10/11/2012

Taking a Break

After the solo show at Octavia View I felt the need to take a bit of a break. It's surprising how much admin you can fall behind with when working 60-70 hour weeks, and after producing so many paintings I was in need of time out and reflection from creating new artwork.

Not that I haven't been busy, my new job was and continues to be challenging and I've been busy working on my Sketchbook for the 2013 Sketchbook Project. This is almost finished and it might actually be the biggest artwork I've ever made. It's a bit different from the rest of my work and not very deep with concept but I was going for challenging scale rather than challenging concept. Of course the point of the Sketchbook project is to do something different from your usual work but more on that another day.

Unfortunately some things did fall by the wayside. 2012's photographic project on Flickr started to suffer from a lack of time invested into it and the results became so erratic and samey (really how many photographs of flowers and plant from ground level up could I do) that I let it die an early death. I still think it has possibilities, it just needed a bit more thought and time on a daily basis which I couldn't offer. Saying that I've not been stinting the photography, I just had to go back to basics a little, experimenting and getting accustomed to my new camera. Finally after years of saving I bought myself a DSLR and it's a revelation as to what can be done. The level of control over the image is so much greater than compact cameras.

I've also been away on a couple of trips, first to the Isle of Wight in August and then to Dublin in October which gave me lots of practice and inspiration for new paintings. Below is a selection of photos from both. Finally I'm planning on starting a weekly blog entry on a project you might have heard about a few blog entries ago.

Isle of Wight



Dublin


31/07/2012

Beautiful Fenland

Beautiful Fenland, My solo exhibition opens this Friday at 7pm at Octavia View, Wisbech.

I spent 5 days in the fens taking photographs and exploring in preparation for this exhibition. 

While my work does not depend on a particular place, I do feel that it is important for people to connect with my work through seeing places they are familiar with.

Octavia View can be found just off Somers Road opposite the entrance to the public car park.

The exhibition is open from the 3rd August to 6th September.

A Catalogue can now be purchased via Blurb. Click the link below.


13/06/2012

Welcome to Simons Wood published


Welcome to Simons Wood is a photographic project from 2010-2011. As many of you will know it follows on from the previous years project Perambulation and attempts to explore the idea of creating a reality of a place through photography.

This year long project was subject to a number of blog posts and discussions. The idea of reflecting reality was one I explored first with Perambulation, however that while that project proved interesting I didn't feel it truly managed to find any kind of objective reality.

I continue to debate if a true and objective representation of a place is possible. However Welcome to Simons Wood I feel may have come as close as I can with photography alone. Narrow in focus, it shows the same view of the same place over the space of a year. This was controlled through a series of rules that can be found below.

Rules
 1. As from the previous project, there will be no post production editing of the photographs. With the exception of cropping and resizing for the internet.  
2. The camera will be set to scenery mode, and the only setting on it I can change will be the white balance to the appropriate weather conditions (either cloudy or sunny)  
3. I will go out when I should, no matter the weather at the time.  
4. I will go to the same place and take a photo of the same view  
5. I will go out weekly, Saturday at 12pm.  
6. I may change the day (but not the time) if life conspires to make Saturday impossible. The day should be as close to Saturday as I can make it and I should make every effort to do it on a Saturday.  
7. I will attempt to do this for a year.

After the projects completion I always intended to do something with it beyond a record of the images on Flickr. As I have previously discussed I always fancied doing a photobook.

So here I present Welcome to Simons Wood published!



It is paperback, full colour, 109 pages and 18 x 23cm. It has a large page count to allow each of the 53 images to stand entirely on their own. Plus it also does that flipbook thing so you can watch the year change at speed.

If thats enough to tempt you, you can purchase it here.
Support independent publishing: Buy this book on Lulu.




If not click on the image of the cover to learn more about the book.

I still fancy producing one on Perambulation I'm just unsure how I'm ever going to fit 366 images into a book that won't be huge, while doing justice to the imagery.

28/05/2012

Exhibition update: Mis-InFormation

On Friday night I went to the Private View of this years Fringe Arts Bath the visual arts side of the Bath Fringe.

This year the Fringe has over 30 exhibitions, performances and open studios over 6-7 venues around the city.


I have 3 paintings in an exhibition in the Old Pet Shop at Pigeon Park called Mis-InFormation.
Curated by Diana Ali and featuring over 25 artists from around the globe. More information can be found here: http://www.fringeartsbath.co.uk/mis-information/

Taking the concept of hidden truths, misquotations, rumour and gossip, artists are now being selected to exhibit their work which investigates this avenue. Art works selected will give the audience the chance to be allured, intrigued, enticed and be flirtatious with its appearance and reality. Artworks will explore ideas of being out of the loop, lying, pseudoscience, factoids and conspiracy theories.


It was an interesting evening with many people enjoying the exhibition and other exhibitions within the building. The building itself was left much in the state it had been found in, which lent it an industrial and temporary air. A bold choice by the curator although a tricky space to take photographs. 


 The exhibition is on until the 10th June. 


I also saw a fabulous sunset on my way home.





04/05/2012

Changes


It's been a month of changes for me, part time and freelance work has been replaced with an actual full time role. I've been working on a project and finding time to continue with my paintings for my upcoming solo show.

As well as that I have got into 2 new exhibitions and been busy getting paintings to places for them as well as those already booked in.

Currently I have work in Art at the Ark's Spring Open, Basingstoke
http://artintheark.wordpress.com/

and a month long exhibition at Woodley Library.

Which I am very pleased about.

Exhibition at Woodley Library


Next up I have three paintings in Mis-In-Formation an exhibition curated by Diana Ali as part of 2012 Fringe Arts Bath. Last time I was part of the Fringe Arts Bath was in 2008 where I showed a Bath location specific for the Locus exhibition. It's really nice to see the Bath Fringe Arts expand over the years and there is more going on this year than any previous year.

Taking the concept of hidden truths, misquotations, rumour and gossip, artists are now being selected to exhibit their work which investigates this avenue. Art works selected will give the audience the chance to be allured, intrigued, enticed and be flirtatious with its appearance and reality. Artworks will explore ideas of being out of the loop, lying, pseudoscience, factoids and conspiracy theories.


Plus here's a sneak preview of one of the works going up in Wisbech in the summer.



I was also invited to show my painting “Welcome to Bracknell” at last weekend Bracknell Forest Mayors Civic Reception.
It was a nice event with many local organisations, including local arts groups, Bracknell Camera Club and Janet Curley Cannon (who has produced many works about Bracknell) from ReOrsa there. I was asked to be part of the South Hill Park stand as my work “Welcome to Bracknell” was recently exhibited at South Hill Park. 

Me and my painting at South Hill Park's stall at Mayors Civic reception
 

Finally I have grand plans for some online projects/versions of already completed work.


Oh and there is a book to be finished...............

13/04/2012

Exhibition Update: Art in the Ark

Next Friday is the opening of my latest exhibition at the Ark Centre, Basingstoke. 

The Spring Open is the first of 4 seasonally themed exhibitions for 2012, celebrating the Ark's 10 year Anniversary.


The exhibition runs from 20th April to 1st June. Open Monday - Friday 7.30am - 7pm.
The PV is on the 20th from 6 - 8pm. 

Hope you can make it. 

31/03/2012

Postcards from beyond the edge

This work was partially inspired by an article I read about sending postcards from space. Soon after I got the brief for the next ReOrsa artists project, dealing with notions around boundaries and the breaking of them. The two seemed to coalesce instantly into the beginnings of this work.

Boundaries and Beyond flyer


Thinking about the nature of boundaries and what boundaries mean from a tourist or postcard perspective, I decided that not only did I want to send postcards from space, I also wanted it to seem perfectly normal. I had also recently re-watched a episode of Horizon called The Core which talked about the interior of the Earth and how it may be the last place we ever explore due to its phenomenally inhospitable conditions.

This sounded like a challenge to me so I decided to create a series of postcards that infer that the current limits of human exploration and some of the most inhospitable and remote areas of the world are perfectly normal holidaying destinations. Creating, photographing and using free to access images I have produced 60 postcards with images from all around the globe and beyond. Jungles, Deserts, Arctic regions, Space and under the earth are all represented as well a a few other areas.

Original test postcard


Additionally many of the images are not of the places they say they are. I wanted to take to the extreme the postcard tradition of showing places in the best possible light, often to the point that they no longer look like the place they depict. I won't spoil here which ones are fake, I will leave that for you to work out.

I've always been interested with perception and the power of suggestion to produce views and ideas that are not true. This is one of the reasons that postcards interest me so. The idea that one or a few perfect images of perfect places can represent a place really fascinates me. 

 
Intital mocked up postmark

To accentuate this power of suggestion, I took all 60 postcards and created a universe where these cards were sent from one person to another, arranged them into series of cards from individual holidays and gave them an entire timeline and false history. The cards were written in order according to my timeline and frequently contain references to previous holidays or past unknown events much as a 11 year association via postcards would do. I created a false publishing company and a QR code, that when scanned should take you to my website. Finally I created fake stamps that referenced the general locations of the cards and 60 individual postmarks.

Final work


From my 6 years working with postcards I seem to be mainly producing works that cannot be touched and are quite traditional from a fine art aspect; paintings, drawings and prints. For a medium that is first visual but also quite tactile this can be odd. I have recently started archiving my collection so I have had a lot more tactile relationship with them in recent months which may be impacting in the scope of my work.

I liked the idea of creating actual postcards and of forming this entire new world where a weekend in space is as normal as a weekend in the south of France. The idea of looking into a future where the infrastructure to allow postcards to be sent exists everywhere seems both utopian and disturbing. Being able to go anywhere that easily seems amazing but also the idea of every wild and natural place becoming as false and uniform as most other highly touristy place goes against everything I believe.

Example of one of the finished cards (text side)


At the end of the day there are not (quite yet) shuttles to hotels on the Moon, but I am interested to what level visitors believe what they are given. And I like that they have to rifle through the postcards. I'd want to see how many people feel the need to read from start to finish and how many pick up the first one they see. I had a great time making up this character writing the postcards, who is effectively me, but me writing from a position I could only imagine rather than experience.

As to the addressee, which I really agonised over, I decided that I would have to take inspiration from a fictional explorer. Hopefully before I said that most of you didn't work out which one immediately.

Example of a finished card (image side)


Often the ReOrsa space is only accessible by looking in through the windows. I was highly aware of this when I was planning the work so I wanted my work to be at least partially readable through the windows. So far every time I have gone past the Gallery@49 windows I have seen at least one person trying to read my work. Additionally it seems every time I have gone past more and more of the postcards have escaped from their box. As well as a few originally scattered on the plinth they have seemed to explode exponentially with masses on the plinth and many now sitting on the nearby window ledge. It seems the postcards themselves want to take their own journey.

Boundaries and Beyond is on from 15th - 31st March at Gallery@49 in Bracknell Town Centre. It will be open 12 – 4 on the 31st March and I will be there from 2 – 4 pm. 



Installed work at ReOrsa Gallery@49


Links:

01/03/2012

Exhibition Update: While Things Were Good and Boundaries and Beyond

My exhibition at South Hill Park has been up for a few weeks now and I thought it was time for an update.

Paintings got finished thankfully, even if they were still a little tacky when they went up, I was able to unveil my newest works Reading and South Hill Park. Reading ended up being quite a labour of love, that lion took 4 days of intensive work to get done but I am very pleased by it. South Hill Park seems to have become a lot of peoples favourite but then again it is also a building that is close to all who visit it so that is no surprise.


The private view went well, I had lovely chats with the various Mayors, Deputy Mayors and other Bracknell Forest/Town Council dignitaries that came along. In fact I was so busy talking to people I didn't manage to get any photographs of the event. Many of my friends and artists I've previously exhibited with came along as well as the hilarious Jan Williams from the Caravan Gallery. Hearing that she was coming down had me in a bit of a tizzy, I'd never met her in person although we became contacts through Twitter and Facebook previously. I am a great admirer of her work and as you might expect it has great resonance with my interests within my own practice. Plus I got a bunch of new Caravan Gallery postcards to add to my collection.


On the subject of postcards, I had some made of 5 of the works in the show, including S
outh Hill Park, Reading, Cowes - Isle of Wight, Windsor Castle and Welcome to Bracknell. At the moment these are available from the Bracknell Gallery at South Hill Park at £1 each. If you come on a Sunday afternoon (you will find me up there invigilating Ubiquitous Materials) I'll sign your postcard. After the exhibition ends I'll be looking into ways to sell these online. If you are desperate for a postcard though send me an email and I'll see what can be done.


The work has been really well received, one of the South Hill Park bar staff said to me the other day that she had never had as many comments and compliments about the work in that space than any previous exhibition.

Finally a note on Boundaries and Beyond, this is the ReOrsa Artists Project no. 6 and I will be exhibiting a new artwork. It's not painting but all my hints on Twitter and Facebook about photographs and stamps might give you an idea. It is a group exhibition in and around Gallery@49 in Bracknell town centre from 15th - 31st March. Opening night is oddly right in the middle of the run, 22nd March 5-8pm. More information here: ReOrsa
 


28/02/2012

Tacita Dean: Film

In January I also saw Tacita Dean's Film the new Unilever installation in Tate Modern's Turbine hall.

I'm not usually one for video art, I often find it hit or miss but this one was a a hit for me. 

Photo: Joseph Keating, www.atsukojoe.wordpress.com

It inhabits the space with an almost monolitic quality, making me think of Arthur C Clarke's novel and Kubrick's film 2001: A Space Odyssey. The screens size in the space gives the projection epic proportions, something I found I only wanted to increase by sitting down and dropping my eye level. Like a cinema screen yet disproportionate, it fit well with the idea of portraying physical film stock. Showing not only the imagery but also the bits we don't see when film goes through a projector.

The scale also reflected iconic aspects to the building it inhabits namely the central chimney, made more obvious by the almost constant imagery that undercut the whole piece. This repeating imagery may have been part of the Tate Modern's chimney, it was difficult to be sure. While the architecture was unmistakably from the Tate Modern, it's exact location was difficult to ascertain. This worked better as while tied in wonderfully with the space, it didn't specify so loudly that it drowned out the other imagery.

This other imagery included added sections of moving image, often cut into the still background, as well as a combination of shapes and colour changes that subtly altered the nature of the film. One might expect it to say something about the nature of film, through the history and conventions of cinema (our most recognisable way into the format of film). In fact it was far more visceral than that, looking at the nature and physicality of film.

It's power came in the almost hypnotic influence it had on the space, something I've not felt since Olafur Elliasson's The Weather Project. From the ground it was immersive, but even from the bridge on the second level it was powerful, not only in it's presence but in the ability to people watch those so caught up in it. People that become (to return to a sci-fi reference) but black silhouettes against a bright backlight reminding me of the visiting aliens from Spielberg's Close Encounters of the Third Kind

Looking back at the viewers on the bridge
 

27/02/2012

Apocalypse!

In January I made a trip to London to finally see the John Martin exhibition Apocalypse as well as a few other exhibitions. 

John Martin, The Great Day of his Wrath 1853

I haven't looked into John Martin since my degree. An obvious choice some might say as an influence for my work, however I really hadn't looked at him in any greater depth, mainly because while I was interested in him in general, I wasn't particularly interested in the religious significance of the apocalypse. Nor has history painting really held much importance for my work.

Individual exhibition rooms were based around a chronological system, charting his life through his work. The works themselves had as much impact as they must have had when they were first unveiled and it was interesting to learn that while popular with the public, Martin's works were lampooned by the critics.

Certainly many of his subjects had a historical or religious basis or inspiration, however although signs of the apocalypse that follow these inspirations are well known there was also certainly a significance for the time it was created. Scenes of fiery apocalypse echo that time of extreme change and industry.

Yet it is not all fiery apocalypse.

As well as the large paintings of implied death and destruction there are also images that are of seeming peace and tranquillity, showing the peaceful aftermath of the storm that brought the great flood or angels taking the good to heaven. There are even a number of small works that are more rural and of the natural landscape which owe more to Claude than the Bible.

In all though it is obviously the fiery apocalypse that is the focus of the exhibition. But it is great to see the breadth of the artists work. Many of the apocalyptic paintings have a certain sameness about them, especially the ones that rely on an almost exclusively red palette. Many as we know come from historical and/or Biblical stories and both of these work best when the subject of the story is placed in such a way to accentuate the emotion and drama. As such the feeling of the imagery being staged is almost inescapable. Indeed Martins works do feel staged, critics of the day commented on this glossiness, in fact the staged nature of the works was much greater than might be initially seen. Martin would also replace minor characters with important figures of his day, possibly highlighting something about these people in relationship to the parts they played in his paintings.

Certainly in an era that was embracing romanticism and the sublime, Martin gave the public the most spectacular and shocking portrayal. In many ways this extreme unreality reminds me of the nature of the postcard. Granted no one would be encouraged to visit these places but falseness they had in spades.

Even with this falseness the details are astounding. Harsh almost textural paint creates the most tiny of details. Sometimes the detail reveals more about a falseness of the image from over accentuated waves to lightning strikes that sit like knife and rule slashes in the fabric of the canvas. I found the lightning particularly odd until I realised that at this time society had only just leant what electricity was, additionally it was a phenomenon that lasted mere milliseconds with none or very little photographic information to reveal its detail and true nature. Martin would have to have relied on his own memory of such events, which would be flawed at best, as well as other potentially equally flawed renditions of it. In his later paintings the use of lightning has changed and appears far less angular and unnatural.

Finally a word should be said about the title, a title that both seems appropriate and over the top. Appropriate because he is very well known for his paintings of biblical destruction, however the exhibition is by no means just about these fiery images. It includes a range of works that describe the man as artist, but also as civil engineer, businessman, father and brother. His life was by no means an apocalypse but had it's ups and downs like anyone else. Maybe by calling it by a title that can never be lived up to (Apocalypse being the most spectacular of ends, but it is also one you don't come back from) it reminds us that he is just a man and is as apt to failure as anyone else. It also makes me think of the split between commercial and public success vs. the critical disdain his works produced.

In addition the timing of this exhibition seems highly coincidental. The choice of a time period that extends into the first few weeks of 2012, a year that has been highly publicised (even to the extent of having a film made about it) as the year that the Mayan people apparently predicted to be the end of the world. Again this choice seems to cash in on the publicity and hype surrounding this significant date making the work by a successful (for his time) commercial artist even more commercial. 

John Martin The Destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah 1852

But maybe my cynicism is showing through. All and all I liked it and found the works to be highly engaging and interesting. It was good to see the scope of his work and I found the imagery about a time long ago to be exciting and relevant to our age as much as it must have been to his. Which just goes to show that many of the stories from the bible ad history continue to resonate with us. While the specific historical nature of his works still don't appeal, this idea of themes that transcend history is something that does and is worth looking at within my practice.

09/01/2012

Sketchbook project 2012

For those of you that don't know, ArtHouse Co-Op in Brooklyn, New York has been doing a yearly sketchbook project, where for a relatively small fee (compared to the usual entry fee for UK exhibitions) they send you a A5ish sized sketchbook which you can alter almost anyway you like, a project title and will then exhibit the sketchbook around the USA and store it in the Brooklyn Art Library forever for people to look at.

For 2012 the project is also getting toured overseas, so my sketchbook should be available to view not only throughout the USA but back here in Blighty as well.

Pages 6 and 7

There were a selection of topics to choose from, with my love of postcards and subverting the traditional postcard image I chose “It's Summer Where You Are”. I intentionally wanted it to be quite free flowing like a sketchbook should be, also like a journey and work with images and postcards that were from places I had travelled. I was tempted to use postcards I owned to present some kind of story from a fictional person on a journey but felt that it seemed a little forced for the idea of the sketchbook. It is after all meant to be an exploration of ideas as well as a body of work. There needs to be some experimentation. Additionally I'd tried previously to produce my painted postcards with reverses, this seemed like a good idea but in the end it just served to make my point about these paintings being postcards too bull headed. Of course there is always a exception to the rule as Greetings from the Mantelpiece showed.

Pages 8 and 9

In the end I dumped the writing idea completely leaving just a few examples on pages that were meant to be more about unformed ideas than actual semi finished work. Which in the end was just some musings on all the various ice cream trucks I had encountered on my travels over the last 5 years. The rest became a mix of small scale biro drawings, a few unusual or interesting photographs and printed on postcards.

Roughly the sketchbooks journey started with an exploration of places around the coast. I'd been to Southwold very recently on a summer holiday and as one that reminisced heavily from my childhood holidays with my parents it seemed an obvious place to start and spend some time/pages on. Moving on, the sketchbook visits Portsmouth (including Portchester), Cowes and from the boats of Cowes to the boats of Venice then through other foreign places including India and Tenerife. Returning back to London and following a route west towards my home, through Kew Gardens, Windsor and Virginia Water.

Pages 16 and 17

The inside back cover and front cover are the same image done using two different methods that both had heavy use in the sketchbook. This image of Brooklyn Bridge was taken by me when I visited New York in 2005 and is one of my favourite images from the trip. I wanted to include it as a homage to the sketchbooks final resting location and organisation that created the project. The original idea for the book was to have the book reflect the actual physical journey it would go on but I felt uncomfortable trying to reproduce images of places I had never been. Nor at that time did I know if I had postcards from each of these places. I still am unsure but thats a story for another day.

Pages 18 and 19

Many of the methods used you will recognise. The biro drawings I have been doing for a few years now. I was interested however if I could do them that small and in trying to push myself technically.

The photographs were chosen because of an inherent oddness or importance to the visit I made. For example on page 9 I have a photograph of a sunny Southwold with an obvious and somewhat ominous rainstorm on its way (No photoshop by me, this was real and I got very wet that day). On page 16 there is photograph of a pair of entertainers in Cowes week, dressed as sailors they arrived and created an utterly surreal air about the place. It was fantastic and really set the tone for the rest of the day.

Pages 20 and 21

The printed on postcards embraced a number of methods depending if I already had produced a plate for another purpose of that place. There is a postcard of Southwold beach huts that has on the reverse a print from my Southwold Beach Huts etching. There is a postcard from Tenerife that I have printed on using a solar plate of Tenerife and there are a number of postcards that I have used the polymer plate lithographic process on including Venice and the front cover showing Brooklyn Bridge.

The method of printing was fairly immaterial, polymer plate won out with the newest plates only because it was cheap, quick and very graphic. Mainly I was interested in the idea of printing imagery on the reverse rather than words. It seems subversive and can produce some aesthetically interesting combinations. While imagery, it still retains this contrast from the highly detailed photograph.


Images are my actual sketchbook.

Pages 24 and 25

05/01/2012

Getting into it - Photo project 2012

So it is time again for a new photographic project. The idea that has been brewing for some time is an extension of the looking at reality of a place, however instead of trying to find an objective reality, this time I want to use photography to look at views that would be unfamiliar from a human perspective. I'm not interested in photoshopping my images beyond some gentle cropping as it is the idea of the camera as a true medium, if that makes sense, that interests me more, certainly when a photograph is the end product, rather than a painting.

Perambulation: 28th Oct 2009

One thing I do know about photographing is that an unusual angle is often more interesting than shooting from human head height. The Perambulation project reinforced that in me, early photos of fungi are from above with me standing or only leaning down, later ones might even have me spread eagled on the leaves and I think we can agree which are best.

Perambulation: 6th Oct 2010

I like the idea of manipulating reality using camera angles. Of going more extreme than that to produce images that might not be immediately known what or where they are. Predictably my life is all over the place already and it's only just 2012 so for now I either have to be flexible about when and how often I get these images or I have to be flexible about where.

Perambulation: 29th Jan 2010
So,
Option 1: a full 365, time fixed like Welcome to Simons Wood, of where ever I am that day and time. This would be looking more of a subjective reality of my life rather than a particular place. It is interesting, but why would I want to complicate it with the challenge of finding unusual angles.

Option 2: a project like Perambulation, 6 days a week not time fixed. I'd probably stick to nature as my backdrop but might find a few other ones here and there depending on what I find interesting that day. It has the potential to be interesting but feels like it might be a little unfocused and I know work will get in the way massively.

Option 3: probably a 52 although I am tempted to define it as twice a week rather than once. Not date or time sensitive but would focus on one place or one type of place. Certainly won't be objective in any way.

Perambulation : 1st June 2010

For those of you with long memories the seed for this idea has lasted over a year and was known once as Secret Project 3. (Secret Projects 1 and 4 were revealed to be my Postcassettes and my foray into Printmaking. Both now on the website. Secret project 2 ran into technical difficulties.)

I'm going to go with Option 3 although Option 1 might become it's own project one day. Mainly because after the restrictions of Welcome to Simons Wood I feel the need for a relaxed project with the potential for large creative output. I also wanted a project that would challenge me as well as not interfere to much with work. 

Perambulation: 26th Aug 2010
 
Photos: some examples from Perambulation, plus below, the first image of the project.  Find it on Flickr here: http://www.flickr.com/photos/noblueskies/sets/72157628733339427/

Photo Project 2012: 5th Jan 2012