playground book  

Play Ground Play
Harriet Murray

Play Ground Play was a six month project aimed at developing a creative play strategy for Horsenden Primary School in West London.

This book contains a collection of stories and games created by children, for children. It is intended to be used in the field or in the playground. You can write, draw and scribble in it, that is the beauty and the play of it.

£5.99

 
         
  koskela   Koskela
Nat Breitenstein
Material: chipboard, leather, stain and varnish
Edition of 10
£180
 
         
  colour fight  

Colour Fight
Martina Schmuecker
Material: 220gsm print paper, Mono Print
Edition of 10 
£120 unframed
£200 framed

 
         
  Eastwood amonst these trees  

Eastwood among those trees, what glorious shape / Comes this way moving?
Sam Dowd
Material: laser cut wood cut print, d-type photographic print, collage
Edition of 10 
£115 unframed
£200 framed

 
         
  skull  

Skull Bag Kit for All & A Wicked Witch of the East
Naoko TakaHashi
Material: Mixed Media
Edition of 10 
£150

 
         
  not so too much of everything  

Not So Too Much of Much of Everything by NaoKo TakaHashi (2007)

The narrator of Not So Too Much of Much of Everything takes the reader on a breathless journey through the air-conditioned rooms and arid streets of the modern Arab metropolis. The narrator's sexual freedom is confronted by rumour, suspicion and threat. Every move the narrator makes, whether in solidarity with Arab women, street cleaners and bar staff, or confronting male hostility, is misread; her identity repeatedly forced upon her, manipulated and rendered paranoid.

Based on personal experience of a three month residency in Sharjah, United Arab Emirates, Not So Too Much of Much of Everything is written in the style of a factual report, and explores ideas of dislocation, mistranslation and gender politics. Moving from confusion and isolation to corporeal anger, the artist's residency and the everyday frustrations of making work in a new context are cast as a modern allegory of alienation.

Not So Too Much of Everything is published as part of Book Works Chap Book Series (No.7) printed pffset in an edition of 1,000 copies, b&w, 72 pages with a colour soft cover.

Designed by Emma Peascod, 180x111mm.

Cost £6.50 + Post and packaging  £1.00

ISBN 978 1870699 97 6

book works

 
         
   

The publication Works, acts an extension of the exhibition space in the form of a newspaper and is published by Campbell Works on the occasions of new projects to act as a wider discussion around their themes, thinking and visual language. It is the new parent for its surrogate offspring artinit.

Issue 005a

Issue 005b

Cost £2.00 inc  (005a + 005b)  Postage and Packing

Ref: CW005

 
         
  Doyle and Mallinson   Shaun Doyle and Mally Mallinson: Multiple

To accompany the exhibition Tanky Monk at Campbell Works, Doyle and 
Mallinson have created an edition of 12, 'Darwin Jesus', Lino Prints.

Cost £145.00 + £5.00 postage and packing. (unframed)

Cost £205.00 + £5.00 postage and packing. (framed)
 
         
  Shane Bradford: Multiple  

Shane Bradford: Multiple

To accompany the exhibition History 2 Shane Bradford has created an edition of 10 'Dipped Paper Airplanes'

Cost £300.00 + £10.00 postage and packing

 
         
   

Matt Golden: Multiple

To accompany the exhibition Autonomous Series, curated by Alli Bedoes, Matt Golden has created an edition of 40 artists multiples.

Cost £40.00  + £3.00 postage and packing ( UK Mainland)

Click here to view all the Multiples available list

 
         
   

On Trust

This publication is printed as a limited edition of 250 numbered copies and forms a wider discussion around the issues surrounding the collaboration On Trust with curator, Claire Nichols, with accompanying contributions from Michael Archer, Brian Catling, Henry­­­ Lydiate and Sophie Leris.

It also contains the five commissioned text from artists:
Robert Attanasio,
Miriam Craik-Horan,
Filipe Cravo,
Levin Haegele
Laura Wilson.

Cost £5.00 inc postage and packing

 
         
  hayvend  

Art in a vending machine

There is now a Hayvend Laboratories vending machine located in the street at the front of Campbell Works. This is a unique arts project that sells a range of artists work in small cardboard boxes, through a network of vending machines located at 16 venues in London and nationwide.

Each box costs two pounds and all the artists submissions are mixed randomly in the slot style machines. A page documenting the work together with an artist's statement is located on the Artist's section of the Hayvend website.

Hayvend works in two ways, providing opportunities for people to buy artwork as well as providing opportunities for artists to apply and distribute their work. Anybody can apply with anything at anytime... well almost, there are a few restrictions and considerations. Most of these are to do with having some sensitivity for the context of the vending machines as well as the physical restrictions imposed by the machines mechanisms.

If you would like a list of all the vending machine locations or would like to apply with your art, visit http://www.hayvend.com/

 
         
     

artinit

artinit is an offsite gallery in the form of a newspaper, compiled through an open submission process. Each Issue is developed around a curatorial framework and distributed across London. This unique project allows artworks to be circulated through relay, expanding the walls of the gallery indefinitely.

Issue 3

Cost £1.00  inc postage and packing

 
         
     

Issue 2

Cost £1.00  inc postage and packing

 
         
     

Issue 1

Cost £1.00  inc postage and packing

 
         
     

We will shortly be setting up an automated sales area, but in the meantime please send a cheque for the correct amount to:

Campbell Works
27 Belfast Road
London
N16 6 UN

For sales and commissions related to our projects, please enquire at: sales@campbellworks.org