Thursday, 1 January 2026

Drawings for 1SSUE 59

At one point last year I was asked by the curator Frances Woodley if I would contribute to an artists' book project and as I like to challenge myself, thought it an interesting thing to get involved with. I had to come up with 20 images, all of which were to be folded in half when they were inserted and bound into the 20 artists' books that would result from the process. 

As is often the case with these things you were given a set of rules to follow and an introduction to the history of the project. The ongoing artists book project 1SSUE was initiated in 2002 by artist Richard Cox. Since then, its four rotating editors and artists, Richard Cox, Heather Parnell, Phil Mead and Hilary Wagstaff, have ensured that it has continued. 

Frances Woodley was the guest editor for 1SSUE 59, and it was in this role that she had contacted myself. 

Each artist had to make as many pages as there were participants (19), plus one. The pages are then collated and bound into artists’ books and then distributed to the participants. We were also informed that one copy of every edition of 1SSUE is housed in the Bodleian Library of the University of Oxford.

1SSUE 59 had a theme that we were all to work to, it was the prefix ‘Re-’ as when used in front of a verb.

We were given some information about this:

‘Re-’ is derived from a Latin prefix, a root word meaning: “back, back from, back to the original place;” also ‘again, anew, once more,’ also conveying the notion of “undoing” or “backward,” . . .

‘’The many meanings in the notion of “back” give ‘re-’ its broad sense-range: “a turning-back; opposition; restoration to a former state; “transition to an opposite state.”

From the extended sense in “again,” ‘re-’ becomes “repetition of an action,” and in this sense it is extremely common as a formative element in English, applicable to any verb, and we were also given some examples. 

Guidelines also included some practical instructions.

Your page dimensions which have to be 25 h x 40 w cm exactly, with no rough/cut edges to the sides.

When folded, each side had to be 25 h x 20 w cm exactly and there was a drawing embedded into the instructions to make sure we understood what to do. 


Paper had to fold flat and not be too bulky. (240-350 gsm being recommended)

We were to work on one side of paper only. To use any medium (but nothing that stains, leaks, rubs or desiccates onto others’ work.) Artwork must be original. If printed, edition style, the design to be original to this 1SSUE.

All pages were to be sent to Frances by Friday 24 October 2025.

These are the pages I drew and sent off.





















All the images were drawn with a black biro. I took the ‘RE’ theme very literally and simply sat down and drew black ballpoint pen marks over and over again, each time allowing whatever to come into being to suggest some form of collective human encounter. Then as small crowds of marks/people emerged, I would draw whatever it was they were encountering. 
We also had to decide on a title. I asked if possible to set the title in a range of sizes? Like so:
Black Ballpoint Human Marks: Drawn Again And Again And Again And Again
Finally we had to send website and social media addresses for inclusion in the ‘List of Artists’ and a postal address to which 1SSUE 59 was to be delivered. 

Hopefully you can see from the images how I tried to compositionally respond to the fact that each page would be folded in two. I realised as I drew the images how much I enjoyed drawing with a simple biro, you just have to let the drawing be as it needs to be, no adjustment, no clever mark making, just an idea and an image to carry it. I thought they made an interesting set of drawings and was slightly disappointed that as a set they would be immediately separated from each other and each drawing would have to fend for itself within whatever collective of images it found itself next to. This post is the only way they will ever be seen as a collection, so I will have to be content with that.

My copy of the final book arrived in a box and I now have it on a shelf in my studio.

1SSUE 59

The book is a fascinating format and deserves serious study as an object in its own right. As part of my job as a print technician back in the late 1970s I had to look at basic book binding, so am very aware of how much care must have gone into this aspect of putting these artists' books together. 



The spine and opening inserts

The spine of any book is a vital signifier. In this case the stitching is beautifully done and it conceptually links the interior to the exterior, thus unifying the project and signifying that all the various participants are being cared for.

Detail of the stitching

As you open the book, the significance of the spine is revealed, as it is an integral part of the opening experience, lying between the two opening inserts which are composed on the left of a stamp collection set into a transparent stamp album page and on the right each participating artist's titles for their various contributions, which are also set into the same transparent stamp album context. Suggesting that the contributors will be conserved and collected together carefully. 

My title as it appears set into the stamp album format

All of these design decisions go towards the construction of the artists' book as a unique object, that is not just a collection of artists' images stuck together, but which is a composite reflecting the 're' concept that artists had to respond to. 

As you open the book you realise that it is bound as a concertina or what is sometimes called a Leporello fold. 

1SSUE 59 opened out

The term 'Leporello fold' reminds us that there can be a far more performative engagement with the concertina form. You can engage much more of your body in its display; a realisation of this is seen at the moment in Mozart's opera Don Giovanni, when Giovanni's manservant innumerates his master's infidelities, by reading from a list written on a concertina of paper, of the thousands of women Don Giovanni has seduced. This list takes up so much space that the manservant, Leporello, has had to write it on a piece of paper folded onto itself many times. During the opera this list written on a concertina fold is unfolded to great effect, the drama of the unfolding being so much more spectacular than it would have been if Leporello had kept a simple notebook. Hence the term a 'Leporello fold'. 

The reading of Leporello's List: Basso Marco Vinco in Don Giovanni

There are of course 19 participants, so therefore 19 double spreads of artists' works. There is no common style to the people involved and I was relieved to see that I was the only person to make a biro drawing but there was a fair amount of print and collage, which I was sort of expecting, as participation was about making multiples of images.





Sample pages from 1SSUE 59 

My own contribution when folded was I thought ok, but perhaps not the best of the images I drew, but I am usually the worst judge of my own stuff, so I wont worry too much about that.

My contribution: Biro drawing of repeated figures engaging with a burning head form

Don't ask me what it means because I don't know, I just started drawing repetitive figure type marks and the image gradually arrived. 

So begins a new year of posts on drawing related thoughts, this will be the 13th year that I have kept this blog, a fact that amazes me, as when I started it, it was an addition to my BA Fine Art Drawing strand teaching. Then the strand was dropped, I reduced my teaching hours, then I retired, left the university but eventually returned as a research fellow; each week though I have somehow nearly always managed to put up a post about something to do with drawing, although lately posts have had more to do with my own practice and less to do with the wider practice of drawing as a discipline. The longer I move away from my teaching role, the more I become involved with my own work, but after over 50 years teaching art, I will always have one eye on a student audience, many of which will be past students.

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Friday, 26 December 2025

Christmas calendars

At Christmas time I put together a calendar, that I use to give to friends as presents. I try to write a small aphorism or quip that can sit in the calendar's date boxes, so that people have something to think about every day. The fact that many people who get them hang them in the toilet, seems to suggest that is where we like to sit and have a little something to think about. Over the last few years I have been contacted by people from outside my family/friend circle, by other's wanting these calendars and interest seems to continue to grow. I usually choose a visual theme from the work I have been doing over the year and write the aphorisms at odd times during that same year. When I was teaching, at one point I was developing a thought for the day that I would put to students first thing in the morning as a sort of wake up call. When Twitter arrived I then used to use that as a way to disseminate the idea. The calendars emerged as a way to record a year's worth of thoughts and were quickly taken up as a more condensed or easy to read, idea a day stimulus. 

I have been involved in a variety of projects this year, some focused on ceramics, one on animation, several on drawing and I have done both collaborative and very solipsistic work. The strand I decided to use as illustrations to this year's calendar, was selected because it represents the impact on us all of the continuing political churn that is emerging from the USA. I have met several people who live in the States over the course of the year at conferences and all of them were talking about their worries for the future of academic freedom and they cited the use of military forces on the streets of usually Democratic voting cities, as the tipping point for them. Like so many of my ideas these images initially emerged as responses to conversations, it seemed that the anonymous forms of semi-military personnel, had wormed their way into people's imaginations and it became my role as an artist to find forms for them. 

I was very aware however that each and every one of the ICE personnel that people were referring to, was underneath whatever covering they wore, an individual, who would have thoughts and feelings no less complex than those who were witnessing these events. An ex student of mine was now living in Chicago and had posted an image of ICE agents dropping into the city by helicopter, who then went on to storm a hostel that held immigrants. She was obviously disturbed by what was going on, frightened by the possibilities it was raising in her head. I could not fail to be affected by these things.

Events such as these are part of a much wider issue, immigration is a hot topic and the media use several rhetoric tropes to stir up people and agitate the situation. The reality is that people are worried about the non integration of large numbers of people coming into the countries of the northern hemisphere. Global warming, war and famine, are together driving thousands of people from their traditional homes, the weather as you go further north is still as yet reasonable and the economic viability of the western world, appears from afar, as creating a haven in comparison to the places where people are coming from. It is no surprise then that people will want to move, but also no surprise that the peoples who already live in the various western countries are resistant to an influx of people that are outsiders. The resultant conflict will I suspect become worse as heat rises. As an artist I have no answers, my practice is focused on listening to people and trying to find images that visualise their fears, anxieties and worries, as well as aspirations, exhilaration and joy. Our world provides us with a complex mix of experiences, some people such as scientists seek some sort of rational understanding of these and others such as artists try to develop more poetic or mythic concepts that help people find an alternative understanding of life's experiences. 

My approach to making visual responses to what I encounter is to set up a situation whereby the materials of image making, be these inks and paints or clay or wood, become another partner in the development of an emerging something. In the case of these recent images, I was looking at TV news footage and first of all scribbling down notes in pencil onto sheets of A3 paper. I then went back through these notes applying ink and watercolour washes, letting the flow of colour and line talk to me. Each image took its own time to emerge out of the materials of its making, I had no idea of where I was going with them and made them on and off over several months, many of them were useless daubs but a few began to chime with something inside me that suggested that they were ok. I didn't want to set these images up as critiques of a situation I had no real understanding of, they were, as are most of the images I make at the moment, more an attempt to capture the psychic feeling tone of people that I have spoken to or an attempt to capture what is in the air. 

These are the pages of this year's calendar.
















My calendars are not very Christmassy I'm afraid and they never have been. Last year I decided that prints I made in response to the situation in Gaza would be the main chosen images, but the year before that images of Sooty were chosen.*


I have often in these posts reflected on the various ways that drawings can be presented in exhibitions, but rarely written about other forms of dissemination. In this case by putting images and texts into a calendar, you in effect are sending out a small compact exhibition to individuals. The fact that many of these calendars will find their way onto a toilet wall is for myself a good thing, as it means that people will at least take time to think about what the images might mean to them or ponder on the aphorisms. 


*Thinking of alternative formats for the dissemination of work, at some point in the coming year, Landline Records will be releasing Micko & the Mellotronics latest recording, 'The Trinity'. The singles that have already been released used my images of Sooty as their cover and the gatefold CD package that the new CD will come in will also use Sooty images. I think it's great to have work chosen to accompany Micko's music, which I think is fantastic. Hopefully his sense of how odd our everyday Englishness actually is, will chime with my own take on Sooty as an avatar, an incarnate mystic animal, clothed in the form of a yellow child's puppet; an everyday object that has gone ferrel. 

Sooty is used to cure a painful heel. Stained glass: 2025

This is my last post of 2025, a turbulent year and one that has thrown up many challenges for the human race as a whole. As an artist who tries to make images by making drawings, I feel at times totally useless in the face of world events that I have no control of whatsoever. But I still continue to draw and new images still seem to emerge, so perhaps all is not as bleak as I might at first think it is. Thank you for reading these posts and hopefully you will find an occasional thought that you can use in your own journey. 

Happy New year. xxx

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