Advertising helps fund Big Issue’s mission to end poverty
Art

Artist creates stunning wildlife collages using scraps of The Big Issue

Carole Baughan previously raised nearly £500 for The Big Issue by selling her art and has even bigger plans for after the crisis

carole baughan

Big Issue readers are a talented bunch, and they’re always finding creative ways to support our vendors.

This was recently demonstrated by Maidenhead-based Carole Baughan, who creates striking artworks by carefully cutting up pages of the magazine and arranging them in animal-inspired designs, most recently created the image of a stag (pictured above).

Baughan, a retired former midwife and teaching assistant, has been creating the collages for ten years and already has a record of using them to raise cash for The Big Issue.

“It was an idea I had at my art class,” she said. “I wanted to do a collage of a golden eagle and I had a copy of the magazine in my bag. I gave it a go and it worked.”

The “wildlife-daft” amateur artist sold a number of the pieces in 2015 and raised nearly £500 for The Big Issue Foundation, our charitable arm.

Fast forward to this year, Baughan said she turned back to her art – and The Big Issue – to help keep her occupied during lockdown.

Advertising helps fund Big Issue’s mission to end poverty
Advertising helps fund Big Issue’s mission to end poverty
carole baughan stag
carole baughan stag

“It’s so wonderful how you have managed to look after the vendors,” she said. “And having the magazine subscription delivered is amazing.

“I read my mag from cover to cover and pick them up whenever I’m away.”

Her art has previously gone international – after the amateur artist picked up a copy of The Big Issue Australia while in Perth and used it to create the image of a tui, a bird native to New Zealand, for her sister-in-law’s birthday.

The artist said each pieces takes her between two to three days to complete, starting with a pencil drawing from reference photos.

“Then I take the magazine and leaf through it looking for print, colours and type that suits what I’m doing,” she said. Baughan has even created several hedgehog pieces using the crossword and sudoku squares from our puzzle section.

There’s a hidden Easter egg to be found in each piece too. She makes sure a piece of print with The Big Issue’s web address is on a scrap hidden in the picture – take a look towards the bottom of the stag.

“I’ve bought the The Big Issue all my life,” she said. “I think you have all done a marvellous job of getting the vendors off the street and reinventing the way we can all get the magazine.”

And Baughan hopes her art can go on to help support our vendors when the crisis has passed, with plans to organising an exhibition of her work to raise more money for The Big Issue.

Art is helping people get through the pandemic in a big way. We spoke to the organisers at the 240 Project which has been helping vulnerable people through isolation by making sure they have creative outlets, even if they have to meet on Zoom.

Advertising helps fund Big Issue’s mission to end poverty

READER-SUPPORTED SINCE 1991

Reader-supported journalism that doesn’t just report problems, it helps solve them.

Recommended for you

View all
Cranhill Arts Project: Meet the Glasgow community group that painted itself a better future
Art

Cranhill Arts Project: Meet the Glasgow community group that painted itself a better future

'If you think I'm a dirty crackhead, that's fine': Artists Slawn and Opake talk mistakes and success
Opake takeover

'If you think I'm a dirty crackhead, that's fine': Artists Slawn and Opake talk mistakes and success

Road sign artist Suto: 'I don't want to make something that will be loved by everyone'
Opake takeover

Road sign artist Suto: 'I don't want to make something that will be loved by everyone'

Artist Will Blood wanted to be a rock star – but pop-punk's loss is the art world's gain
Opake takeover

Artist Will Blood wanted to be a rock star – but pop-punk's loss is the art world's gain