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By: Lauren Healey
I'm intending this to be an on-going record of ideas, thoughts and progress of my practice.
Lauren Healey is an artist, curator and project manager based in Newcastle.
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Lauren Healey, 'Work in progress'. In progress - doily design being carved into brick wall
# 5 [16 December 2008]
Today, I've mostly been using a rotary tool to mechanically scratch paint off the base of a brick column. This has succeeded in giving me a sore back and knees, but as resolutely failed to do what I wanted it to.
When I've done this previously, the layers of paint beneath the surface were a pale colour, and even if I scratched too deeply and went back to the plaster, this wouldn't matter particularly. However, there seems to be some black paint under there somewhere, which means that the entire design is looking too dark, too obvious. (And also a bit like pencil lead, which ironically I used to draw the design on the wall in the first place. The way it looks currently, I really needn't have bothered with this time consuming scratching process).
When you get close enough you can see the layers of colour, which is interesting enough, but overall it's not working. Might try painting over it tomorrow, so all that's left is a scaring on the brickwork, a trace of the shape.
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Yes, I’m aware of some of the visual similarities between this particular body of work and Catherine’s practice, as there are between lots of artists work. I came to this particular way of working after becoming frustrated with the container that a framing device (be that an actual frame or the edge of a piece of paper) prescribed to my drawings and prints. I was also frustrated with representations rather than using actual objects. So I began to collect these old photographs, postcards and letters initially as a way into thinking about detachment and loneliness – I responded quite emotionally to this idea that such personal and private possessions could be disposed of as if they had no value. The carved lace patterns (which I assume you’re specifically referring to) came afterwards, as I began to be more interested in the domestic side of the ephemera I was collecting. I curated a gallery for a couple of years (Saltburn Artists’ Projects) and it was during this time that I became much more aware of how a particular space affects the reading of particular objects and how shifting them within this space also affects this reading. So these two areas I’m looking at developed independently, before I consciously started to bring them together about a year ago. However, I don’t think this work is ‘exactly the same’, as you put it. Although I know Catherine (both of us live in the North East) I only really began to know her work (and hence see the similarities) as I was researching ideas during this making process. I also think we’re approaching things from different angles. As I understand it, Catherine thoroughly researches the history of a particular space / venue, and then responds accordingly. For ‘Still Lives’ and for the work documented in this blog, I created the installation in the space, but it wasn’t made specifically for that space. Rather, part of what I was interested in was how the display and the response to the physical space altere
posted on 2009-02-02 by Lauren Healey
Catherine Bertola makes very similar work as this, involving the specific use of space. I saw her work for The Beacon Project in Lincolnshire a couple of years ago, and it astounded everyone who saw it, located in a derelict farmhouse, the use of space, the poetic narrative imbued by the work was quite magical. So I wonder, did you draw inspiration from Catherine Bertola, or is it purely coincidental that this is almost exactly the same as some of her work? http://www.axisweb.org/ofSARF.aspx?SELECTIONID=16403
posted on 2009-01-02 by Helen Dearnley
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Lauren Healey, 'work in progress'. First version of re-constructed dress
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Lauren Healey, 'detail of dress'. detailing of fabric which has had individual threads pulled from it
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'Lauren Healey'. work in progress - projecting images onto wall
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Lauren Healey, 'Lauren Healey'. doily on wall in progress
# 4 [15 December 2008]
Rather bizarre experience today – I received an email directly addressed to me from a-n about these blogs, only to find I was quoted in the first couple of lines. It’s mildly peculiar to read something addressed to you, that you’re speaking in – kind of like having a conversation with yourself. Apparently, I “dedicate my blog to a critical self-reflection” – and there I was concerned I was partaking in a large amount of self-indulgent rambling.
However, it has got me writing again – my head’s been getting a bit full the last couple of weeks, but I have made quite a bit of progress on where I’m coming from. More on that later.
For the moment, let me explain what I’ll be doing for the next week or two. I’m using a project space until the 5th Jan, so omitting time to visit family for Christmas, this gives around 10 days to work out some ideas, and try things out. Access to the internet on site isn’t yet possible, so although I’m writing this in the space, I’ll be posting it up later this evening, along with a few photos of Day One.
The dress on the mannequin is the in-progress culmination of two months work. The idea is that a second hand dress is used to suggest a trace of a person - it is stiffened in such a way, that the fabric takes on the shape a body, whilst also being ephemeral and fragile. I’ve spent a long time trying to find a way of chemically ‘thinning’ the cotton fibres in the fabric, only to have nothing work in the manner I want so far. I’ve therefore gone for option two for the purposes of these two weeks – I’ve been through the time consuming process of pulling out individual threads from a thin fabric, hence making it even more fragile. I’m applying starch to stiffen it, so it should hopefully be strong enough by the end of the week to support itself and the shape which is has taken on from the mannequin. A note on the mannequin – I wanted it to be quite a realistic form, so instead of using a dress-maker’s dummy, I did a body cast of a friend, then created a resin and fibre-glass positive. This took a long time. A really long time.
The other part of what I’ve been doing today is drawing lace and doily shapes onto the walls, which I will be ‘carving’ into said walls with a dremel tool in a few minutes. The positioning of these in the space is important – they need to be stumbled across, not particularly obvious at first sight. I’m putting them in corners, creeping up the wall, hiding out of sight. They’re a bit lonely, a little lost. And that loneliness, that sense of loss, decay and fragility is what I think my practice is about.
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# 3 [5 December 2008]
I've been feeling a bit numb recently. I think this is mostly due to reading lots of things I really ought to read (and many are really interesting - I've got books out on concepts behind collecting, interpreting objects, installation, aesthetics and The Poetics of Space) but then finding that it's quite difficult to actually make work. I've never gotten the balance right - I either read and think so much that I can't make work, or make work, so that when I look back on it later, feels rather concept-less.
I'm trying to work out my reasons for using the materials I use, and working with the objects I'm working with. I've often worked in quite a process based way, but I don't feel satisfied with that anymore - I don't think that it's challenging me intellectually enough anymore. The trouble is, a lot of things, I think I just like them, because they’re attractive visually.
The difficulty is that everything is so inter-reliant, that it's difficult to separate things, and then I find myself thinking about ways to go about thinking - I've decided that the way to try and solve this is to plan out what I need to make and what I need to read about. Otherwise I'll just not get anything done and I hate that.
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Cheers Amy, I’m really glad that I’m not the only one feeling like this. Nice and reassuring that there are other people dealing with similar issues in their making.
posted on 2009-02-02 by Lauren Healey
I completely relate to this at the moment. Perhaps its the result of being a bit of a perfectionist but I am quite obsessive about concept and material coming together. Good luck getting the balance right - and if you work it all out you have to let me know how you do it!
posted on 2008-12-11 by Amy Ferguson
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Lauren Healey, 'Most recent mapping of ideas', November 2008.
# 2 [24 November 2008]
I've been spending a while trying to really get it straight in my head what is at the core of my practice. There's loads of things I'm interested in (in fact I find it quite difficult to edit things down) but I'm trying to really gets to grips with how all these strands are connected, and why I'm interested in them.
As I think I've already explained, I don't think thoughts tend to follow a linear narrative (mine certainly don't), so instead of trying to elaborate here on all these different aspects, I've photographed my most recent mapping of these ideas. I could read it when I just checked the image on my screen, so hopefully should be okay online.
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Lauren Healey, 'Still Lives (installation detail)', Found photograph, paint and plaster dust, 2008. Photo: Cathal Carey.
# 1 [21 November 2008]
I've been considering starting this blog for quite a while now - technically it would probably have made more sense when I was working towards my recent solo show at Fold Gallery, or perhaps when I first started my MA course. However, I've been having a little difficulty with the concept of it - what 'project' am I doing? What would people be interested in reading about (assuming that this is one of the reasons I'm writing it)? How honest can you be in a piece of informal text when you don't know who's reading it?
I've been having a few conversations with other artists recently, and have basically come to the conclusion that I'm interested in how they go about making work, where their ideas come from, how they develop, so I figured that other people would probably be intersted in this too. And so the blog has started.
A note on the title: I find writing artists' statements incredibly difficult. How do you formalise a series of ideas which are connected, but not in a linear form? I write things down with arrows connecting all the various strands, often ending up writing upside down on the page, to get everything in. The only time I feel that I can really explain what it is I'm doing is in a conversation with someone. And usually that takes quite a while, and I often need my notes. I've tried writing a statement as a conversation, but the act of trying to write it made it self-concious and a bit false. So basically, I'm seeing this as a way of getting those conversations I'm having with myself out of my notebooks and into an arena where they might help other people have a clearer idea of what I'm doing. And my doing that, I'll be getting my thoughts more organised, and that will therefore help me.
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