Alexander Rodchenko by Olga Sviblova, Moscow House of Photography/Multimedia Art Museum.

 

 

pic 1. Skira

A leading representative of the Russian avant-garde, Alexander Rodchenko (1891– 1956), revolutionized the world of graphic art, design and photography. There are more than 250 illustrations featured in this volume and it is this fulsome range that helped me to grasp the force of this innovator. In fact, I devoured it.

 

It is more than  a collection of his work. As Rodchenko’s camera captured images, he didn’t just experiment with interesting angles, with light and shade, but also captured the Soviet World and its inhabitants. He drew back the curtain on a fascinating era. I feel one could call him a photo journalist. I had a sense that it wasn’t just the image that was important for him, but that which he was photographing. He was interested in the world – did he also want to modernize that, as well as the world of photographic images?

 

All of this, for me, gives the book an important and emphatic depth.

 

Rodchenko’s works bear witness to his many collaborations and friendships, evoking not just the image of a brilliantly creative personality but a unique phase in twentieth-century history. I kept turning the pages, admiring his brave perspectives and aware that I was examining the advance guard of photography today.

 

Complementing the volume are contributions by Olga Sviblova, the director of the House of Photography / Multimedia Art Museum of Moscow, by the grandson of the artist and leading scholar of his work Alexander Lavrentiev, in addition to writings and testimonies by Rodchenko himself and his daughter Varvara.

 

I found this publication by Skira in turn moving, fascinating and enlightening. It is an overview. It made me want to see his work in exhibition.

 

Alexander Rodchenko by Olga Sviblova.   Hb Skira £36.00

Seafood Tarts

Spring is in the air so I have a doozy of a recipe for you today, Seafood Feuillettes, deliciously tasty, puff-pastry cases full of delicious seafood in a creamy vermouth sauce. Now before we start I don’t want you to panic at the thought of puff pastry, I’m going to put up my hands up right now and admit straight away few of us are lucky to have the time and patience to perfect the technique of making puff pastry at home, even after hours of practice I struggle to get an even rise and perfect bake. The solution, used correctly the bought-in product is practical, versatile and very labour saving. Rich, buttery and flaky, ready-made puff pastry can top a rich fish pie, enclose marzipan and fruit for a luxurious dessert or make simple crisp cheese straws to nibble.

Seafood Tart

Puff pastry can also be used to make savoury hors d’oeuvre or bite sized appetisers. The most famous of these being little-stuffed Vol-au-vent cases topped with a little lid or delicate Crolines, small lattice topped parcels. My recipe today is how to make the third, great little tartlet case that can be used in a savoury starter, light lunch or filled with whipped cream and fruit as a simple, elegant dessert.

Feuillette Pastry Tarts
I have used many fillings in Feuillettes, roasted Provençal vegetables topped with whipped Goat’s cheese and a little rocket dressed with sea salt and Balsamic, creamy garlic mushrooms or a seafood medley as well as fruit purées and Confectioner’s custard, glazed poached peach halves and raspberries.

Puff pastry ( ready made or homemade )

Egg wash

Preheat your oven to 400F / 200C / Gas Mark 6. Roll out your pastry on a lightly floured work surface. Cut into squares 4 by 4 inches for a large case 1 1/2 inch squared for smaller bite size tarts.

Tart 2

Carefully cut  two L – shapes into the pastry like the picture above. Make sure to you leave to small pieces of uncut pastry to hold the edges together. Egg wash the pastry square the fold over the cut pastry strips.

Tart 3

Egg wash the tart case again including the sides of the pastry. Dock or prick the center of the case with the tines of a fork, this will prevent the center rising. Transfer to a non-stick baking sheet and chill in the fridge for 15 minutes to relax the pastry. This will help prevent the pastry from shrinking. Place in your heated oven and bake for between 10 to 20 minutes depending on the size of your feuilette, until crisp and golden brown. Remove to a wire rack and cool. You can make your cases ahead of you needing them and store in an airtight container.

 

For the Filling

 

6 -8 Gamba’s or large Shell on Prawns

500 gr Fresh Mussels Fresh Clams

500 gr Fresh Clams

12 Scallops

6 large Banana Shallots, peeled and finely diced

3 cloves of Garlic, peeled and crushed

A small handful of fresh Dill

200 ml thick double cream

50 ml of Vermouth ( White Wine is a great substitute )

25 ml Olive Oil

25 gr Butter

Juice of one fresh Lemon

Sea Salt and freshly ground Black Pepper

In a large, heavy-bottomed pan ( with a tight fitting lid ), melt the half of the butter and add half of the oil. Over a medium heat soften the shallots for ten minutes without colouring. Add the garlic and cook out for two or three minutes stirring continuously. Tip in the mussels and clams and add the Vermouth place on the lid add steam the shellfish for five to six minutes. Carefully holding the pan with a heat proof cloth remove from the heat. Place a colander in a large glass bowl and tip in the mussels and allow to cool. Reserve the cooking liquid to be used to make the final sauce.

When cool pick the majority of the mussels and clams from their shells leaving a handful for garnishing. Carefully pour the cooking liquid through a fine strainer into a small pan and place on a medium heat. Bring to a simmer and reduce the volume by half. Add the cream and simmer for a couple more minutes before seasoning with a generous grind of pepper. Melt the remaining butter and oil in a large heavy-bottomed frying pan and saute the gambas, over a gentle heat, for three minutes before turning up the heat and adding the scallops, turn over the prawns and the scallops as soon as they are brown. After two more minutes remove from heat, squeeze over the juice of one lemon and keep warm.

Heat the mussels and clams gently in the sauce. Take care not to boil or the shellfish will toughen, add the remaining lemon juice and finely chopped dill, taste and add more pepper if required. Place a warm pastry case onto a deep lipped plate and carefully spoon in the picked mussels and clams. Add a couple of scallops then fill with sauce and top with the prepared lids or a large prawn. Spoon around a little extra liquid and the retained shellfish in shells and sprinkle with a little extra dill to garnish.

 

La Source by Crabtree and Evelyn – Perfect for a Mother’s Day Mini Spa

 

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It’s officially spring and Mother’s Day is fast approaching. If you’re still stuck for gift ideas to show your mum what she means to you why not give her a taste of summer.

That’s what the latest products from the La Source range at Crabtree & Evelyn reminded me of.

Formulated with restorative mineral salts and nutrient-rich seaweeds the range smells of the ocean, time on the beach and fresh, clean air. It totally lifted my spirits and reminded me of carefree summer days. Exactly what I needed during the last grey days of winter.

The La Source collection is designed to restore, condition and rejuvenate the skin from head to toe. Formulated with a blend of ingredients including underwater algae, mineral salts and seaweeds the products in this collection allow you to immerse yourself in spa-like rituals.

The products I tested were perfect for pampering myself with on a quiet night in.

ONHT__LaSource

Overnight Hand therapy

Treat your hands to an intensive “beauty sleep” therapy with this specially formulated night-time preparation. A concentrated complex of vitamins and amino acids, including arginine, enhances the skin’s natural barrier, maintains its natural moisture levels and soothes dryness.

The rich and easily-absorbed formula contains a concentrated complex of vitamins and amino acids to enhance the skin’s natural barrier functioning, protect and restore dry skin, soothe and maintain its natural moisture levels

Apply nightly and awaken to smoother, softer, nourished hands.

£19 (75g)

80746_La_Source_Ref_body_mist_straight_HR

Refreshing Body Mist

I soon worked through the full bottle. It smells fresh but exotic  –  think Bahamas, blue sea and sky, white sand. I kept the spray on my desk as I worked. A quick burst on my arms now and again woke me up and made me  feel much more refreshed and alert. Try it for yourself. It features an anti-oxidant-rich green seaweed extract, and an amino acid blend to condition the skin leaving it soft and revitalised.

Botanical notes including sparkling citrus and green herbaceous tones are embraced by musk and fresh scents of peppermint.

£15 (120ml)

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La Source Effervescent Sea Foam Foot Soak

A luxurious spa experience for beautifully revived feet. Featuring a refreshing marine blend of anti-oxidant-rich green seaweed extract and purifying brown algae extract. Pour the contents of one packette into a foot tub filled with warm water and it quickly foams and bubbles up.  The citric acid acts as gentle exfoliator and the mineral-rich dead sea salts leave your feet soft and fragrant. Great for when you’ve been on your feet all day.

£12 (5 x 30g sachets)

www.crabtree-evelyn.co.uk

1/3 of Females Put Off STEM Careers

Photo of the Week- Women in STEM Introducing Girls to Engineering Credit-wikimediaA THIRD OF UK FEMALES INTERESTED IN STEM CAREERS ARE PUT OFF BEFORE LEAVING SECONDARY SCHOOL

 

  • 46% OF UK FEMALES AGED 16-24 HAVE CONSIDERED A CAREER IN A STEM INDUSTRY, BUT ONLY 13% ARE IN STEM ROLES TODAY*

 

  • 31% OF FEMALES AGED 16-24 BLAME LACK OF ‘REAL-LIFE’ CAREERS EDUCATION FOR THE LACK OF FEMALES IN STEM CAREERS

 

  • 23% OF FEMALES AGED 16-24 SAY THE WAY STEM SUBJECTS ARE TAUGHT AT SECONDARY SCHOOL PUT THEM OFF A STEM CAREER

 

  • 13% THINK STEM INDUSTRY WORK EXPERIENCE SHOULD BE MANDATORY

 

Debut, the student and graduate careers app has today published a report that reveals the reason why females aged 16-24 are not pursuing career aspirations in STEM industries. The report reveals that despite almost half (46%) of all females considering a STEM career while at school, only 13 percent make it through to fulfilling their plans.

 

The research, which involved 500 females aged 16-24 revealed that their interest in STEM careers ended before leaving secondary school. According to the females asked, the top five ways that secondary schools could fuel their interest in STEM careers more are as follows:

 

1)      Provide ‘real life’ STEM careers education, such as ‘a day in the life of’ videos (31%)

2)      Make STEM subjects more interesting to learn (23%)

3)      Make STEM industry work experience mandatory (13%)

4)      Promote the fact that STEM careers pay better salaries (10%)

5)      Promote the fact that career progression is better in STEM industries (9%)

 

The Debut app, which has been downloaded more than 50,000 times, has seen 88 percent of students register a profile, and from those registered, only 16 percent are females studying or graduating in STEM subjects, compared to 22 percent of males.

 

Since its launch 12 months ago, Debut has showcased 432 STEM roles on the app, however only 34 percent of all applications received were from females.

 

Debut has fast become the recruitment method used by most the UK’s leading graduate employers, includingEY, Microsoft, Barclays, Capgemini, Rolls-Royce, L’Oréal, and General Electric – they benefit from being able to ‘weight’ applications, especially in the STEM industries, to promote equal opportunities.

 

“It would be great to see more STEM employers going into primary and secondary schools, or better still, live streaming direct from their organisations into the classroom, to give young people an insight into what STEM careers involve. Companies would benefit from this time investment in the long-run.”

 

 

More Mother’s Day ideas…

 

I would still like to beseech you to buy tickets for The Girls Musical by Tim Firth and Gary Barlow. I know I’m going on about it, but you’d all enjoy it, laugh, cry and come out feeling wonderful. But also buy your mum a book, or several.

 

pic 1 M & BMy daughters’ nightmares all at once: Turing into Your Mother. It’s so funny, that even Mother (me) laughed.

The Mills and Boon Modern Girl’s Guide to Turning into Your Mother by Ada Adverse is a hoot. Horribly astute as well. Read it, and laugh, and then have a good think, and have a gin, a large one. Then another… Please read it. It will do you good.

Turning Into Your Mother by Ada Adverse   Mills and Boon. £6.99

What else?

CORPUS by Rory Clements . Quite different, but just as gripping, and you might well need a bit of a refresher during it. Very tense, not a lot of laughs, but a really good read, and concept.

pic 2 corpus

It’s 1936 – Europe is on the brink of a cataclysm. The Nazis have marched into the Rhineland, in a country house near Cambridge, an elderly couple are discovered brutally murdered. Has it anything to do with the looming abdication of Edward V111 and the unstoppable march of fascism?

Fascinating times, great book. So often they are from this publisher.

CORPUS by Rory Clements. Zaffre.   £12.99

 

So, CORPUS is the middle of the sandwich.

The Lavender House is the last slice. By Hilary Boyd

 

pic 3 lavender

 

Looks lovely, and is another great book, especially for Mother’s Day as its theme is how much duty do we owe to our families as we get older, and how much do we owe it to ourselves to chase happiness?

 

This really is a conundrum because we’re so much younger when we’re older, these days, if you get my drift. Is it enough to be granny, or should we still be dancing on table tops? Or if not that, surely we have the energy and wits to carve a third phase interesting life?

 

The Lavender House   Hilary Boyd. Pb £7.99. Quercus.

 

Mother’s Day Gift Discount On Ancestry DNA Kits

ancestory dna kitGenealogy is huge right now so this Mother’s Day, give your mum the exciting opportunity to discover more about herself and the unique stories hidden in her genes with the AncestryDNA test.

The perfect gift for the most important woman in your life, AncestryDNA  provides a personal ethnicity estimate from up to thousands of years ago from 26 separate regions across the globe (including Great Britain, Ireland, Scandinavia, Middle East, Asia Central, East and South and nine African regions). She can also uncover new family connections as the test matches users with a database of more than 3 million people worldwide who have taken the test.

The kit is very easy to use, you activate the kit online, gather your DNA – which is just some salvia, and then you send it away. You will then find out where you and your ancestors were from. Pretty exciting.

Available at www.ancestrydna.co.uk for £79 + postage but there is a special Mother’s Day gift discount up until March 26th: £69 + postage. That is £10 off.

 

Happiness tips for parents and their kids on International Day of Happiness

Happiness tips for exhausted and over-worked parents and their children on International Day of Happiness

International Day of Happiness – Monday March 20th 2017

 Happiness tips for parents and their kids on International Day of Happiness

Natalie Savvides is a married Mum of two young children under five who lives in South-West London. She is also the author of Full Circle, published in 2016 by Pegasus, which is a memoir with a difference. Natalie Savvides, now in her early 40s, has been called ‘the real Bridget Jones’ on many occasions, but the difference between her book – Full Circle – and the likes of Bridget Jones is that it’s 100% real!

 

Her book is packed with unedited extracts from her diaries from the age of 13 through to when, through a chance meeting, she fell in love with her husband, as well as memories and reflections on the different times of her life – from school playground politics to leaving home for university, finding her place in a different town, then in a different country, meeting new friends, discovering truths about people she thought were friends, battling an ongoing problem with her weight by eating erratically and drinking too much, the infamous dating game we are all too familiar with, launching onto the career ladder, burning the candle at both ends, and much more, Natalie’s life story is told with such raw authenticity thanks to the diary extracts.

 

Natalie hopes her book will be read by teenage girls so they know they are not alone in their thoughts and feelings, and for their Mums, so they can remember a little of what it used to be like growing up!

 

International Day of Happiness is coordinated by Action for Happiness, a non-profit movement of people from 160 countries, supported by a partnership of like-minded organisations.

 

Five of the suggested ten changes you can make TODAY to help you feel happier

International Day of Happiness – Monday March 20th 2017

 

1) Talk To Yourself: “It’s going to be a good day!”. Believe it. Every time something appears to get in the way remind yourself again: “It’s a good day”. Positive psychology can be powerful. Convince yourself that all is well and you will create a sense of wellbeing. Take time in the morning, in the afternoon and in the evening, even just a minute each time, to be mindful of where you are and what is happening around you. Tell yourself: “It’s OK, it’s a good day, I’m OK”.

2) Smile: It sounds like a cliché, I know, but it really works. Even if you don’t feel like it – smile. The act of smiling is proven to release stress. Smile at yourself in the mirror (force it if you must…), smile at others in the street. When you feel yourself getting stressed or anxious, stop and smile. You will feel the benefit throughout yourself.

3) Stop The Comparisons! Don’t compare others’ external worlds with your internal one. Lots of people project images that are not a true reflection of their real selves or lives. Social media is a perfect example of how we often only project the best version of our life – the happies photos, a comment about the best part of a day. People rarely share photos of themselves at their unhappiest. You don’t truly know what is happening in other people’s lives…Comparisons are the thief of joy!

4) Be Grateful: Gratitude cannot be underestimated. Focus on all the good things in your life and feel real gratitude for them – your health, the roof over your head, the hot cup of tea you just drank. Feeling grateful and appreciative sparks happiness and it builds momentum over time. The more you do it, the more it will come naturally.

5) Take A Deep Breath: Remember to breathe, take deep breaths from the bottom of your stomach, not shallow, quick breaths from the top of your chest. Be still and listen to your breathing for a few seconds and take a big, deep breath in through your nose and out through your mouth: five seconds in, seven seconds out. By doing this regularly, you will feel more relaxed and energised. The deep intake of oxygen circulates and energises the body and mind.

 

Natalie now dedicates her time to helping others with their problems, much like a ‘happiness coach’. While she may have been brought up in a ‘nice’ part of London, given opportunities to go to university, travel and enjoy exciting new experiences, Natalie also went through myriad challenges of growing up, finding her place in the world, and looking for love, like so many of us do (and quickly forget/erase from our memories as we get older!).

Her ability to recall the exact language and feelings of times in our lives that so many of us choose to forget gives her an incredible empathy with teenage girls, those in their early 20s living away from home for the first time, through to women in their 30s on the dating bandwagon trying to find love after a string of bad relationships!

In honour of International Day of Happiness Natalie will, on the morning of March 20th, be giving away free copies of Full Circle to teenage girls, career women and Mums on Kensington High Street. Her aim is to show these women that they’re not alone in their problems, that there is a light at the end of the tunnel, and to give people another reason to feel happy on this International Awareness Day.

Natalie is also going to be visiting secondary schools throughout south-east England, during the summer term and new academic year, to talk to them about the experiences and emotions that are so overlooked and not commonly discussed in schools, from bullying to eating issues, drinking to friendships, drugs to anxiety. She will be gifting each school a copy of her book – Full Circle – for the library. She aims to continue this connection with the teenage students by returning to the school to answer their questions after reading the book (the content usually sparks a series of questions) and to offer one-to-one support when required.

 

 

BLUSH by Charlotte Josephine

We’re all busy so maybe this is one to put in your diary before you’re booked solidly through to  summer.

pic 2 Blush

 

Blush by Charlotte Josephine

Following a sell-out run at the Edinburgh Festival, the award-winning BLUSH now transfers to Soho Theatre before embarking on a UK Tour. Written by Charlotte Josephine and presented by Snuff Box Theatre, the team behind the sell-out, multi-award winning Bitch Boxer, BLUSH tells five candid stories about image-based sexual abuse and all its many victims. BLUSH is a slap in the face and a call to arms.

Blush feels like powerful and important theatre on an urgently contemporary issue (The Daily Telegraph).

This angry, honest and heartfelt piece seeks to encourage and broaden examination of how the scarcity culture in modern society is fuelling our shame, encouraging the destructive belief systems that we are not enough.

Daniel Foxsmith and Charlotte Josephine (who won a Stage Edinburgh Award for BLUSH) lead this fast-paced production, exploring why society has a desire to shame, what it’s the result of and how we allow this to happen. BLUSH shines a light on the secrets we attempt to keep in the dark, our fears of disconnection and our attempts to be part of the tribe.

The catalyst for the piece was legislation passed in April 2015 to make revenge pornography a criminal act. The law now makes it illegal to disclose a ‘private sexual photograph or film’ without the consent of the person depicted. Many people consent to the creation of an image but having it made public is a very different matter. While revenge pornography may have been the catalyst of Blush, the true focus of the work is shame.

BLUSH is presented in association with Sphinx Theatre and has been supported by the Peggy Ramsay Foundation, Unity Theatre and Arts Council England.

@SnuffBoxTheatre, @sohotheatre, #BLUSHplay

Tuesday 16th May – Tuesday 6th June 2017 
Soho Theatre, 21 Dean Street, London W1D 3NE

Tour Dates:

6th – 10th June . 19th June 20th June 21st June 22nd – 24th June

Tickets are available from www.sohotheatre.com or 020 7478 0100 priced from £10.

Tour venues:

The Bike Shed Theatre, Exeter 162/3 Fore Street, Exeter EX4 3AT

Gulbenkian, Canterbury
Darwin Road, Canterbury CT2 7NZ

MAC, Birmingham
Cannon Hill Park, Birmingham B12 9QH

The Garage, Norwich
14 Chapelfield North, Norwich NR2 1NY

Wardrobe Theatre, Bristol
The White Bear, 133 Street, Bristol BS2 0DF