Samantha Humphreys

Art, Photography, Inspiration & Education

Tag: pop

Connecting Through Music: My Own Take That Odyssey

Breathstealing (26 June 20262026)

I need to write this down while all the words are here in my brain and the elation is still bubbling away in my heart even though I fully intend to keep it there.

I am, as you will know, an advocate for creativity as a powerful tool to celebrate the small moments in life. By employing mindful practices, I have learned not only to recognize but also to appreciate those little snippets of time when my heart feels joy. These fleeting instances inspire me to capture my experiences in my journal, where I employ a range of media, from sketches, and watercolours to words and poetry. Through these creative expressions, I find a sense of space within which I can process my emotions and deal with them accordingly. I also teach these methods of how to harness and apply the powerful combination of mark-making techniques.

However, there is one particular experience that consistently overflows my heart with an abundance of good feelings, positive vibes, and sheer elation for a whole two-hour stretch, every couple of years or so. It transcends mere enjoyment; it is the excitement and shared love of something profoundly special that has the unique ability to unite many people. At said times, the world around me fades away, and I become immersed in a collective outburst of love. I am of course talking about Take That and the breath ‘stealing’ shows they put together. It’s not just the two hours that spark joy but the anticipation leading up to it, the overwhelming camaraderie shared with fellow ‘Thatters’, and the echo of laughter and smiles that linger long after the concert has ended.

I happened upon my first Take That concert in 1993, I was twenty one and of course, life felt tough. I was at the Chelmsford Spectacular at Hylands park which I went to every year, there was always someone good on. From that moment on, life just felt better and this was down to the pure energy and good vibes those boys gave to their audience in abundance. They gave a convincing impression of happiness and it was absolutely infectious.

This unified experiencing of music and the memories that are being stirred up with each word, each dance move (for me its Pray) and each smile from the stage makes the stadium a large scale, high intensity enrichment experience for those within. It’s like a workout for the brain, only it’s a wellbeing workout rather than a physical fitness type of exercise. I have always encouraged my girls to see their favourite bands because of the impact this had on me and now they are adults, they are seasoned concert goers like their mum and we have a shared understanding of the powers they can hold. This was the first time I have been to see Take That with one of them. It will now be a new tradition. One night with my long time friend and fellow Thatter Rhiannon in seated and another night standing with Ruby,

This is the most powerful example of the enormous power creativity holds to forge bonds and harness lasting memories that soothe our lives. Each encounter becomes a cherished memory, a reminder of how vital it is to seek out and celebrate those moments that fill us with joy, reminding us of our part as the embroidery in the shared fabric of humanity. But these are moments that need no documenting for reasons other than to be able to rewatch. This is not a safe method of retaining these memories. we all know that these records can disappear off up into the ….cloud….thingies or whatever. The documenting of these experiences are internal and our emotional responses are there for all time. We just need to make sure we hold on to them (on the lovely fluffy cloud that is living very nicely in my head right now).

Whilst I was waiting on both my trips to Stratford this weekend, I started a series of drawings of the little pockets of togetherness that was happening during the wait in the queues. I have also included in this series, people who were standing or sitting alone a the time I captured their image because they were part of the collective togetherness.

P.S In case you were wondering…Mark Owen from day one.

The End of The Night (27 June 2026)

A Big Fat Metaphor

 


 

Inspired by a recent mini task on the course I teach on where the students had to bring along a photograph and an object that holds meaning and has impact on their art practice.

The first image is a print I made a few years back, it is my Nans block of flats. At the time of making this piece, my Nan still lived there, and I was starting to think that one day, I would never visit there again. Over lockdown, my nan has become unable to live there alone and has moved into a care home.

As this is all happening over 200 miles away, she has turned 90 over lockdown with only socially distanced visits from family living nearby (thankfully most of the family live nearby) and filmed efforts and cards from the rest of us. It is now very unlikely that I will visit the flat again, however-as long as I can visit her eventually, what does that matter? I look forward to that day.

The second image is my object, it is a paperweight.

When my Grandad was alive, he was the caretaker of these flats and he had a workshop downstairs which was filled with things he was repairing and other paraphernalia. I loved visiting him down in this workshop and I can still remember the smell of it. I have had this paperweight for as long as I can remember, initially it was just special as my grandad gave it to me, for a long time I didn’t even know it was a paperweight it was just a fascinating colourful object-it had been thrown away by someone and he rescued it.

Later on, when I was older, I learned that the pattern I was so fascinated with had been created using a technique called Millefiori, which I taught myself with clay when I used to create dolls house food. The way it works is that you work carefully with a short fat cylinder, making it a long thin cylinder which you finally slice and somewhere inside, there is the perfect slice of orange, kiwi or hot cross bun. Thats how it works with clay anyway, I have less of an idea of how it is created with glass as in my paperweight.

I keep this paperweight on my desk, I see it every day while I’m working from home. I think of this technique as a metaphor for how art practice develops and therefore it helps me both in my art practice and my teaching practice.

As an artist, when you are developing ideas, you have all your thoughts, sketches and ideas rolled up within your fat cylinder of clay, then you carefully and thoughtfully work your way through all these ideas and sketches, teasing out the ideas but carefully preserving the whole idea which will eventually narrow down to one you will use. When you have your long thin piece, you slice away at it with care, then eventually, after much thought, somewhere inside that cylinder, you find your perfect slice of final piece which makes all the hard work worth it.

The point is, there is going to be lots of what could be considered waste at either end of the cylinder, but the final outcome would not be possible without the discarded bits that help you get there.

But also, it’s important to remember that no art is a waste and should not be discarded!

 

Seriously?

Life is so unfair…. with age comes wisdom, sometimes!

seriously

No Further Searching

We have developed a dependency on those devices that provide us with all we need to know about the world and they are all we need to let the world know about us. How about if there was nothing more than what was contained within the edges of the box we hold in our hand, no further searching, no further discovering….

woodendisplay

Devices

 

We have become dependent on our devices as a source for everything, I wonder how long it would take if we stopped receiving our news in this way? Would we panic? Would we soon get used to it again?

fakedevices

More Than Just A Public Space

morethanpublic

I have been exploring how the digital documentation of our lives online using social media is infiltrating our physical being. Public spaces are no longer limited to when we step outside the front door. Spaces we share extends beyond physical public spaces, parks, shops, nightclubs and bars.

Over the last few years we have begun to play out our lives online, documenting what we do, where we go, what we eat and how we look. We seek the world’s approval while we do all these thing and in addition, the world seeks our approval.

But maybe now there is no divide between our online presence and our physical lives, perhaps it has become one reality. 

#ineedyourapproval

Do we need to document our life in this way?

ineedyourapproval

#wakeupandsmellthecoffee

The trend of constantly documenting our life online is seeping into and affecting our ‘real’ life. This disturbs me.

wakeupandsmellthecoffee

Same in our Uniqueness

A study of how society allows for total absorption of the media and popular culture into our own lives.

notconforming

lostinpop

optout