Anarchy in the basement
Transcription
Anarchy in the basement
KB DECORATOR PROFILE Anarchy in the basement Hidden away off a busy street in Clerkenwell, London is a subterranean print shop called T-Shirt Dave, one of the last remaining manual screen printers in what was once the beating heart of the capital’s print industry. Images visited its owner, Dave Brett to talk psychedelic art, Simon Cowell and rude tees at Glastonbury hedelia yc Pure ps rint poster p C lerkenwell, an uber-cool part of London that’s crowded with media and design companies and boasts the highest concentration of architects in the world, is an area that has changed hugely over the past 20 years. The jewellery shops still pack out Hatton Gardens, scene of last year’s audacious jewellery heist by OAPs, but the litho printers, type-setters and screen printers that used to call this area their own have moved on in the face of an increasingly digital world. Or most of them, anyway. Happily, Dave Brett, of T-shirt Dave, is still screen printing spectacularly coloured posters and T-shirts in the basement of his brother’s gallery, Bamalama Posters, on Leather Lane. The gallery itself is an early indication of what to expect downstairs in Dave’s workspace: currently hosting a punk exhibition, there are five authentic punk Tshirts strung across the room and beautifully coloured posters covering the walls. Given many of the garments from the punk era unsurprisingly failed to survive beyond the 70s, the T-shirts, all owned either by Dave or his brother John, form an impressive spectacle. Dave, a 52-year-old from Hackney in east London, quickly points out various items. There’s a poster he printed from a picture by 60s psychedelic artist Nigel Waymouth 60 IMAGES JULY 2016 There were a lot of Daves at the pub so I became T-Shirt Dave and a poster by Ben Eine, the artist who has worked with Banksy and created the picture David and Samantha Cameron gave to Barack Obama: “He’s at Glastonbury at the moment, painting a wall. I’m printing some T-shirts that he’s designed for the Big Issue to be sold at Glastonbury next week,” Dave reports. The tour continues downstairs with some skulls on a delicate fabric: “Here’s some material I’ve printed for Jo Wood, Ronnie Wood’s (of The Rolling Stones) ex-wife: she used these for cushions.” A lot of what Dave prints is used by charities for celebrities to wear, such as the Save the Children T-shirts worn by models Kate Moss and Naomi Campbell and media mogul Simon Cowell, although for Simon the crew-neck, all-over printed T-shirt was swapped for a one-off, more ‘Simonesque’ V-neck tee. The stories keep coming and make you want to pull up a chair and listen to Dave for hours, although this is impossible: he likes to work hard and party hard, he says, and with the Glastonbury festival taking place only a ” Dave ha rd at wo rk few days after Images’ visit this is the time for serious amounts hard work. As he has done for many years he’ll be selling T-shirts at the festival, although sadly this year the most gratuitously rude yet hilarious of his designs won’t be on sale. It’s the festivalgoers’ loss, although he has plans to replace it with something less obviously profane, but still easily capable of raising eyebrows. Even if Dave had time to stop for a chat, finding a chair to perch on for more than two seconds without being moved is an impossibility – every inch of the space is already being used, and then some. The sixcolour manual Hopkins carousel dominates the print shop, with brightly coloured screens still in place from a job Dave was printing for frozen yoghurt company Snog. Dave says of the Hopkins press: “Unfortunately it’s all in imperial measurements so if I want any parts I have to get them from America, but it’s the best carousel.” Orders range from one-offs to 500 pieces and Dave rarely prints longer run lengths as beyond 500 he feels his manual set-up www.images-magazine.com