Brixton Bugle February 2020

Page 9

FEBRUARY 2020 brixtonblog.com CREATIVE BRIXTON  9

ARTS BRIXTON BLOG & BUGLE ART SHOW NOW OPEN FOR ENTRIES Are you an artist based in Brixton? Do you want to show your work to the local community? Entry is now open for the 2020 Brixton Blog & Bugle Summer Art Show. After the successful launch of the show last year, we are now planning an even bigger and better one this year. The show is open to any artist

– professional or self-taught – who is at least 16 years old and is based in or around (a short bus ride from) Brixton. You can submit up to two works. To enter, all you have to do is send up to three digital photos of each work to arts@brixtonblog.com. with “Summer Art Show” as the subject. Include your name, address, contact

number, the title and a brief description of the work including its dimensions. The closing date for entries is Friday 3 April. Please do not submit work included in the 2019 show. Shortlisted works will be featured in the Bugle and will be displayed in Brixton library for three weeks. Winners will be decided by a people’s vote.

ADRIAN COLEMAN PORTRAITS OF BRIXTON

There’s a lot going on Leslie Manasseh meets a local artist exploring belonging and identity Brixton is a busy place – full of people, noise and activity. But local artist Adrian Coleman has found an extraordinary stillness and calm amongst the bustle. He paints ordinary street scenes and domestic buildings. But his is a rare and special take on the streets we all know. It is as if a stranger has landed, taken a long hard look at Brixton, reproduced a series of beautiful images, and then moved on. His work is a beguiling mix of intimacy and detachment. As we talk, the reasons for this become clear. The simple truth is that he is something of a stranger. Adrian was born in Britain but moved to the USA when he was three. He started painting when he was seven and later studied art and architecture at Yale University. He returned to the UK three years ago and chose Brixton because of similarities with the area of Brooklyn he had lived in. He explains that his art explores notions of identity and belonging, being both a part of and estranged from a place. This sense of not quite belonging gives his paintings an eerie, reflective quality capturing a less well known side of Brixton. Some of his work can seem quite bleak – but as an observation rather than a judgement. He is inviting you to share his vision. And it’s a very interesting one. The work is unashamedly urban and architectural – and painted with a very disciplined technique which perhaps reflects his training in architecture. It falls into a number of time periods coinciding with

where he was living. So most of his paintings are of America. Fascinating as these are, I want here to focus on his paintings of Brixton. Nothing is obvious about these works – you need to look quite hard to get the full picture. At a simple level they are delicate, very finely rendered celebrations of the everyday. More profoundly they create a sense of place which is different from most perceptions of Brixton. And sometimes there is a more complex narrative at work. For example in Station to Station, the painting becomes the site of intersecting stories between locals and those passing through. But they are subtle paintings as well – with hints and suggestions of urban alienation, deprivation and gentrification. He is also interested in how images of a place can reflect its history and character. So quite often yucca palm trees appear in his work as a neat way to show that Brixton is an immigrant community from different parts of the world. Interestingly Adrian places his work in the tradition of English landscapes. Urban landscapes they may be, but there is a lot going on in these paintings. They invite you to savour the feel of Brixton and its textures and spaces. You can get lost in the loving and painstaking detail of the world as he sees it. And you come away with a sense that you’ve seen something new in your bit of London. These are fine works by an interesting painter with much to say. A See more at colemanadrian.com

Station to Station and, below, English Gardens

KEY DATES

A Friday 3 April – closing date for entries A Friday 24 April – shortlisted artists invited to bring their work to a viewing in the Library A Monday 8 June – show opens A RULES: http://bit.ly/BBBAS20-rules


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