charcoal

Upcoming: Somerset Open Studios by Fiona

Grass Roots, charcoal on Fabriano paper

I’m preparing for Somerset Open Studios (16 Sept - 1 Oct).  My studio and garden will be open to visitors at Venue 12, Cranmore BA4 4RH, daily 10-5. Thanks to East Somerset Railway for allowing me to use their engine shed for some small scale metal fabrication.

Wander_Land (Tremenheere Sculpture Gardens & Gallery, Penzance, Cornwall) is now over. It was such a joy to work together with colleagues from Royal Society of Sculptors. Creating, installing, and working behind the scenes has been all-consuming. It was lovely to have others’ responses to the work; feedback has been rewarding and encouraging. Flags of the Forest was challenging and ambitious in scale. People found it emotive, apocalyptic, tribal, hopeful, ephemeral, rapturous, joyous, ‘extending line out into the world.. with a sense of survival’… (Listen to my podcast with Doug Burton). The show ended with a Closing Event: talk/demo by Jane Fox, and performances by Barbara Beyer, Dallas Collins, Ann-Margreth Bohl and Tabatha Andrews.

My work was about caring for the environment, valuing every small thing, life’s entanglements. Sited on a hill overlooking the sea and St.Michael’s Mount, stormy weather was quite harsh on my outdoor piece, but I learnt to let go. Fading colours, wear and tear became part of the work. Tibetan prayer flags (reused in the work) are allowed to disintegrate over time. Tibetans believe the prayers will be spread by the wind and bring goodwill and compassion to all beings. Mine were made in honour of nature (esp. trees, forests..) to celebrate its resilience, despite our destructive, greedy tendencies, and repair a degrading world. There is hope that we might all join forces and make amends. It would be interesting to create a piece of work that intentionally invites the wind to do its tangling.

Thanks to: Neil Armstrong, owner of Tremenheere Sculpture Gardens for his support; Martin Holman who helped with curation and his excellent text; Steering Group (Seamus Moran, Ann-Margreth and Mark Richards). Special thanks to Shey and Jo Moran for their wonderful hospitality; Shey and Pauline Antram for helping with my takedown, and James Vane for excellent transportation.

Grateful to David Bird for the video (above) and to visitor Mick Waite for these detail pics of Flags of the Forest

Road trips

I’ve been taking some time off to pause, reflect, get inspiration, and reconnect with people. I ventured to art exhibitions and venues further afield, some I’d never visited, and have enjoyed meeting up with fellow practitioners and friends.

Above: 1 Fay Ballard, Lines of Empathy, Close Ltd; 2 Deborah Duffin, If Not Now, When, Hepworth Wakefield; 3 Cornelia Parker (“); 4 Raisa Kabir, Bluecoat, Liverpool; 5 Antony Gormley, Crosby Beach, Liverpool; 6, 7 Julien Creuzet, Tobacco Warehouse, Liverpool; 8 Albert Ibokwe Khozas Tobacco Warehouse; 9 Fachima Rodrigo Tate Liverpool; 10 El Anatsui Tate Liverpool; 11 Leonardo Drew, Yorkshire Sculpture Park; 12 Phyllida Barlow, Leeds Art Gallery; 13 Leeds Art Gallery; 14 Sonia Boyce, Leeds Art Gallery; 15 Gilbert Bayes Award Winners exhibition, The Art House; 16, 17 Anselm Kiefer, Finnegans Wake, White Cube; 18 Frances Carlile, WAC, Wells; 19 Will Cruikshank, Threads, Arnolfini Bristol; 20 Alice Shepherd-Fidler, Studio.

Loved Liverpool, now one of my favourite cities - such an impressive fusion of contemporary and heritage architecture, friendly people and a vibrant contemporary art scene, especially during the Biennial, this year curated by Khanyi Silembongwa. The Kiefer show at White Cube, London, reminds me of my (much smaller) collected hoards of scrap materials and how I can use and reuse old works for new beginnings.

My drawing Iris Roots, charcoal on Somerset paper, is entered into the London Graphic Centre exhibition and prize. The People’s Choice award is open for your vote until the end of Wed 16 Aug. If you like it, please vote for no 32 https://www.londongraphics.co.uk/peoples-choice-award-entries

Do also visit my online shop to purchase my work. Prices are going up soon…

Hope to see you at my Open Studios!

New Work Developing by Fiona

Maquette; found objects: pondweed, buddleia dyed fabric, khadi paper, plastic netting, leaves, wire, sisal, steel, aluminium

Developing Work (Developing Your Creative Practice funded by Arts Council England)

I’ve been revisiting concepts of Life in the Undergrowth, reading Entangled Life (Merlin Sheldrake), and experimenting with making new plant dyes and ink. My latest discovery, literally on my doorstep, is buddleia, which produces a wonderful vivid yellow, ochre and olive green.  So abundant, buddleia is ‘one of our best wild sources of yellow in the UK… plenty to share with butterflies and bees…’ (Flora Artbuthnott).  A studio tidy up gave me a chance to pick through a few collected objects to inspire.  I’ve been drawing roots and iris bulbs, which had survived in a bucket since a pond clean up 2 years ago.  They will potentially provide me with some black iris bulb ink soon..  This has led to a few small trial sculptures. ‘Radical’ derives from the Latin ‘radix’ = root. Excited to see where the roots take me.

For more info and to follow my development please visit my new instagram page: fiona_campbell_dycp dedicated to my ACE DYCP work.


Together We Rise

It’s been over a month since Together We Rise opened at Chichester Cathedral.  Last Saturday I revisited and really enjoyed showing London Art Critic Tabish Khan round our exhibition, along with Maria (Royal Society of Sculptors), Jo (Jo’s Art History) and Nia (Tate). Photo credits (below): 2 Martyn Sheppard, 7, 8, 9 Paul Gonella

I’ll be taking part in an Artist Talk event alongside fellow sculptors and curator Jacquline Creswell, this coming Wednesday 17th August at 11am and 2pm, Chichester Cathedral. ‘Hear about how the show was conceived through meetings on zoom during the pandemic, learn about materials and processes, and join in the discussion on how the works resonate with the architecture and context of the Cathedral.' Tickets £6, book here - or call: 01243 813586

Hope to see you there! There’s a month left to visit the exhibition - it ends on 6 September.

The Gleaning

I’ve been working on textiles panels and leading workshops for The Gleaning - a community arts project I’m co-curating with Gill Sakakini.  The work involves gleaning materials, ideas, people, cultures..  We’ve had some wonderful collaborative sessions, most recently at Collett Park with a group of people drawing together on fabric for our Shepton panel, which will represent the town’s iconic landmarks.  We used wax crayons and oil pastels, followed by ink - mainly homemade botanical mixtures including turmeric, onion skin, avocado pit, oak gall and buddleia inks. The wax resists the ink - a great way to build up colour in layers. We return to the bandstand on Tuesday 16 August, 10-12 for another free workshop. Do join us!

I’m delighted to have been supported by The Eaton Fund, enabling me to buy a sewing machine and other materials for The Gleaning.  Hand-stitching is important for some of my work, but it’s not always ideal for large-scale pieces! Thanks also to our funders Shepton Mallet Town Council, The Arts Society Wessex Chrisi Kennedy & Cranmore Parish Council. We’re still seeking some funding - get in touch if you can help.

Check out our instagram page: thegleaning_shepton


Tomorrow I’ll be running a free swan sculpture workshop at Wells Museum via Somerset Art Works - free drop-in!


'Art is always about reappraising the way we look at the world. It can speak more eloquently than propaganda because it can inject emotion into facts. And sometimes it can work like a Stealth Bomber: it can slip under the radar and hit home’ Cornelia Parker.