Winter News by Fiona

A few more images of my installation Dust of Stars, made from scrap, reused and found materials, some from older work. It questions what is waste, dead, no longer of value. We throw away so much… Looking at the bigger picture, all of life is made from stars made billions of years ago: ‘The cosmos is within us. We are made of star-stuff.’ (Carl Sagan). Matter keeps on going… Loved watching the way visitors interacted with the installation. See my instagram page for video clips of the work. We had some great feedback: ‘one of the most exciting art exhibitions I have seen in a while’ (Jan Ollis, SAW Co-Chair). I gave a talk about Dust of Stars as part of the Hatch exhibition, which will soon be published online via their website.

Photo by Rod Higginson

I’m enjoying the speed and convenience of working at a small scale, trying out different versions of a general idea about precarious structures on stilt legs. The sculptural maquettes are made from repurposed and to-hand materials, treating the assemblages as 3d sketches. These and other sketchbook ideas are leading to upcoming projects, including one I’m co-curating with Jan Ollis (‘As Old as the Hills - working title) for next year’s Somerset Art Weeks Festival. We have some great artists on board and will be taking over the top floor of the Zig Zag building, Glastonbury. The project is rooted in local heritage and environment, linking community with social engagement activities highlighting issues of conservation and sustainability. Culture is an indispensable pillar of climate action. Currently fundraising for the project. More on this soon..

Maquettes: Found & recycled materials: (top left) grass stems, willow, pine, peacock feather, copper wire, wool, roots, steel; (top right) steel, copper wire; (mid left) steel, copper, aluminium; (mid right) sticks, grass stem, khadi paper, leaves; (above left) roots, cardboard, plywood; (right) wood, cardboard packaging, khadi paper

Collage

For many instability is the norm. Dwellings exist on the edges of safety raised high on make-do scaffolding to avoid floods and other threats. In ‘Planet of Slums’ Mike Davis highlights our increasingly unstable urban world. Nomadic Somali tribes carry their homes on camels. Shepherds in France used to herd on stilt legs in boggy ground. I’ve been thinking about resilience, making do. In order to adapt, change the narrative of consumerism and economic growth, imagination is key.

Teaching:

I’ve been running 6 courses at Bath College (3 sculpture, painting, drawing and life drawing). Loved getting to know and working with students on their work - see pics below of students’ work.. (from top to bottom: Maureen, Mandy, Nick, Cath, Juliette, Sarah, Lynette, Sarah, Martin, Sally, Cath, Fran, Cathy, Pat, Juliette, Jenny, Suzanne, Sally, Judy, Jenni).

Squeezing in my own studio time has taken a concerted effort, and I have been treasuring that.

My next online sculpture course starts in January ‘24. If you’re interested please get in touch, or buy the course direct from my shop. I have other goodies you can purchase too, if considering arty Christmas gifts!

Upcoming events:

My work will be showing in Casting Shadows, Royal Society of Sculptors group exhibition at ACEarts, Somerton, 2 March - 6 April ‘24.

As part of the Snowdrop Festival (February ‘24), I’ll be running a free workshop with writer Polly Hall to create a long scroll-like collage with text, on 20 Jan, 10am-4pm, at Create@#8, Shepton Mallet. The artwork will be installed in the Baptist church for the festival. Get in touch if you’d like to join us.

Really enjoying reading The Golden Mole and other Vanishing Treasure by Katherine Rundell, sent to me by Faber books. As part of the book launch, I was commissioned to make a small Pangolin sculpture, now on display at Hunting Raven Books, Frome. If you haven’t yet, do read the book! Each chapter tugs at your heart with enthralling details about wonderful but endangered creatures.

I’ve been selected for a PADA residency, Portugal in February, and am fundraising for this great opportunity. If you can support me (for travel and accommodation costs), I’d really appreciate a donation via the link below.

Donate

My next blog may be post-Christmas, so here’s wishing you a wonderful festive time wherever you are!

Dust of Stars by Fiona

Work in progress: Dust of Stars, for Hatch. Found, discarded and recycled materials: wood, metal, wire, rope, twine, glass, plastic, rubber, miscellaneous debris and objects.

I’ve created an installation in a disused barn for an exhibition Death & Microwaves, Hatch, Somerset. Enjoyed the freedom to be experimental in a large space, play with shadow, and take a line for a walk, working with my collection of salvaged materials and objects. Regarding the value we give to different materials, I’ve re-used old work and things which often end up in waste piles, what I already have.

Anselm Keifer speaks of the detritus he collected as ‘an incessant metabolism, the beginning of a rebirth.’ The creative cycle,  the ‘ceaseless shuttling back and forth between nothing and something, a constant going from one state to the other’, is synonymous with life and death. Each merges into the other with no real defining point, a cyclical persistence. Considering this and the magnitude of our universe, what is living and what is dead?  As matter is ongoing, is this stuff alive?  Life comes from the dust of stars, and we return to dust. According to Carl Sagan: ‘The cosmos is within us. We are made of star-stuff.’

Death & Microwaves, Hatch, Langport, Somerset, Oct 27 - 12 Nov. ‘Like the Dadaists, whose name came by stabbing a knife into a French-German dictionary pointing to the word dada (hobby-horse), the title for our upcoming exhibition arose from two spontaneous and juxtaposing conversations around a dinner table.’ Book to visit. Exhibition late opening 3 & 10 Nov, from 4.30pm. Tea & cake 5.30pm. Artist Talks 6pm. Come to my talk on 10 November! Georgina Towler and I will each be discussing our work on show. See here for more.

Somerset Open Studios ‘23

A few more pics from my Open Studio event, which ended at the beginning of this month. Some days were magical, with visitors, sunshine, and butterflies galore. Other days wind and rain lashed at the outdoor work, activating the flags. Great to have sold a few pieces and receive quality feedback. Loved welcoming people - thanks to all who visited!

Resurrection., on show in my garden. Photo credit Andy Ladhams; thumbnail pics above: 1-5 Rich Cassidy; 6 Andy Ladhams

I have a small sculpture Roots in ACEarts Open Exhibition. The Meet the Artists event was a great start to the show. Lovely to catch up with so many artists, and see the wide selection of artworks. Runs 14 Oct-11 Nov, 10-5, Tues-Sat, Somerton, Somerset.

My work is currently on show at Stone Lane Gardens Sculpture Exhibition 2023, Chagford, Devon until 31 Oct..

Loved making a small Pangolin sculpture for Faber Books. As part of a campaign to launch the paperback ‘The Golden Mole and Other Vanishing Treasure’ by Katherine Rundell, Faber Books is working with independent, sustainable artists on bespoke pieces inspired by animals in the book. My obvious choice was a pangolin, most trafficked mammal in the world. I have a particular passion for their plight. Many people aren’t aware of what they are and how endangered they’re becoming. They are such docile, shy creatures, and it’s a tragedy that they are slaughtered for their only protection - their scales.

Pangolin, found and recycled materials: copper and steel off-cuts, wire, aluminium & plastic bottle tops, buttons, beads, wood, twine, shells.

I’ve been leading workshops with young people via YMCA/SAW. I’m also teaching art at Bath College: sculpture, drawing & painting, and life drawing courses. It’s been a busy initiation, with heavy admin, training and prep involved. Finding the juggling quite exhausting, but it helps pay the bills and support my art practice.

Looking forward to a PADA residency in February, and seeking help to fund this great opportunity. If you can support in any way, please click on the link below.

Donate

Autumn News by Fiona

4 photos above by Andy Ladhams

Mycelial Landscape, botanical inks (oak gall, avocado pit, onion skin, buddleia flower) on paper

Open Studio

The past month has been largely dedicated to preparing for my Open Studio event, (part of Somerset Open Studios), and welcoming visitors in the opening week. Thanks to Nigel Evans and Jason Nosworthy for their help with the install of some of my work. There’s quite a lot to see, both inside and out.

I’ve so enjoyed having relaxed conversations with visitors of all ages, some from out of county, a few from abroad. I’ve been struck by emotional, visceral responses to my work: sadness, joy, empathy, discomfort, appreciation, recalled memories, and references to other artists’ work, for which I’m grateful. It’s been a great opportunity to see my work from different viewpoints, through visitors’ perceptions and my own, enhanced by various weathers and times of day. See some of the visitors’ comments below.

There is one more week left, so if you haven’t visited, please do if you can. My studio and garden are open to visitors daily until 1 October, 10-5 at SAW Venue 12, Laundry Cottage, Cranmore, nr Shepton Mallet BA4 4RH.  Follow the yellow signs!

Upcoming exhibitions and residencies

I’m thrilled to have been selected for a PADA residency next year in Portugal - more info to follow!

Delighted my piece ‘Roots’ has been selected for ACEarts Open ’23, Somerton, 14 Oct-11 Nov, 10-5 Tues-Sat.

Roots, reclaimed materials: wire, sisal, plant fibres, twine, cotton, 64 (h) x 47 x 35cms

I will also be taking part in Hatch, at a Secret Barn Exhibition, 27 Oct-12 Nov, 11-4 Fri-Sun.

My work is currently on show at Stone Lane Gardens Sculpture Exhibition 2023, Chagford, Devon, 1 June-31 Oct.

I ran a couple of eco sculpture workshops with scholars at Millfield School using recycled and found materials, related to the school’s current art and climate change theme. I loved the varied, imaginative processes and outcomes.

I’ve been making a set of copper bowls for Core by Clare Smyth. The 3 Michelin star restaurant in London, currently under refurbishment, has an emphasis on natural, sustainable food. Thanks to East Somerset Railway for use of their benchspace.

I will soon be teaching some Love2Learn Art courses at Bath College - Sculpture (Tues eves, Wed daytime, Life Drawing (Thurs) and Painting (Thurs eves), starting in the week of 9 October. If of interest, do get in touch.

Hope you get to some of these events and wishing you a happy autumn!

Invitation: Open Studio event by Fiona

I am opening my studio (historically the village laundry) and garden as part of Somerset Open Studios. I’ll be showing a selection of sculpture, installation, textiles, drawing and sketchbooks, indoors and outside.

Laundry Cottage, 13 Cooks Lane, West Cranmore, nr Shepton Mallet, Somerset BA4 4RH.

[what3words: overture.talker.comply]

Open 16 September - 1 October, daily 10am-5pm.

Do please visit if you can, I would love to welcome you!

As part of it I’m offering a family friendly workshop on 24 Sept, 2-4pm. For more details visit my current and forthcoming events page.

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!