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The Grateful Web
#5 Weaving Connections with David Gledhill
In this episode I talk to the wonderful artist David Gledhill about his work and upcoming exhibition at Rogue Gallery, Manchester. David has exhibited widely both in the UK and internationally, including Frankfurt, Berlin, Milan and Brussels and was recently awarded a PhD from PAHC at the Manchester School of Art.
In addition to his activity as an artist, David has contributed writing and reviews to numerous artist’s projects and publications. He is co-director of Rogue Artists’ Studios CIC in Manchester, the largest artists’ studios in the North of England.
David’s recent work centres on the use of both personal and institutional photographic archives to produce sequences of paintings that address historical and political themes through the lived experience of their subjects. Works by David are in the collections of East Sussex County Council, Rank Xerox, Halliwell's, Touchstones Rochdale, Deutsche Kreditbank AG Berlin, and Steven Berkoff.
Please do go and check out Davids fabulous exhibition titled Parties, - the private view is this Saturday June 14th from 2-5pm at Rogue studios, 2-6 Barrass Street, Openshaw, Manchester M11 1PU and will be open to the public every Friday and Saturday 12-5 pm until July 27th. It really is incredible.
If you enjoyed this episode please , follow, share, spread the word and look out for more brilliant conversations coming soon. You can find the grateful web on ACAST, spotify, AND apple podcasts, You can also find and follow us on Instagram at - the underscore grateful underscore web and at jo underscore clements
This podcast has been made possible with the generous support from GMCA Inspire Fund that has a remit to support the regrowth and strengthening of the creative sector in Greater Manchester and by an a-n Artists Bursary to support artists development in learning new skills, undertaking mentoring or dedicating time to their practice.
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Episode #20 Weaving Connections with Sophy King and John-Paul Brown
38:14|Today I’m delighted to be talking to artists Sophy King and John-Paul Brown about their major new exhibition The Guardians of Living Matter at The Lowry in Salford, currently on show until 29th March 2026. Sophy King is a multidisciplinary environmental artist whose work interrogates the nature–culture continuum through installation, film, and sound to examine ecological systems under the pressure of climate crisis. Her research across the moors and lowlands surrounding Manchester focuses on moss, fungi, peat, wildfire, and water—both as material and subject—probing our entanglement with damaged landscapes while proposing urban rewilding and sustainable futures. John-Paul Browns practice spans large-scale installation, documentary photography, expanded drawing, and painting. His work layers personal narrative with geopolitical and environmental realities, combining material sensitivity with environmentally conscious production methods. Like King, his commitment to low-carbon practice is not an add-on but a structural principle—shaping both aesthetics and ethics. Together they present this fabulous, ambitious multimedia exhibition unfolding across four galleries. At the centre of the exhibition is a vast, multi-sensory, immersive installation that explores a hope inducing speculative future: a living sculpture where mycelium and AI co-exist, a fictional research lab containing factual research, new ambitious large scale bodies of work and a delicious mixture of entangled logics and imagined possibilities for fungal and artificial systems. Instagram: @sophykingart Website: www.sophyking.comInstagram: @johnpaulbrown_ Website: www.johnpaulbrown.com https://thelowry.com/the-guardians-of-living-matter-myvx
Episode #19 Weaving Connections with Jeremiah Quinn
01:12:42|In this episode of The Grateful Web, Dr. Jo Clements interviews filmmaker Jeremiah Quinn, who shares insights into his diverse body of work, including documentaries that focus on social justice and forgotten narratives. They discuss the importance of sound design in filmmaking, the impact of his films like 'Oluwale' and 'Incognito', and the emotional connections that storytelling can create. Quinn also highlights his experiences working with charities and his upcoming projects, including a film about artist Heather Alderson. Quinn is a multi-skilled, multiple award-winning filmmaker, videographer and screenwriter. He is close to completing his first feature documentary about an undisclosed subject which he has filmed in nine countries on three continents over the last three years.His work spans documentary and narrative, short and long-form, much of it rooted in social justice. His films have helped raise significant funds for organisations, transformed institutions, and in some cases, changed the course of people’s careers. They also pack a serious emotional punch.Links to Quinns work and the artists mentioned in this episode @jeremiahq_quinn1 https://www.youtube.com/@jeremiahq/videos HeatherAlderson @heathera077 and David Gledhill @davidgledhillartist
Episode #18 Weaving Connections with John Powell-Jones
52:05|On this brand new episode I speak to the brilliant multi-disciplinary artist John Powell JonesJohn Powell-Jones is a UK-based artist whose work spans sculpture, animation, print and installation. Drawing on horror, folklore and the visual language of videogames, he creates speculative worlds populated by mutated beings and unstable technologies. His practice examines how power, ideology and myth shape perceptions of the body, the other and the future. Often working with ceramics and hand-built props, Powell-Jones combines meticulous craft with DIY worlding to produce narratives that are darkly humorous, unsettling and critically charged. He has exhibited widely across the UK and Europe, presenting projects that merge countercultural aesthetics with experimental storytelling. https://www.johnpowell-jones.co.ukhttps://johnpowelljones.bigcartel.com@johnpowell_jones If you enjoyed this episode please follow, share, spread the word and look out for more brilliant conversations coming soon. You can find the grateful web on ACAST, spotify, apple podcasts, Patreon or wherever you get your podcasts. Thank you so much to those regular listeners who have been supporting me in this endeavour. If you want to support me further, please do check out my Patreon page, for just £2 a month you can help me to keep this podcast going – link in bio/show notes This podcast has been made possible with generous support from GMCA Inspire Fund and by an a-n Artists Bursary.
Episode # 17 Weaving Connections with Amanda Sutton
59:14|In this episode I’m delighted to talk to Amanda Sutton Director of Venture ArtsBased in Manchester, Venture Arts is a supported studio that provides professional facilities, long-term artistic development, and artistic support that enables neurodivergent learning disabled artists to develop their own visual languages, produce ambitious work, and build sustainable careers within the contemporary art world.Under Amanda’s leadership, Venture Arts has become nationally and internationally recognised for its exhibitions, commissions, collaborations with major cultural institutions, and its commitment to challenging who the art world is for, and whose work is valued. In this conversation, we talk about how Venture Arts works day-to-day as a supported studio, the conditions artists need to thrive, and what happens when access, care, and excellence are placed at the centre of an organisation’s practice. We also discuss what learning disabled artist Nnena Kalus’s recent Turner Prize win means for artists, organisations, and the future of inclusive contemporary art.https://venturearts.org@venturearts_ If you enjoyed this episode please follow, share, spread the word and look out for more brilliant conversations coming soon. You can find the grateful web on ACAST, spotify, apple podcasts, Patreon or wherever you get your podcasts.
Episode #16 Weaving Connections with Jamie Holman
01:06:31|Hello and welcome to the grateful web. I’m Dr Jo Clements - artist, artists coach and your grateful web host My guest today is the brilliant Jamie Holman A multidisciplinary artist, Jamie Holman seeks to make visible the exciting connection and propositions that manifest when heritage collides with contemporary practice. His research often proposes the emergence of culture through the celebration of topics & movements including subcultures, trades unions, folklore, activism, mill workers, football, labour & poetry. Jamie’s work includes deep research particularly into archives, often resulting in the discovery of unknown working class histories and stories of individuals who have impacted the future of our nation, it’s culture and communities. He often works in collaboration with communities, many of whom are categorised as not engaging in art Recent commissions include ‘Wonderful Electric’ a four-part commission for the capital development of Blackburn Youth Zone, and his solo exhibition ‘Contagious Acts’ at The Whitaker.https://www.jamieholman.co.uk @jamie_holman_studio If you enjoyed this episode please follow, share, spread the word and look out for more brilliant conversations coming soon. You can find the grateful web on ACAST, spotify, apple podcasts, Patreon or wherever you get your podcasts. Thank you so much to those regular listeners who have been supporting me in this endeavour. If you want to support me further, please do check out my Patreon page, for just £2 a month you can help me to keep this podcast going – https://www.patreon.com/cw/JoClementsTheGratefulWeb This podcast has been made possible with generous support from GMCA Inspire Fund and by an a-n Artists Bursary.
Episode #15 Weaving Connections with Jude Wainwright
01:03:12|My guest today is the fabulous artist Jude Wainwright Jude is a figurative and surrealist painter based in Manchester. Her work explores identity, emotion and storytelling through staged, symbolic self-portraits that blur the line between the real and the imagined. Drawing on theatrical gesture, costume and surreal settings, she examines how we construct and conceal the self, reflecting on the boundaries between authenticity, performance and control. Alongside her practice, Jude is the Studio Manager at AWOL Studios in Ancoats, where she supports a large community of artists and creatives. In 2022, she reached the semi-finals of Sky Arts Portrait Artist of the Year, and in 2025 returned to Sky Arts as a guest presenter, leading two Portrait Artist Masterclass episodes on narrative portraiture. Jude is an Associate Member of the Manchester Academy of Fine Artists, and her work has been exhibited widely across the UK and internationally.@judewainwright_ https://www.judewainwright.com. If you enjoyed this episode please follow, share, spread the word and look out for more brilliant conversations coming soon. You can find the grateful web on ACAST, spotify, apple podcasts, Patreon or wherever you get your podcasts. Thank you so much to those regular listeners who have been supporting me in this endeavour. If you want to support me further, please do check out my Patreon page, for just £2 a month you can help me to keep this podcast going – link in bio/show notes This podcast has been made possible with generous support from GMCA Inspire Fund and by an a-n Artists Bursary.
Episode #14 Weaving Connections with Rowland Hill
01:16:33|A warm welcome to the 14th episode of the Weaving Connections series on The Grateful Web the podcast that weaves connections with some of the fabulous people I’m privileged to call part of my arts community here in Manchester and the North West.I’m Dr Jo Clements - artist, artists coach and your grateful web host My guest today is the artist Rowland Hill. Rowland studied Drama and English and worked as an award-winning artist film curator before graduating in 2018 with a Masters from the Slade School of Fine Art where she received the Clare Winsten Memorial Award. In 2024 she presented her debut institutional solo exhibition Logical Song at Castlefield Gallery in Manchester which she transformed into an ambiguous attraction. In the same year she was shortlisted for the prestigious Jerwood & MAYK Bursary for artists working in radical live performance.Her projects have been supported and commissioned by institutions including the Jerwood Foundation, Raven Row, Hospitalfield, Turner Contemporary, and Flux Factory in New York and she’s performed and directed work at the Southbank Centre, Tate Britain and The Lowry among others.www.rowland-hill.com @row.land.hill Thank you so much to those regular listeners who have been supporting me in this endeavour. If you want to support me further, please do check out my Patreon page, for just £2 a month you can help me to keep this podcast going – link https://www.patreon.com/cw/JoClementsTheGratefulWebIf you enjoyed this episode please follow, share, spread the word and look out for more brilliant conversations coming soon. You can find the grateful web on ACAST, spotify, apple podcasts, Patreon or wherever you get your podcasts.This podcast has been made possible with generous support from GMCA Inspire Fund and by an a-n Artists Bursary.
Episode #13 Weaving Connections with Chris Bailkoski
51:03|Welcome to The Grateful Web, I’m Dr Jo Clements and In this episode I’m delighted to speak to curator Chris Bailkoski. Chris is an independent curator with over 20 years’ experience developing collaborative practices with artists to co-create dynamic exhibitions and events, predominantly focusing on grassroots visual and musical artists in Greater Manchester. He has founded several cultural spaces including music venue SOUP (2010), artist development platform PROFORMA (2017) and resident-led gallery Longsight Community Art Space CIC (2022). In 2024, Chris relocated to Norfolk and is currently embarking on new projects in the region and across the UK. If you enjoyed this episode please , follow, share, spread the word and look out for more brilliant conversations coming soon. You can find the grateful web on ACAST, spotify, AND apple podcasts.This podcast has been made possible with generous support from GMCA Inspire Fund and by an a-n Artists Bursary.
Episode #12 Weaving Connections with Sara Hindhaugh
01:13:05|On this episode of The grateful Web I’m honoured to be joined by Sara Hindhaugh, a visual artist whose work weaves together fragments of memory, autobiography, and myth. Born in the Solomon Islands, Sara studied Fine Art at Wimbledon School of Art and is a valued member of AWOL Studios in Manchester. Her practice spans drawing, painting, printmaking, embroidery, book arts, and sculpture. Themes of time, grief, vulnerability, and salvation run through her work, shaped by delicate, time-consuming processes and materials that are as fragile as they are powerful. With threads of Oceanic and Chinese culture, humour, and deeply personal storytelling, Sara creates intense and moving narratives that reflect her emotionally honest, formidable approach to life. https://www.sarahindhaugh.com @awolstudiosmcr @saraehindhaugh Please note there is mention of suicide in this episode.If you enjoyed this episode please , follow, share, spread the word and look out for more brilliant conversations coming soon. You can find the grateful web on ACAST, spotify, AND apple podcasts.This podcast has been made possible with generous support from GMCA Inspire Fund and by an a-n Artists Bursary.