Ian Berry Ian Berry

Ian Berry in the Year of Covid - A look back

Angle of the North | Drone Works North East

Angle of the North | Drone Works North East

‘‘The thanks first came from the people, you saw kid’s on cul-de-sacs celebrating their new heros but as the weeks went on it seemed all the pictures were politicians and celebrities and the goodwill faded. It felt like who it was from, overshadowed who it was for.’’

Ian Berry

Ian Berry with his son, Elliott with #iclapfor

Ian Berry with his son, Elliott with #iclapfor

The last year of Covid 19 has touched everyone’s lives no matter where they are in the world, and professions from those direct on the front line to those with the knock on effects of lockdown.

Most artists lost all their shows with some ‘going virtual’ but for Ian Berry he found three of his exhibitions still on (some were lost) and not only on, but large solo shows and in foreign lands. Many isolations and quarantines later we are now looking at the anniversary of the start of lock down in the UK as he prepares for a memorable event at a great location this week to mark the occasion.

Here we look back at the huge number of things the artist originally from Huddersfield but now living in Poplar, East London, has got up to often with his son Elliott by his side.

Stay Behind Close Doors at Museum Rijswijk

Stay Behind Close Doors at Museum Rijswijk

From setting up a photo in isolation juried show for a museum, to lighting up a message of gratitude in almost every town and city in the UK and Ireland and many around the world, to collaborating with an Oscar Winner to remaking his Lock Down Living Room all of course in the material he sees the world in… denim.


Stay Behind Closed Doors

For many years not only did Ian Berry use denim in his work he has portrayed isolation in urban environments, whether in an empty bar, a lonely soul in a launderette or with Behind Closed Doors, people in their own homes. The latter body of work took on a new life with people now being told to stay home, many, alone.

Screenshot 2021-03-17 at 22.44.10.png

Ian works from photoshoots he sets up, and last March all of his got cancelled. They were to be people in their own homes. Life now already imitating art. Before lockdown he started to ask photographer friends if they could shoot themselves in their own homes due to the restrictions and as the photos came in, Diana Wind, curator of Museum Rijswijk in The Netherlands and Berry decided they were so good that they should be displayed in the museum also and they made it wider for anyone to enter in what became a juried show.

A Stitch in Time Niki McDonald by Alec Dawson, Sydney, Australia

A Stitch in Time Niki McDonald by Alec Dawson, Sydney, Australia

Denise Stock, Munich, Germany

Denise Stock, Munich, Germany

Ian Berry's home isolation work in denim

Ian Berry's home isolation work in denim

Screenshot 2021-03-20 at 11.07.30.pngdoors denim jeans art kunst installation

Entries came in from all over the world from professional photographers and amateurs alike. 16 were chosen to present in the Museum alongside many dozens more that were lasered to create a denim backdrop. As a great record of the time period they captured Olympic stars training with the event off to people playing games at home. Below, famed New York photo journalist Martha Cooper captured the nightly 7pm clap for the Carers in Manhattan.

you can see more of the project here

Marha Cooper, New York

Marha Cooper, New York


#ICLAPFOR from Lands End to John O’Groats -

and almost everywhere in between and to countries far and wide…

On Thursday 26th March, the UK followed many other countries around the world with an applause for those out on the frontline caring for us. It came from the people, and at 8pm the night skies erupted with noise in what will one day be remembered very positively. Ian’s son then aged 6, Elliott, wondered what it was all about in a week that broke up his home schooling. His parents could explain it to him and he was hooked - especially being told of people he knew personally that we were clapping for while he was engaged and so interested.

Elliott like many children made a rainbow…

Elliott like many children made a rainbow…

..and sent it to his grandma. But he wanted to make more art

..and sent it to his grandma. But he wanted to make more art

After making a rainbow to send to his grandma he wanted to make more art and he asked his father about clapping hands. Elliott took the photos of his dad clapping hands. Ian Berry then set about making them in denim, not only blue but universal, while Elliott sat next to him drawing. They realised that to portray clapping, they had to show the motion. So they made two. And animated it.

 
IclapforIan.gif
 

It was intended just to send to some friends to say thank you but one day when Elliott was watching a movie on the projector he said ‘can we put the clapping on the projector?’ The next minute it was being beamed off the balcony… They lived in a building in London where the roof could be seen from miles around but the projector wasn’t strong enough. He looked online and it lead to Andrew Hall of See The Bigger Picture in Newcastle. Once discovering what they wanted to do with a projector he said ‘I can do that’ and this was the starting gun for it to be beamed all over the world.

Through Andrew and some of Ian’s other contacts word got out and it ended up lighting the lonely night skies on places like the Baltic Contemporary Arts Centre in the Newcastle/Gateshead, to Edinburgh Castle and the V&A in Scotland, Conwy Castle to Cardiff City Hall in Wales, all over Ireland and from John o’Groats on the Northern most tip of the island of Britain down to Lands End, the southern most tip in Cornwall and so many towns and cities in between.

#iclapfor Ian Berry clapping hands clap for our cares

It also was seen as far as Australia, Brazil, Colombia, Germany, Italy, Mexico City and Sweden and more along with in the USA like New York, LA, New Orleans, Princeton and a beautiful one in Greensboro North Carolina know as ‘Jeansboro’.

click through to see images in each location

click through to see images in each location

With it, online they asked the question, who do you clap for? #iclapfor …

This brought thousands of answers from family and friends to neighbours to whole groups of people we were thanking - many who had been overlooked at the time like people working in the prison services, unpaid carers, and so many other people on the Front Line. These answers were projected on the Angel of the North in Gateshead. By making it more personal, who can begrudge you clapping for a family member?

Angel of the North | Drone Works North East

Angel of the North | Drone Works North East

While the projections were temporary it lasted longer and spread online and in the press and people sent the animation to those they were clapping for. It also got a lasting memory with the mural painting in Walthamstow in East London together With Wood Street Walls and ATMA - on a doctors surgery too! Not only that; Berry never actively sought to ‘do anything’ in this time, he had a full schedule of shows to do and ‘well, I didn’t want to jump on the bandwagon, there’s times I wonder if I had, what really could have been achieve with this. The beauty of it was that it was so much more than me. It was never about me. Maybe a little Elliott, but it was who it was for, not from.’

Screenshot 2021-03-17 at 23.02.12.png

With this mindset Ian Berry invited other artists to send in their clapping hands.

‘I loved to see mine and Elliott’s light up the night on different buildings. Looking back it was amazing to see a quiet street and then see an ambulance or other worker go past. But if it was left up all night, or, done with a council or body that tells people it was going to happen, well, who wants to see the same thing! One of my favourite parts of the initiative was having over 20 artists from all over the world sending their art in and seeing it projected. No one wants to clap alone!’

Screenshot 2021-03-17 at 22.50.51.png

In the UK the clapping happened every Thursday for 10 weeks. In New York it lasted longer, and it was every night. Having been around a lot of these places we saw the positively both in the action and with the projection. While once pay rises came into the conversation of course we wanted the staff get paid well, especially the nurses. #iclapfor in fact managed to turn the claps in to money raising around $10,000 for NHS Charites Together and Doctors Without Borders before stopping donations once you could get a badge with Pin Your Thanks. But it was more about putting the good will into the night sky.

For the NHS birthday on the 5 July there were special projections on the White Cliffs of Dover, Coal Drop Yards in Kings Cross, at the Piece Hall in Halifax along with two tributes at Hospital at the Royal Brompton in Chelsea, London and the RVI in Newcastle. See more at the dedicated website #iclapfor


Pin Your Thanks Jacket with Jenny Beavan OBE

Ian Berry Jenny Beavan pin your thanks I Clap for

Ian Berry was asked to join Pin Your Thanks an initiative set up by volunteers in South East London to give a ‘Heartfelt Thanks’ to those who have supported us. He joined public figures like Ringo Starr, Keria Knightley and Joe Lycett and now the Clapping Hands had another legacy - the ‘Peoples Medal’ that were given as a small thank you to those on the frontline.

Ian Berry Pin Your Thanks iclapfor

The Charitable foundation was launched with a projection on London’s South Bank starting with the Clapping Hands then unveiling it as a badge, and then the other badges like Anoushka Shankar and David James. Rita Ora and young competition winner Evie have been added since. Berry joined the others in singing a Christmas song, the 12 days of Christmas.

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Ian Berry worked with double Academy Award winner for costume design, Jenny Beavan OBE. They made a denim jacket with Blackhorse Lane in London and lined with with all the letters of support for Pin Your Thanks like Stephen Fry, Dame Emma Thompson, Harry Hill and many more. The Jacket was adorned with all the different care worker badges who had been answered with #iclapfor symbolising all those who had gone above and beyond during Covid-19.

Denim iclpafor nhs covid art Ian Berry clapping

The badges were pinned and sewn on, alongside with acknowledgements for the NHS and Volunteers. Pin Your Thanks through the sale of the badges and the denim jacket are raising funds for NHS Charities Together and Volunteering Matters.

There was lenticular posters made of the clapping hands and were installed in hospitals along with in the Museum Rijswijk which debuted the collaboration with Beavan and a short documentary you will see below. You can get a poster here


Lockdown Living Room

lock down living room Ian Berry denim art

With getting caught up unintentionally with the charity initiatives it is easy to forget Ian Berry is an artist with still a lot going on. While his 15 years of collections were shown in the museum it all ended up falling in under ‘Splendid Isolation’ which was brought together connecting the various bodies that have looked at lonely melancholy scenes all in indigo blue. With his shoots cancelled he was forced to look closer to home for inspiration.

Ian Berry lock down living room

‘I have lived in many places and while sometimes I portrayed what was around me I often moved somewhere I then flew off somewhere else. Like from Sweden to London, then when I lived in London I went to America a lot to base work from. With lockdown, and the beautiful spring we did have, I was forced to see what was around me here in East London and I liked what I saw. It was quite a lesson.

Ian Berry denim art installation

Berry ended up remaking his whole living room and bedroom in denim. With his Chesterfield sofa made in Cone Denim, the plants all in old jeans to the record collection and even a window, looking out to a #Iclapfor projection.

Ian Berry denim art installation rijswijk
Ian Berry Museum Rijswijk done in denim

The Museum Rijswijk showed 30 pieces of work of Ian Berry’s art in denim spread over numerous rooms and his 15 year career with the material. From Behind Closed Doors to the lonely soul on the subway, to a newsagent - who were very much on the front line this last year. The show itself is now locked down, but will be extended into the summer. Berry also had a solo show in the Levi Strauss Museum in Germany and one in Basel.

Ian Berry indigo denim art textile fabric kunst

And finally…

‘Do remember they can’t cancel Spring’

David Hockney

Secret garden Ian Berry denim art installation contemporary

A reincarnation of the Secret Garden, first shown in the CMA in New York in 2017 was curated at the end of the exhibition in Holland to echo David Hockney’s words with his new work a few weeks into lockdown in 2020.

Ian Berry Museum Rijswijk secret garden Tonello cone denim installation up cycling art

All made out of denim - vines and flowers hang down from the museums roof echoing the museum garden and representing the nature. Of course denim and jeans are great contributors to the global issues and environment, especially with the fast fashion and over production and consumption. Showing the flowers and wisteria made out of something originally started as a plant. We all hope for a better future and take many of the lessons of the last year to learn from, not least the way we saw the nature bloom and pollution decline.


Below you will see a short 5 minute documentary about what #Iclapfor was about narrated by Ian Berry and Fiona Berry, his sister, that wrote a poem as Berry Poetic. We hope it will relive some of the memories and positivity of this time last year. We see it that not only have some not got the pay rises that the year deserved, but they also no longer get the gratitude. And this doesn’t mean just the clapping, it ran its course. But the free coffee here, or the queue jump there. All the little moments in a day, that made a big difference, not from government, not from a celebrity, but, from the people.

Watch out this week to see what we’ll do to mark the years anniversary along with the great folks over at Make it Blue. .

A big Thank You to all those supported.. fully listed on www.iclapfor.com but including Cone Denim, Tonello, Tencel, Famore Cutlery, Pin Your Thanks and many more!

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Ian Berry x Jenny Beavan OBE x Pin Your Thanks

The Jacket by Ian Berry, Jenny Beavan and Blackhorse Lane for Pin Your Thanks

The Jacket by Ian Berry, Jenny Beavan and Blackhorse Lane for Pin Your Thanks

Ian Berry with #iclapfor asked the question 'who do you clap for?' and the project got thousands of different answers from around the world. Ian was then invited in to join Pin Your Thanks to design a badge, the clapping Hands seemed an ideal first choice straight away.

He was asked to join by one of the founders, his friend Jenny Beavan OBE and then progressed to talk about a collaboration to add to it. What could a costume designer that feels most comfort in denim and an artist produce, a denim jacket of course - and what goes with a denim jacket, pin badges! They worked with Blackhorse Lane in Walthamstow for the jacket and it was then pinned with the answers to #iclapfor, with badges from a range from the various medical workers to teachers, bus drivers and prison workers - all the many people we were grateful for during the pandemic.

Jenny Beavan OBE Oscar winning costume design Ian Berry denim art
pin your thanks Ian Berry clap for our carers Jenny Beavan Ian berry

The inside was lined with the letters of the many famous backers like Stephen Fry, Emma Thompson and Harry Hill. Of course they included all the Pin Your Thanks specially designed badges. Beavan hand stitched these into the jacket and they pinned the badges on starting in the early weeks of lockdown! Working remotely from Ian Berry’s studio and Jenny Beavan’s south London home.

About Jenny Beavan OBE

Jenny Beavan has been nominated for the Oscar for Costume Design ten times, claiming two Academy Awards - for A Room with a View in 1986 and Mad Max: Fury Road in 2015.

Since then Beavan was appointed Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) in the 2017 New Year Honours for services to drama production.

She is known for films such as Howards End, Sense and Sensibility, Gosford Park and The King's Speech as well as her work in theatre.

Ian Berry Pin your thanks NHS clap for our heros cares Jenny Beavan Clive little

at the time of her latest Oscar win that made the headlines, she said

‘I am a real jeans person. I have clothes to dress up in, but [the Oscars] was a really conscious thing of not just doing the plain black suit. I am British with a slightly rebellious character; I always have been. But, actually, in truth, you’ve seen me. I’m short, I’m fat. I really would look ridiculous in a gown. What I was actually wearing at the Oscars was sort of an homage to Mad Max — a kind of biker outfit. I thought, “If I can’t beat them, or if I can’t sort of join them, then why not try doing something a little bit fun?” And George [Miller] loved it. The [vegan] leather jacket had the Immorten Joe symbol on the back and I was just giving a little wink to Mad Max.’

The 12 Pin Your Thanks badgers on the denim jacket, joining Ian Berry is Kiera Knightley, Ringo Starr, Joe Lycett, Emelie Sande, Dame Sarah Storey, Anoushka Shankar, David James MBE, Billie Temple and of course, young Evie! Get one here

The 12 Pin Your Thanks badgers on the denim jacket, joining Ian Berry is Kiera Knightley, Ringo Starr, Joe Lycett, Emelie Sande, Dame Sarah Storey, Anoushka Shankar, David James MBE, Billie Temple and of course, young Evie! Get one here

Ian Berry's exhibit is running from the 1st December 2020 till 13 June 2021.  The museum shop also stocks all our 12 pins and they can now be seen on the streets of Holland for people to say thank you. Want to add yours to your denim jacket or gift one to another? Buy one here - a perfect gift to say thank you this Christmas. 

Post exhibition the Pin Your Thank jacket will be auctioned to raise money for their charities.

Ian Berry with his Pin Your Thanks badge at the Museum Rijswijk in The Netherlands

Ian Berry with his Pin Your Thanks badge at the Museum Rijswijk in The Netherlands

Ian and Elliott Berry, 6, sporting the badge at the Shard in London.

Ian and Elliott Berry, 6, sporting the badge at the Shard in London.

…and finally.. can you spot Ian Berry singing with a former Beatle?

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Ian Berry Ian Berry

When the Clapping Ends, the Caring Continues

A creative community claps

 

Ian Berry has formed a collective of over 20 international artists who all made their Clapping Hands to show their gratitude to health workers and others in this period. 

Ian has seen his hands projected all over the world after making two hands in denim with his son. 

 

Ian Berry I clap for

For the last two months his hands have been projected on buildings as far away as Colombia, Mexico City, New York, Sweden and Brazil and here in the UK on 70 different areas walls from Land’s End to John O’Groats, the most Southern and Northern areas of Britain. They were seen on places such as the Baltic in Gateshead, Edinburgh Castle, the South Bank Centre and the BT Tower in Birmingham – it was even on the white Cliffs of Dover! 

 They can now be seen with more artists hands including his sons, only six, who inspired the whole project. Elliott loved the clapping here in the UK on Thursday nights at 8pm. ‘It enabled us to be able to talk to him about it while he was engaged and interested. We could tell him about his auntie who was on the Covid team in Lund, Sweden and our friends on the frontline. He now sees the NHS workers as heroes and gets excited every time he sees the logo. That’s why I think the clapping is great, while I understand the arguments if kids can grow up seeing health workers and others to be respected then we have more hope for the future.’ 

Elliotts hand clap

Elliotts hand clap

Ian managed to get his projections to Land’s End prior to the last clap on the tenth week after the ‘creator’ of the clapping Annemarie Plas called for it to end. ‘I can imagine the pressure she was under when It got political’ Ian said. The night before Ian was also at a projection himself in Greenwich, ‘We thought fitting as time was running out just as momentum had really started’. 

Ian was starting to get back into the studio for his museum shows later in the year when a call came in, the clapping was back! For Sunday the NHS celebrates its 72nd year and have asked for a clap not just for them, but all on the front line. This was actually Ian’s angle all along, and this projection on the Angel of the North shows many of the answers to who do you clap for. Ian used the hashtag #iclapfor 

‘All the opportunities that had faded suddenly came back, and then more. A lot came in and led nowhere, no one sees all the time put in, but this week should see a lot of different projections and events! My phone has never been used as much’

 One that is a great development is that Ian isn’t alone, he had many artists submit their hands, traditionally one of the hardest body parts to make. ‘I’ve avoided them for years!’ Said Ian. No one wants to clap alone, and nor did Ian. The isolation was bad enough for him, and now feels a part of a wider community with artists like Dutch artist Max Zorn who sent in his hands with brown packing tape, Daisy Collingridge’s amazing creatures hands, Andre Veloux who makes his work with Lego and Kirstie Adamson who makes collages out of magazines.

Jess Wilsons Hans clap in Newcastle

Jess Wilsons Hans clap in Newcastle

 There were some really successful artists join with more traditional materials like Benjamin MurphyWill RochfortRuth Fox  and Saatchi’s “Top 20 artists to watch in 2020” Marcus Aitken. Illustrator Jess Wilson of Jealous Gallery made a bold one with a yellow emoji hand that is striking when projected. 

With Ian being a unconventional textile artist, he got many submit with textiles like Sophie StandingAlice Kozlow,  Cas HolmesTerry AskeBéatrice BeraudBarbara ShawRachadi ZahiraClockwork Press, and Juan Manaul Gomez and of course little Elliott who also got an added treat, a trip to the top of the Shard with his dad and be the only ones there! 

In the final week culminating in the NHS birthday it was shown in various sites in London, Huddersfield, Newcastle, Halifax, Shrewsbury. In Halifax it was at Yorkshire’s ‘Number One building’ The Piece Hall, for the artist from neighbouring Huddersfield. Ian famed for using denim jeans in his art and it will be shown in the region’s iconic old cloth Hall. They made a film of it with videos of people saying who they clap for which Ian has been asking in this period. 

The angel of the North’s projected final message

The angel of the North’s projected final message

‘By asking the question who do you clap for?, it made it personal, but also as well as getting friends and relatives answers, we got certain groups of people like prison officers, unpaid care workers and volunteers - many who had felt forgotten. We projected their names and I know there were many happy to be included when they saw it.’ Ian added.

 

It all started by accident, Ian’s son Elliott loved the clapping and it gave Ian the opportunity to tell him what was going on and who it was for – and to talk about their family and friends on the front line while he was engaged. He now sees the NHS workers as heroes and gets excited every time he sees the logo. Elliott took the photo of his dad’s hands and sat with him while he made it in his studio. 

Walthamstow wood street walls Ian Berry I clap for

He was certainly excited to see a mural made of it in Walthamstow, North London. He even painted a part of it with Wood Street Wallsand Atma. The painting of the now iconic clap was on the side of a Doctor’s Surgery and was liked by the neighbours. At 5pm on the Sunday of the NHS birthday Ian and ATMA clapped with the residents of the street at 5pm.

 ‘I know by the tenth week the clap had its detractors and I understand the arguments. But I have seen children engaged in this and let’s hope they grow up to respect the Heath Service, it’s that well used phrase, they are the future. We live in a country that made the court jesters kings and I think many are starting to see who we should value. And (laughing) I’m aware of the list that placed Artists on the least valued workers in this period.’ 

the pins of Pin Your Thanks on the Royal Festival Hall, South Bank, London

the pins of Pin Your Thanks on the Royal Festival Hall, South Bank, London

His son now proudly wears the Clapping Hands as a badge. Ian was one of the names behind Pin Your Thanks that also includes Kiera Knightley, Ringo Starr, Anoushka Shankar, Rita Ora, David James and Joe Lycett as a way of showing thanks to those in this time. They are raising money for NHS Charities Direct and Volunteering Matters and backed by the likes of Stephen Fry, Emma Thompson and Oscar winning Costume Designer Jenny Beavan. And it was all launched by.. you guessed it, a projection, and at London’s Royal Festival Hall on the South Bank. 

 

Ian’s no longer known by just art in denim, perhaps projections are his new medium. 

But as Ian says. ‘When the clapping ends, the caring continues.’

 

The dedicated Iclap website

www.iclapfor.com

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