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“HI THERE.....
ME FAMISHED......so ME a bit earlier then you perhaps want ME to be......
Found some caviar, but that no good!!!!!
ME wants....well, you know what ME wants....!!!
So beware in the dark, because.....ME FAMISHED!!!!!!”, whispers ‘Skull’.
Design Origami "Skull": Matthew Green
Folded from 24x24cm black/white kamipaper.
Folded it, then unfolded it, crumpled the paper and folded it again to get this structure in the paper.
There is a video tutorial, if you want to fold it too ;-)) Happy folding!
Councillor Matthew Green unable to be respectful during today's wreath-laying at the Remembrance Day service.
In June 2010 to coincide with the building of UCLH Foundation Trust's new Cancer Centre, UCLH Arts commissioned fifteen artists to create work on the theme of well being. For the next year and a half these works will decorate the external hoarding of the Cancer Centre as it is being built.
My work entitled Play is on display on University Street, off Huntley Street, W1, London. The other fourteen artists who created work for the project were Adam Hayes, Fiona Hepburn, Matthew Green, Andrew Curtis, Tom Leighton, Lucy Gough, Edd Pearman, Anthony Burrill, Sarah Bridgland, Jack Kettlewell, Abigail Hunt and Kieren Reed, Erica Donovan, Jess Wilson and Jane Ward.
All the artworks will be created into limited edition prints that will form part of the permanent art collection within the Cancer Centre once completed in 2011. For further information about Art at UCLH or the commissions please contact Arts Curator, Guy Noble: guy.noble@uclh.nhs.uk
In June 2010 to coincide with the building of UCLH Foundation Trust's new Cancer Centre, UCLH Arts commissioned fifteen artists to create work on the theme of well being. For the next year and a half these works will decorate the external hoarding of the Cancer Centre as it is being built.
My work entitled Play is on display on University Street, off Huntley Street, W1, London. The other fourteen artists who created work for the project were Adam Hayes, Fiona Hepburn, Matthew Green, Andrew Curtis, Tom Leighton, Lucy Gough, Edd Pearman, Anthony Burrill, Sarah Bridgland, Jack Kettlewell, Abigail Hunt and Kieren Reed, Erica Donovan, Jess Wilson and Jane Ward.
All the artworks will be created into limited edition prints that will form part of the permanent art collection within the Cancer Centre once completed in 2011. For further information about Art at UCLH or the commissions please contact Arts Curator, Guy Noble: guy.noble@uclh.nhs.uk
In June 2010 to coincide with the building of UCLH Foundation Trust's new Cancer Centre, UCLH Arts commissioned fifteen artists to create work on the theme of well being. For the next year and a half these works will decorate the external hoarding of the Cancer Centre as it is being built.
My work entitled Play is on display on University Street, off Huntley Street, W1, London. The other fourteen artists who created work for the project were Adam Hayes, Fiona Hepburn, Matthew Green, Andrew Curtis, Tom Leighton, Lucy Gough, Edd Pearman, Anthony Burrill, Sarah Bridgland, Jack Kettlewell, Abigail Hunt and Kieren Reed, Erica Donovan, Jess Wilson and Jane Ward.
All the artworks will be created into limited edition prints that will form part of the permanent art collection within the Cancer Centre once completed in 2011. For further information about Art at UCLH or the commissions please contact Arts Curator, Guy Noble: guy.noble@uclh.nhs.uk
In June 2010 to coincide with the building of UCLH Foundation Trust's new Cancer Centre, UCLH Arts commissioned fifteen artists to create work on the theme of well being. For the next year and a half these works will decorate the external hoarding of the Cancer Centre as it is being built.
My work entitled Play is on display on University Street, off Huntley Street, W1, London. The other fourteen artists who created work for the project were Adam Hayes, Fiona Hepburn, Matthew Green, Andrew Curtis, Tom Leighton, Lucy Gough, Edd Pearman, Anthony Burrill, Sarah Bridgland, Jack Kettlewell, Abigail Hunt and Kieren Reed, Erica Donovan, Jess Wilson and Jane Ward.
All the artworks will be created into limited edition prints that will form part of the permanent art collection within the Cancer Centre once completed in 2011. For further information about Art at UCLH or the commissions please contact Arts Curator, Guy Noble: guy.noble@uclh.nhs.uk
In June 2010 to coincide with the building of UCLH Foundation Trust's new Cancer Centre, UCLH Arts commissioned fifteen artists to create work on the theme of well being. For the next year and a half these works will decorate the external hoarding of the Cancer Centre as it is being built.
My work entitled Play is on display on University Street, off Huntley Street, W1, London. The other fourteen artists who created work for the project were Adam Hayes, Fiona Hepburn, Matthew Green, Andrew Curtis, Tom Leighton, Lucy Gough, Edd Pearman, Anthony Burrill, Sarah Bridgland, Jack Kettlewell, Abigail Hunt and Kieren Reed, Erica Donovan, Jess Wilson and Jane Ward.
All the artworks will be created into limited edition prints that will form part of the permanent art collection within the Cancer Centre once completed in 2011. For further information about Art at UCLH or the commissions please contact Arts Curator, Guy Noble: guy.noble@uclh.nhs.uk
Exhibition curated by Brad Troemel and Lauren Christiansen
thejogging.tumblr.com/post/459553531/an-immaterial-survey...
An Immaterial Survey of Our Peers presents installation images of an exhibit that never physically took place. Using digital compositing techniques, we have re-imagined the process of browsing through a Google Reader by adding art to images of the Sullivan Galleries’ empty walls. This presentational gesture of conflating scrolling with strolling is meant to question the ongoing tendency to believe material interaction with art is mandatory despite living in an age of utter dependency on the digital image as an informational source. Like the Argentinean Communication Media artists before us, we have cut out the middle-man (objects) and inserted the image as our final product, aware that the documentary media art receives plays the most pivotal role in defining its public discourse anyway. To expedite this process of media exposure, An Immaterial Survey is simultaneously being debuted online in addition to its projection in Chicago, confusing the boundaries of when and where the exhibit took place.
It is an intentional choice to offer no objects and no work of our own as our final display at SAIC. This is in part a tribute to the decentralized network of artists who comprise An Immaterial Survey. To present art online is an act of selflessness; the creator forfeits stringent control over their work’s meaning in favor of allowing the most generous opportunity for global viewership possible. For this we are thankful and indebted to the names that comprise our list of participants. We choose not to present sellable goods because we are fully aware of the irony of the BFA Exhibit itself; four years of a Feminist-Marxist education culminating in a grand celebration of luxury goods and the willful commodification of artist identity brands (best exemplified by the entire shelving units dedicated to freshly printed business cards). It is our intent to use this opportunity not for our own market assimilation, but for the praise of others and the criticism of art’s hierarchy of material value still present in our digital age.
An Immaterial Survey of Our Peers includes work by:
On July 4th 2011, over 200 people attended Commission's Consultation on Social Assistance Review in Hamilton,Ontario Canada. Pamela Hubbard drew this graphic facilitation as each focus group presented.
We finished our mini-gallery this weekend. Due respect to Tony Hart then, who was no doubt an influence toward its creation.
For the WordPress weekly photo challenge.
A friend of mine once implied that, if you let your beard grow long enough, you cease to be a "man with a beard" and start to become "a beard with a man". I think I have a way to go before I cross that line. But someday I might let it grow longer to see if I can get a respectable "patriarchal" beard (you know, like the paintings of Abraham or Moses). But I think those long beards look better when they are white with venerable age. Don't ask me why.
Heather Kidd entertaining local party supporters at recent Marches supper in
Much Wenlock. Mathew Green, former LibDem MP for Ludlow, and guest speaker
Lord Tom McNally, LibDem leader in the House of Lords enjoy the
entertainment.
“VIVA is Matthew Green’s commentary on religious fervour, hometown glory and the wonder of the everyday celebrated through a photographic feast of tone and colour"
5 July 2008 to 31 July 2008
hosted at: art..e gallery
art..e gallery is located close to St Francis & St George Square and is a stones throw from the Oraturju Don Bosco.
If you stumble across Helen’s Salon or George’s Bar then you’re almost there...
Can’t find us! Don’t give up; just ask the next person you see
Saturday to Thursday
9.30am - 12.15pm
Fridays
9.30am - 12.15pm and 5pm - 7pm
It was truly amazing seeing Erykah Badu Perform. She is so Amazing . . . and Gorgeous!
Taken By. Matthew Green