Billboard size poster of your art now available to order

We are now offering all Art Below exhibitors (past and present) a one month only deal on poster printing.
 
Art Below billboard posters measure 1 meter wide by 1.5 meters tall and normally cost £89.  For the next 4 weeks we are offering you the opportunity to order your own billboard size poster for just £69 (includes postage and packing for UK based artists) 
 
If you would like to order a copy of the poster that you displayed in the London Underground or of another piece of art work you have made then please contact postersales@artbelow.org.uk 
 
Please note that if you would like to print a poster of an artwork that has not been previously displayed by Art Below then you will need to have a high resolution image file available.
 
 

Art Below Summer Show: 1 week left to apply 

There is now just over a week left to apply to take part in the Art Below Summer Show. So far we have a star studded selection of artists taking part incluidng Nina Fowler, Miranda Donovan, James Mylne, Rebecca Fontaine Wolf and Schoony.
 
As an exhibitor in the Art Below Summer Show your chosen piece of art will go on display as a billboard poster for 2 weeks in June at a London underground station of your choice where it will be viewed by thousands of people daily.
 
To coincide with this your work will also go on show and available to buy at the Taberncale gallery in Notting Hill. 
Heralded as ‘The Taj Mahal of Kensington’, the Tabernacle was originally built as a church in 1887.  Today the Tabernacle serves as a cultural arts and entertainment venue, including a theatre, meeting rooms, music studio, art gallery, bar and kitchen, conservatory and a garden courtyard.   
 
There will be a VIP Summer Show launch event for all the artists and special guests with complimentary drinks served. 
 
To view further details on how you can take part  please click here to view the guidelines.  Application is by email to submissions@artbelow.org.uk with the requirements as specified in the guidelines by Monday 28th March. 
 
All applicants will receive 2 free tickets to The Other Art Fair, Victoria House, Holborn, London,  7-10th April.
 
Our last 2 summer shows were hosted at the Muse Gallery in 2015 see here and at London Westbank in 2014 see here. The confirmed gallery space for 2016 will be announced in the next few weeks. 
 
undefined
 
The Tabernacle building boasts a Curved Romanesque facade of red brick and terracotta, and towers with broach spires on either side. 
 
undefined
 
The Tabernacle Gallery space 
undefined
 
undefined
 
Peter Higgins at Holland Park Station, Art Below Summer Show 2015
undefined
 
Umut Yalim at Knightsbridge Station, Art Below Summer Show 2015
undefined
 
Joao Santos at Westbourne Park Station, Art Below Summer Show 2015
undefined
 
Michaela Gogova at Oxford Circus Station, Art Below Summer Show 2015
undefined
 
Louise Dear at Westminster Station, Art Below Summer Show 2015
undefined
 
 
 

 

Art Below at The Other Art Fair this April

Art Below will feature the work of an eclectic group of 3 artists at The Other Art Fair at Victoria House, Holborn, London this April - London based photographer, Noah Da Costa, Award winning RCA painter Amanda Wigglesworth, and 'X Ray artist’ Ernesto Romano from Venice, Italy. Selected works will go on display across billboard space in the London Underground in the run up to the fair.  

Noah Da Costa will be showcasing a series of prints from his series BRUTAL. The art works are based on the architectural movement from the mid-20th century that was know for it's brutalist style. The series of art works shows the beautiful brutality in the buildings by combining symmetry and selected details in the buildings to high light a new view on the controversial architecture. 
 
undefined


Ernesto Romano's work is an exploration of the human body. Cultivating precious floral species and super-imposing their structures onto x-rays are an attempt to preserve their beauty and to create analogies in combination with the human body. X-Rays from his own body are transformed into intimate self portraits, conveying metamorphoses in symbiosis with the unique beauty of the floral form.  White skeletal shapes are overlayed with vibrant flowers revealing harmony and drawing attention to the fragility of the human body and the ephemeral nature of plants and flowers (written by Renee Pfister) 
 
undefined


Amanda Wigglesworth will be exhbiting her award winning painting ‘Harmony’  (National Open Art Competition 2015).  
 
Amanda's paintings are essentially forms and surface energies which are richly textured. The vigorous application and removal of paint form images of an inner landscape.  Her work is based on paint as process; layers of oil paint, collage and textured pastes are painstakingly applied to the canvas over time. By taking paint off and reapplying, an image is built up and simultaneously disrupted as new layers are applied and removed. Primarily process driven, her work plays with the way paint runs, settles and layers, creating interactions between underlying forms and colours. The result is a harmony of colour and texture, revealing paintings of depth that although abstract, have definite forms, shapes and figures.

undefined
 
 
 
 

Art Below Pop Up New Orleans February 2016

Through out the month of February Art Below are displaying the work of 16 international artists on billboard space across New Orleans, Louisiana.  Running alongside the billboard display the artists work is also on show as framed giclee prints at Gallery Orange based on Royal Street in the heart of the french quarter. 

 
February is an integral month for New Orleans as it is when the city hosts one of the biggest street carnivals in the world - the Mardi Gras - meaning ‘Fat Tuesday’, reflecting the tradition of the last day and night of eating, drinking and partying to the max  before everyone gives up their hedonist ways for 40 days and 40 nights

Ben Moore who curated the show says ‘I think the work that is on display in New Orleans this month resonates with the city in various ways - socially, politically, and culturally - Many of the artists who are displaying their work have some kind of connection with New Orleans, and if they don’t - well, they do now because their work is now present in the backdrop of the consciousness of the people and parades masquerading across the streets'

Lou Patrou an artist based in New York who has been drawing and painting faces since the 1960s talks about his experiences of New Orleans: 'When I was last in New Orleans, (in the 1970s) it was a crazy place, it was dark and seedy like New York City was - lot’s of strippers, hookers and strip clubs all around. - we used to call them Sailor bars.’
 
photo
 
Lou Patrou's 'Hank and Sylvie'  Location: University Place & Canal. Photo credit Dave Rhodes
 
Much of the work on display resonates with the African culture that is forever present in the fabric of New Orleans society. 

For Francis Akpata a Nigerian artist based in London -  this will be the second time that he has exhibited in New Orleans with Art Below - His work ‘Dogon Vision’ is inspired from the patterns and fabrics of the Dogon tribe Mali, West Africa. 
 
photo
 
Francis Akpata 'Dogon Vision'  Location: St Claude & Port. Photo credit Dave Rhodes

Coventry based artist Patricia Joy Chamberlain work titled ‘No Dinner for Anansi’ is baed on an African Myth - She worked with children aged between 2 and 4 to create this unique collage which measures 3 x 2 meters and is now viewable in the form of a billboard on the streets of New Orelans.  
 
photo
 
Patricia Joy Chamberlain 'Anansi'  Location: Claiborne Ave. Photo credit Dave Rhodes

Barbara Rachko a US artist based in NYC has produced as series of work titled ‘black paintings’

'I take Mexican and Guatemalan folk art figures and masks and give them a new life in my pastel paintings. This ties directly to New Orleans and Mardi Gras because masks are an integral part of Mardi Gras culture.  During early Mardi Gras celebrations hundreds of years ago, masks were a way for their wearers to escape class constraints and social demands.  While wearing masks, carnival goers were free to be whomever they wanted to be and to mingle with any individual they wished.  My painting is called “Charade, ” which also alludes to hiding behind a false identity, just like those who don the Mardi Gras mask.   This is the first time I have done anything in this part of the country'
 
photo
 
Barbara Rachko 'Charade'   Location: Poydras Street.   Photo credit Dave Rhodes.
 
photo
 
Monee Stamp 'Mama Africa' and Gary Winship 'The Great Escape' Location: North Broad Street. Photo credit Dave Rhodes.
 
The work of Karen Thomas a french artist based in Montpellier and US artist Diana Whiley pay homage to  the vibrant music scene - the star feature of New Orleans - a legacy that is African-American at its core.
 
photo
 
Karen Thomas 'Guitarist' and  Diana Whiley 'Singing the Blues'  Location: Bernard Avenue. Photo credit Dave Rhodes.
 
Ben Moore remarks on the placement of the billboards ‘When I plan where the different works are going to be positioned I try and find an interesting dialogue between the work and the space in which it will inhabit for example I postitioned ‘Cars and Stripes’ in the forecourt of a used car dealer.  I positioned Noah da Costa whose work is concerned with concrete buildings under the backdrop of the mid city skyscrapers whilst Sirenes (Norway)  and Lisa Cody Rapport (US) works well against the backdrop of the traditional New Orleans town house' 
 
photo
 
photo
 
 
photo
 
Noah Da Costa 'Brunel' Location: South Rampart Street. Photo credit Dave Rhodes
 
photo
Anthony Garratt 'Anna's Botanical Imaginarium'  Location: Galvez Street.  Photo credit Dave Rhodes.
 
photo
 
Sirenes 'Flower Garden' and Lisa Cody Rapport 'Euphoria' Location: Carondelet St & Martin Luther King. Photo credit Dave Rhodes

photo
 
Miles Baker Location Pontchartrain.  Photo credit Dave Rhodes.
 
Written by Dee Brown.

 
 
ARTISTS TAKING PART
Lou Patrou   |   Lisa Cody Rapport   |  Barbara Rachko   |    Sirenes   |
 
photo
 
 
 

 

 
               
 
 

 
Art Below Ltd.
 
This e-mail is intended only for the named person or entity to which it is addressed and may contain valuable business information that is privileged, confidential and/or otherwise protected from disclosure. Dissemination, distribution or copying of this e-mail or the information herein by anyone other than the intended recipient, or an employee, or agent responsible for delivering the message to the intended recipient, is strictly prohibited. All contents are the copyright property of the authors, all rights reserved unless otherwise agreed. If you are not the intended recipient, you are nevertheless bound to respect the sender's worldwide legal rights. Please note that unintended recipients should delete the e-mail and destroy all electronic copies in their computer systems, retaining no copies in any media.

Art Below Ltd. Registered in England No.05697608.