Talking Art

Group Leader: Robert Sedgley

Contact: rasart29@outlook.com or

Meeting Venue: Javea Players Studio, C/ Cronista Figueras Pacheco 6, Javea

Meeting Day and time: Fourth Tuesday of the month, 11am to 12pm

Accepts new members: Yes but contact Robert first before attending.

Cost : 2€ per person

Talking Art Meetings

The meeting takes the form of an illustrated talk of about fifty minutes or so with time afterwards for questions or discussion. We are concentrating on the Modern period, from the end of the nineteenth century; but any period, movement or particular artist may be focused on, pondered and discussed if a member requests.

In a recent Norwegian scientific paper, looking at of two groups of pensioners, it was discovered that those who looked regularly at artworks, and in particular modern ones with brighter colours, found a marked improvement in their health and general sense of well being. Also, a recent publication by the World Health Organisation cites research ‘proving’ that engaging in an art activity, as a practitioner or student, may actually extend yourSo there it is: ART IS GOOD FOR YOU.

Whether you are an experienced gallery goer or sporadic sightseer and would like to know a little more about art, about why a painting or sculpture is considered an important cultural icon, or wish to expand your present knowledge and look a little deeper into the background, the techniques and the lives of the artists, Talking Art is the space for the adventure. Come and join in the conversation or just listen and enjoy.

If you find Nigel Spivey’s subtitle – how humans made art and art made us human – to his Television Series (2005) How Art Made the World puzzling, and a challenge to your ideas, then the monthly meetings are for you.

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Meeting Report

Talking Art - Der Blaue Reiter

Talking Art – Der Blaue Reiter

March 24th 2026 About twenty members attended the second Talking Art meeting of the year. We looked at Der Blaue Reiter (The Blue Rider) group of artists which lit the touchpaper of a firework display of colourful paintings from 1911, flourished for a few years, only to be engulfed by the cataclysm of the First World War. Extinguished as a …