Busman’s Holiday

Ah, I love Cornwall!  I love the coasts and villages; I love the people; I love the rugged beauty of the moors and the intimacy of the narrow lanes, which are currently looking particular spectacular fringed as they are with drifts of cow parsley, foxgloves and red campion.

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The hedgerows and road verges are so colourful at the moment.

 

It has been such a treat to travel around with no time pressure visiting artists in their lairs and chatting to them about life, art and Cornwall. Not being able to get into my own studio and knowing that this is a time for just lapping up the atmosphere has been so relaxing.  Who could ask for more?

I began close to home on the Roseland where, much to my surprise, I discovered only one artist was taking part in Cornwall Open Studios. Carol O’Toole and I happily whiled away the time in her  studio in Tregony.  What a lovely lady!  She made me feel so good about my decision to move to Cornwall.  I showed her my work, which happened to be in the car, and she showed me hers.

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Carol O’Toole: a fabulous mix of print and paint.
I love the fact that she, like me, does not stick to the rules.  In her case this results in delicious combinations of print and paint which work brilliantly together.

Later in the week I prowled further afield, crossing the ferry and trekking into the wilds of Feock and Mylor Bridge to gaze with admiration at Lucy Spink’s jewellery – Just as well she does not have any kind of facility for taking credit cards or I might have parted with a fair bit of money – and the print makers Jenny and Sarah Seddon.  Despite having committed a dreadful error here and failed to read the booklet properly, the Seddons were not officially open on the day I went, the welcome I received was as warm as any and the work was enthralling.  I would not have minded staying with the Seddons all day!

Of course I had to drop in on Paula Downing whose work I had seen at Truro Museum and who I really wanted to meet.  She could not have been more friendly and, despite the fact that she was actually trying to run a workshop at the time, was happy to chat about the ceramics scene in Cornwall and sounded genuinely interested to meet a fellow manipulator of clay.  Paula’s light and airy studio felt like a tree house.  You look out of the large windows across the valley of the River Fal and see nothing but a canopy of deciduous woodland.  How she gets any work done is a mystery to me – I would spend all day gazing at the wildlife!

My overall impression of the Cornwall Open Studios is that, whereas in Wimbledon we get around 4000 visitors in 4 days, life is hectic and the opportunities come to us, the artists in Cornwall get nothing like those numbers in 10 days.  Here the visitors have to make quite an effort to seek out the studios (I got lost more than once) and the artists have to make a massive effort too.  Tea, cake and hospitality were on hand wherever I went and

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Some of the settings were simply glorious.

some of the settings were simply glorious.  Most importantly, those who had grouped together with more than one artist in a building seemed to have a real advantage and were clearly receiving a disproportionately higher number of visitors. 

 

Well you would if you could!

Studio or Cornwall?  Cornwall or Studio?  Well it was a bit of a no-brainer really.  I have a mass of work to do following the Open Studios, commissions, ideas, gallery approaches.  All very exciting really but it is going to be HOT this weekend and my studio will be like an oven.  So early on Friday morning, before the rest of London was away I high tailed it down to the South-West and beat the crowds.  The sun was shining when I arrived, the sea was blue and all of a sudden I felt like a different person.

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The sun was shining, the sea was blue

The truth is that I have been feeling a bit burnt recently:  Pop up shops; Open Studios; teaching;  it all takes its toll if I am honest.  So I am planning to do very little for a week.  Feet up, tiller in hand, bobbing about in the oggin in my darling boat.  Then back to work refreshed and raring to go.

Not only that but it is Open Studios in Cornwall this week so I can call this a bit of a busman’s holiday and go wandering around the lanes and byways in search of other ceramicists who are already based in Cornwall.  I am looking forward to having a bit of a snoop if I’m honest.  My studio is currently only on paper so I could do with picking a few brains about layout, equipment, lessons learned before the diggers move in to clear the area.  Cornwall’s Open Studios is great for that because, unlike in Wimbledon, here the studios are spread all over the county and you get to visit some fabulous spaces.  I don’t imagine that I will get round all 259 artists but I certainly want to seek out a few who work not too far away.

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Doctor Livingston?

In the meantime, there seems to be a bit more jungle clearance to do at our new abode before the builders can find the house so I don’t think I am going to do too much putting my feet up but I am planning on returning to London refreshed and raring to go . . . . . .