Stacia

Stacia (full name Stacia Blake), born 26 December 1952 in Ireland, was a dancer for the English rock group Hawkwind. She is now a professional artist.

Contents

With Hawkwind

Stacia joined the band in 1971; however accounts vary as to how and why she began working with the band. Liner notes to In Search of Space indicate that poet and lyricist Robert Calvert recruited her for live shows; other sources state that she was a friend of Nik Turner, saxophonist and flautist for the band. In an interview in British music magazine Melody Maker, Stacia herself stated that she attended a show and, inspired by the music, got on stage and performed an impromptu dance to the band's music. She immediately became an integral part of the live show after joining in 1971.

According to a 1974 interview in Penthouse, Stacia was six feet tall and "happily bisexual"[1]. She regularly augmented her visual impact by performing topless or nude, her body decorated in iridescent or luminescent paint. In a 2007 BBC Four documentary, Lemmy described her as 6 ft 2 inches tall with a 52 inch bust and a bookbinder by trade. The same documentary said that she was working as a petrol pump attendant in Cornwall when she joined the band.[2]

Stacia regarded what she did with the band as interpretive dance, and was an integral part of the early to mid-1970s Hawkwind show, particularly during the Space Ritual era. She left Hawkwind in 1975 after touring with them for the Warrior on the Edge of Time album. Her departure, along with that of Lemmy (who went on to form Motörhead) and Robert Calvert, signaled the end of an era; though Calvert, after a guest appearance with the band at the Reading festival, decided to rejoin the band full time towards the end of that year.

After Hawkwind

After leaving Hawkwind, Stacia returned to private life and married Roy Dyke. As former Hawkwind manager Doug Smith said in the October 2000 issue of Classic Rock magazine, "The last anybody heard, Stacia was married with children and living in Hamburg with her husband Roy Dyke, formerly of Ashton, Gardner and Dyke." The couple have a daughter, Aysha Dyke, who lives in Hamburg and is currently in the band Generations of Music.[3]

Stacia is now living in Ireland and working as an artist.[2]

She has said about her work: "[It..] is greatly influenced by my love of nature, in all its aspects. Landscapes, people, animals, sound and movement. All these things permeate my being. I allow them to become part of me. After a time of reflection, all these impressions culminate in the creation of inner landscapes which are then released to create the images you see in my work."[3]

Artistic education

1990 Freie Kunstschule, Hamburg / Germany
1992 Limerick Senior College / Ireland
1993 Crawford Collage of Art and Design / Ireland
1995 Erasmus exchange, Finland

Exhibitions

Solo Shows

1995 Taidemuseo - Joensuu / Finland
1999 The Daffodil Gallery - Ireland
2000 Oisin Gallery - Dublin / Ireland
2001 Tinahely Courthouse Centre - Ireland
2001 Domamaise Theatre & Centre for the Arts - Ireland
2002 Kolin Ryynänen - Koli / Finland
2002 Galleria, Petra Raasio - Joensuu / Finland
2003 Bank of Ireland - Dublin / Ireland

Awards

2001 Art Flight Air Lingus / Arts council
2001 Three month residency at Koli, Finland (Arts Council, Joensuu, Finland)
2005 Tyrone Guthrie Bursary (Arts Office Laois, County Council, Ireland)

Group Shows

1997 Bank of Ireland Exhibition - Skerries / Ireland
1998 Sunlight Studios - Ireland
1999 Sunlight Studios - Ireland
1999 Post War Art & Design at Philips Auction House - Edinburgh / Scotland
1999 Sunlight Studios - Ireland
2000 Sunlight Studios - Ireland
2001 Sunlight Studios - Ireland
2002 Blue Leaf Gallery - Dublin / Ireland
2002 Sunlight Studios - Ireland
2003 Blue Leaf Gallery - Dublin / Ireland
2004 Balbriggan Art Festival - Co. Dublin / Ireland
2005 Balbriggan Art Festival - Co. Dublin / Ireland
2006 Nebenan Ausstellung - Berlin / Germany

References

  1. ^ Long, tall "Stacia - the six foot lady with the two-way sex life", interview in Penthouse, 1974
  2. ^ a b Simon Chu (Director), Tim Cumming (Writer) (2007-03-30). Hawkwind: Do Not Panic (Documentary). BBC. 
  3. ^ a b Classic Rock Magazine. October 2000. 

External links