Angel House is a restored listed Regency building on Brighton seafront.

'At Home ... bringing contemporary visual art and live performance together to question our 21st century notions of homemaking', said the blurb.

At Home did succeed in asking one question - what is your 21st century notion of how to best spend 15 quid.

The house itself is splendid, though some parts of it were sadly off limit.

There were six creative contributions to the event, ranging from Me and the Machine's hole in the laundry room door through which a film could be glimpsed, to Sarah Nicolls' vertical grand piano swinging like a giant metronome in the Regency Room.

The problem was not the contributors or what they were saying, but what their work had to do with the space and homemaking.

Jonny Fluffypunk's short spoken word rant about fatherhood, performed in the wonderful Best Bathroom, was most entertaining.

But why the bathroom? Any connection between the pieces and the building were tenuous at best.

Home Live Art, who curated the event, showed little imagination with this disappointing project.

It smacked of laziness and pretension. Even with the explanatory programme there was no cohesion and intermingling with the other visitors proved the best entertainment.