Category Archives: Life

New Beginnings.

Well, I’m back in a fully working (and brand new) studio, in a brand new part of the country, and now that the dust has settled and the work machine has started it’s engines I thought I’d finally update the blog. I moved both house and studio from Hastings to Brighton around 5 weeks ago; it’s amazing how much things can slow down, even grind to a complete halt when you’re relocating. Happy to say the studio is now running at full speed and it feels great to be back at work. I’ve put a lot of time into getting the studio to a level of functionality and comfort that really makes it a great place to be every day as I’m planning on spending a lot of time here from now on.

And with the move comes a new start in many ways. A new exciting and creative city to explore, but also a new way of working and putting my work out there. To start with, for the first time in about 5 years I’m now sharing my studio space with my good friend and fellow artist/illustrator Ben Southern. It’s a strange thing to go back to after working in total solitude for such a long time, but having another creative around to discuss ideas and collaborate with is actually pretty nice.

So as well as continuing to push forward on my own as a solo artist, I’ll also be forming a new band with Ben known as the Freak Show Projects, (apologies for the naff music analogy, but I’m going to run with it). From within the studio, we’ll be experimenting with new sounds, new instruments and new ways to play, the results of which will be available in the FSP online shop. Keeping things as unique but affordable as possible, we’ll be working on everything from t-shirts to prints, paper-cuts and collages, 3D objects, books, zines, basically anything that we think will be fun at the time. And, in the spirit of a true Freak Show, things will come in all kinds of shapes and sizes, styles and directions. The new studio is a place to experiment and have fun regardless of stylistic restraints, the new online shop will be the place to get your hands on these new things we create.

The Freak Show Projects shop will totally replace my current store, so as well as the more experimental playful pieces and products, it will also be the place to get your hands on all future Eelus printed editions. I’ll still be pushing forward with the Eelus work and I already have 2 solo shows booked for next year which I’m very excited about. So please keep your eyes on eelus.com for any news on available originals and how you can go about buying them.

As soon as I have more news on either Freak Show Projects or my solo work this is where you’ll read about it, so don’t forget to pop round for a brew whenever you can.

Big thanks.

Lee.

Iphoneography

Apologies for the lack of posts recently, lots going on here but lots of really good stuff coming very soon. In the meantime, here’s a few recent iPhone snaps, my camera of choice lately. If you’re an Instagram user, you can follow me at ‘freakshow’.

 

 

Brighton Bound

I had news that the construction of my new studio in Brighton was finished so I excitedly got the train up there today to have a quick look. There’s something really inspiring about waking into an empty space like this, a blank canvas that’s waiting for you to move in and bring to life. Should hopefully be in there in the next couple of months. Woop!

Old Films

I love the precision and detail I can get from shooting with my Nkon D90 DSLR but at the same time, I love throwing caution to the wind and shooting from the hip with either my Lomo LC-A+ or Diana F+ cameras. I haven’t used my Diana that much and, as you can see, I’m still trying to get to grips with the focus, but I still love the feeling of some of the out of focus shots. It’s nice to take a break from the settings of a digital and enjoy the unpredictability of the Lomo cameras.

I’ve just a few rolls developed that have been hanging around in the fridge for the last year (it always takes me ages to get round to having them developed) and here are a few randoms. I can’t remember which films I used so I really need to start getting a system for making note of what’s been used when. If anyone has any cool tips for this please feel free to leave a comment!

Playing with Double exposure as we drive up the East Coast of Australia.

Enjoying the Indian Ocean.

A great Lister in NYC.

The decaying skeleton of Brighton West Pier.

Williamsburg Rider.

Australian Sugar Cane.

 

High Hopes for Tyler.

Every now and again, I get emails from people that not only confirm for me why I make pictures for myself and others to enjoy, but really put life in general into perspective. A while ago one such email came my way from a customer who wanted me to help him out with a special, yet very sad request as his wife had tragically jumped to her death the previous year, leaving him and his 13 year old daughter Tyler behind.

Gary went on to say in his email that both him and Tyler were big fans of my work and already had a few pieces on their walls, but when they first saw my High Hopes image, it ’stopped my daughter & I in our tracks’ for obvious reasons. The thing is, quite a few people I know approached me after the release of the image and asked why I was painting pictures of a woman committing suicide, every one of them missing the point completely. Tyler however, like myself and thankfully many others out there, is a ‘glass half full’ kinda gal. She new that the woman in the image wasn’t about to fall at all, but about to float away amidst the birds. Full of hope, she’s taking a positive leap of faith from the edge of building and in my mind, and obviously Tyler’s, is moments away from taking flight.

The idea from the image came from a lifetimes worth of dreams in which I’m able to fly. It happens so much it’s actually unusual if my feet stay on the ground for the entire dream. Even in a dream state, the feeling of walking to the edge of a building and slowly stepping from the edge but knowing you’ll be ok is pretty awesome and something I’ve had the pleasure in enjoying time after time for as long as I can remember.

And so, Gary wanted to buy a copy of High Hopes for Tyler as a positive symbol for her as she moved forward and to remind her to keep her spirits high, but he asked me if I’d mind writing a few positive words on the print to make it that extra little bit special. Which I did no problem and got the print out and didn’t hear back from Gary for some time, until he sent me another email to thank me again for the personal touches to the print and to ask for my address as he had something for me. Shortly after I replied I received a package in the post from Tyler herself, containing this great painting…

Here’s a great explanation from Gary about the meaning behind Tyler’s painting.

‘Central to the picture is a river with no beginning or end. That’s because she thinks that spiritually or on some other level the “life” that dwells in a body already exists before we are born, and continues after our death. I guess part of that is her own emotional reckonings – backed up by a bit of science in school which says you can’t destroy energy, it simply moves to a different state. Heavy stuff for 13!
The river meanders from one bank to another alternating between a flowery pleasant land & a series of mountains. On lifes journey the current takes us to both sides & Tylers feelings are that we should enjoy the good times (flowery side) with the view across the river reminding us that life isn’t always that good, but we have reached a good place. When you reach a bend you never know which side you will land on next.
When we hit the mountains & the harsher side of life, you just have to keep climbing. The further you get up the mountain the more of the other bank you see & you can work out a new way forward… hence High Hopes.’

So now the painting is proudly on the wall of my studio amongst all the other bits and pieces that keep me inspired and moving forward and is a reminder to just relax and enjoy life. Like Tyler says, you never know which side of the river you may find yourself on from one day to the next, but if you just keep your head and your spirits high, you’ll keep moving forward no matter what. Very wise words from a 13 year old.
BIG thanks to Gary for getting in touch and to Tyler for the painting and the inspiration.

Don’t you just hate it when…

…you come home from holiday and find a fridge full of bad eggs.

Slush & Sunburn

Back to work after a weeks snowboarding in La Plagne, France. A tasty dose of sunburn on my nose and mouth has made me look like a Muppet Show escapee and an unhealthy dose of booze, meat and cheese has made me feel a little under the weather. But regardless of the often slushy conditions, time on the mountain is always a beautiful thing.

I stupidly left my camera at the studio before I left but here’s a few shots from my iPhone.

Quite Simply the best table cloth I’ve ever seen.

All these were taken with the cool Instagram app for iPhone which I’m loving at the minute. Kind of like Twitter but instead of hearing about how crap people’s bus ride to work was, it’s just a stream of lovely photos from the people you choose to follow. My username is freakshow, follow me for more of the same if you have an account.

The Best Laid Plans.

Afternoon all. After a few utterly depressing months of being bitterly cold and down from a lack of sunshine here at the Eel Cave, it’s good to see a little proper daylight and to work without wearing all my snowboarding thermals…and hat…and North Face coat…and gloves as things start to warm up slightly.

Been speaking to quite a few people lately in person and over email who have all been asking 2 questions. 1. Why are you giving up stencils? and 2. How’s the new direction going? With a feeling that I should be using this blog a little more for thoughts on things like this to try and document my goings on, for those who are interested, I thought I’d spend  few minutes to try and explain things, and hopefully at the same time get them clearer in my own mind.

When I announced a desire to take steps towards a new direction to work on other projects, that wasn’t me throwing the towel in, snapping my scalpel in half and retiring from the world of stencil making. It was just a need to step back, take a few breaths and challenge myself with some new personal projects that weren’t stencil related. I just felt so burned out after Africa and realised that I just wasn’t having much fun crawling around on my hands and knees in the studio cutting huge stencils to paint outside. I don’t see myself as part of the street art scene any more, this is true, but I am still a stencil artist and do still enjoy making well crafted pieces of art within the solitary confines of my cold, dark studio.

So I decided to try and explore other avenues of picture making in the hope of putting some of my creative eggs into other baskets. The only problem is the good ship Eelus seems to be sailing at full speed and people don’t want to get off. Job after job and opportunity after opportunity is placed in my lap and it’s been impossible so far to make any kind of moves towards experimenting with other things, as people want and expect the look and feel that I’ve built up and become known for. Which is amazing, not a bad thing at all and the things I’m working on at the minute and the jobs lined up for the rest of the year are really exciting. One project in particular is going to be quite interesting. I’ve been commissioned to produce a range of prints and paintings based around both Alice in Wonderland and The Wizard of Oz. So that’s just one of many things that I have on the table that have been put there by people who want the ‘Eelus’ style.

But at the same time, it makes moves into new areas more difficult. At the end of the day, I see my role and purpose on this big spinning rock is that of a picture maker, plain and simple. I make pictures in any way I see fit that are pleasing to me, and in turn will hopefully be pleasing to a few others.

So my Freak Show Projects site is gently simmering away in the background while I attend to the boiling stew that is full of all the other tasty projects that keep coming my way that I’m finding hard to turn down. I guess from here the plan is to find a balance. A balance between not only respecting and nurturing the ‘brand’ I’ve worked so hard to build up and establish over the last 7 or 8 years, to make sure I still have a presence in this strange art world that I seem to have found myself in. But to also find the time to work on other styles and avenues of creativity, which will be the Freak Show Projects side of things. It’s just that age old nut that needs cracking; ‘YOU WILL ALWAYS BE TOO BUSY’. How often do you find yourself saying ‘as soon as I get this out of the way, I’ll be able to concentrate on x,y,z’? ‘I’ll just do this one last job and then I’ll have a bit of free time to write that comic, get those t-shirts out, work on those illustrations, that book, that movie idea, that magazine…’ I’m quickly discovering that that time will never come, there will always be plates already spinning.

So it’s just time I started to spin a few more plates, work on improving my time management, streamline my work flow and hopefully just start embracing everything that I feel is important to me but hopefully without the quality being affected.

Anyway, I’m off to buy some plastic plates. Cheerio!

Happy Horrors

First attempt at a pumpkin since I was a kid. Carved it whilst watching American Werewolf in London. What a way to spend a Sunday afternoon.

I <3 Nietzsche