If you’re curious, you can read our privacy notice.Find a wide variety of authentic Martin Whatson prints and multiples available for sale on 1stDibs. To leave our community click on the name at the top of your screen and choose 'exit group'. If you don't like our community, you can check out any time you like. We also treat our community members to special offers, promotions, and adverts from us and our partners. No one will be able to see who is signed up and no one can send messages except the ChronicleLive team. All you need to do is choose which community you want to join, click on the link and press 'join community'. To join you need to have WhatsApp on your device. We have a number of communities to join, so you can choose which one you want to be part of and we'll send you the latest news direct to your phone. Baltic is open Wednesday to Sunday and entry is free: find out more here.ĬhronicleLive is now on WhatsApp and we want you to join our communities. The Open Submission exhibition is running until September 1. Applicant Lily Senner was picked out from the submissions to create a new artwork for the gallery's ground floor lightbox which greets visitors as they enter Baltic and Kübra Müjde, an artist from Mesopotamia now living in Newcastle who has a large dreamscape oil painting called Sleeping Girl on show in the exhibition, was chosen to create a design for a flag which is now flying at Newcastle Castle Keep. The projection is not the only new commission inspired by the exhibition. Showing an animation of the logos of both the gallery and Fenwick, this lit up as the Millennium Bridge was also turned ‘Fenwick green', to mark the department store's involvement in Open Submission as part of its support of local talent. The opening of the eye-catching exhibition was heralded on Friday evening by specially-commissioned projection by graphic artist Jimmy Turrell onto the side of the Baltic building. This is A Parliament of Empty Gestures by Mark Duffy who was a photographer at the Houses of Parliament and these hands are cut-outs from the images of MPs who featured in the pictures he took in the Commons during political debates. One of Niomi's favourites is a sculpture in the corner of the room made up of a tower of hands, some fluttering as if in mid-conversation others entwined or pointing. Kelso and one built of plastics - comprising trays, bleach bottles and plastic ties - by Peter Kellett to draw attention to environmental pollution. Sculptures include a wooden creation by 80-year-old former architect Paul W. There's the familiar sight of the kittiwakes on the Baltic painted by a retired GP called Kim Fewell and glowing photographs of Wrestling Warriors by Giorgio Di Francesco which take us on what's described as 'A Visual Journey into Kushti Heritage' of India. The Teesside parmo gets a look-in too in a collage by Meg Mcwilliam. "It really made us realise the amount of talent in the region." They would have had enough to fill the upper level four gallery, she says, and the hope is that a future Open Submission - already grown massively in popularity since last year's 500 entrants - will be able to transfer to the bigger space.īecky Hush, a student of French, features Newcastle Brown Ale in her artwork called Frog on the Tyne, a mix of oil and MDF wood, which fuses food stereotypes by showing the local beer label on a bottle of Moet Champagne plus a Greggs paper bag with a croissant inside. "We could have done this show four times," she says. It all results from the Gateshead gallery's Open Submission call-out, held in association with Fenwick, which attracted more than 1,400 submissions from Berwick to Teesside, says Baltic curator Niomi Fairweather who was one of those facing with the enormous task of viewing all the entry photographs and whittling them down. Get all the latest North East updates with our free What’s On newsletter.Read more: Viewing opens in Newcastle for rediscovered Banksy ahead of auction.There is work packed with colour and energy, fine detail and bold flourishes, alongside plenty of surprises and fun. It occupies two adjoining rooms on the Gateshead gallery's ground floor and it impresses at every turn. Other subjects include vibrant dreamscapes and fantasy settings in this new group exhibition whose huge variety of work - paintings, photography, ceramics, video and sculpture - is by 104 local talents, many of them untrained and exhibiting for the first time. Soaring city views, North East coastal scenes and even references to Greggs and Newcastle Brown Ale feature in a remarkable collection of artwork now on show at Baltic Centre for Contemporary Art.
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