From 1990 to 1991, Guru travelled to Africa and India, then for the next year lived an Islamic lifestyle in an Algerian household in
Islington, London, where she was a waitress in a Mexican restaurant. The inspiration for the band came from UK garage rock and US punk, and their sound was a mixture of garage, punk, and pop. The name was a reference to the Mambo Taxi used by the heroine of the film,
Women on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown. Guru in an interview with NME's Sam Stallard in 1992, said the name was "tacky", and "with all sorts of different things in it that sort of clash, but everything’s useful as well as fun." In late 1992, drummer Anjali Bhatia left Mambo Taxi to start the
Voodoo Queens, along with Guru and others. After their first concert, they were offered a
Peel session by
BBC DJ,
John Peel. This was recorded in January 1993. Other radio and TV appearances followed, including a further two Peel Sessions, and a
busking competition against
Boyzone on Channel 4's music and arts programme
Naked City. The group reached number one in the
Indie chart in 1993.
Stuckism of
CNN International during
Go West at
Spectrum London gallery, October 2006 Guru started painting seriously again in 1997. of the pro-figurative painting
Stuckists, an anti-
conceptual art and pro-
figurative painting art movement founded by
Charles Thomson and
Billy Childish. She started the Stuckist web site, stuckism.com: against the
Turner Prize, 2000. Thomson said that most of the Stuckist groups made their first contact through the site and that Stuckism was "the first significant art movement to spread via the Internet." In 2000, she took part in the first
Stuckist demonstration against the
Turner Prize at
Tate Britain, and has done so in later years also. In 2004, she was one of the fourteen artists in the "founder and featured" section of
The Stuckists Punk Victorian show held at the
Walker Art Gallery for the
Liverpool Biennial. In 2006, she was one of the ten "leading Stuckists" in the
Go West exhibition at
Spectrum London gallery.
Painting Guru has stated her concern for ability and technique, and her admiration for the work of
Old Masters, although they are not necessarily her model for painting: she also appreciates untrained artists who show invention in their work. She spent three years painting life models at art college, which gave her much of the grounding for her approach to art. Her paintings take anywhere between two days and two years to complete, and usually start by her "going out and getting pissed with my friends", when she takes the photographs which provide the initial ideas, although the images she works from are often "very bad, dark, fuzzy photos", necessitating subsequent real life studies as well as imaginative interpretation. The initial layout is done with a line drawing, but the aim is to achieve a finished result where the subject appears three-dimensional. She has talked about an irrational obsession with shapes, such as those of wigs, which have always fascinated her. Her painting ''The Queen's Speech'' had its origin in Pennsylvania in the house of a friend, with whom Guru has collaborated for a number of years in setting up suitable scenes for photographs by dressing people in costume. This particular scene, showing Guru's husband, Sexton Ming, was the friend's idea. A photograph was the starting point for the painting, which was not started until Guru's return to London, but it was augmented by life studies and also the addition of extra items, such as the bottle of
absinthe. ==Honors==