I recently wrote in-depth statement for an open-submission about
my practice and specify my most recent major finished piece ‘Regressive Flight’. Here it is if you’re interested in
learning a bit more about this piece and my practice:
Regressive Flight: November 2014, Various Animal Bones, rubber
duck and other Mixed media
‘The literary theorist and critic Terry
Eagleton sums up my current practice, “one of the great humanist functions of
culture is to open some daylight between its self and the rest of our social
practises and institutions so it could actual operate as a critic of them”. Art as a cultural and political critique is
important to my work through the largely narrative driven events taking place
in my sculptural worlds where the extremes of society are played out.
Within my piece ‘Regressive Flight’
I examine a regressive tendency in a post technological society in the
aftermath of disaster. Specifically I question
a possible rise in belief as a questionable substitute for science and reason. I question if the ‘Opium of the people’ as
Marx called religion would became un-tempered by reason and regress and warp
into an Ideology of the extreme aided and abetted by abject poverty and ruin.
The piece seeks humorously to depict this by focusing on two main characters. The one below is chained although is giving the impression of being a semi willing sacrifice. His arms are raised in a parody of flight but his crossed fingers allude to some doubts. Far above on a raised platform a larger character is preparing to throw a rubber duck out into orbit; evidently the hope is that this divine object ‘with wings’ and magical glow is going to fly. If it fails there will be a blood sacrifice and the cycle will go on next time in the form of a toy plane. At the back of the sculpture a character specifically references this cycle, by breaking the fourth wall and looking at his human audience and pointing to a blackboard on which a circle coming full circle is chalked.
Characters that interact with the audience as well as use of human props are key to my work so the viewer can identify with the events taking place in the world and see the work as a satirical reflection of events in our world.
The sacrificial scene has a large
audience of the young and old some evidently believers others simply there to
see a blood sport. There is also evidence
of resistance, for example characters attempting to hold back the duck-carrier
although one takes the form of an extreme armchair activist. Motivation in the form of a cannon makes it
seem unlikely that they’ll be able to prevent the sacrifice, as regressive
ideology will still allow a certain form of destructive technology. The landscape its self is important with its burnt
wasteland of rusted metal, spent bullet casings and most importantly toy
collapsed building blocks. This suggests a form of hubris on the part of this
society as its technical achievements have been brought down possibly toppled
by naturally disaster or all out war, so they have regressed to an earlier
period of history and belief.
This many layering of themes and
hidden narrative is important to my work, as is the irony inherent in creating animal bone characters doing
very human things. According to the World Wide Fund for Nature the earth has
lost half of its wildlife in the past 40 years largely due to human activity which
adds a particular poignancy to the themes explored in this piece and in my
other works.’
If you
have a moment please visit my website, to see more of my work and find out more
about my practise.
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