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Here is a piece I have spent a few weeks working on. It is a technique I discovered when I was experimenting with newspaper and PVA glue. It is quite a time consuming technique and takes a lot of control and patience, however it is process I really enjoy. I liked to work on this piece undisturbed, concentrating on the patterns I was creating, consumed in my own world. I found this process was a relaxation process for me, I could put my mind at rest from the everyday anxieties I suffer, instead concentrate on this.

The last few pieces are some sample pieces I have created for the upcoming Fine Art Auction @ UCS in March 2015. It is an auction my class is organising to raise money for our Fine Art Degree show. These will be my contributions, they are originals.


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I have been spending a bit more time in the studio, reflecting. During this time I have been creating these sculptures, using recycled wire and newspaper. I think through creating these forms and patterns I am gaining some kind of control. I am in control of the shapes and patterns I’m creating. I can’t control how society is taking over, I can’t control the slowly diminishing natural world, therefore by creating this small world of mine in my studio I become lost in my own landscape. During this process I achieve a sense of relief.


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Giving my practice some thought.

My work appears to be revolving around the theme of creating a personal space, a landscape within a space. My personal space where inspiration is discovered and ideas flourish. This happens when I am next to/experiencing nature or within a natural landscape, I escape into the natural wilderness, away from the urban life that is increasingly taking over.

I constantly feel like I am trying to escape the depths of society, the negative obstacles I face because of gender/appearances. The elements of control society feeds us to keep an order in the world that we live in. Whether that is through diet (the food we are provided through supermarkets, sugar loaded and chemical loaded), the advertisements we consume on how we should dress, behave, live! The forces that are bestowed upon us to keep us all in line (police, armed forces). Money, which controls our career choices, life choices. We lose what we truly love, who we truly are.

This world is increasingly taking over as population grows, and the wilderness is slowly diminishing. These two worlds are combining into one, with urbanisation/society being the stronger of the two. This scares me, will we become an existence uninspired and losing ourselves into this corporate world of working and consuming? Whatever happened to “living”?

Where will I find my inspiration once the natural world disappears?

In my work I will demonstrate how the two worlds are increasingly integrating into one.


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Here I used two projectors to project images of my installation work with projections of images of people, busy society. I created this with the thoughts on how the world is getting smaller, with population increasing the world is losing more wilderness spaces. This makes me question what will happen to creativity as this problem increases, will people become less creative as nature slowly diminishes? In my case, this is what scares me.
Below are some quotes from well known people of our world, who describe the significance of the wilderness to our existence.

There is a delight in the hardy life of the open. There are no words that can tell the hidden spirit of the wilderness that can reveal its mystery, its melancholy and its charm. The nation behaves well if it treats the natural resources as assets which it must turn over to the next generation increased and not impaired in value. Conservation means development as much as It does protection.” – Theodore Roosevelt. President of the United States.

And this, our life exempt from public haunt, finds tongues in trees, books in running brooks, sermons in stones, and good in everything.” “One touch of nature makes the whole world kin.” – William Shakespeare.

“Earth and sky, woods and fields, lakes and rivers, the mountain and the sea, are excellent schoolmasters, and teach some of us more than we can ever learn from books.” – Sir John Lubbock. Vice chancellor, University of London.

All Quotes From: http://wilderness.org/article/famous-quotes


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In this set of works I have been incorporating the use of lens based media. I wanted to capture the thought process of dealing with everyday life in an urbanised environment, in search of solitude. I recorded a video whilst cycling through Ipswich town centre on my bike, a journey which always agitates me. I am constantly met with barriers of society, whether it is people, glances, traffic.
The other video I recorded was cycling through the forest at Rendlesham, a place where I always escape to when it all becomes too much. The deserted, peaceful location contrasts with the busy town centre video. I changed the speed of both videos so the forest video was slowed down, and the town video was fast forwarded. I projected these videos on top of each other, I thought this effect showed the inner battle I feel I am fighting between the two world, with the urbanised world slowly taking over.


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