Spaces Available

The Cambridge Art Salon has SPACES TO RENT at Unit 13, Barnwell Drive, and is delighted to be able to offer them to members of the public in arts or creative making.

Rent starts from £125 per month subject to space size.

All creative practices are welcome, including ceramics, fashion, painting, millinery, and many more.

Contact: info@penelopehayes.co.uk

Get ready to see us at Cambridge WOW on Sunday March 8th!

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NEW INFLUENCES: Female Voices is hosting a chill out room upstairs in J1, screening footage from art installation The Women’s Room, feminist video art from Amy Spencer (includes some nudity), plus videos from Hollie Mcnish, Bryony Kimmings and rapper Shay D. You can also see quotes from interviews with inspirational women in the community, such as Mayor of Cambridge Gerri Bird.

See our feminist posters downstairs in the J1 entrance. Plus check the Under 10s room, featuring Bryony Kimmings’ alternative feminist pop star made with nine year old neice, Taylor.

*Please note that some roads may be closed due to the half marathon, so check routes before driving*

Cambridge WOW Feminist Posters #femalevoicesnow

Feminist and inspirational posters are now going up all over Cambridge, as part of Cambridge WOW, featuring quotes from women in the city interviewed for Female Voices. Share or post a photo of one, designed by Sensibly Insane and Rebecca Scambler, online on twitter or FB with #femalevoicesnow. The quotes were selected, with help, from our group of girls at Romsey Mill. There’s the chance to win lots of goodies, including cinema tickets from Cambridge Light cinema, gig tickets from Cambridge Junction, jewellery made especially for the comptition, feminist books, vegan cake and mounted inspirational quotes from Hollie Mcnish and novelist Alison Bruce. The posters are all over the city – from cafes such as Clowns and Urban Shed, to shops such as Jemporium, Cambridge Resale, Romsey Mill charity shop, or in public space near the Guildhall (thank you Cambridge City Council), to Cambridge Regional College, to youth and community centres such as Brownsfield and Romsey Mill.

Share with #femalevoicesnow – prize draw is Monday 9th March.

Also see inspirational portraits by My Linh Le, Louisa Taylor and Aurora Cacciapuoti all over the city.

Check https://www.facebook.com/womeninfluence

Click here to view the full programme. 

Welcome to our new website

Welcome to our new website. We are thrilled to bits to share it with you. Thank you to Rebecca Scambler – arts activist, single mum and designer extraordinaire who created this for us (read her fantastic Art Of Protest blog here and check her website design services here).

One of the biggest things am excited about with this new website is being able to communicate the full scope of the Art Salon – our artists, supporters, vision. When you are growing an arts organisation on very, very little, every bit of support helps. We have a new strapline, which says it all. At the heart of the Art Salon is equal access to art – which you can see in the projects we run, the people we work with and support – from all backgrounds. Cambridge is rapidly becoming as expensive as central London to live in – and to work. Although we have fantastic free to visit arts spaces, like Changing Spaces, Kettles Yard, the Fitzwilliam and many more (highlighted on our Art Map) – our concern is helping people access the space and support they need to practice art, as well as engage with it – regardless of how rich, or well connected they might be. A studio to an artist is like a kitchen to a chef. And Grayson Perry is right, it’s not the rich who produce culture. So affordable studio space for the community like ours – is vital for any city that prides itself on supporting the arts.

We won an award last year from what can do with disused space, described by judges as a ‘great social enterprise that nurtures people as well as community’. But the hunt for long term space – and resource to fund this – goes on. We have an open call to property owners, investors, philanthropists, business and individuals to help us – get in touch if you have access to an underused space that you’d like to see put to good use. Or if you’d like to talk to us about helping us buy property to preserve as long term creative space for the community. In the meantime, read our articles to see what our people and projects have helped bring to the city (check Spotlight On… each month for a full feature), or go behind the scenes At The Studios to see what the makers there are up to. Watch official call out for the third ever Romsey Art Festival this year, too – celebrating community through contemporary art, with a theme of COLOUR AND MAGIC for its new date of September 5th – 19th, 2015. East Cambridge is where we started, where the festival happens and where we are currently based – with Romsey Town itself the inspiration behind the Romsey Art Festival, which is still all about celebrating the creative independence and community represented by the area.

Personally, I have been flatout throughout January working on the final stages of our fantastic feminist Art Salon project Female Voices partnered with Romsey Mill which brought the likes of Phoebe Davies INFLUENCES NAIL BAR to Cambridge’s first ever Women Of The World Festival (WOW) last October (as heard on Radio 4’s Women’s Hour no less). Please come to our exhibition in March, launching on March 3rd – featuring a fabulous programme of female artists whose work successfully engages with popular culture to make feminism more accessible to new generations of young women (check the flier, stunning design from Katy Figg). We’ve helped our girls interview role models such as Mayor of Cambridge Gerri Bird. We’ve commissioned Sa’adiah Khan to create a portable space that has been on tour around the city facilitating discussion between girls and women in Cambridge, too – The Women’s Room – from Sa’adiah Khan. Plus catch videos from the likes of female rapper Shay-D or performance artist Bryony Kimmings, at our show.

2014 was one of the toughest years we faced as a young arts organisation without core funding. The fact you’re reading this now in 2015 is a testimony to all the passion so many people have shared for the Art Salon since we started in 2011 – and our resilience, the grassroots power of people, art and community to make things happen. Many of you will know that we had to move premises last Summer. But thanks to Cambridge City Council we found new space for our studios to move to in June – and are so thankful to everyone who stepped in help us throughout that very stressful time. I’d also like to offer my heartfelt condolences to the family of Simon Sedgwick-Jell, former head of Cambridge City Council who was a massive moral support to the Art Salon back then – and sadly passed away in December. Generosity and kindness goes such a long way.

We’re delighted to be working with a new property in secret location in North Cambridge this January, for later this year. Do you live in Chesterton or the Arbury? Would you like to show your work, or help make a mini art space for the community happen? We’re particularly keen to hear from you.

Finally, would you like to come and work with us? We are looking for a one day a week administrator or co-ordinator to help with the studios and our projects and invite applications from you all now. Please pass on the opportunity. We’re also looking for a new Chair for our board of trustees – a person as passionate as we are, about art and creative culture’s value in the community, dedicated to our commitment to equality and social inclusion.

Wishing you all the best ever January (and for more on the broader art scene in Cambridge don’t forget to pick up a copy of my arts column in the lovely Cambridge Edition magazine).

Ruthie x

At the studios – update with Ruth Schmid

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Ruth Schmid of Q Here in her studio at UNIT 13 – http://www.qhere.net/

NEW INFLUENCES: Female Voices

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See nail wrap designs from Phoebe Davies and girls supported by Romsey Mill at our latest exhibition NEW INFLUENCES: Female Voices, Cambridge, appearing at Cambridge WOW, March 8th.

Update coming soon …

Welcome to the new Art Salon website

Welcome to the new Art Salon website. Big thanks to Rebecca Scambler for her design skills creating it! Watch out for our weekly studios updates, plus special features and posts on our work in the community. For regular updates please subscribe here:

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At the Studios – February 2015

 

Penelope Sackett Hayes, ceramics artist, at work at the studios on new work. http://penelopehayes.co.uk/

Jill Fordham, glass artist, at work at the studios on a new commission
http://hurdy-gurdyglass.co.uk/

 

INFLUENCES NAIL BAR comes to Cambridge Women Of The World Festival, October 26th

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Cambridge Art Salon brings the acclaimed INFLUENCES NAIL BAR to Cambridge as part of their second Women Of Influence project with Romsey Mill, Female Voices, funded by the Arts Council. Since September, a group of girls from Romsey Mill have been discussing equality issues with artist Phoebe Davies and together have selected a range of inspirational women to go on a series of nail wraps, available at INFLUENCES NAIL BAR at Cambridge’s first ever Women of the World Festival (WOW) on October 26th.

The nailwraps selected by the girls include the likes of performance poet Hollie Mcnish and Every Day Sexism’s Laura Bates.

Read more about Phoebe Davies and the INFLUENCES NAIL BAR in this article in Grazia magazine : http://www.graziadaily.co.uk/conversation/entertainment/why-everyone-needs-a-feminist-manicure.

Come and visit the nail bar from 10am until 4.30pm on October 26th at Cambridge Junction. Get your tickets here : http://www.junction.co.uk/artist/6790

Female Voices is led by Cambridge Art Salon and Romsey Mill,  partnered with Cambridge University’s Women Of The World Festival, plus online magazine Female Arts : http://www.femalearts.com/

 

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MARK WOODS-NUNN STUDENT COLLECTIVE (PART 2) 27 JUNE – 1 JULY 2014

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An eclectic mix of styles born from having fun, experimenting and applying new skills. Both traditional and digital methods have been utilised.

This body of work has been produced by past and current photography students of Mark Woods Nunn. Whilst all of those exhibiting hold a keen interest in photography, several are now working as professional photographers. The camers used range from modest ‘point and shoots’ to higher end kit.

Launch night starts at: 6pm at the Box Cafe, Gwydir St, Cambridge

 

Announcement and Change of Address

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A solo exhibition of work by Jadryk Brown – Opening 9th May 7 pm, running 10th May – 16th May (Read our artist interview here)

 

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We recently interviewed artist Jadryk Brown to ask him about his work, his creative  background and his latest show:

Q: What are you doing right now?

A: Right now I am finishing off a few pieces for the show and working on designing some much larger figurative works for my collaboration with Deanna Tyson.

Q: Tell us about your show.

A: The show is a collection of work which I have produced in the last year, largely influenced by the couple of months I spent in Los Angeles last summer. The work focuses on ideas of the forgotten, unnoticed and discarded coming together with the beauty of typography and classical  oil paintings. But I’m doing it with spray paint, biro and a bucket of black gloss.

Q: When did you start making art?

A: I wouldn’t be able to say when I first started making art. I guess it’s more that I’ve just never stopped. I’ve always been doing something in one way or another, whether just throwing paint about or drawing terrible pictures of cars, so I think it’s more that it’s just grown and become more of an expression of my thoughts and ideas.

Q: What are your influences as an artist?

A: Everything influences my work. Anything I encounter day to day  can give me an idea, whether it’s a colour, a shape, a piece of lettering, some clothing, or something I hear about will give me the start of an idea behind a piece.

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