Monday 26 May 2008

Exhibited Work, Screenprints

Screen print of a window

Domesticity Varies

By way of illustration



Domesticity means different things to different people. Here we see that some people select somewhat different styles of living from that of their neighbours. LHS - Flamboyant - RHS - Deadly Dull (but then how would one compete?)



Domestic:



Home – Homemaker - Homely – Homeward – Homemade- Home rule – Home spun – Homesick – Homebreaker - Homework – Homestead – Homicidal – Homer Simpson



Not imported - Not importuned – Not impotent - Not important – Not very interesting



House – Housewife - Household – Houseproud – Housekeeper – Housemaid – Housekeeping – Housemaster – Housemate - Housemouse – Housewrecker

NB Provisional takes no responsibility for the entries made by individuals: Remember that values can go up as well as down!


Domestic is a place that is hard to inhabit - its boundaries being so close. Perhaps it is easier to define by what we look out at, than where we look from.

Thursday 22 May 2008

emilyfarrow

Images of domesticity on the washing line
May 2008
Emily Farrow

Wednesday 7 May 2008

TV no.2
C-print 20x20"
Annette Habel

Thursday 24 April 2008

Domestic

Home sweet home.
Domestic, domestical, domestically, domesticate, domesticant, domesticated,
domestication, domesticator, domesticity, domesticize.
From the Latin: Domus - for house or home.
"Be it ever so humble, there's no place like home."

Wednesday 16 April 2008


Is domestic a place that we can look at?
Perhaps it is a place that we can only look from?
I am planning a trip: I need to get some space, some distance from which to consider the view.

Saturday 12 April 2008

Home Life



do-mes-tic-ity
-noun, plural -ties

1. the state of being domestic; domestic or home life.
2. a domestic or household act, activity, duty, or chore

Annette Habel, April 2007

About Andrew Pegram April 2008

Andrew Pegram is an artist living and working in North London. He has a background in Interior Design. His consequent interest in buildings, interiors and the built environment has influenced much of his work. He is a photographer and uses photography as a notebook to record the townscape which surrounds him. His drawing, painting and printmaking all tend to use graphical images with strong use of outline. He acknowledges inspiration taken both from his urban surroundings and from the work of Patrick Caulfield. His work is on permanent display at Arnold House School, Lewisham College, The Lord Stanley Public House and in Hotels in Spain and Italy.

Recent work includes screenprints of architectural subjects.

It also includes a number of Photographic series regarding the window, construction and demolition, the market and so on. These have sometimes been shown as slideshows. The work of this exhibition will include large scale representations of windows.

Andrew’s work can be seen at http://ajpegramartist.blogspot.com/

Andrew can be contacted at ajpegram@msn.com