Saturday 20 February 2010

organisation

An hour to go before driving to Heathrow for my flight to Tokyo - YIPPEE! And just time to let you know about progress - I know you're all on tenterhooks. Well, this week I've been phoning round and have managed to organise equipment for our promo at the Glaziers 'do', plus some filming the following day, Patrick painting in John's studio and a trip to Sandersons. Plus the Somerset week which involves filming Charlie Higson in the library with Professor Plum and a candlestick - ah, no, sorry, wrong game - in the library with Patrick and multitudinous tomes. Also interviewing Patrick, photographing his autonomous stained glass panels, trying to discover if there are old photographs and press cuttings which might be of use, and visiting St George's, Taunton and Stoke St Mary where there are two recent Patrick windows.

Saturday 13 February 2010

Open Days and Film Benefit











Flying Birds and Flag Flying - Patrick's grandchildren show their support in true artistic fashion!
The week following our Cambridge meeting was an absolute nightmare, I arrived home a day later than anticipated because we had to finish FBSG, a lecture in London on the Saturday, writing a lecture for the Japanese translators to peruse and then making PDF files of all the FBSG chapters so that Charles could author the DVD and get copies made before my trip. Plus it snowed. Boy did it snow and we were once again marooned - the first time it was fun, succeeding events become a trifle tedious. The more tired I became the more mistakes I made. I was due to travel to London for the Reyntiens Open Day today and almost called it off due to the snow and lack of progress but eventually decided the break would do me good - which it did! I had to be pushed out of one snow drift, and had a few graceful slides through the icy village but once out on the main roads it was OK.
Anyway, yes, the Open Days. These are held at John's Studio on the top floor of a lovely 1930s building, great quality of light.









Inspecting the array of panels and the yummy luncheon
One arrives, has a look at Patrick's panels, chats, great luncheon spread including John's speciality green soup, and then Patrick performs! He paints a sheet of glass, jigging along to American hill-billy music today. He doesn't appear to have a design in mind when he begins, it just evolves. This one started with some trees, an island appeared, the sea, birds wheeled in the air, a nude figure came to live there, and a sunbather, and just when we thought it was finished he decided to add a pile of clothes - just in case! His mark making is extraordinary and he uses a variety of tools, brushes, paper, Somerset reeds which he gathers and sharpens himself, feathers. It's a real education and we were all mesmerised.






Patrick painting and the completed work
Details: Open Day dates - 27 February, 13, 14 and 27 March. Venue: Urban Glass Works, Acme Studios, 15 Orsman Road, London N1 5RA. For details and tickets contact johnreyntiens@mac.com
DOCUMENTARY FILM BENEFIT
This will be held at the Glaziers Hall, 9 Montague Close, London Bridge, SE1 9DD (nearest tube and train - London Bridge) on 12 April 2010. Graham Jones and Danny Lane are the guest speakers. A 5 minute promotional film about Patrick's work will also be shown.
Doors Open 6pm, Drinks Reception
Lectures and Raffle, 7-9.15pm
Bar, 9.15 - 10.30pm
Tickets £20 per person, advanced sales only
Contact John Reyntiens:
Tel: 020 7729 8718 or email: prfilmbenefit@gmail.com
Autonomous stained glass panels painted and signed by Patrick will be for sale:
200 First Edition painted and leaded panels @ £90 each (they come with authentication certificate and are already selling fast)
Limited Edition of 15 Artist's stained glass panels @ £160 each
Second Edition of 100 panels @ £130 each
Limited Edition of 15 Artist's Stained Glass Panels @ £200 each.
Every panel is unique and they are just fabulous and terrific value. And the Glaziers Hall has what is reputed to boast the best panoramic view of the Thames in all London!
The proceeds from the evening and sales go to funding 'From Coventry to Cochem', our documentary celebrating the life and work of Patrick. So please do attend, otherwise there's no money in the pot!

Wednesday 3 February 2010

Cambridge coughs


'Arf a larf', alias Libby catching flies!
Today we are scheduled to drive down to Cambridge to have another meeting with John and Charlotte and Charles had agreed to drive to give Libby a break. Unfortunately during the night he started developing the nasty cold which Jobear had introduced to the house last week. Undeterred we set off in relatively high spirits.
It's interesting that whenever Mike Goldmark gives us a commission, he just says 'I'd like a film about Piper' or whomsoever, pays the money and then leaves us to it. He knows he can trust us to do a good job and that we are a one-stop-shop! Charles is the Director and does all the tehnical stuff with aplomb (or sometimes without) - the filming, editing, sound, authoring of DVDs and he's also something of a connoisseur about music. Libby is in charge of organisation, research, transcription and formulating the film sequences and sits in on editing sessions. They are both dab hands at design and stills photgraphy. So a pretty talented duo really - and markedly modest with it!
However John remarked that all their friends and acquaintances were very liberal with advice about film-making, they all had tame directors under the second mushroom on the left, why choose Malachite, why not Lapis Lazuli, who's going to direct the work, must ensure the sound is good, who's going to write the script etc etc. Rather troubled by all this, and not having made a film previously, they arrived with a huge story board and a list of people to interview at various sites (which would have been a logistical nightmare and played merry whatsit with our carefully worked out budget which allowed one week to bag all the relevant stained glass windows). And they've wheeled in some celebs - Charlie Higson is going to inspire Patrick in the library - the other celeb still under wraps (watch this space).
Anyway I think by the end of the session we all understood where we were coming from or from whence we were coming (not round the mountain).
Sandwiches and soup in the Octagon room most enjoyable again - Charles and I definitely approve of the venue and think Kings should bestow upon Charlotte a permanent Fellowship!
John brought along some of the stained glass panels which Patrick has been working on, and they really are wonderful, every one completely different and just inspired, illustrating Patrick's wit and energy.
One of Patrick's panels - signed, leaded, unique and a snip at £90!
Charles' cold (or rather the one Jobear had graciously bestowed upon him) had developed exponentially during the afternoon and by the time we started our drive back home he was a very unhappy bunny, his lot not aided by the rain which was tanking down and the driving snow which hindered us for the last half hour. However the AGA-warm kitchen, a glass of red and Libby's buttered prawns with tomatoes, olives and Arak, together with doses of Beechams made him feel a little better.