The wife and business partner of celebrated of celebrated chef, Tom Kerridge, Beth has been instrumental in helping her husband Tom shape his vision for the two-Michelin starred Berkshire public house, The Hand and Flowers. Now that the twice-decorated pub has blossomed into a “garlanded mecca for food pilgrims”, (The Independent, February 2015), the distinguished sculptress, has swapped the front of house to return to her artistry and calling.
Beth’s forthcoming show is entitled, Supersuits and in this body of work, she has wielded the tools of her trade against the enemy, the moneymen with whom she and her husband have battled with since they opened a decade ago. When Beth and Tom Kerridge presented their business plan and intentions to win stars for their own establishment to the bankers he was a seeking a loan from, their joint ambitions were met with ridicule and mirth. The experience presented her with the inspiration – and an axe to grind – against the faceless officials that who frequently road blocked their success. It wasn’t just the bank managers and financiers, but the planning permission bureaucrats that have all fired her creative rage.
Rage against the machine
Beth’s artistic career, following her MA from the Royal College of Art has encompassed public commissions, solo exhibitions, work for world renowned artists such as Edwaordo Paolozzi and a seven year tutelage under the great British sculptor, Sir Antony Caro. After Beth sold a sculpture to the Stoke City Council, plus a tiny bank loan and help from family and friends enabled, they were able to get the Hand and Flowers off the ground. Deciding that it would be difficult to realise Tom’s vision by himself, Beth decided to put her distinguished artistic career on hold for three years (to get the pub to where they wanted it to be took nine). Beth’s gift of the gab and memorable, winning personality was the perfect foil to Tom’s cooking and they won a star within a year of opening. The British gastropub was the first public house in the UK to win two stars in 2011. The work on display is reflection on the challenges they faced, metaphors that so many creatives come up against on their journeys.
Stuffed shirts
Beth has been making a series of striking and beautiful sculptures of empty shirts and ties. Some of the sculptures are polished marble; some are cast-bronze button-downs with shark fins at the back. All of them are dedicated to the bankers who back in 2007 and 2008 not only bankrupted the world’s economy but also, in Marlow, almost drove the Hand and Flowers, and Beth and Tom were working towards, to the wall. The work itself, finely crafted stuffed shirts, grew out of frustration not anger, she says. “It always felt a bit like ‘grind it out or give in. I’ve even heard Heston [Blumenthal] say the same thing,” she says. “The day he got his second star all he could think about was whether he could pay his staff the next day.” In Cullen’s dynamic sculptures the suits are transformed into rearing serpentine forms; impassive, coiled, strangling or waiting to strike like a cobra. They offer a compact riposte to their years of struggle, whilst also providing a concise visual comment about the nature of power and male dominance – most importantly that they will be overcome.