




With sculptures whipped up from paper, slime (as my students call it), stories and fairy tales. Carol W's work is tingling with imagination and fun. Her paper mache creations have graced galleries, shops and cat walks. Please visit her flickr or website as this is a needle in the haystack of her portfolio.

Above: The Museum Of Childhood's promotioal poster from 2008




Sally has been very busy during her build up to the Brighton Art Festival. This is one of my favourites where Sally has incorporated a nail in a piece of flotsam into her composition, 'The bird with the rusty nail beak'



Taking a lead from the wonderful Joel we have had amazing fun making Zip line mini me's and racing them (often with unfair weight advantages; magnets, erasers ect). Not high art but fun art.
Above: My demonstration flyer's; Below: Iain Denwitt's Puffin.
The beginning of this academic year has been concerned with movement, so we started with balancers, and since then we have had flying toys. These are tricky, you will need to make the wings big . . . find the balancing point with your fingers, by resting the wings across your fore fingers and then string up where they balance best. These models are made with dense cardboard.












This is the beautiful work of Satomi Kawai an artist from Iowa, who creates monoprints, mono objects and amazing jewelry. Satomi's work has a wonderful peace about it, it is very organic in form and has an incredible elegance and style.
