Sexton Ming


Sexton Ming is a British artist, poet and musician who was a founding member of The Medway Poets and Stuckism art movement.

Life and career

Ming was born in Gravesend, Kent, England. In 1979 he was one of the founder members of The Medway Poets group. He is an old associate of Billy Childish and collaborated with him on albums and films up until 2008 when Ming severed contact with Childish. Ming and Childish began recording again in 2011 and released a new collaborative release in 2012.
In 1999, Ming was one of the 13 original members of the Stuckists, a pro-figurative painting, anti-conceptual art, group, which was co-founded by fellow Medway Poets, Billy Childish and Charles Thomson. He exhibited in the group's shows, most notably being one of the "featured artists" in their first national museum exhibition, The Stuckists Punk Victorian, at the Walker Art Gallery during the 2004 Liverpool Biennial. He left the Stuckists in 2005 to pursue a solo career. He exhibits at the L-13 Gallery, London. In 2012, Ming contributed artwork to "The King of The Shale" single by Ex-Hefner guitarist Jack Hayter on Audio Antihero records.
He is married to Stuckist artist Ella Guru.

Discography

Solo albums, unless stated otherwise

  • Old Horse of the Nation
  • Ban the Mindreader
  • Six More Miles to the Graveyard
  • Birds With Teeth
  • Master of Gibberish
  • Endless Discipline
  • Rogue Male
  • Marshan Love Secrets
  • A Lifetime of Nervous Gutaches #1: Rare Recordings 1979–2002
  • Crumb Girl
  • Funk Child
  • Out to Stud
  • A Lifetime of Nervous Gutaches Volume 2: Rare Recordings 1979–2005
  • A Taste of Wood
  • Punks are sad, Hippies are cool
  • A Lifetime of Nervous Gut Aches Vol. 3 Rare recordings 1979–2010
  • Live at the 12 Bar
  • We Steal your Girlfriend
  • Hotchicu Blues
  • For the Love of Scrap
  • Beer Mat Chronicles
  • Coming Face to Face

    With [Billy Childish]

  • Which Dead Donkey Daddy?
  • Plump Prizes & Little Gems
  • Ypres 1917 Overture
  • The Cheeky Cheese
  • Here Comes the Fleece Geese
  • Dung Beetle Rolls Again