• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

A Creative Lifestyle Blog By Zoe-Lee Skelton

  • Home
  • About Me
    • In The Press
    • Contact
  • Photography
  • Art
  • Craft
  • Lifestyle
  • Fashion
  • Beauty
  • Interiors
    • DIY

Zoe-Lee Skelton

Adobe Illustrator Vector Shape Techniques

November 17, 2012 by Zoe-Lee Skelton

This is the result of placing a vector shape over an imported image, grouping the objects and then creating a clipping mask. Unfortunately, I haven’t been able to fully understand how you delete the white space in Illustrator, but I simply copied it over to the ol’ faithful Photoshop and magnetically cropped it – thanks to the straight edges. Anyway, I’m really pleased with the result, so I think I’ll give heart shapes a try next.

Stay tuned…

Zoe-Lee

Filed Under: Art

Installation view of my pieces for the Exhibition Error 404 at the A-side B-side Gallery, Hackney

September 23, 2012 by Zoe-Lee Skelton

Installtion view of two of my drawings:

(Left) ‘Quoth the Raven’, tea, black ink, pen, pencil, charcoal, highlighter and watercolour. £50

 (Right)’…at the slightest lapse, someone at once attracted the greatest suspicion’, tea,  black ink, watercolour, black ink pen, pencil and charcoal. £50

Filed Under: Art, Drawings, Fine Art, Illustration

Contemporary Cityscapes after E. Hoper and D. Hepher – Nadiya Pavliv Tokarska

August 2, 2012 by Zoe-Lee Skelton

Home

Nadiya Pavliv Tokarska / Contemporary Cityscapes. After E HOPPER and D HEPHER

Unreal City, 60 Under the brown fog of a winter dawn,
A crowd flowed over London Bridge, so many,
I had not thought death had undone so many.
Sighs, short and infrequent, were exhaled,
And each man fixed his eyes before his feet.
T. S. Eliot, The Wasteland, 1922

London town; Do we acknowledge the architectural giants in between sips of our extra hot, extra skinny, mocha-decaf latte as we drudge routinely through the chartered streets? We take their lining of the street and London’s turreted skyline for granted. We can all identify with the names: Gherkin, the shard, the thrusting peaks of Canary Wharf – but have you ever really looked at them. Have you ever stood at the summit and exchanged a submission of proportion with these benevolent giants, or stopped in the middle of Oxford Street while the drones throng and swell to the beat of the consumer drum?

Nadiya Pavliv Tokarska’s exhibition sheds an appreciative light upon some of London’s buildings that have literally become part of the scenery. For all we know, these buildings that we regimentally pass could be standing with the profound crudeness of a spaghetti western backdrop. If you ever happen to study these magnificent old buildings, do you ever see anybody ushered in or ever leave? Often the functions of these buildings remain supremely coveted; the secrets there in are as old as the buildings themselves.

It is a shame that these structures once symbolic of London’s irreverent global power have fallen into disenfranchising circumstances in spite of the commercial buzz below. However, the tired, tarnished facades that may have originally averted us now enthral and overwhelm as we appreciate the immutable detail of the paintings. Their convoluted realism alone transfigures a fresh love of our surrounding beauty. I feel as if Nadiya’s work has taken me on an alternative whistle stop tour of the capital; a tour of a begotten London miraculously silenced, captured in snap shot frames of time standing still.

This somewhat magic ability to pacify the pandemonium has been executed in rather uncanny detail, reminiscent of the veritable old master technique – a certain style that reasserts the once stirring power of these builds. Snapshots of Finsbury Circus inter-changed with sights of heritage and familiarity such as Oxford Street, St Pauls and the National Gallery have not just been copied for picture postcard compatibility, Nadiya is a modern day flaneur, living and breathing her city – more importantly flexing her love for this city.

However, scratch the surface, pat away the brick dust and the artist’s brush has introduced a polemic. The juxtaposition between the semi-suburban dwellings of Finsbury Circus and the tourist hot spots of the Albert Hall and St Pauls characterises the receding domicile in to commerciality. The magnificent detail of Finsbury Circus, Northern Side, London ratifies the wealth of these once domestic households, now outlets for vagrant bureaucratic ends.

A bygone era of London has emerged: Nadyia cultivates a Britain upholding its revered Imperialism through architectural plains, dimensions and stone, yet now aching and quite functionless – unless some enterprising go-getter musters the rental money to dwell in these aging pieces of history. And the cycle will continue, wheels within wheels, beauty undone by the mercenaries of progress.

Remember what we have and what we should not ignore. This is London in transmission. Nadiya has perhaps inadvertently presented us with a future battle to contain London’s disappearing domiciles and earlier centuries radical architecture. In favour of what: speedy builds, swaying bridges, unmanned Olympic stadiums and fiscal greed?

Zoe-Lee Skelton

Here is a link to the Gallery’s website: http:/tokarskagallery.co.uk/

Filed Under: Uncategorized

A Catalogue foreword…

April 15, 2012 by Zoe-Lee Skelton

I was honored that I was asked to make a contribution to the Catalogue foreword for Middlesex Fine Art Graduates 2012. Here is my submission below:


‘Doubt, a pervasive feature of modern critical reason, permeates into everyday life’ 

–          Anthony Giddens


We interrogate our validity as an artist with the same gravity that we hasten to tighten our purse strings.


We are on the blade’s edge economically; do we cut ties with our passions and bind ourselves to an insurable career, with a cheque in the post and a guarantee? Or do you listen to that incessant voice that guided you to Art College in the first place.


From this dilemma begins an arduous enquiry into the essence of art. We attempt to penetrate into the heart of the truth that lay within art, yet it all descends into phenomena. But can phenomena be stable, a career to bank on?


We have all experienced this crisis of purpose. Frustratingly, as we tiptoe on the verge of giving up the creativity flows. As artists we exhibit this inherent ability to adapt, survive and flourish in times of adversity. This is why an artist will always outlive a recession. Our approach towards our work is to analyse, respond and bring into existence – an artist’s tools are vast and ubiquitous.


We have never been “A” to “B” individuals; we take the scenic route with extra detours upon the way. We live and breathe in beauty and ruin, aim for beauty but manage to find the filth in every rainbow. We’re detectives, collecting evidence, cleaning up any straggling threads and move onto the next case to solve, injustice to rally against. We are prepared for all eventualities.


In all honesty we knew this choice wouldn’t be easy, and this reflects the strength of character.


We are shocking, entangled with vulgarity, but we will always be illuminating.


Zoe-Lee Skelton

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Pieces of Eight (2012)

April 12, 2012 by Zoe-Lee Skelton

Pieces of Eight (2012)
Medium: Cigarette boxes, Tea, Resin, Bronze bees.
Dimension: A3 relief
This piece is also on show at The Tokarska Gallery, Walthamstow, London.
Here is a link to the gallery’s exhibitions listings:
http:/tokarskagallery.co.uk/current-exhibitions

Filed Under: Uncategorized

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Go to page 1
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Go to page 39
  • Go to page 40
  • Go to page 41
  • Go to page 42
  • Go to page 43
  • Go to page 44
  • Go to Next Page »

Primary Sidebar

Hi, I’m Zoe-Lee

Zoe-Lee

Welcome to my creative lifestyle blog showcasing my art and fashion, discussing interior design ideas and style as well as cruelty-free beauty.

Follow me

  • Bloglovin
  • E-mail
  • Facebook
  • Flickr
  • Instagram
  • Pinterest
  • Twitter

Etsy Shop: RagnBow

Follow me on Bloglovin

Secret Diary of a Scavenger
Privacy & Cookies: This site uses cookies. By continuing to use this website, you agree to their use.
To find out more, including how to control cookies, see here: Cookie Policy

Copyright © 2025