The second board is now on display!
Our second Get On Board display was unveiled on Saturday 22nd August.
Grand Unveiling of our Board!
On Saturday 18th July at 11am Veronica unveiled our ‘Get On Board’ display outside Studio 36.
Thirty-two works are now on show, all produced under lockdown by the community of Newtown & St Leonard’s, Exeter.
In the Get On Board! project Studio 36 invited local residents, young and old, to unlock their thoughts, feelings and observations by sharing artwork, photos, poems, stories and more.
Many passers by have already seen it. Do take a look if you’re in the area! An exhibition is planned for later in the year and we are still accepting submissions for future months.
36 Contributions to House Lights On!
In this time of lockdown we received a series of illuminating contributions from friends of Studio 36 who engage with our mailing list.
Appropriately 36 people featured on our mailings over a 15 week period from 10th April to 23rd July 2020. Work submitted included artwork, poetry and prose.
This work will in due course be archived in its entirety and will appear on this website and in a future exhibition.
A New Owl
A new owl sculpture by Veronica Gosling keeps watch in the garden of Studio 36!
House Lights On … Clive Hurman
My art relationship with Veronica’s Hay Farm began when unawares we gatecrashed her private exhibition for family and friends. Needless to say we were made welcome. I’ve engaged ever since in setting up exhibitions at Studio 36, displaying woodwork items made by my charity Headway plus my own work at the Sunday events in November.
Wood is a very universal material. There are hundreds of different varieties, most of which are not used commercially. Considering the vast global use of the material, I am always surprised at how little people in general know about wood. Officially, wood is divided into two categories: Hardwoods and Softwoods. This does not mean a finger nail test will do! If a tree sheds its leaves in the Winter it will be termed a Hardwood, deciduous. If it keeps it’s leaves it will be called Softwood, evergreen. In the famous words of Michael Caine, ”not many people know that”. However, there are exceptions, for instance: Yew wood is evergreen but physically very hard! Where as, Balsa wood, used in modelmaking is a hardwood but very soft to the touch!
I have worked wood for many years, designing and making modern furniture. In the 1970’s it was not easy, as most people’s tastes were still in the Victorian era. However, I was achieving what I had set out to do! Making tables, chairs, cabinets, etc and anything sculptural that gave me a challenge. Many requests for repairs led me to study furniture restoration for antiques. With my knowledge, I also began teaching woodwork to those with special needs and acquired brain injury. I set up a woodwork centre in 1999.
I have now retired, and become interested in making early Irish “hedge chairs”, so called as most of the wood was gathered from hedgerows in fields. Shortages of timber in Ireland in the 1800’s forced poorer carpenters to gather wood, often naturally shaped for their purpose, thus chairs were made from a variety of different woods. Many were painted, like most of the Irish country furniture of that period.
Anyone interested in details of construction welcome to email me: hurmanclive@gmail.com