Join us on a literary world trip!
Add this book to bookshelf
Grey
Write a new comment Default profile 50px
Grey
Subscribe to read the full book or read the first pages for free!
All characters reduced
101 Days of Lockdown Art - cover

101 Days of Lockdown Art

Elliott Grey Turner

Publisher: Brown Dog Books

  • 0
  • 0
  • 0

Summary

Elliott Turner designs events, exhibitions and conferences for productions and companies all over the world. As Covid hit, to limit the spread of this virulent pandemic these activities became totally restricted. On the 19th March ’20 he was working at Park Display in Bicester. As a diabetic needing to isolate, he left the office for what he thought would be just a few weeks. Then on 23rd March 2020 to find an activity to occupy himself he decided to mow the lawn. The garden refuse bin was full so he piled the grass clippings at the end of the garden. The clippings looked like a melting snowman, so he put some sticks in with a pair of gloves on, a scarf and a carrot nose with his Panama completed the picture. 
He posted it saying: ‘This self-isolation is a piece of piss but I think my grass snowman is melting!’ On the 24th March the bin was emptied, so he filled the bin and put the hat, scarf and carrots on the bin posting: ‘To all of you worried about Mr Grassy the snowman, he’s now self-isolating.’ On the 25th March he power-washed the patio, scoring the letters RIP in the dirt in front of the bin: ‘Sad news everyone. Mr Grassy didn't stay in the bin so now they came and took him away. RIP Mr Grassy.’ On the 26th March Elliott’s eldest son took a photograph of him praying beside the lawnmower in a recreation of Millet’s ‘The Angelus’ and posted: ‘So today we held a quiet service for Grassy, to follow the Covid19 direction there was just one in attendance, sorry Millet.’ Little was he to know that there were to follow 101 days of art recreations in homage to favourite works of art and to artists whose work he has always admired. 
This book is a loving tribute to my wonderful mother and how hard she worked trying to educate my brother, sister and I into the joys of art.
Available since: 04/01/2022.

Other books that might interest you

  • The Virgin in Art - cover

    The Virgin in Art

    Kyra Belán

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    The art world is filled with the presence of the Virgin Mary – a fundamental symbol of motherhood, who has been radiating youthfulness, tenderness, and compassion for two thousand years. Finding in her an inexhaustible source of inspiration, artists have consistently used the image of the Virgin Mary to reflect our own sufferings and joys. The author Kyra Belán leads us on a comprehensive tour analysing the profound meaning to be found in the images of the Virgin – from personal interpretations to spiritual reflections on a universal level. These works of art present a fascinating visual commentary on the evolution of Western art as well as a striking record of the rise in status of women in society. With more than 200 illustrations, two thousand years of human history are expressed in a single image; that of the Blessed Virgin, Mother of Christ.
    Show book
  • News from Lake Wobegon: Summer - Stories From The Collection News From The Lake Wobegon - cover

    News from Lake Wobegon: Summer -...

    Garrison Keillor

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Funny and touching, these monologues from original live broadcasts of A Prairie Home Companion focus on the summer season.Includes: The Living FlagThe Tollefson Boy Goes to CollegeTomato ButtChamber of CommerceDog Days of AugustMrs. Berge and the Schubert Carillon Piano
    Show book
  • Anatomy of a Doll - The Fabric Sculptor's Handbook - cover

    Anatomy of a Doll - The Fabric...

    Susanna Oroyan

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    “At last! A complete book on doll design and soft sculpture has been written.” —Virginia Robertson, designer and publisher Master dollmaker Susanna Oroyan gives you the definitive book on fabric sculpting. Anatomy of a Doll is packed with an abundance of exquisite photographs that capture the best work from dollmakers today. Detailed step-by-step illustrations for an incredible variety of cloth dolls are included for you to create any type of cloth doll imaginable. Many methods of doll construction are covered so that beginning and professional dollmakers have a handy answer book. Beginners will find the book a practical guide that examines techniques for making all kinds of dolls. The more experienced dollmaker will discover an abundance of new ideas and techniques never before found in one book. Anatomy of a Doll shows you everything from bending wire to cutting cloth, which will allow you to create your own original dolls!“[Enjoy] this book as a peerless museum guide, as a user’s manual of the inventive hand and mind, and as a parable of science.” —Scientific American“It’s finally happened—the cloth doll book that says it all! Thank you Susanna—the table is set, the banquet is prepared!” —Elinor Peace Bailey, author of Storytelling with Dolls“Here is all the information you need—written in Susie’s friendly, casual style.” —Cary Raesner, editor of Doll World
    Show book
  • Theatre in Scotland - A Field of Dreams - cover

    Theatre in Scotland - A Field of...

    Joyce McMillan

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    'She has, to my knowledge, an almost unblemished record in never having failed to spot a great new play…' Philip Howard, from his Foreword
    Joyce McMillan has been writing about theatre in Scotland for more than three decades. As drama critic successively for The Guardian, Scotland on Sunday and The Scotsman, she has reviewed thousands of plays. During that time she has borne witness to an extraordinary cultural and political renaissance in Scotland, reflected in the newfound confidence of its playwrights, in the vibrancy of its theatre culture and in its recent outburst of new theatre companies.
    Compiled by McMillan and the theatre director, Philip Howard, Theatre in Scotland is a panoramic history of modern Scottish theatre, reported from the frontline. It traces the remarkable journey of Scottish theatre towards its new self-confidence: the road to 1990, when Glasgow was European Capital of Culture; followed by the explosive expansion of the 1990s; culminating in the emergence of the National Theatre of Scotland and its drive to bring theatre culture right into the heart of the nation.
    Gathered here are the leading Scottish playwrights, from John Byrne to Liz Lochhead, from David Greig to David Harrower, as well as the full breadth of English playwrights, from Shakespeare to Pinter. There are reflections on the great Scottish plays, classic – Ane Satyre of the Thrie Estaitis, Men Should Weep – and modern – Black Watch, The James Plays. There are reports not only from the urban theatre centres of Edinburgh and Glasgow but from all over Scotland; and from the feast that is the Edinburgh Festival, to the nourishing A Play, A Pie and A Pint.
    A leading thinker and writer about Scotland, McMillan has an incomparable ability to detect the wider cultural resonances in Scottish theatre, and to reveal what it can tell us about Scotland as a whole. Her book serves as a portrait of a nation and a shared cultural life, where visions of 'what we have been, what we are, and what we might become' are played out in sharp focus on its stages.
    'When Scottish theatre works [its] magic over the coming years, I will be there, to try to catch the moment in print, and to tell it as it was. And believe me, on the good nights and the bad ones, the privilege will be mine: to be paid to go looking for joy, and occasionally to find it.' Joyce McMillan
    Show book
  • Swifty McVay Presents: The Seventh Star - The Autobiography Of Ondré Moore - cover

    Swifty McVay Presents: The...

    Swifty McVay

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    The Seventh Star is a deeply personal, unflinching and unapologetic memoir that sheds light on an intense childhood spent on Detroit's notorious West 7 Mile, the pivotal role that the area's hip hop scene played, and the rise to national prominence Swifty McVay and his peers experienced after the massive mainstream success of the group D12. 
    Ondre Moore, better known by his stage name Swift—or Swifty McVay—speaks plainly here, telling the inside story of how the members of D12 met and how their relationships have evolved throughout the years. He describes D12's close connection and initially mixed reaction to a then little-known rapper, Marshall Mathers III, better known as Eminem. 
    But Swifty also details the significant struggles each of them overcame in their personal and professional lives—including the bleak and brutal deaths of group members Bugz and Proof—as they rose through the ranks in the demanding world of rap. Finding anchors in sobriety and spirituality, Swifty continues to challenge himself creatively as he releases solo albums and tours today. 
    The Seventh Star is the unique story of an artist finding his voice in America's heartland, succinctly and intimately told by a creative powerhouse in the world of hip hop.
    Show book
  • The Scarlet Pimpernel - Hollywood Stage - cover

    The Scarlet Pimpernel -...

    Hollywood Stage Productions

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Hollywood is indelibly printed in our minds as the ‘go-to’ place for entertainment and has been for decades.  When there really did seem to be more stars in Hollywood than in Heaven Hollywood Stage had them performing films as radio plays – on the sponsors dime of course.  Classic films now become audiobooks with many featuring the original stars from way back when. Here's The Scarlet Pimpernel starring Leslie Howard & Olivia de Havilland.
    Show book