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GREYS COURT EXHIBITION 2023

THE glorious setting of Greys Court is once again the backdrop for the Oxford Sculptors’ Group’s summer show.

Thirty-one artists will be participating in the sixth annual Sculptures in the Garden exhibition, starting next Saturday (June 10).

They will be showing 175 sculptures in stone, metal, wood, ceramic, bronze resin, glass, Perspex, steel, wire and bronze both in the grounds and indoors.

All the pieces will be available to buy and a share of the proceeds will go to the National Trust property near Rotherfield Greys.

Min Reid, who is based in the Cotswolds, will be taking part in the show for the first time.

Her pieces will include Lean on Me, a sculpture of an ancient Egyptian dog.

She says: β€œI started sculpting in lockdown. I started doing a few local courses and then I went to the Sculpture School in Devon, which is taught by a master of sculpture, Andrew Sinclair.

β€œI learned a lot from him and about anatomy. I still go back to him. I’m constantly learning about things like proportions.

β€œI’m just navigating the waters, going with my gut feeling about what I love and I love bringing awareness to endangered animals and to ancient animals.

β€œSculpting is very therapeutic for me in the sense that you’re just focused on what you have in front of you and something comes out of nothing, which is wonderful.”

Min is married to American singer-songwriter J. R. Richards of the alternative rock band Dishwalla, and the couple have four sons between them.

After a successful career in marketing, design, photography and film-making, she had to make some life changes 13 years ago when her 10-year-old son, Dom, was diagnosed with childhood-onset schizophrenia. He also has autism.

She says: β€œAs a mother, it’s just horrific but you just have to cope, you have to reinvent yourself.

β€œDom is the sweetest soul. He’s 23 now and he’s doing really well. He’s an artist too, so it’s all good.

β€œA lot of my work involves making short films to raise awareness, whether it’s mental health in children, or breast cancer, or people going blind, or early-onset Alzheimer’s. I just have a mission to reduce the stigma.

β€œFunnily enough, I met my husband through Dom as he is also a singer and a songwriter.

β€œJ. R. and I had both previously been married and I was living in California when Dom put himself into a competition for best original song. I was training at UC Santa Barbara with a wonderful woman called Lynn Koegel in understanding
autism.

β€œI was a bit nervous of him entering this competition but he had his little rock band and he had written four songs about his psychosis.

β€œI thought, β€˜Oh Lord’ but they ended up winning. As the prize, they got to go on national radio, to be one of the headliners at a music festival and to play at a nightclub.

β€œI thought, β€˜Oh blimey, this is a can of worms’ but I asked a friend whose kids were in a band and he said, β€˜Look, I’ve just been working with this amazing chap. Call him.

β€œHe told me his name but he didn’t tell me that he was a rock star, who was massive in America in the Nineties. It was love at first sight.

β€œI have three sons and J.R. has one son, who is also on the spectrum, so together we have four. Twelve years later, it’s just fantastic and wonderful.”