Photograph for article: China’s creeping sands published to coincide with the Copenhagen Summit on climate change.
Al Jazeera, 9th December 2009
Climate change photograph for Al Jazeera
New photographic work on exhibit
Three photographic prints selected from the series Untitled (Collecting and Dropping) are on exhibit at Transition Gallery in London through November. For more about this series see the Portfolio page here.

Untitled (Collecting and Dropping) No.52

Untitled (Collecting and Dropping) No.179
Untitled (Collecting and Dropping) No.228
All from the series Untitled (Collecting and Dropping).No.s 1 – 245. 2007-2009
Printed on Hannamule paper, 56 x 42.5 inches, framed.
Mrs. West’s Hats recommended – Beijing Today
Vivian Wang from the Bookworm recommends the following bestsellers to Beijing Today readers.
Yu Li: Confessions of an Elevator Operator. By Jimmy Qi
Mrs. West’s Hats. By Helen Couchman, introduction by Anthony Gorman
Charles Darwin’s On the Origin of Species: A Graphic Adaptation. By Michael Keller, illustrated by Nicolle Rager Fuller
He Jianwei
www.beijingtoday.com.cn
Mrs. West’s Hats London book launch photos




Mrs. West’s Hats review – The Hat magazine

in print
Mrs West’s Hats
by Helen Couchman with an introduction by Anthony Gorman
Mrs. West’s Hats is the first publication in book form of a series of sixty photographic self-portraits produced by the artist Helen Couchman in 1997. The title of the piece refers to Couchman’s maternal grandmother, Mrs West (1909-1993). In the photographs Couchman, made up to look like a young woman of the austere 1940′s or ’50s, is seen wearing a succession of her grandmother’s hats, as though acting out the “role” of her own grandmother as she would have looked during that period.
Carole Denford
The Hat Magazine No. 43. November 2009, page 42
Mrs. West’s Hats review – Country Life, ‘Hats off to new book’

in print
Hats off to new book
A young British artist this week unveiled a striking and stylish hardback book that features 60 self-portraits in which she wears a succession of her late grandmother’s vintage hats. Helen Couchman, who grew up in rural Wales andHampshire, re discovered the collection, from the 1940s and 50s, in a chest of drawers after the death of her much-loved grandmother, with whom she spent part of her childhood. To explore inheritance, heritage and memory, Couchman resolved to photograph herself wearing every hat she found, and the result is Mrs West’s Hats.
Despite the austerity of the post-war era, the hats are lively and full of character – demonstrating perhaps that imaginative milliners could give women a means to express themselves despite fabric rationing. Dr Anthony Gorman writes in his foreword: “As the example of Mrs West’s headgear shows, hats are as diverse and expressive as faces.”
Miss Couchman’s favourite is a close-fitting bright blue creation decorated with little imitation flowers. “It’s extraordinary, and you can see in the photo that my expression is a bit puzzled,” she says. “Another interesting one is in straw, designed in keeping with Christian Dior’s ‘New Look’ collection of 1947.”
Couchman exhibited the photographs in London and Armenia before publishing them in book form. The work follows another photographic project, Workers, a series of portraits of Chinese migrant workers who were building the infrastructure for last year’s Olympic Games.
Yolanda Carslaw
There and Everywhere – private view

There and Everywhere
Helen Couchman Liz Harrison David Webb
5th November 6-9pm
PRESS RELEASE
Like the numerous luggage labels from different locations pasted onto battered suitcases, artists’ journeys now take centre stage on the cultural landscape. In his manifesto of altermodernity Nicolas Bourriaud proclaims that in our era of globalisation, artists have become nomads ‘wandering in time, space and mediums’. And that their work now ‘arises out of negotiations between different agents from different cultures and geographical locations.’
The impetus for There and Everywhere began with painter David Webb’s focus on his grandmother’s journey made by sea in 1955 from Tanzania to London. This personal history, and his experiences of residencies overseas have led to his making work about travel and ancestry, which he interestingly describes as ‘a turn inwards’.
Reflecting on these themes Webb selected Helen Couchman and Liz Harrison to show alongside him in There and Everywhere. Each artist brings a distinct perspective to the project revealing surprising and unexpected connections between their painting, photography and video installation, so that the general somehow becomes the specific.
Liz Harrison’s practice spans a broad range of media, incorporating site-specific installation, lens-based projection, illusion and image. She is based in London and recently co-curated Concrete Dreams at APT, London (2008) and had a solo exhibition Perch at Five Years, London (2009).
Helen Couchman is a British artist currently based in Beijing. Her most recent solo show was at Gallerie Perif in Beijing where she showed a series of woodblock prints. In 2008 her photo portraits of migrant workers building the Beijing Olympic buildings were published in a book, Workers (gong ren).
David Webb is a painter based in London. His most recent solo exhibition was at SE 1 Gallery in London where he showed work made during a residency at Yaddo, in upstate New York. He showed at Transition Gallery in The Painting Room (2008) and was selected for Jerwood Contemporary Painters in 2009.

Transition Gallery Unit 25a Regent Studios, 8 Andrews Road, London E8 4QN
Update: 09/11/09 … Standing out for me are Couchman’s photographs so delicate and yet powerful. Corinna Spencer
Mrs. West’s Hats – London book launch

Dr Carol Tulloch in conversation with Helen Couchman
Book launch and book signing
6.30pm, 3rd November 2009
Phoenix Artist Club, 1 Phoenix Street, Charing Cross Road, London WC2H 0DT
Update: 04/10/09
Many thanks to Carol, Mauice and to everyone at the London launch for your interesting questions and good wishes.

Mapping the move
The UAL Centre for Drawing are inviting alumni to draw the Southhampton Row and Charing Cross sites before Central Saint Martins school, based there, moves to King’s Cross. The project is called Mapping the Move. The CSM Museum and Contemporary Collection are now the owners of the drawing directly below. I choose to draw in the two places where I constructed and exhibited site-specific pieces for my graduate MA show (1998) at Charing Cross Road.

CSM Charing Cross Road 8th floor landing, 30th October

CSM Charing Cross Road 9th floor studio, 30th October
Uncharted Stories – Opening
Uncharted Stories
Private View –› 6 – 9 pm October 29
Daniel Baker
Pedro Carvalho de Almeida
Helen Couchman
Annabel Dover
Dettie Gould
Sara Angel Guerrero-Rippberger & Rossella Emanuele
Hannah Hurst
Ope Sarah Lori
Catherine Maffioletti
Aaron McPeake
Marcela Montoya-Turnill & Cayetano H. Rios
Idit Nathan
Jane Norris
Deepan Sivaraman
Tansy Spinks
Deborah True
Anna Vickers
Senem Yazan
28 October –› 5 November, 2009
11 am –› 6 pm
The Triangle Space
Chelsea College of Art & Design
16 John Islip Street
London, SW1P 4JU
http://unchartedstories.wordpress.com


Uncharted Stories panel discussion
Thursday 29 October, 3:30 – 4:30pm
Triangle Space at Chelsea College of Art & Design
Open discussion on identity research with Uncharted Stories exhibitors:
Aaron McPeake
Ope Sarah Lori
Sara Angel Guerrero- Rippberger
Helen Couchman
Researcher at Chelsea, Dr Carol Tulloch
Update: 10/11/09


Thanks to IN for the photos
Mrs. West’s Hats review – Dakai magazine
To view this and the images selected see: www.dakaidakai.com
Dakai magazine is a new online journal of the independent arts devoted to creating a necessary, mutually nurturing bridge between the artistic communities of China and the rest of the world.
Beijing based artist Helen Couchman’s new book uses an eclectic collection of hats left to her by her departed grandmother to weave a striking and stylish narrative of an adventurous young woman and her exploration of identity and self-presentation.
A celebration of both her grandmother’s life and mid-twentieth millenary design, Couchman’s photographs ape the fashion photography of the time and resurrect an array of bold and colorful characters that although long out of “fashion” seem as vibrant and exciting as anything we’ve seen recently. The hats, all of which are authentic vintage, range in style from the colorful and classically feminine to the avant-garde, gently recalling a time before the sleekness of the modern era when a hat could serve as the proverbial “cherry on top” of a dignified yet colorful outfit.
Mrs. West’s Hats – Beijing book launch photos
In conversation with Stacey Duff and Dr Anthony Gorman



Thanks to Cissy B for the photos
At Frankfurt book fair 09
Find WORKERS 工人 and Mrs. West’s Hats at
Hall 8, Stand: 8.0 L971. 14 – 18 October
UCCA talk photos



Thanks to EC and Michael K for the photos
Shenzhen factory photographs for Die Zeit

in print
Die Zeit, 27th August 2009 No. 36. Page 20. Read here

Liu Yaping at work, Shan Ping City, Dongguan, Southern China

Factory owner, K K Wong, Shan Ping City, Dongguan, Southern China








