magazine, exhibitions and projects
the flux review
Q&A – Emily Shih
Delighted to be showcasing the work of Emily Shih who is Inspired by daily life, beautiful scenery and things that touch her heart. Shih is fascinated by colour and the journey of living. Through art, Shih can express her truth.
Q&A- Commodore
Commodore takes urban walls from drab slabs to beautiful canvases. His stencils aim to evoke action from a static element. The subject matter I focus on varies but tends to evoke nostalgia or movement.
Q&A – Belinda Pearce
Belinda Pearce is a flamboyant character, a creative artist unafraid to experiment in order to achieve unique yet collectable canvasses. Pearce paints with passion, choosing subject-matter dear to her heart.
Q&A – Evelyn Polk
Evelyn Polk’s work is centred around the found object, but also overlaps with notions of excavation and the land. Acting as a mediator, selecting and presenting items for the consideration of the viewer. The process of how he works is dictated by the objects he finds.
Tate to Reopen Steve McQueen Exhibition
After successfully reopening all four Tate galleries last week, Tate Modern is pleased to announce that its Steve McQueen exhibition will also be reopening on Friday 7 August and will be extended to 6 September 2020. First launched in February, the acclaimed exhibition spanning 20 years of McQueen’s work has been modified with new visitor signage to aid social distancing and will reopen with a reduced visitor capacity.
Q&A – Minju Kim
Drawing on personal experience and inspired by human anatomy and psychoanalytic theory, Kim explores desire as the main subject matter alongside the concept of life and death.
In her theory, all things stem from desire and it varies depending on how the person’s desire appears. The human figure is a recurring theme and Kim’s obsession with the human body started when she was young after experiencing a rare body condition and medical examinations as part of her daily life.
Q&A – William Reinsch
William Reinsch is a young artist who is perhaps one of the most exciting new talents at work in the UK today. An astounding ability with figurative work, work which conveys as much about Reinsch as an artist as it does about the subjects he paints. Working from his studio in Essex, Reinsch is what the art world classes as an “outsider”, an artist with huge talent and yet not the product of formal art school training; perhaps in this instance, such training may have been counter-productive.
Q&A – Peter Basden
Peter Basden is an artist that produces candid, observational photography that attempts to capture a personal interpretation of honest, in-between, unposed moments. All of his photographs are made with persistence, patience, 35mm film and a small manual camera.
Q&A – Hannah Sullivan
Hannah Sullivan is a young British artist living and working in Manchester.
Self-taught or art school?
I’m currently studying at Manchester School of Art in the UK, and am about to enter my graduate year.
If you could own one work of art what would it be?
Antoni Tapiés ‘Rinzen’ (Rinzen being Japanese for “sudden awakening”). I saw this in Barcelona last year, and it completely captivated me. The scale of the work is astronomical and completely overwhelming. I like the familiarity of the bed and the mess, and how destructive it feels floating in the air. This was displayed alongside one of his larger cement paintings that upon reflection tonally could have been a suggestion of a mattress. The contrasting ideas between harsh, physical materials and the more empathetic/understood ideas around what it is to be human is something I take a lot of interest in.
Q&A – Batool Showghi
Batool Showghi was born in Iran and moved to England in 1985. She received a merit for her MA in Design & Media Arts from the University of Westminster in 1997 just after finishing her BA honours from the London Guildhall University. In 2001 she received a Certificate of Education from the University of Westminster. While continuing her art practice, she taught at Harrow College from 1998 until 2015 as a part-time lecturer. Since then she has dedicated her time to her art and exhibiting her work in both solo and group exhibitions in England and abroad.
Robin Ross – From DJ To Print Studio
Former broadcaster and artist Robin Ross has admitted to finding some cunning ways of escaping the clutches of the law in his youth. The 69-year-old, who grew up in St Annes, was one of many budding DJs pursuing a career in radio and started out the only way he knew – on pirate stations.
Q&A – Roanne O’Donnell
Born St. Andrews, Roanne O’Donnell is an award-winning Scottish painter currently working on the series, ‘Surface Work’. She studied Drawing and Painting at the prestigious Edinburgh College of Art and went on to obtain a Masters in Contemporary European Fine Art in Barcelona. After 18 years of professional practice in Northern Norway, she now has her studios in Andalucia and Fife, Scotland.
Q&A – Kio Griffith
Kio Griffith is an interdisciplinary artist, independent curator, and arts writer working across themes of social issues, geopolitics and migrating cultures, through multimedia, craft and technology-based works including graphic design, 2D and 3D objects, time-based sound and video compositions, performance, computer programming, writings, installation, and publishing.
Q&A – Kelly Wu
Delighted to introduce art student Kelly Wu to The FLUX Review Q&A’s…
Q&A – Jeremy Gluck
Jeremy Gluck is an artist working as a neurodiverse, non-linear fine artist in digital art, film, installation and mixed media. Uncompromising works confront the viewer, encouraging a physical, sensitive, or conceptual experience of each. Radical artistic engagement is the mission statement. Embracing pre-conceptual mind-language art.
Francesca Busca – Artie a Day
Francesca Busca creates incredible arties during lockdown. A challenge by the Getty Museum.
‘Sharing the love for Art with a laugh: recreating artwork with things found at home, embracing the Getty Museum challenge. One Artie a day during Lockdown 2020.
Arties were made by a ‘one-woman band’, whilst the brilliant soundtrack was kindly composed ad hoc by Moreno Andreatta (www.morenoandreatta.com).
What started as a friend’s challenge for a laugh soon became a daily appointment…and created an amusing bond among quarantined souls worldwide. It was fun and rewarding, especially seeing the tremendous feedback of participation – and challenges! – I was receiving. Such a positive exchange of energy!
Yurim Gough
Yurim Gough was born in Korea, a country with a historic tradition of ceramics. Gough was a fashion designer and by the age of 30 had been designing high heeled shoes for over ten years in Seoul then in Tokyo and London. Gough emigrated to England in 2007, the first time she had set foot outside Asia. Learning English from scratch and being influenced by the radical change in culture Gough went back to being an artist, which was always her first calling. Starting with life drawing and experimenting with other media, Gough found herself drawn to her cultural roots in ceramics.
Q&A – Rosemary Hurrell
Rosemary Hurrell graduated with a BA (Hons) in Fine Art in 2017. Initially inspired by traditional needlework Hurrell’s work gravitates towards abstraction, sculptures are created using free motion machine embroidery on soluble film which is subsequently dissolved, shaped, and dried.

















