Scroll down to see examples.
HOW YOU CAN BUY THE WORK
Now this is the important bit.
Obviously, there’s going to be an auction on the night and the highest bidder will win.
However, not everybody will be able to attend but might still want to bid. So, in the interest of fairness, what you can do is place a bid for any of the work in the comment box below on this post. If no one exceeds your bid on the night – the work is yours.
Bidding on The Blog will end at midnight on Wednesday 6th April.
All you will have to do is donate to the Red Cross Japan Tsunami Appeal.
Then email me your e-receipt from the Red Cross for proof of payment and I’ll post it off to you. (You will also have to pay the postage.)
See below for a full list of contributing artists. (To whom I am eternally grateful!)
You can also buy raffle tickets in advance of the night and on the night itself for one of the works of art. Tickets are £5 each or 5 for £20. Drop me an email if you’d like some: dmc@anidealworld.eu
Tickets for the auction/exhibition are £10 each and also include entry to a Prize Draw for one of the works of art. (Not to mention some free sushi, wine and beer!) Again, drop me an email if you’d like to come along.
Right, let’s get on with it…
I’ve only just got a ‘soft copy’ of this stunning piece by Edinburgh based painter, Mike McGinn. Full of energy and emotion. I love it. And was outbid for it on the night! If, like me, you’re keen to see more of his work, drop him a line at: memphisotool@hotmail.com
Molly Cockcroft’s Imaginary City is built on a precise 2mm grid with a 0.1 and 0.3 black pen after a pencil composition sketch, which lead to the more detailed piece. In this imaginary city, someone has hung a Japanese flag out of their window to show their support.
BLOOD SAMPLE aka ” CIRCLE OF LIFE”
The diffusion of the blood in the water, compounds the effect the Tsunami had on the people of Japan.
Again reminiscent of the Japanese flag in its simplicity, this piece shows the dissipation of the notorious Japanese red circle. Combine that with the title ” The Circle of Life” and we are at least left with a feeling of hope and that life will return.
FINGERPRINT aka ” IDENTITY”
In the wake of the Fukushima Tsunami disaster we found it impelling to capture the human element. Images were constantly showing the Tidal wave wreaking havoc through Japan. What was left was cites and towns washed away and turned upside down.
To the eye it would appear that everyone in the path of the Tsunami has lost everything, loved ones, homes and personal possession’s. What we tried to portray is that the people of Japan still have their identity. A thumb print is the most personal possession all of us posses.
And you can never wash that away. The piece also evokes the patriotism and symbolism of the Japanese flag in with its simplicity and colour. For that reason we named this piece “Identity”,
Extraordinary and exquisite series of shots art directed by Des Barzey and shot by Wilhelm Scholz.
Des Barzey is an award winning Art Director / Creative Director based in NY. He is originally from England, where he studied Art & Design at Jacob Kramer School of Art and Falmouth School of Art. He’s applied his extraordinary creative skills in Ad agencies around the globe from London, Amsterdam, San Francisco, LA to NY. He now resides in NY as a freelance advertising creative consultant.
Des recently founded six degrees of creative separation, six soon became 950+. Six degrees of creative separation refers to the idea that, if a person is one step away from each creative person they know and two steps away from each creative person who is known by one of the creative people they know, then everyone is at most six steps away from any other creative person on Earth.
aka the Human Creative Web. Do you know him?
Wilhelm Scholz is a location photographer and commercial director based both in New York City and Frankfurt, Germany.
As a child, Wilhelm grew up in Germany, Chile, Spain and Venezuela .
Wilhelm has traveled the world producing imagery for advertising and editorial clients such as American Express, BMW, The British Virgin Islands Tourist Board, Geo, Conde Nast Traveler, T-Mobile, United Airlines, Alfa Romeo and his list of awards include the Advertising Photographers Of America Award for Location Photography, Moebius Award for Billboard, Best Ad for Travel Advertising, Masters Of Color Photography Award for Sports Image, The British Black & White Spider Award for Documentary Work.
Leeds and Edinburgh-based graphic designer, Sarah Jane Robertson, has donated this pair of A3 mandala letterpress prints. Entitled Sunshine & Moonlight, she worked with haiku poets of Alan Summers and Hidenori Hiruta, who created the poems in response to the Earthquake and Tsunami. Sarah then created the prints in response to the poems and letterpress printed them to give greater depth and definition, adding to the original artwork.
The artwork and collaborators
I first found out about the event through Creative Times, an online magazine for the creative community, and I was keen to put my graphic design skills to good use and help. I spent a weekend exploring ideas and coming up with concepts, then got in touch with haiku poet Alan Summers, who kindly created two haiku for me to choose from. I chose both!
The following weekend Hidenori Hiruta, Secretary General of the Akita International Haiku Network, translated the poems while I created the mandala graphics, which were letterpress printed by sponsors Blush Publishing on Bright White and Ebony 350gsm Colorplan, donated by sponsors and GF Smith, to give greater depth and definition.
What is a haiku and where does it come from?
Alan Summers summarises on his website:
“Haiku is a form of Japanese poetry that takes aspects of the natural world as its subject matter. Haiku typically contain a kigo (seasonal reference) and a kireji (cutting word).
English-language haiku is often written in three short lines and read out loud in about six seconds. Written in the present tense, they adopt ordinary language, and work well as two different images that spark off each other.
Haiku don’t tell, or merely describe, they allow the reader to enter the poem in their own way.
Haiku comes from a “first verse” called hokku; they often look incomplete as they originate from a linked verse poem, by different poets. Each verse is completed by the next verse and so on.
They have a special place in the range of poetry known as renga, or renku, that enjoyed a renaissance in 17th Century Japan and continues today in Japan and in the West.
Journalist, writer and poet Masaoka Shiki officially made hokku an independent poem in the 1890s called haiku (singular and plural spelling) and brought the form into the 20th Century.” Alan Summers
Alan Summers is a Japan Times award-winning writer for haiku and renku, and has been awarded a Ritsumeikan University of Kyoto Peace Museum Award for haiku.
He is the founder of With Words, a UK-based provider of literature, education and literacy projects, often based around the Japanese genres.
He is based in Bradford-on-Avon, Wiltshire, UK.
http://www.withwords.org.uk
Hidenori Hiruta
Hidenori Hiruta (pen name Shuutou Hiruta) is the founder and Secretary-General of the Akita International Haiku Network and a member of the Haiku International Association.
His haiku have appeared in various publications including Asahi Shimbun; Haijinx; Simply Haiku; and HaikuPix Review, and HI (Tokyo).
He is based in Akita, Northern Honshu, Japan.
akitahaiku.wordpress.com
What is a mandala?
As described by The Mandala Project:
The word “mandala”, from the classical Indian language of Sanskrit, can be loosely translated to mean “circle”. It represents wholeness and can be seen as a model for the organisation structure of life itself; a cosmic diagram that reminds us of our relationship with the world around us.
The mandala appears in all aspects of life; the celestial circles we call the earth, sun and moon, as well as the conceptual circles of friends, family and community.
Irish poet, Patrick Chapman, has most generously donated signed copies of his complete works – five collections of poetry including a handwritten poem especially written for this auction and the victims of the Japan tsunami.
The Japanese Lotus flower is a symbol of hope and rebirth.
The lotus flower is revered in Japan for its ability to rise from the dirty, murky waters to bloom into a beautiful pure flower.
‘Our Fragile Earth’ is a window decal made from resin and food colouring. This piece will not be up in the exhibition, but is still available to buy online, or on the night, and will be posted to the buyer directly from Ireland.
This Japanese Rising Sun depicted by a cherry blossom tree symbolizes that Japan will grow again and that their spirit is bigger than any crisis.
The Japanese wording translates as “Broken land. Unbroken Spirit”, which is the title of the piece.
My work is influenced by the traditional Japanese concept of worshipping nature. Many of the stone gardens in Japan deal with the idea of recreating nature and providing a contemplative situation in which the spirit can be purified. In a similar way, I try to recreate my experiences of nature through my work.
I work from observational drawings and photographs of fruits, vegetables and bones as well as the human figure and landscapes. Through these influences and observations I explore the anthropomorphic quality of natural forms. I aim to achieve in my forms and situations, a tactile quality that is serene and calm.
Mari-Ruth Oda
Born in Switzerland, grew up in Norway. Tone came to Manchester in 1994 to complete a BA in Three Dimensional Design at Manchester Metropolitan University and never went back.
Her work has been widely exhibited in the UK and abroad. Galleries and outlets include Liberty (London), Gump’s (San Francisco), Majlis Gallery (Dubai) , Haa Gamle Prestegaard (Stavanger, Norway) as well as Bluecoat Gallery in Liverpool , City Art and Design Gallery in Leeds and Royal Exchange in Manchester. The current collection can be found on the website www.madebyhandonline.com
Three bottles (20cm, 28cm and 37cm tall) is from the recent Winter Collection. They are hand made on a potter’s wheel and glazed to a satin finish. The collection draws inspiration from memories of snow covered landscapes in Norway. When heavy snow covers trees, rocks, paths and architecture; sharp edges become soft and everyday shapes may become unrecogiseable. Tone has tried to bring the same feel to her work by softly distorting pieces made on the potter’s wheel and giving them bulges and indentations. The colour range is reflecting the many tones of snow, ice and winter skies.

Hallmarked sterling silver bangle weighing 12.4gms, hand-forged and designed to go on directly over the wrist. By Prue Biddle, UK
Ella Griffin offers you a Zelig-like appearance in her second novel, a romantic comedy to be published by Orion in 2012. She will name a minor character after you or someone whose hand you want to hold. Please note: If your name is a Annette Curtain or Anne Ass or Amanda Huggenkiss this might be tricky!
This is an absolutely brilliant prize for a loved one from best-selling author, Ella Griffin. Immortalize them in her next novel! She’s a beautiful person both inside and out so don’t worry, the character won’t be an axe murderer or anything like that. You’ll also get a signed copy of her first novel: Postcards from the Heart. About which Marion Keyes said: ‘A fresh, funny new voice, Ella Griffin can make you laugh and then cry in the turn of a page.’
John Shelley studied at Bournville School of Art, then illustration at Manchester Polytechnic under children’s illustrator Tony Ross.
Debuting as a freelance illustrator in London, by 1984 he’d co-founded the artist’s collective Facade Studios with designer Andy Royston and illustrators Jane Ray and Willie Ryan. Fascinated by Japanese art, in 1987 he moved to Tokyo in search of the missing link between samurai and Sony, making it his home for the following 21 years.
In Japan his award-winning illustrations have been used in everything from animated TV ads, poster and newspaper campaigns to character merchandising and editorial illustration. With a unique insight into the Japanese creative market he has stood as a committee member of JAGDA (Japan Graphic Designer Association) and presented at colleges across the country.
Shelley’s work for publishing follows a more elaborate vein of pen and watercolour. His first major picture book The Secret in the Matchbox was shortlisted for the Mother Goose Award, since when his children’s illustrations have continued to gain steady recognition in East and West. As an author his own published stories include Hoppy’s New House (Fukuinkan Shoten) and The House of the World (Benesse).
Bilingual in Japanese, Shelley returned to the UK in 2008, but still maintains close associations with Japan.
Member of The Society of Authors, Society of Children’s Book Writers and Illustrators (SCBWI) and Picture Book Artists (PBA)
Just received some exquisite silver jewelry by Japanese designer, Junko Mori. Rings to be precise. Haven’t got shots yet, but couldn’t wait to tell you about them. They’re actually cast from Australian plants and look very organic. Absolutely unique works of art you can wear!
Thank you to ceramic artist, Tone von Krogh for asking Junko to donate something.
Not only has The Smiths, Mike Joyce kindly donated a limited edition print from The Smiths early days by Stephen Wright. He’s also very generously auctioning a signed snare skin (courtesy of Johnny Roadhouse) and a set of signed drumsticks. Oh, and no, that’s not the actual drum and sticks in the pic. It’s just an artist’s impression of what a drum and some sticks might look like.
Studio Parris Wakefield
Howard Wakefield worked with world-renowned designer Peter Saville for nearly 20 years and in that time explored pushing the boundaries of Photoshop to pioneer digital abstract graphic art to create a large number of the digital imagery for the music industry including Joy Division, New Order and Suede.
He has also worked with fashion photographer Nick Knight to create a number of figurative abstracts. Sarah Parris and Howard Wakefield have worked together since 2001 and their recent project is their Cityscape series which represents the profusion of perceptions from a constantly evolving city. There will always be something new to discover – from the distinct, to the obscure, these cityscapes portray their unique infinite quality
Some of Howard’s work, collaborating with Peter Saville, is sold through Paul Stolper Gallery and the V&A have Waste Painting #3 as part of their permanent collection.
Interestingly, Robert said that he took this shot just 12 hours before the earthquake struck.
Kelvin is originally from the UK where he incorporated his passion for photography with his career as a freelance commercial photographer. His first pictures were taken age 5 on a plastic camera from tokens on the back of a cornflake packet sent to him from his uncle in Brighton and then continued to take pictures on a Kodak 110 instamatic camera until he borrowed His Dad’s Pentax to acheive the cub’s photographers badge at the age of 10 (which included a complete portfolio printed in a darkroom and answering theory questions). After achieving an O level in Photography (one of the first to do it and independently from school), he pursued a Photography DIP at Salisbury College of Art and went on to assist photographers in Los Angeles and London, most notably with John Claridge . He was commissioned to work on assignments with the most creative London advertising agencies – Saatchi and Saatchi Abbott Mead and Vickers, BMP, Y&R, TBWA and Ogilvy + Mather to name a few. Work included British Airways, Smirnoff, British Rail, Citroen, Kodak, British Gas, Karvol, Tetley Bitter and Yorkshire TV, most of which were 48 sheet posters and press ads.
During that period he also worked on numerous Charity accounts such as NSPCC and Mencap . Editorial commissions include numerous portraits for The Sunday Times Magazine, The Observer, The Sunday Telegraph Magazine and Management today which lead to advertising assignments from New York – working on campaigns with Jaguar, New Balance, Chesterfield, Canadian Airways, Air France, Nenex and I.B.M. San Francisco agency Goodby Silverstein commissioned a total of 19 Ads for Hewlett Packard some of which won The One Show awards , SF Addy awards and Clio. He had other european clients in Germany and Holland. In I992 he relocated to Dublin where he presently resides . Whilst still working internationally Kelvin commenced working with Dublin ad agencies working on Guinness, Tourism Ireland, Ballygowan, Bank of Ireland, Bulmers (Magners,) Kelloggs, Tullamore Dew, BMW, Heinz, Vodafone and Lotto. Along the way he has received numerous awards – Ilford print award, John Kobal portrait awards, Benson&Hedges Photography awards , Epica’s, The Association of Photographers (UK) including a cover of the awards book , numerous Gold and Silver in the Irish Creative Advertising awards. Kelvin is continually involved in personal photography projects and individual images some of which are available for commercial usage and fine art print sales through Lens Modern. Exhibitions include Hamiltons Gallery and various group exhibitions such as the London Portrait Gallery, AOP, The Photographers Gallery and The Blue Leaf Gallery Dublin.
He is currently working on a new website as well as projects to include ‘Sweeps Re- Visited’ ‘Souls’ and Dublin South Wall. His Blog is continually active.
JAPAN ART AUCTION CONTRIBUTING ARTISTS
1. KATY EGAN Writer, Ireland
2. DAVE MERRELL Illustrator, UK
3. GRACE MILLS Art Director, UK
4. JOE COLEMAN Writer, UK
5. DAVID MILLIGAN-CROFT Writer, UK
6. MOLLY COCKCROFT Designer, UK
7. NICOLA DAVID Photographer, UK
8. CRAIG HEBDITCH Art Director, UK
9. JONATHAN OAKES Photographer, UK
10. OONAGH YOUNG Artist, Ireland
11. ROBERTA MASCIARELLI, Artist, Brazil
13. PATRICK CHAPMAN Writer, Ireland
14. DES BARZEY Art Director, NY, USA
15. AIDAN DOWLING, Illustrator, Ireland
16. EUAN MYLES, Photographer, UK
17. KELVIN HUDSON Photographer, Ireland
18. CAROLYN WALSH Artist, Ireland
19. LOU HUGHES Artist, UK
20. SARAH JANE ROBERTSON Designer, UK
22. SIMON WINNALL Photographer, UK
23. JOHN SHELLEY Illustrator, UK
24. SHANE HOLLOHAN Photographer, Ireland
25. STEPHEN HUNTER Art Director, Ireland
26. TONE VON KROGH Ceramic Artist, Norway
27. PAUL FOSBURY Photographer, UK
28. ELLA GRIFFIN Writer, Ireland
29. TREVOR HART Photographer, Ireland
30. JEAN SMITH Artist, USA
31. DAMEON LYNN Ceramic Artist, UK
33. SARAH PARRIS Digital Art, UK
34. ROBERT WALKER Photographer, UK
35. NICK and CHLOE Photographers, Paris, France
37. MIKE MCGINN Artist, Scotland
38. MAGGIE GIBSON Artist, Ireland
39. ALEX TELFER Photographer, UK
40. Mari Ruth Oda Ceramic Artist, Japan
41. Junko Mori Ceramic Artist, Japan
42. GRAHAME COOPER Photographer, UK
43. DAVID SHORT Photographer, UK
44. LYNTON HEMSLEY Artist, UK
45. BART O’REILLY Artist, USA
46. SELINA YUK TZANG PAN Designer, Netherlands
47. PAUL WOLFGANG WEBSTER Photographer, UK
48. MICHAEL SWALLOW Photographer, UK
49. STEPHEN WRIGHT Photographer, UK
Thank you to all the sponsors: Samsi Japanese Restaurant, Studio Manchester, Jonathan Oakes, Brave Music Agency. Kirin Ichiban, Wells & Youngs.