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Journey – Responses to Place, An Interview With Sculptor & Artist Sue Roberts
By Ceri Shaw, 2014-01-18
Susan was born in 1953 in Sussex. From 1979-82, she obtained an education degree at Bulmershe College, Reading (B.Ed). After having brought up a family, she embarked on a Foundation Course in Fine Art at Pontypridd College of Art, i.e. from 1997-98, which was followed, from 1998 to 2001, by a degree course in Art & Aesthetics (BA.hons) at University of Wales Institute Cardiff. In 2001 to 2003 she completed her art education by a M.A. Course at UWIC/Howard Gardens Cardiff. She lives and works in Cardiff where she has been active for the past 20 years; has her studio in Canton, Cardiff.
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AmeriCymru: Hi Sue and many thanks for agreeing to this interview. How does one become a sculptor? How did your interest in this art form evolve?
Sue: I moved to Wales in the early 1980s with my husband who is Welsh and I thought it was important to learn to speak Welsh. My children went to Welsh language nursery in Cardiff where I started helping out. Eventually I became the teacher of the class and this involved making things with the children every day. I have always liked making things it is a creative process. When I left the nursery there was a chance to do something for myself and this was when I started my journey into the world of art. At the age of 43 I did a foundation and enjoyed it a lot. The only difficult thing was deciding what medium to work in. I chose ceramics, painting, printing, and photography as this way I could carry on making. I then went off to the University of Wales Institute Cardiff and did a BA in Art and Aesthetics which was so enjoyable, that I went straight on to do an MA in Fine Art. It was whilst I was in UWIC that I was introduced to sculpture. My main interest was in the human body and in particular the female from which was something I understood. I was keen to find ways of portraying women that moved away from the conventional forms of beauty. Having had five children I had a particular interest in the mother. I read a lot about ways women had been portrayed in prehistory and fell in love with early carvings of mother Godesses. As a mother of five here were depictions of a beautiful female body I could relate to but they werent conventional to the modern eye. By the end of my MA my life had changed a lot. Art had become something inside me. I got myself a studio and I started working, as well as teaching Drawing at a local community Arts Centre. I have always felt it important to pay my way with my chosen path. It took a bit of juggling to get things right in terms of family and art but it all seemed to fit in.
AmeriCymru: We note from your website that you work in metal, stone and ceramics. What are the advantages and limitations of these materials for your work? Do you have a preference?
Sue: I love working in metal, but it is a team game, and takes a lot more organizing. I mainly work in wax clay or plaster first and then when money allows I get things cast in iron or bronze. I suffer from diabetes which can make the physical work difficult but there are excellent technicians in Wales who help with the process. I sometimes use a chisel and stone but I find working in plaster to be a very tactile experience. I try to express this tactility into my work and in particular into the surface texture of the finished piece. I use rough and smooth areas to express tension or inner conflict. I also use twists in the body to express emotions and often make pairs of figures that interact with each other as well as the viewer.
Bronze has a sense of universality about it which is something I like to play with and iron is a brittle material that corrodes over time. The surface of raw bronze can be changed using chemicals to create different colours and iron rusts which can also be very expressive and very beautiful or you can wax or paint the surface. I also work in stone which takes a great deal of effort. It is the opposite of building something up in clay or plaster. You just chip away until you feel the form is there. It can be difficult, heavy and dirty work but the rewards are great.
AmeriCymru: You also paint. How would you characterize your paintings and drawings?
Sue: I teach life drawing which is vital to my understanding of the body. Drawing is often a starting point for my sculpture. It allows me to search for those moments of expression or to develop ideas. Painting is another way of expressing the things I want to say. I usually paint single figures, the background is a space, so in a way it is similar to sculpting for me. I tend to work on very large canvases and this is also similar to the monumentality of some of my sculpture.
AmeriCymru: Can you tell us about your involvement with the Sculpture Cymru project - Journey Responses to Place?
Sue: I am Vice Chair of Sculpture Cymru which is a group of sculptors from Wales who come together to promote sculpture. The group has had exhibitions all over the Europe including Germany, Ireland and France. The Journeys Project is a response to landscape and in our case the Welsh landscape. At one of our Journey meetings, a sculptor from Brecon , Matthew Tomlin said something that described what we had all done up to that point. There is an atavistic tendency in our ideas, a sense of the disappeared, fragile, destroyed or lost - over long periods of time together with whatever it is remains and whatever still contains the memory of lost lives. We have used this quote to describe our work. The intention is to explore the idea of a special place of interest and our relationship to that place and its past.
When our children were young we would take them out on day trips and in Wales that often meant historic or prehistoric sites. As we explored I fell in love with this beautiful country and its long, rich history. My response to the project is to combine my love of the history and geography of Wales with my sculpture. So for my part of the project I have devised a project called Figure in the Landscape which involves visiting places that are special to me and rather than just taking photographs or memories away I decided to leave something behind that marks my visit. So I have made some small figures that I intend to leave at these special sites. There is an element of pilgrimage in this project and pilgrimages often end with an offering. Making art is like making an offering, so that is what I am doing. Each figure will have a tag attached that asks people to take the figure to a place that is special to them. I am then asking them to take a photograph of the figure in their special place and tell me something about why it is special to them. I have started a Facebook page for collecting this information and pictures. By using Facebook as a medium to share my work seemed to me to be one way to bring it from the past up to the present.
www.facebook.com/figureinthelandscape
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Maen Llia
This work will then be shown at the several exhibitions for Sculpture Cymrus Journeys project. These will show the works of all the members and the first show will be at the Gas Gallery in Aberystwyth from February 26th to April 1st This will be followed by three other venues around Wales including Oriel Lliw in Pontardawe, the Wyeside Gallery in Builth Wells, and Arts Central in Barry. There will also be a book relating to the Journeys project.
Details about the Journeys project will be posted on the Sculpture Cymru website which is
AmeriCymru: What's next for Sue Roberts? Do you have any further exhibitions planned?
Sue: Recently I was lucky enough to get a grant from the Welsh Arts Council. This was a great boost for me and allowed me to make lots of work. However artists have to promote themselves which doesnt always come naturally but there is no point doing all this work if it doesnt get seen.
In March I have a solo show at the Cynon Valley Museum and Art Gallery in Aberdare so that means a lot of work as I have to fill two floors! I am a member of several groups which show work in Wales and around the world. Earlier this year I was part of a show in Vienna and I am currently part of an exchange program with the International Society of Experimental Artists and The Welsh Group. Through this some of my work is currently being shown in America. The exhibition starts in Florida and will then move on to California. I am also going to be part of a show in Mid Wales, then in Dusseldorf later this year.
I am a founding member of a group called 3ormore which is a mentoring and exhibiting group. We have two shows lined up in Cardiff, one which is actually inside the Welsh assembly itself and the other at the fabulous Pierhead Building in Cardiff Bay. Next year we will be showing at the newly renovated Penarth Pier.
I am also a member of the Vale of Glamorgan artists where we are having an exhibition in the beautiful Dyffryn Gardens in October. The idea is to make work that responds to the space.
I am a committee member of the Women Arts Association which is having several exhibitions in March to celebrate womens day.
So it is a very busy time for me which is great. There is a website of my work at
www.suerobertsartist.co.uk
AmeriCymru: Any final message for the readers and members of AmeriCymru?
Sue: I came to the world of art fairly late in life because I was busy having a family, but I believe it is important for people and nations to express their identity. The Arts are under a lot of pressure at the moment with the financial problems we all face, but art is a way of telling others what you think and feel. It is a way of talking about the things that are important to people. Sometimes these things are abstract or difficult but art seems to be the ideal way to address these things and begin a dialogue. Art is an important part of our culture, so I can only urge people to get involved, either by having a go for themselves or through supporting the arts. If you are on a day out in Wales and spot a little figure lying there with a label on it, pick it up and take it somewhere that means something to you and that might be your first steps to becoming an artist.
2014 L.A. St. David's Day Festival & Working (Playing) ~
Check out our selection of St Dwynwen's Day ecards here .
Don't forget to check out our selection of St Dwynwen's Day Ecards on the Welsh American Bookstore. We have traditional, humorous and just plain bizarre designs to suit all tastes. And of course the obligatory cat pic. Keep checking back. We will be adding more between now and next year.
You can customize the cards with your own message and your text will appear on the reverse of the image just like a postcard ( see below ) .
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More card selections to come soon!
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After chatting with Brett on AmeriCymru the other night the above question occurred to me. We were talking about fish'n'chips ( pysgod a sglodion ) when I realised that my Welsh vocabulary for common dishes and menu items is woefully deficient. Bangers'n'mash is a well known British culinary masterpiece and gastronomic delight. I occasionally cook it and here is my recipe ( please note the mystery ingredient ):- Bangers'n'Mash
The problem is, of course that the term bangers'n'mash is highly idiomatic and would not translate literally other than as literal nonsense. So I'm wondering if there is a Welsh name for this dish? If anyone knows please feel free to comment below.
On a more serious note I have recently discovered that there are a number of novels and short story collections available for Welsh learners. Most of these have vocabularies either on the page or at the back of the book and they are all easy to read.
It seems to me that reading through a few of these, mentally translating them at first but eventually grasping the meaning directly from the Welsh language text, would be a good way to speed up the learning process. Has anyone tried this and if so with what result?
Here are a few Welsh learners titles from our Dysgwyr Cymraeg page:- Eistedd Ar Groen Ieti , O Law I Law (Welsh Edition) , Nofelau Nawr: Tri Chynnig I Blodwen Jones , 4 Stories for Welsh Learners (Welsh Edition) , Bywyd Blodwen Jones (Nofelau Nawr)
I am keen to be able to read the popular Welsh language novels of Lloyd Jones - Y Dwr and Y Daith True, one of them will be published in English language translation later this year but thats not really the point is it.
N.B. It's still not too late to join the AmeriCymraeg 2014 online Welsh class on the site. Just click the text link or image below for instructions on how to enrol. We only covered basic pronunciation last week so it shouldn't be difficult to catch up.
Click here or below to for the 'How To Enrol For AmeriCymraeg 'page
More Here - dysgwr2014
I'm looking forward to my second class in the AmeriCymraeg term on Wednesday night. I am also looking forward to ridding myself of one particularly stale and irritating habit that I picked up years ago.
At a lunchtime Welsh course I attended in Caerdydd back in the 90's we students were tasked to respond to the question "Y dych chi'n siarad Cymraeg? " ( Do you speak Welsh? ) with an original Welsh sentence of our own device.
I was horrified! This involved a combination of grammar and creativity. The former was beyond me and I was in no mood for the latter on a wet Wednesday afternoon. So ... I resorted to ellipsis .
I wrote my 'sentence' as follows and enunciated accordingly:-
"Dwi'n dysgu Cymraeg nawr...ond yn araf....mae'n waith caled." ("I am learning Welsh now....but slowly....it's hard work")
To my shame I have been answering the same question with the same phrase, or phrases, ever since. BUT I am determined that 2014 will be the year when I finally abandon the three dots and learn to speak ( and write ) Welsh in whole joined up sentences.
Sound file:- dysgucymraeg.wav
N.B. It's still not too late to join the AmeriCymraeg 2014 online Welsh class on the site. Just click the text link or image below for instructions on how to enrol. We only covered basic pronunciation last week so it shouldn't be difficult to catch up.
Click here or below to for the 'How To Enrol For AmeriCymraeg 'page
A pictorial tour of some of the pubs Dylan Thomas visited in Swansea, west Wales, Oxford, London, and the USA. This book will put Dylan Thomas's love of public houses and liking of drink into its proper perspective. Events that happened to him in and around pubs are reflected in his famous works and these are discussed in the book.
Buy Dylan Thomas: The Pubs here
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A recent article about the current Dylan Thomas centenary in the UK Guardian announces that Wales is preparing to resurrect the poet''s reputation . But is there really much work to be done? A recent book published by Y Lolfa looks at Dylan''s ''alcoholism'' from a new angle.
This meticulously researched and beautifully illustrated book seeks to put the record straight on Dylan Thomas''s lifelong love affair with the pub. Was the poet more interested in people than pints? Did he crave fellowship and social interaction more than alcohol?
In the introduction, author Jeff Towns makes a number of telling points in support of this thesis. Firstly Dylan was, for the most part, a beer drinker. He objected to a colleagues suggestion, whilst working at the BBC, to keep a bottle of whisky in the office and only consumed spirits in any quantity on his American tours toward the end of his life. Additionally he was regarded by himself and others as an entertainer, the ''pub fool'' perhaps. He had a wide repertoire of bawdy jokes and limericks at his disposal and he craved the adulation of a receptive audience for his performances. All of this is far removed from the traditional picture of the sad and lonely alcoholic sitting at home alone pickling himself with the strongest liquor available. Perhaps there is truth in Dylan''s own observation that:- "An alcoholic is someone you don''t like who drinks as much as you do." The opinions of contemporaries should also be borne in mind, some of whom recall him as a habitual ( and occasionally excessive drinker ) but by no means a hardened alcoholic.
But however persuasive the introduction, it is the sections on individual pubs and incidents in Dylan''s life which are the real meat of this volume. Here is an incident ( quoted in the book ) that occurred in the Mermaid Inn, Oystermouth Rd, Mumbles:-
" Once after a widely reported rabies epidemic, Dylan and friend Wynford Vaughan Thomas....used this as some spontaneous horseplay. They went down on all fours and crawled around the floor of the pub, pretending to be rabid dogs, biting people''s ankles. When Dylan tried this on actress Ruby Graham, she feigned anger and shooed him out of the door. She was astonished to see him continue across the pavement to a lamp-post. "I thought he was going to pee on it.", she recalled. Instead, he bit on it, leaving him with a broken tooth for the rest of his life. ( Afterwards he used to tell her he remembered her every time he smiled.) "
This incident was later referenced in Thomas''s radio play Return Journey . Other passages from Dylan''s writing are illuminated in the same way and this is one of the many strengths of this book.
Together with the wonderful illustrations by Wyn Thomas, the wealth of incident recorded here is sure to delight Dylan Thomas afficianados and casual readers alike. An unreserved thumbs up and five star recommendation.
About The Author
Jeff Towns is a rare-book dealer based in Swansea who, for more than 40 years, from his Dylans Bookstore, has specialised in books about Wales in all its many aspects and ramifications and in particular, the life, works, manuscripts and iconography of Dylan Thomas. In 1993 he edited an unknown poem by Dylan, Letter to Loren , and is currently working on several other books and films on aspects of the poet''s life.
Wyn Thomas (Illustrator) was a design draughtsman before becoming broadcaster specialising in history and the arts for radio and television
Product Details 'Dylan Thomas: The Pubs '
A pictorial tour of some of the pubs Dylan Thomas visited in Swansea, west Wales, Oxford, London, and the USA.
Written by: Jeff Towns
Published by: Y Lolfa
Date published: 2013-24-11
Edition: 1st
ISBN: 1847716938
Available in Paperback
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Below you will find a list of the pubs referenced in the book, together with links to as many as we know which are still open. We hope this will be useful to anyone wanting to spend some time in one of Dylan's old watering holes. If you know of any websites we''ve missed please post in comments. Photos are welcome too.
SWANSEA The Uplands Hotel ( now The Uplands Tavern ) The Three Lamps ( now The Office ) The No. 10 ( closed ) The Bush Inn ( closed ) MUMBLES The Mermaid ( now The Mermaid Restaurant ) The Antelope ( closed ) GOWER |
CARMARTHENSHIRE LAUGHARNE WEST WALES ENGLAND NEW YORK BOSTON LOS ANGELES |
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From left to right:- The Worms Head Hotel, Gower - The Uplands Tavern, Swansea.
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A quick post tonight, it's Saturday night, traditionally a time to raise a few cyrfau. I wanted to draw attention to an email I received on the site today about pronunciation . Here is the text:-
Just a wish sent your way for Welsh Phrase of the Day. If an idea on how to pronounce the phrase would also be included it would help.
So after due consultation with Brett we have decided to add occasional sound files to assist absolute beginners in this area. Please feel free to add a sound file whenever you post a phrase or sentence in the blog.
I added the first of these tonight:- "mae hi'n bwrw glaw heddiw". It's a .wav file so I hope it plays ok and I hope my pronunciation is not too awful. It only takes a second to make a recording and we hope more of our followers will feel inclined to contribute. Whatever you do....cael hwyl
Here is the sound file:- bwrwglaw.wav
Click here or below to for the 'How To Enrol For AmeriCymraeg 'page
Dydd Santes Dwynwen is on January 25th. The link below takes you to a free card that you can print out and give to someone special x
More Here - dysgwr2014
Back in the 90's I used occasionally to attend Welsh language courses. I never lasted long and always found an excuse to drop out, usually because of time pressure or for financial reasons.
I did, however, pick up a smattering of Welsh and imagined, because I had mastered a few phrases, that I was ready to go forth and test my vocabulary and comprehension in the real world.
It so happened that one year I set out with a companion to walk the Rhinogs , a grim but magnificent range in Snowdonia, which boasts some of the roughest hill walking country in Wales. Situated in the Harlech Dome, the Rhinogs are frequently shrouded in mist and home to little more than the occasional sheep farm.
It was on a misty day somewhere south of Maentwrog that my companion and I admitted we might be lost and sought directions from a sheep farmer we were lucky to encounter on the barren hillsides.
This was my big chance. I said, "Dyn ni'n mynd i Maentwrog. Ble mae'r Maentwrog?"
Our new found friend began talking rapidly in fluent Welsh pointing ( fortunately ) in the general direction of Maentwrog and no doubt, supplying us with a detailed account of every major obstacle and landmark we would encounter en route. All wasted! After several minutes he came to a halt and smiled. I smiled back, waved and said, "Diolch yn fawr."
After leaving our helpful guide a safe distance behind in the mist my companion turned to me and enquired smugly, "You didn't understand a ******* word of that did you?"
I hung my head and muttered, "No...not a ******* word."
And so....if there is a moral to this tale it is this. Join AmeriCymraeg now before you too get lost in the Rhinogs!
Click here or below to for the 'How To Enrol For AmeriCymraeg 'page