Tuesday 8 December 2009

Suitcase of Fixed dreams

So, after many rainy English weekends, endless stencil designs and cuttings and much deliberation I have finally finished my 'suitcase of fixed dreams'. Lets see how much this has set me back or, rather, pushed me forward? In order of appearance...

Petrol to pick up suitcase - £3
Spray Paints X4 - £39.96
Etching primer - £10.99
Petrol to pick up paints and primer - £5
Stencil Film - £10
Finger Bandages - £5.99
Print - £6
Frame & Glass - £17
Grand Total: £97.94
FREE STUFF!
Suitcase
Help and Advice (care of the men at CARS on Canvey Island)
Rainy Weekends

Sunday 22 November 2009

Apparently it CAN rain every weekend...


But that didn't stop me - although I had a bit of a touch, as we say in Essex. No sooner had I sprayed my red cross and was walking out the door to bring it back inside, when it began to rain. I was lucky. Around five minutes later it chucked it down! Cats AND Dogs!...I will finish this another day!!

Saturday 24 October 2009

Metamorphosis


I decided to find some people who could help me paint the suitcase. First I called uncle Keith, the car repairer/mechanic in my family (hasn’t everyone got one?) to ask if he’d ever painted aluminium - to which he replied “Yes” and gladly told me I needed to get some etching primer to help the paint take better. I’d read about this and it seemed a complicated process so I asked Keith if he knew anyone who could tell me more and he pointed me in the direction of a local business on Canvey Island industrial estate, called simply “CARS” (google search). I got there and explained my predicament to the men of cars, showing them my suitcase, with the lovely golden plasters stuck on it, and they were very helpful. I couldn’t get any free stuff from them but at least they gave me exactly what I needed. I chose my colours carefully from their colour charts and they made up the spray cans for me on the spot for my tropical beach scene - including Flash Red, used for VW Beetles! “Perfect!” I thought.

Spraying, by the way, is not easy, especially when you have a suitcase with lots o little noks and crannies and features that you really want to keep clean. Nevertheless, after a very patient session with masking tape, a pointy tool and newspaper, I was able to get to work on the first side of the suitcase.

Let's get away from it all


The Suitcase symbolise for me the idea of travelling of course, but more than that they represent something of our desires, our need to escape, to be free of the shackles of the work we must do in order to survive. But more than this they represent a certain kind of love - a love for the world as well as the need to express our feelings about the world and our lives - to take pleasure in what is around us. We cant necessarily do that all the time, at home in our everyday surroundings because we, naturally, take these for granted a lot of the time. It’s hard to look around you with the eyes of a child and wonder at the lamp post on the corner of your road - but to me that is what in a way art does, by giving us new ways of viewing the world. It’s not that art should be sentimental or nostalgic of course - but not all art should be seriously political either. Art should be about reflection as much as it is about imagining new ideals. Art is a two-sided coin.

Monday 20 July 2009


Who knows what madcap adventures and vast travels this aliminium suitcase has endured, but one things for sure, the gaping hole in its side is a sure sign of an almighty collision with something pointy! Hence, this once lovely item, bought for its promise of security and protection in the hold of every aeroplane, has been made redundant of its purpose and rendered worthless by its disappointed owner; discarded, orphaned off to a new life, a new journey!



But alas, I shall revive this suitcase and maketh it into a work of art, filling it with a renewed essence of beauty and value! Honest guv!