by rathbone » 05 May 2012, 07:22
I was trawling the net for something on Ray Petri when I came across an interview that Mark Hooper conducted with Judy Blame in 2004.
If you haven’t come across him, Judy Blame is definitely worth seeking out...... rubber bands, feathers, champagne corks, pill bottles, stamps......
Judy Blame used to be called Fred Poodle. Before that he was Chris Barnes from Leatherhead. He is classic example of how to transform yourself. If you were to make a movie of his life, it would definitely be a trashy, low-budget affair. In the late 70's and early 80's, London was the centre of the night-life world, and Blame, who ran away from the Devonshire countryside at 17, penetrated its core. “Well, if you’re talking about attitude, I ran away from home when I was 17. This was ’77. I didn’t know what running away entailed. It started with the music and the visuals of punk rock. I just saw people with pink hair playing in mad bands and just went for it.”
'' I couldn't afford a new outfit every week, so I had my David Holah chemise -- a long
plain muslin dress -- and just used to make a new piece of jewellery each week. When I hadn't got the money, I had to use my imagination. I used to go and scavenge around the River Thames. I didn't have any fear about using something that wasn't classic jewellery material.'' As time went by, these jewels became increasingly over the top -- and so did their creator. Blame took to transforming himself, from ghostly pale aesthete (a latter-day Jean Cocteau, all beret and pan-stick makeup) to a wild, hairy Buffalo Bill character.
As the host of his own nightspot called Cha Cha's, he wasn't so much a party animal as a party monster: a catty hard act with a forte in withering looks and lines to match, fueled by a cocktail of amphetamines and ''All About Eve'' repartee. Part diva, part demon, he was also the creator of divine accessories that had the New Romantics swooning.
Thirty years later, Blame's personal appearance is tamer, but his creative ingenuity and irreverent attitude are still going strong. In essence, his designs are little more than a muddle of everyday objects. ''It doesn't have to be diamonds and gold or bling,'' he says. ''I see beauty in everything.'' Everything has included industrial chains, rubber, ropes and a Coca-Cola can run over by a car. ''One necklace when I first started I literally made out of string. Just a ball of string dyed in different colours with a few wooden beads in it.''
I suppose I first became aware of his work through the pages of iD. He seemed able to take anything..... cigarette packets, bits of string, coat hangers, wrapped chains, buttons, badges, drinks labels, brown paper bags ..... and make something magnificent from them.
Last year he was one of the judges of the Scottish Style Awards, which struck me as a little ironic because, as he says, “Me and the general public have always had quite a dodgy relationship.”
But, if you’re struggling to spend that spare five thousand quid you have lying around you could do worse than.........pearls, wooly pompoms, stars, shells, plastic six-pack holders, teddy bears.......
I have nothing to say and I'm going to say it.