How and why Kate Prior turned to cheffing over lockdown
The London-based illustrator told us all about a significant side project that kept her busy during the first lockdown last year.
- Date
- 18 June 2021
- Words
- It's Nice That
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Headlining June’s Nicer Tuesdays event was Kate Prior, the London-based illustrator you may know for her colourful, fun and bold style which is full of life. During the first lockdown, Kate and her partner found themselves in a new area but with no way to meet the locals. To keep themselves busy, and use their creativity in a very different way, they decided to set up their own pop up pizza business. In a detailed Q&A with our editor-in-chief Matt Alagiah, Kate explains how they raised over £1,000 for local food banks, and how Short Road Pizza came about.
Before launching into the pizza chat, the illustrator told us more about how her illustrative career launched, and how it was actually a side project to begin with. Mentioning a few key projects which bring us up to date with Kate’s practice thus far, Kate then told us about the visual branding of Short Road Pizza, which saw her incorporate friendly characters and joyful design decisions along the way. A significant side project birthed from a very difficult time for a lot of people, Short Road Pizza not only gave back to the community, it also taught her a lot about her own creativity too. Peppered with questions from the audience throughout the Q&A, Kate rounded up her talk with some good advice for anyone thinking of embarking on a new side project: “Just give it a go. I’m scared of things going wrong or not going well, but this has been a lesson in the opposite.”
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One of the most innovative artists and designers of the 20th-century avant-garde, Sophie Taeuber-Arp (1889-1943) challenged the borders between abstract art, design and craft. Tate Modern’s major exhibition will be the first in the UK to trace Taeuber-Arp’s accomplished career as a painter, architect, teacher, writer, and designer of textiles, marionettes and interiors. Showing from 15 July - 17 October 2021, the exhibition brings together over 200 objects from collections across Europe and America, the exhibition will show how she blazed a new path for the development of abstraction.