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Alison Aye

Artist
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Smash Thatcher

September 2, 2024

Christopher Madden is a County Durham born artist who lives in London. We were born in the same hospital. I was unaware of his existence until a few weeks ago.

In 1979, Chris drew a cartoon of Thatcher which was then used by the Socialist Workers Party for placards and posters. Other people copied the image for their own personal banners. In 1980, one such person drew the image, wrote ‘SMASH THATCHER’ underneath, and carried it to protest against the closure of Consett Steelworks (image above, full credits below). The Steelworks closed in 1980, with a loss of 3000 jobs. One of many closures, as Thatcher continued her axe-wielding across the North. The protest was photographed and printed in the Northern Echo, which is where I found the image. In 2022, I stitched it to ‘Shifting to the Moon’, a piece about greed and short-sightedness, the ridiculousness of the monarchy, how history keeps repeating itself, and how the posh lads are always in charge.

I grew up in Spennymoor which is 10 miles from Consett, and very similar. Nobody in my hometown liked Thatcher. Understandably. I’d never knowingly met a tory until I moved South.

In 2024, I submitted ‘Shifting To The Moon’ for consideration for the Royal Academy Summer Show. It was accepted. Alice Fisher, from the Observer, wrote an article about it, on account of me unsuccessfully trying to get work into the Summer Show for 30 years.

Chris read the article, recognised his cartoon, and got in touch via Instagram. Turns out he has a history of Summer Show rejections, too.

Credits:

Image 1- Consett Steel Workers’ protests, 1980. Northern Echo. Photographer uncredited.

Image 4 - Me with my work at the RA. Photo by Cassie Candle.

Image 5 - Chris’s original cartoon. A screenshot from his Instagram feed.

In Art, Other Stuff Tags consett, consett steelworks, thatcherism, northern england, working class culture, the eighties, 80s, miners strike, class ceiling, class system, the workers, chris madden, political cartoon, margaret thatcher, shifting to the moon, alice fisher, the guardian, royal academy summer exhibition, working class art, working class
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Family Affair

November 8, 2023

This piece is about the ridiculousness of the monarchy, and how it was built on the backs of working people, and how my feminism is conflicted by three privileged and powerful leaders. The class system, inherited wealth and the common-wealth, it’s about that too. It’s also about Usain Bolt’s orange shoes being worth 20k, and him not being able to catch the person in Croydon who ran off with them. I tried various legs on Elizabeth, Sly Stone’s were made to measure. I need to credit my husband, who came up with ‘Family Affair’.

61. Family Affair

Hand-stitched paper to tea towel

37 x 31cm unframed, 46 x 41cm framed (by The Framing Room)

Queen Elizabeth II with Charles and Anne Balmoral, 28th September 1952. Bromide Print, NPG 1616. Photo by Lisa Sheridan (mother of Dinah Sheridan* and grandmother of Jenny Hanley, Magpie presenter). Cut from Coronation Souvenir. Printed by LTA Robinson Ltd, London. *I have a soft spot for Dinah Sheridan, in that she is in one of the most joyous film moments of all time. The bit in The Railway Children where they have apple pie for breakfast.

Queen Victoria Alexander Bassano 1887 (1882). NPG x8753. For Victoria’s Golden Jubilee. Cut from Kings and Queens by Ronald Pearsall, Tiger Books 1986.

Queen Elizabeth I c1588. Unknown artist. N. Looks like a copy of the Armada Portrait. Cut from Heritage of Britain, Reader’s Digest 1975.

Trousers of Sly Stone, Frank Driggs Collection. Cut from Rock Stars by Timothy White. Columbus Books, 29 Elmfield Road, Bromley, 1984.

Large Feet belong to Usain Bolt. Cut from the i newspaper (16.4.22). Photographer uncredited. The orange Puma running shoes (worth £20k, according to the BBC) were stolen in London in 2014.

Small Feet and Hand belong to Prince William (red shoes) and Prince Harry (blue shoes and hand) Majorca 1987. Photo by Jayne Fincher. Cut from William, The People’s Prince by Ian Lloyd, Pavilion 2003.

Family Affair will be part of the ING Discerning Eye exhibition at the Mall Galleries, from 17th - 26th November. All works are for sale, and continue to be so online until 31st December.

Please note that I do not reproduce physical images to stitch, but use already printed materials. The paper comes from discarded books, newspapers, magazines, calendars and the like. Most of the books I cut are beyond repair, the rest are beyond my respect.

In Art Tags class system, monarchy, commonwealth, usain bolt, sly stone, queen elizabeth I, queen elizabeth II, queen victoria, prince harry, prince william, royal family, princess anne, king charles III, lisa sheridan, studio lisa, dinah sheridan, jenny hanley, magpie, the railway children, bassano, armada portrait
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