Who we are and what we do



Furniture with a story to tell



Each piece of furniture has a unique story hidden within. The story waits to be found by the curious and creative.

Showing posts with label Furniture. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Furniture. Show all posts

Monday, 29 September 2014

Coast Magazine


This month some of our products have been photographed for the lovely ‘Coast Magazine’ in their UK Craft feature. The pieces were styled by the talented Emma Clayton who had seen our work in the SIT Select 2014 brochure. 




We couldn’t be happier with how the pieces look! They work brilliantly with the crafts from the other artisans. It’s so wonderful to see so many British craftspeople and we're especially happy to see four we know from Stroud! What a hive of talent we are.

Thank you Coast Magazine for a lovely feature!

Monday, 30 June 2014

Finding treasure in furniture

Often at Clever Monty, people donate their furniture to us. Sometimes we go along to auctions or car boot sales to see what catches our eye. But every piece which passes through our studio has a story. We are so often inspired by the little pieces of humanity left behind by previous owners.

Today it was this picture which inspired our story


To the curious and creative

My father loved all things Japanese. I knew this about him, although he kept his love hidden from everyone else. A secret just for him. And sometimes for me. When I ran away from my latest scolding, fingers or legs burning, I would run to the warm leather and pipe tobacco filled fug of his study. To the only comfort which seemed real. 

He became used to such interruptions from me, benignly allowing me to clamber over him and soothed me gently with huge leather bound books filled with Japanese art and culture. We would pore together over cherry blossom and geishas, tea ceremonies and temples made of gold. I would gaze in wonder at it all, but mostly at him. I never saw such beautiful melancholy in his face, as in those moments.  

When my questions became irksome, he would gently lift me from his lap and return the book to its shelf, sighing lightly. In those wistful moments he wasn’t the man everyone else knew and feared. He was my father. The greatest man I ever knew. 

The day he died I found myself, aged eighteen, running through our rambling house to his study, desperate for the calm quiet sanctuary I remembered. The study hadn’t been touched for months, the police had taken so much by that point and it was cluttered and untidy. Something he would have detested. They had, however, left the old leather bound books untouched on their mahogany shelves. Stepping gingerly between the boxes and piles of paperwork I moved to his empty desk with my favourite of the books we had shared. 

I sat in his huge soft leather chair and opened it gently. 

The rain fell slowly against the window and the world still turned. The newspapers howled their fury at my fathers guilt, his avoidance of punishment through his convenient illness and his subsequent death.

I gazed at the cherry blossom and wept for a man who took all his secrets to his grave.


Clever Monty 


Tuesday, 3 June 2014

Beautiful chairs for your beautiful home

We've finished these gorgeous chairs and now they're ready to find a home! 



One chair is finished in a lovely cupboard green by Little Greene paints and the other is finished in slate grey. Both have been reupholstered in a quirky vintage map fabric. They also have a clever strip of blackboard paint so you can leave dinner messages for your loved ones! 

The story inside was inspired by a flyer for a grand fete from 1875. It tells the story of Delevanti the clown. The story has a copy of the original flyer too. A real treasure to be found in years to come! 



The chairs are £195 for the pair. Contact us if you'd like to come and see them :) 

Clever Monty

Friday, 23 May 2014

Stroud Select Trail 2014


It was my first time as a Select Trail artist and I was unbelievably nervous about opening up my studio to the public for the first time. Luckily I was opening up along with some friends - two potters Jill Watton Ceramics and Anna Simson Ceramics (check out their work it’s utterly beautiful) who are experienced Select Trail artists and helped me through my nerves with lots of good advice; ‘Listen to the compliments!’ 

Stroud International Textiles (or SIT) are also extremely lucky to be curated by Lizzi Walton and her team. Lizzi has the unenviable task of organising all the artists (and their paperwork!) into a group of gorgeous and professional individuals presented in a fantastic brochure each year. Lizzi also had some good advice for me ‘Treat it like you’re opening your home to guests, offer a drink and be hospitable. This is your chance to shine!’ The booklet which accompanied the Select Trail this year was the finest I have ever seen. The photographs by the wonderful Ben Wright truly captured the artists at their best. Ben was lovely, taking the time to talk to us as individuals and engaging with our work while she took photographs. 



So it was with shakey hands that I arrived two hours (yes, two hours!) early on the first Saturday to prepare, or rather over-prepare! The weather was showery but warm so I was hopeful that we would have a few people through the door. I needn’t have worried. The studio I rent is within the iconic Victoria Works, an old steam powered saw mill, which became the now defunct Chalford Chairs. Regular readers of this blog will know about the Last Will and Testament of the building, which I wrote and hid within the walls while it was being renovated. Many of the people who came through to have a look were curious to see the metamorphosis of the building into artists’ studios. Lots of people came specifically to see the wonderful Studio 7 exhibition which was housed in an upstairs room, and most stopped on their way to have a look at my work. Over four hundred in fact over the two weekends. 

It was truly lovely to chat to so many engaged and art-loving people. We had visitors from across the road and from New Zealand and almost everywhere in between. I asked everyone who walked through the door to leave me a memory for the installation I had constructed for the day; a memory tree, and over 60 people did. The memories they left were touching and sometimes a little crazy but all were engaging and I felt really touched that people were so honest by sharing parts of themselves with my concept. I’ll be using the memories as inspiration for future stories. 



It is an extremely emotional experience to open up your studio to strangers. I did, of course, have a few people who came through my studio tutting and critisising my work. To those people, and to anyone who decides to visit an artist in their work space, I would beg you earnestly to keep negative opinions to yourselves until you are out of ear shot of the artist. Artists are naturally very sensitive beings and although our skin toughens over time, no one wants to hear that the work they put their hearts and souls into isn’t engaging enough for you. Or even that you could produce what they have. You couldn’t, because surely if you could, you would be. That’s not to say you can’t give feedback to artists. We love to talk about our work. So ask questions, engage, read the text, stand as close as you can to absorb the work and increase your understanding. And even if it’s not your cup of tea, that’s completely fine. The art world would be incredibly boring if the same thing floated all our boats. But as in every area in life, be it a queue in a supermarket or walking through an installation piece in a highly respected gallery, there is no need to be rude. 

So to everyone else who really did stand and stare; thank you so much. All the feedback I was given was welcomed and made note of. You all made the journey of the Stroud Select Trail 2014 a truly wonderful one. 



Clever Monty 

Friday, 18 October 2013

The kindness of strangers

This week we have been enjoying the kindness of strangers at Clever Monty.

We had a visit from a gentleman who wanted to know more about the concept of Clever Monty and it turned out that he had owned the building in which we now have a studio. He regailled us with stories about previous owners from the 1800s, the history of the building and the village of Chalford. His anecdotes have inspired ideas for several stories for future pieces!

Not only did this kind gentleman give his time to us this week, he also donated four gorgeous Georgian dining chairs. 

Random acts of kindness are contagious. Do something spontaneous and kind as soon as you've read this post! 


Thursday, 10 October 2013

Corks


This week we've been racking our brains to think of a way to use up our sack of beautiful vintage corks..... And then it came to us! We'll be using them as a door lining for a lovely unit (potentially a drinks cabinet?) which will be painted a gorgeous slate grey on the inside. And the story to accompany this gorgeous piece is about a Spanish wine merchant who is not what he seems...