SPOILED ROTTEN
Created by Michael Scott-Smietana and Clive A.C. Green
Spoiled Rotten
BBC hails it as "Brilliant idea"
Spoiled Rotten
ITV London says, "See it before it walks out of the gallery."
Spoiled Rotten
Oxfam says, "Makes people think. We're behind it."



Spoiled Rotten is a public exhibition of mildewing fruits, vegetables, and assorted leftovers, assembled into a visionary art form.
It's an artscape that is constantly changing. But can it change people's attitudes?
As London's ITV news reviewed the exhibiton, their presenter observed;
"We're all guilty of these little crimes."
Surprisingly attractive and tactile, the exhibits have drawn praise for their colour, texture and societal implications.
Previous exhibitions of Spoiled Rotten have featured mouldy food hygenically encased in glass.
But it's time for a more provocative approach.
We now feel that a full , unshielded kitchen installation is essential.
The kitchen will be stocked with foods that have become rotten, through over-indulgence and neglect.
Visitors will be required to wear face masks, handed out at the door.
This installation of mouldy foods will not only be a salute to metamorphosis, but will fully underline the wastage so prevalent in our affluent society.

"Spoiled Rotten Art and Theatre" Copyright 2000-2020. All rights reserved.
THE ARTISTS
Clive A.C. Green is a playwright and author, teacher, exhibiting ceramicist and alternative artist, most recently at The Museum of Everything 2010 at the Tate Modern, London.
He is now permanently resident in Paris.
Michael Scott-Smietana is an architect and also an established award-winning writer for major advertising agencies globally.
He is co-authour with Clive on the satirical theatrical adaptation of Spoiled Rotten.
He is resident in Toronto, Canada.
Living works of mould. A celebration of change. An indictment of affluence.