Image: Detail from a poster from "Branded"(2012). An exhibition co-created by Beth Barlow, Simon Kennedy and Kate Mckenan
A Little About Me Any My Practice
For my A levels I studied Theatre Studies, Art and Psychology. After A levels I knew that I wouldn't go on with Psychology but I was split between Drama and Visual Art. I gained a 1:1 degree from Chester University in Fine Art and Theatre Studies. My final show for my degree took me back to the world of psychology. I first visited "Denbigh Mental Health Hospital" to be part of making a film on aggression and mental health. After the hospital had closed I visited again, walked the empty corridors and wards taking photos and staged a filmed performance in one of the isolation rooms.
This began a fascination with people, politics and mind which has stayed with me throughout my artistic practice. Alongside my studio arts practice I worked in education with excluded school children and young people who found themselves homeless. I returned to Chester University to study for an MA when my son was five and I was working at a hostel. It was a hectic time but each element of my life fuelled the other. I created work around the way the community space in the hostel was managed. The residents would move the furniture to be more social and the cleaner would move it to be more practical. I would photograph it as it moved about and sometimes move it into curious arrangements which made sense to nobody. My life with my son, which limited my work to the domestic, also influenced my practice. I created small dresses which I would carry to the places we visited to photograph and I logged my domestic spaces with plumb lines. I placed plumb lines in public spaces to cause slight bemusement or changes in behaviour. I also became interested in the early days of social media, topic based chat rooms which were forming their own norms and etiquette. Like the hostel lounge or the plumb lined public spaces I observed the norms of these internet rooms and sometimes set about breaking them. In those days it didn't take very much for another member to eject you, going off topic could be enough. I enjoy using the limitations and material within my life as a starting point for creativity, using mischief to stretch and challenge the limits. If I believe that a personal observation will have a wider interest to others in society a project will gain life and momentum. What medium it manifests itself in will be dependant on the subject and the co-creators who get involved.
After working at the hostel I accidentally got a job at Groundwork teaching "Sustainable Development". I had to look the term up before the interview and as I started the job I would say that I was much more interested in people than environment. I came to see that as an error. Humanity is restricted to this earth, if the environment fails to thrive so do people. It wasn't easy to begin to care for environment. As I travelled to work learning about all this environmental theory I would look out of the train window and wonder what my son might see when he grew up. What was this world we were passing on? Sustainable Development is a phrase I've come to reject. It smacks of business as usual, "how can we keep doing everything we do today but with no impact on future generations?" is its core question.
When I was planning this web page I wrote a list of current and past projects. It became clear that the current ones could be divided into those with more focus on people and those whose backbone was environmental. Whilst this distinction is blurry I think it reflects my journey to see environment and human rights/suffering as equally important. You might note from the dates on the projects that my focus on a given project tends to be long. Whilst I have put end dates for some I'm never truly convinced that they are over and new circumstances and partnerships often breath new life into them. I was watching a series of films I made as commissioned works called "Letters From The Future". Ending almost 10 years ago the series looked at young people's expectations for climate change. I'd love to have been a crack pot banging this pessimistic drum but watching the films today brought a tear. It feels like we set the films date for change too far in the future, giving ourselves an optimistic 100 years but some of the things we foretold are true already.
What does an artist do when everything seems in flux? Do we drop art and take up activism? Do we salve people's pain with nice art? I've spent many an hour musing on such questions and I've tried both. I think both strategies are equally valid but I anticipate a third option is coming to the fore again for me. To acknowledge that as an artist I've built up unique skills. The skill to show what is stuck in our heads, to place a highlight on the overlooked, to illicit debate and action in a safer space. Most of all be part of navigating us all kindly through a future which I can't help thinking might be tougher than our recent past.
I'm trying to talk more about my work and its inspiration than furnish my own ego with accolades but if you need a CV of past achievements please feel free to get in touch.
.
A Little About Me Any My Practice
For my A levels I studied Theatre Studies, Art and Psychology. After A levels I knew that I wouldn't go on with Psychology but I was split between Drama and Visual Art. I gained a 1:1 degree from Chester University in Fine Art and Theatre Studies. My final show for my degree took me back to the world of psychology. I first visited "Denbigh Mental Health Hospital" to be part of making a film on aggression and mental health. After the hospital had closed I visited again, walked the empty corridors and wards taking photos and staged a filmed performance in one of the isolation rooms.
This began a fascination with people, politics and mind which has stayed with me throughout my artistic practice. Alongside my studio arts practice I worked in education with excluded school children and young people who found themselves homeless. I returned to Chester University to study for an MA when my son was five and I was working at a hostel. It was a hectic time but each element of my life fuelled the other. I created work around the way the community space in the hostel was managed. The residents would move the furniture to be more social and the cleaner would move it to be more practical. I would photograph it as it moved about and sometimes move it into curious arrangements which made sense to nobody. My life with my son, which limited my work to the domestic, also influenced my practice. I created small dresses which I would carry to the places we visited to photograph and I logged my domestic spaces with plumb lines. I placed plumb lines in public spaces to cause slight bemusement or changes in behaviour. I also became interested in the early days of social media, topic based chat rooms which were forming their own norms and etiquette. Like the hostel lounge or the plumb lined public spaces I observed the norms of these internet rooms and sometimes set about breaking them. In those days it didn't take very much for another member to eject you, going off topic could be enough. I enjoy using the limitations and material within my life as a starting point for creativity, using mischief to stretch and challenge the limits. If I believe that a personal observation will have a wider interest to others in society a project will gain life and momentum. What medium it manifests itself in will be dependant on the subject and the co-creators who get involved.
After working at the hostel I accidentally got a job at Groundwork teaching "Sustainable Development". I had to look the term up before the interview and as I started the job I would say that I was much more interested in people than environment. I came to see that as an error. Humanity is restricted to this earth, if the environment fails to thrive so do people. It wasn't easy to begin to care for environment. As I travelled to work learning about all this environmental theory I would look out of the train window and wonder what my son might see when he grew up. What was this world we were passing on? Sustainable Development is a phrase I've come to reject. It smacks of business as usual, "how can we keep doing everything we do today but with no impact on future generations?" is its core question.
When I was planning this web page I wrote a list of current and past projects. It became clear that the current ones could be divided into those with more focus on people and those whose backbone was environmental. Whilst this distinction is blurry I think it reflects my journey to see environment and human rights/suffering as equally important. You might note from the dates on the projects that my focus on a given project tends to be long. Whilst I have put end dates for some I'm never truly convinced that they are over and new circumstances and partnerships often breath new life into them. I was watching a series of films I made as commissioned works called "Letters From The Future". Ending almost 10 years ago the series looked at young people's expectations for climate change. I'd love to have been a crack pot banging this pessimistic drum but watching the films today brought a tear. It feels like we set the films date for change too far in the future, giving ourselves an optimistic 100 years but some of the things we foretold are true already.
What does an artist do when everything seems in flux? Do we drop art and take up activism? Do we salve people's pain with nice art? I've spent many an hour musing on such questions and I've tried both. I think both strategies are equally valid but I anticipate a third option is coming to the fore again for me. To acknowledge that as an artist I've built up unique skills. The skill to show what is stuck in our heads, to place a highlight on the overlooked, to illicit debate and action in a safer space. Most of all be part of navigating us all kindly through a future which I can't help thinking might be tougher than our recent past.
I'm trying to talk more about my work and its inspiration than furnish my own ego with accolades but if you need a CV of past achievements please feel free to get in touch.
.