Tuesday, 26 June 2012

Meet Clara Vulliamy!





 I first met Clara many years ago and we hit it off at once, bonding over a shared love of tea and cake!

Clara is a superb artist, who studied at the Royal Academy of Art, and is a truly outstanding portait painter. But she is equally brilliant at writing and illustrating stories for children. Obviously it’s in the blood, for we are talking picture-book royalty here: her mother is Shirley Hughes!

So, imagine my astonishment and delight (I nearly fell of my chair!) when she said,,,
 YES to Pop Up!




Clara will join myself and Vanessa Stone at the Pop Up Picture Pavilion, a magical gallery where art comes alive, slightly inspired by Katie’s Picture Show. And she will be helping children create a gorgeous ever-growing jungle, in homage to Rousseau’s astonishing tropical paintings!

We want as many children to come and help us fill our wacky gallery as possible.

So do come along – it’s all FREE – and meet Clara, one of the truly great picture book creators around today. Clara’s best selling books include Martha and the Bunny Brothers, Muffin, and the Lucky Wish Mouse series. Next year our own collaboration, Bubble & Squeak (I did the words, Clara the pictures) will be launched!

Find out more about Clara here:

The Pop Up Picture Pavilion is open on Sunday July 1st from 12 noon, Granary Square, Kings Cross, London. For full details, visit the festival website:






Monday, 25 June 2012

Meet Vanessa Stone


Working alongside me at Pop Up Festival of Stories will be a dear friend and brilliant artist, Vanessa Stone.

She is a magician with paper and scissors and does wonderful workshops with children. She will be joining me in the Pop Up Picture Pavilion to help children make paper portraits based on Renaissance paintings. Which means Knights and Angels and Princesses and maybe even a Dragon!

Take a look at her blog, to find out more about Vanessa’s wonderful world of paper!

Vanessa lives quite near me, In Letchworth Garden City and we’ve collaborated on many art projects, including a magical shadow-play one Christmas.  She has a wonderful way with children and I hope you’ll jump at the chance to work with such a gifted artist, FOR FREE!

The Pop Up Festival of Stories is at Granary Square Kings Cross, and runs over the whole weekend of Saturday June 30th and SundayJuly 1st. It's going to be quite something!

The Pop Up Picture Pavilion will be there on Sunday ONLY, from 12 noon. Details on how to get there etc are here:






TOMORROW you can meet my other partner-in-paint: Clara Vulliamy!


Preparing to POP UP!

Just  a few days now until the Pop Up Festival of Stories and in particular my Pop Up Picture Pavilion. Happily the weather has been kind enough to allow me to prepare these boards outside in the (overgrown) garden. They needed priming for children to come and help me create enormous masterpieces on them.

Will you or your children be amongst them? I hope so! Remember it's all free and it starts on Sunday July 1st at 12 noon. Hopefully the art will be SO good it will be kept and exhibited elsewhere, a legacy from this amazing festival!

I wonder how my other artists, Vanessa Stone and Clara Vulliamy are getting on?

Friday, 22 June 2012

The sound of fairy-tales: the magical world of Rimsky-Korsakov

 
Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov has always fascinated me as much for his choice of subject matter, as his music. No other serious composer dwelt so long on fairy tales and legends as did Rimsky, and he created whole new methods of instrumentation to bring his vision alive.

In just two weeks I will be helping The Orchestra of the Music Makers share his vision of the Arabian Nights in Cheltenham and Lichfield, as I paint along – and tell stories – during performances of Scheherazade. But while we might know him best for that work, there are many others that bring fairy tales to both the concert hall and the stage.

One of his earliest works, a “musical picture” was based on the legend of Sadko, a Russian hero, who is sent to the bottom of the sea, where he almost marries the daughter of the Sea King. The subject later inspired a whole opera in seven spectacular scenes, with a remarkable underwater ballet!


Another musical picture, called simply “Skazka” (the Russian word for Fairy Tales) began life as a portrait of that famous witch Baba Yaga. While his second symphony is almost a blue print for his more famous Scheherazade, using another Oriental tale  – of the Persian poet Antar - who fell in love with the fairy Gul-Nazar, Queen of Palmyra.

But if that sounds extraordinary enough, his operas are even more imaginative and spectacular. Just the titles sparkle with promise: There’s May Night – about the beautiful but dangerous Rusalki (spirits of drowned maidens) and Snegurotchka (Snow Maiden), the innocent child of Winter and Spring. Then there’s Christmas Eve, Kaschey the Deathless, The Legend of the Invisible City of Kitezh,  The tale of Tsar Saltan (with it’s famous Flight of the Bumble-Bee), The Golden Cockeral… all full of magical sounds and characters.





Tragically these works are rarely, if ever staged. Most have never been performed in the UK, where Scheherazade remains the only regularly performed work. My absolute dream would be to design and stage a fairy tale opera like this, for children…

Meanwhile, I hope anyone who comes to the concerts will, like me, fall in love with this beautiful, magical, and colourful world and will be inspired to explore some of his other beautiful music… I’m certain they will not be disappointed by this marvellous musical magician!

FOR DETAILS ON HOW TO BOOK FOR "SCHEHERAZADE" Click here for Cheltenham on July 7th:
http://www.cheltenhamfestivals.com/find-events/music/m19-sinbad-the-sailor-and-scheherazade


And click here for Lichfield, July 8th:
http://www.lichfieldfestival.org/blog/2012/04/orchestra-of-the-music-makers/



Sunday, 17 June 2012

Pop Up Festival of Stories 2012

After all the fun of making a giant pop up book at the Pop Up Festival last year, I'm thrilled to be back this year with the POP UP PICTURE PAVILION.

This will be a mad cap art gallery filled with crazy interpretations of masterpieces and finished off during the day by children's interpretations of famous artworks.

And which day is it?

The festival actually runs over two days with different authors each day, at Granary Square, Kings Cross. BUT I'M ONLY THERE ON SUNDAY JULY 1st.

AND EVERYTHING IS FREE!


Below are some of the exciting designs for the POP UP PICTURE PAVILION!   Created by Gabriella and Fabrizio from Central St Martin's School of Art. Isn't it great???

Come along and help me fill it with ART!

For more information visit: http://pop-up.org.uk/pop-up-picture-pavilion/

Sunday, 10 June 2012

Why Music Matters

With less than two weeks to go before the Orchestra of the Music Makers arrive in the UK and join me for their British and Western debut, I am practising pictures and stories in readiness. I want it to be as perfect as humanly possible!

And as I paint along to a CD of Rimsky-Korsakov's Scheherazade, I ask myself - why am I doing this? Why does it mean so much to me?

I think all children are naturally musical, and naturally creative. And I meet so many adults who are actually afraid of classical music. They think it's uncool. They think it's too highbrow. They think it's slow and boring. These are the people who were not encouraged in the right way to be open minded. They have closed doors. What a shame...

I love classical music. Not all of it. I like what I like. And it all goes back to childhood. My parents were not musicians; they were a regular working class pair who had a few records by The Beatles and The Seekers. And nestled in between... a handful of classical records. Peter and the Wolf was there. Peer Gynt, William Tell. A few other "Golden Guinea" LPs (Budget price!). And they all got played. The Beatles with Beethoven, all on the same player.

Because the snobbery that exists today was barely an issue back then. And to a child... well, music is music. I didn't distinguish between types until adult / teenage preconceptions influenced me. And then I rebelled! As my peer group embraced Punk, I positively hugged Tchaikovsky. When they were discovering New Romantics, I was listening to Old Romantics. Instead of Rock Opera, I was falling in love with the real thing.

I never considered "my music" better. But what I loved was discovering it for myself and not following the crowd. I simply listened and decided with my own ears. Possibly these were not the "right" pieces. I prefer Rimsky-Korsakov to Wagner, for instance (which always has "experts" scratching their heads; everyone knows Wagner was a superior composer... etc).

It matters to me because there is a whole world of sound, of history, of storytelling... It is part of our heritage and part of the world we live in. And I want to share that with children, so they grow up, with that door open. There is music filled with danger and fear; music full of beauty and love; music bursting at the seams with wit and humour.

It matters because I think there is a lifetime of discovering and enjoying for everyone.

So if you want to give your child a really special experience, and can get to Cheltenham or Lichfield this summer, then don't think "Oh my kids would never sit through that". For the price of a trip to the cinema, open the door to a magic world for them with these unique concerts, combining music, stories and art created live on stage!

This is a superb orchestra of gifted youngsters from Singapore, with a wonderful conductor Chan Tze Law. They are truly magnificent. What an inspiration to a child! 


But even if your child, like me,  is not a musician, being able to experience the joy of being part of an audience in the concert hall is a gift too!







Friday, 8 June 2012

Hip Hip Hooray for Hay!


With this rotten summer weather continuing, I at least had a couple of fine days in Hay on Wye, before the rain set in there as well, gearing up for a damp Jubilee.

This was my first visit to Hay, beginning with the very first event of the whole Festival, with 400 school children. The next day I was part of the outreach programme, in a beautiful church. Lastly the Festival proper, with a public event on the Starlight Stage.

Throughout I told upside down stories and had the warmest of welcomes. What a lovely part of the world: mountains, waterfalls, Castles, bookshops, cakes and bunting. How could you not fall in love with the place?

I had the good fortune to share my billeted digs with Nell Leyshon, the playwrite in residence. She was celebrating the publication of her novel, The Colour of Milk (superb; read it all in one go - simply could not put it down) and we had a fantastic evening talking, talking, talking...

My thanks to everyone who organised, supported and set things up. Oh and thanks too for the parting shot: A crate of champagne. Quite how I crossed London with it, I'm not sure. But I could hardly leave it behind. Quite apart from the 6 bottles inside, it's a rather nice wooden box.


Oh and I even got a nice review:

http://www.herefordtimes.com/leisure/9751028.Hay_Festival__James_Mayhew/


So cheers! and thanks for a truly memorable debut!





















Wednesday, 6 June 2012

Sunny Sussex



A couple of weeks ago, in blazing sunshine, I spent a week in Sussex (and Surrey) visiting five fabulous schools. Thank you all for making me so welcome, and thanks also to The Book Box who organised the whole thing and sold more books than you can shake a stick at!  Here are a few memories...


I was especially excited to find these giant Nutcrackers at Notre Dame Pre Prep Catholic School... although I'm hardly Ella Bella! They rather reminded me of a certain movie with giant dolls... which was funny, because earlier that week I'd enjoyed a thrilling drive along the cusp of Beachy Head, from which vertiginous point Chitty Chitty Bang Bang took wing in the immortal movie (and my childhood favourite!).

Interestingly, none of the local (Eastbourne/Brighton) children knew!


For me, it stands as the most iconic childhood movie moment of all. Possibly because the intermission and ice creams came at exactly that moment when Chitty plunged over the cliff...

I also loved the views across the Downs and came home full of Samuel Palmer - type pictures in my head.




Monday, 4 June 2012

Jubilee in... MacArthur Park?

Yes, I'm afraid someone DID leave the cake out in the rain. The plan was to build the biggest imaginable Jubilee cake and share it with all at the Royal Jubilee Festival in MacArthur (sorry, BATTERSEA) Park, but assembly got off to a cold damp start, and by the time the cake was taking shape it was raining so much I didn't even want to take my camera out!

I always wondered what the (late and lamented) Donna Summer was singing about. Now I know: The day was just as surreal as her song...

I managed to gather an intimate audience for some storytellings (despite clashing with the arrival of the Queen on her barge), before dashing for the station and a train home. Only to discover the stations closed because of crowds. It was a long, cold, wet, walk home...