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Artist Statement

To see is to forget the name of the thing one sees. - Robert Valéry

 

I am interested in creating spaces that invite stillness and silence.  Making objects and sculptures that create a pause; a moment before recognition and words arise to name and possibly limit the experience of that work.  I am keen to amplify a space of not-knowing and explore what it might hold as potential for new ways of thinking and being in the world. To perhaps “smuggle a trace of something infinitely unknowable within the parameters of finite form.” I am also experimenting with mildly illusionary effects as a way to introduce a sense of the uncanny and find out if I can exaggerate that feeling.

 

Repetition plays a large part in my practice and I use casting as a way to achieve it. Inspired by Rachel Whiteread and Mária Bartuszová, I enjoy casting in both plaster and clay slip. I have found that repetition creates an opportunity to pay greater attention both in the making and the viewing.  I find it also offers a sense of calm as there is no competing information, it is simply the same thing is being said over and over again.  

 

I tend to work with a small range of materials:  plaster, clay, paper and wood,  and I am always interested in exploring ways to see, hear and feel the essence of the materials I am working with. By stretching, moulding, sanding, massaging, draping, allowing and hugging materials, can I enable them to reveal something more of themselves? Can I hear what Jane Bennett describes as the ‘call of the object’ ? And is repetition a way to amplify that call?  I am also curious about the possibilities of translating our viewing into feeling, or our touch into understanding and what those interactions might say about the objects and about ourselves.

 

I have wanted to create a larger work for sometime and the suspended brick wall allowed me to do so. The idea originated as a way to ensure I could curate a still, quiet space for my degree show and ended up becoming the work itself.  My attention had been caught by a brick from a local brickwork (which closed in 1972) and I was curious about how oppositional this brick was to the rest of my practice: dense, heavy, solid, fixed, purposeful. I began to think about the point at which a functional object loses its function and therefore becomes conventionally useless.  I questioned whether I could keep the form and subvert the function?  And how far I could stretch that abstraction?  In a paradigm where usefulness, productivity and purpose hold the superior position, what happens when an object is none of those things. And so, a brick made of plaster, a brick that is hollow, a brick that is white and fragile and useless materialised.  The abstraction of a brick led to the abstraction of a wall.  A wall that is fluid, floats, is unstable, ungrounded, insecure, see-through. The idea of a grout-less, suspended wall began to take shape.  

 

There is often a theme of precariousness running through my practice which links to my research and written theory around women’s inequality and the violence that is still perpetrated against them.  I was surprised at how this thread managed to appear in something as un-precarious as a wall.

(1) Cocker, E (2013)

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