separate from the similarly flourishing Brighton Festival and Brighton Fringe. While events have grown exponentially, AOH has remained true to its roots, consulting extensively with the 1,000 artists involved annually on the direction moving forwards. Stevens is keen to highlight how everyone is welcomed. “Both artist participants and audiences are welcome to engage with AOH - to explore their own creativity and be inspired by the ideas, techniques and practices of others.” Patsy McArthur suggests AOH helps the city’s artists and makers to meet and visit each other in their own environments and forge important local creative connections. “It offers an invaluable opportunity to have meaningful dialogue about our work with collectors, trial new ideas and receive immediate feedback. Artists are often introverted souls who hide away in our studios and behind social media. AOH forces us into real conversations with real people in real time, there’s nothing like it!” She’s showing her latest series, Night Moves, in her own home on Marine Parade. Using drawing and painting, she explores the figure in motion: leaping, soaring, flying and falling, along with the associated emotions which can be triggered in the viewer. Her work conveys a sense of power and energy or potential energy, along with the fragmented and fleeting nature of experience. “For art fans I think they love the casual environment that AOH offers, and I think they get a deeper understanding of who the artists are as people from meeting them in their homes and studios.”
It’s Abi Chambers’ first time exhibiting at AOH, and she is unequivocal about the opportunities it offers people to discover new work, as well as the platform it gives emerging talent. “It’s a great way to meet and see work from other artists. They’ve given me loads of advice and insights. It’s also brilliant to discover other mediums.” Exhibiting at The Coach House in Kemptown, she’s developed her practice in needle felting. Her work is greatly influenced by the natural environment and the amazing colours provided by nature. She takes a photograph of something and recreates it with wool fibres, evoking a beguiling sense of depth and memory. “For me it’s a feeling, how a moment in time can resonate - and how I can take that feeling and turn it, to produce something which inspires.”
Artwork Credit Patsy McArthur There is a joyful garden party mood in the air for this year’s AOH, especially with the Coronation looming and festivities back to full strength after the pandemic. Exceptional art is being shown in some very beautiful places, including Stuart and Mark and Friends’ large meadow garden with mosaics in Fiveways. Seven Dials has Alizeti Creative, which boasts a beautiful outside space to accompany the display of mosaic sculptures, Japanese fabrics, ceramics and jewellery. Hove’s Art in Bloom features painting, plus sculptures in ceramic, paper and bronze, all hung in a walled garden. Along the coast in Ovingdean, Mike Levy Pots and Prints invites visitors into a purposebuilt home studio, surrounded by a lush garden, where domestic tableware, large garden pots and tiles, posters and cards are for sale. There are more ceramics even further along the coast, in Newhaven, at South Heighton Pottery garden, along with homemade food.
Artwork Credit Abi Chambers The event can be traced back to 1982, when Ned Hoskins began inviting visitors into his home to view his own work and that of a group of friends. Other local artists started doing the same, forming the Fiveways Artists Group. It proved instantly popular, and other groups began popping up in other neighbourhoods – leading to the creation
40 bn1magazine.co.uk
Perhaps one of the most enticing venues is Kemp Town’s The Secret Garden - a huge oasis of green hidden from the city by a high flint wall. With a charming café serving excellent food by TABLE, visitors can marvel at the monumental, crash-landed figures of David Breuer-Weill. Over in Ditchling, Dymocks End Studio is an award-winning Sussex Downs-garden boasting an orchard and an ancient well. This hidden, peaceful place is the setting for sculptures and fabric installations. Or music fans can enjoy a Venezuelan Garden Concert at Encounters in West Hove, accompanied by some delicious food.