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Bootcamps ‘game-changer’ for working class artists

December 13, 2025 3 Mins Read


Handout Artist Tara Harris stands next to paintings displayed on a gallery wall.Handout

Award-winning artist Tara Harris said her confidence received “a massive boost”

A bootcamp to help artists get their careers off the ground has seen participants get their work into galleries and magazines.

The 10-week programme to help working class artists in the West Midlands has run twice this year and was developed by Birmingham-based art curator and critic Ruth Millington.

She said the art world was notoriously hard to get into, “particularly those without connections or inherited wealth”.

Sandra Palmer, known as The Brummy Artist, who has shown her work in exhibitions in Birmingham and London, said the programme was a “game-changer”.

Six artists from the first bootcamp have gone on to show their work in galleries and all 20 have had press coverage, including in the magazine Stylist.

The programme, Get Gallery Ready, funded by West Midlands Combined Authority (WMCA) and based at Solihull College & University Centre, is free for visual artists in the region.

Handout Suminder Virk stands next to paintings displayed on a gallery wall.Handout

Surminder Virk has shown work in the UK and India with Runjeet Singh Gallery

Handout Robbie Jefcott, now represented by Lux Gallery, stands next to paintings displayed on a gallery wall. He has a bag over his shoulder, a gold watch and a glass in his hand. Someone is standing in front of him taking his photograph with the artwork.Handout

Robbie Jefcott is now represented by Lux Gallery

Birmingham-based painter Tara Harris said her confidence, belief and motivation to be seen as an artist received “a massive boost”.

Yulia Lisle, originally from Ukraine, went on to secure her first solo exhibition, A Moment to Gather, at Nook gallery. She said the support “changed everything”.

Handout Ruth Millington stands with her hands under a painting displayed on a gallery wall. There are stepladders behind her as the exhibition is put together.Handout

Ruth Millington said she wanted to level the playing field

One of those taking part, Odette Campbell, works in textiles and creates abstract embroidery.

She said taking part had given her “extra belief that stitch does have a place in the art world”.

Ms Campbell is running a six-week craft club on Tuesdays at Wolverhampton Art Gallery next year.

Artists in the second bootcamp are currently showing their work in the exhibition Winter Folk, which runs until 10 January at The Courtyard Gallery.

Handout Sandra Palmer, known as The Brummy Artist, stands next to paintings displayed on a gallery wall.Handout

Sandra Palmer, known as The Brummy Artist, has been featured in Stylist magazine

Ms Millington, who previously worked for galleries in London, said the art world was fiercely competitive and difficult to navigate, and art school did not tend to teach artists how to prepare for galleries.

“I wanted to level up the playing field,” she said.

At WMCA, Hayley Pepler said the authority had been “thrilled by the phenomenal success” and how the bootcamps had responded directly to local needs.

Mitch Schofield Odette Campbell is seen in the middle of a photograph of three women. They are standing together at an event and there is a crowd of people around them.Mitch Schofield

Odette Campbell is running a craft club at Wolverhampton Art Gallery



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