Address

You can visit the Jiq Jaq Gallery at 112 Heath Street, Hampstead, London. NW3 1DR

Monday 30 July 2007

Street People Exhibition

Jiq Jaq Gallery presents Jacqueline Crofton's Street People.

Where:
Jiq Jaq Gallery, 112 Heath Street, Hampstead, London, NW3 1DR

When:
Wednesday, August 1, 2007 is open night. Come from 6:30-8:30 for wine and conversation. The exhibition will run September 18, 2007.


To an artist, homelessness, like war and poverty, is a powerful subject. Every day, we pass people with nowhere to call home, some of us notice them, others pay no attention, but they are part of our world and their colourful stories are brush strokes on the portrait of our city.

About six years ago, painter Jacqueline K Crofton sat in Camden's soup kitchen eating lunch with a group who shared their experiences. Afterwards, she was able to sketch and photograph some of them and, over the next year, developed a series of large charcoal and oil paintings on flax, which she called Street People. This controversial collection is not for everyone and has never before been shown to the public.

Many of these people use shelters at night. Others are called 'rough sleepers', the ones you see in doorways and under bridges. You may have wondered how they got there and why they have not been able to escape that life.

In 2004, St. Mungo's conducted a survey on 1,534 people without homes. What they found helped explain the tangled web of problems that sends them to the streets. The most common reason has to do with broken relationships that were destroyed by or spiralled into drug and alcohol abuse, behavioural problems and both physical and mental illness. The research found 40% of homeless people have a mental health problem and just over 1/3 have issues with substance abuse. 48% have been without permanent housing for two or more years, 17% for more the 10 years. London offers a number of support groups that help unemployed homeless men and women find jobs. Some sell The Big Issue from which 80p per sale goes into their own pocket. They are often stuck in unemployment because they have no permanent mailing address, poor hygiene, no money for interview clothes and educational problems.

Jaq's reasoning behind painting this series was not for it to be a social commentary but to create a composition of a darker, yet inevitable, reality. The rate of homelessness in London is twice as high as the rest of England and far greater than government statistics indicate, according to the charity crisis who estimates approximately 400,000 homeless in Great Britain. There is a stark contrast in London, even in this borough alone. Here, we have the upmarket neighbourhood of Hampstead, and just around the corner, you find Camden soup kitchen.

To see the entire collection online, click here.

Tuesday 3 July 2007

Summer News

In New York, the Whitney Museum of American Art celebrates the 40th anniversary of the Summer of Love. Here in London, Jaq embarks on her own summer-long journey of creativity.

She continues to expand her brand new series, Nirvana, which embodies the values of that infamous summer in her own signature style. Introducing huge and powerful oil on canvas paintings, some measuring 137cm x 183cm, this abstracted landscape collection of florals and meadows plays with the effect of light and shadows. Luminous and striking, with strategically-placed streaks of red and some darker areas of disturbance, the tryptich Elysian Fields echoes the persistent struggle between peace and war. Experimenting with an entrancing new vivid blue, purple and green colour scheme and dripping paint, Jaq has assured her most recent work is full of energy. Watch for pictures soon.

A taste will be revealed in her first ever art catalogue, to be printed this summer by Colourhouse. This 40-page, glossy publication, complete with large, high-quality images and captivating descriptions, offers a special gift of a complimentary print to those who make a purchase.

Her catalogue brings another first to the mix as Jaq has made the decision to sell her delicate oil on paper paintings. These unique works, previously available only as prints, are highlighted in contemporary frames and feature oriental figures, still lifes and women from her Rococco series.

In September, Jaq's summer of creativity will culminate in an exhibition of her most recent work at Jiq Jaq Gallery (located at 112 Heath Street, Hampstead) which will display a selection of paintings from her Nirvana, Solano and Delicacies series.

If you are interested in a catalogue or would like an invitation to the Jiq Jaq exhibition, call the office at 020 7561 6218 or email info@jiqjaq.com. To see more of Jaq's work, visit http://www.jiqjaq.com/.
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