Other Artists

Studio Time by Fiona

Collage, recycled materials and found objects: paper, plant debris, metal, botanical dyed fabric remnants, plastic, tea bags, wool

Maquette, recycled and found steel, copper, sticks, wire, pondweed

Flags of the Forest (detail), recycled and eco-printed fabric, wool, plastic, leaf

Drawing, inks, plant-dyed fabric, netting, paper

I’ve been working through new ideas in the studio, making sculptures, textiles pieces, collages, eco-prints and drawings.

Developing a series of flag pieces that might all work together. Large-scale drawings in space with fields of colour, celebrating diversity/bio-diversity, hopeful of nature being more cared for, and thriving. Flags represent a shared ideal. Hoists may become growing lines.

A series of maquettes and collages are chasing an idea for larger pieces in conversation. Interconnected entangled substrates with vertical lines supporting infinite small life forms in cyclical transformation. Layered surfaces made up of debris and ‘found’ objects - some found on walks. Vertical lines piercing woven surfaces. Intersecting roots, rhizomic systems, strata, fragile edges. Life above and below.  ‘Fungal networks lace woodland soil… slow stories… making and remaking’ (Robert Macfarlane, Underland).

Been eco-printing on fabric and paper with some success, thanks to Nicola Brown's free bootcamp videos, and online botanical printing demo with Suzanne Ledesma-Sikkerbøl via Zen stitching.

Mentoring sessions with Mark Devereux Projects are helping to challenge my practice. Still overjoyed and so grateful to have been awarded an Arts Council England ‘Developing Your Creative Practice’ Award. My instagram account @fiona_campbell_dycp is documenting progress.

In between making, I’ve been preparing for my Kenyan research trip later this month. Really excited to be meeting the team at Untethered Magic and other Nairobi-based artists. I’ll also be visiting art galleries and museums around Nairobi and Malindi.


Lovely to have been interviewed by Art Etcetera editor Jordan Brinkworth and featured as an artivist in a special edition on eco-art. The Artivists is almost twice the size of their standard digital editions, with an extra 30 pages dedicated to eco-artivism.  In an effort to push for greener alternatives to paper, they are offering a special digital environmental edition for just £1.99 using promo code GODIGITAL on their website.  The edition is partnered with Art From Heart (who selected me as artist of the month in March).


I took part in ‘Lore & Draw’, an event celebrating Coleridge’s 100th annniversary at the Ancient Mariner. We made mud and charcoal mixes, and used sticks/feathers as drawing tools. Inspiring ideas for future workshops.


Recent Inspiration:

Books: Underland - Robert Macfarlane (highly recommend); The Man Who Planted Trees - Jean Giorno; Women on Nature - edited by Katharine Norbury

Podcasts: Brilliant talk by Frances Morris on Louise Bourgeois (currently on show at Hauser & Wirth Somerset, where I occasionally invigilate). Becoming Fungus: poetic sound art with reading by Merlin Sheldrake - extract Entangled Life

Exhibitions: Visited William Kentridge at Royal academy of Arts. A mind-boggling range of powerful expressive multi-media work focusing on South African politics: apartheid colonial oppression, conflict, loss. The impressive scale of work spans drawing, prints, film, theatre, collage, tapestries, sculpture. One large room with 5 films features multiple charcoal drawings as animated films (drawings for projection), through an erasure technique ‘palimpsest’ and stop-motion camera. I wish I could have stayed longer, there’s so much to take in.

Together We Rise by Fiona

Photo Paul Gonella

This week the exhibition Together We Rise opened! Set within the awesome architecture of Chichester Cathedral, the exhibition involves 25 Royal Society of Sculptors members who, during the pandemic, found solidarity by meeting online. Curated by Jacquline Creswell, who was ‘the driving force behind Salisbury Cathedrals’ pioneering art programme’, this unique exhibition is an expression of those meetings.

“Together We Rise is a counterpoint to the challenges of the last two years and an expression of the artists’ perseverance, by coming together through virtual means to overcome isolation, fear and doubt.  The result is a flourishing of creativity, demonstrating the power of shared adversity overcome by shared endeavour. “ (Jacquiline Creswell)

My new work Martyrdom of the Ten Thousand is an installation in the North Aisle of the Cathedral. It tackles the issue of trafficking and slaughter of thousands of pangolins.  Covid - a zoonotic disease - originated from wildlife wetmarkets. Unethical human practices continue to contribute to our own demise as well as increasing animal extinctions at an alarming rate.

Multiple forms suspend, rising and pouring. Some appear skeletal, poised between completion and incompletion, in varying stages of translucency and decay.  Stifled, vulnerable, the ghostly forms suggest pain, loss, death, but also resurrection, and tenderness.

The work has an environmental undertone.  I used recycled materials that are hand-sewn, wrapped, tie-dyed with home-made plant inks, and waxed over woven structures. Stitch by stitch, the labour-intensive process adds to the message of care and repair.  While raising awareness of pangolins, my work is a way to channel and overcome loss, make do and mend.

The title echoes Renaissance religious paintings of the same title. The work also refers to the Ghent altar piece - the bleeding lamb of god an object of religious devotion.  I’ve pivoted the concept to raise awareness around multi-species justice.

Further info: chichestercathedral.org.uk/together-we-rise

Instagram: @togetherwerise2022


Exhibition runs 27th June - 6th September
Mon - Sat, 9am-5pm, Sun 12-2pm
Chichester Cathedral
PO19 1PX

Photo: David Clarke, Solent News

Photo: Russell Sach

Materiality, Greening the Arts and more by Fiona

Snakes and Ladders (detail). Photo (above) by Dominic Weston. Photo (left) by Geoff Dunlop

I’ve been working on several projects in schools along with prep for forthcoming exhibitions and new art projects. And pleased to have just recovered from my first bout of covid!

Materiality

I’m excited to be exhibiting with 3 other women artists whose work I admire. We met during our MAs at Bath Spa Uni.  The exhibition has been a long time coming, with cancellations due to lockdown etc…

Materiality (27 April - 1 May) is the first show at Walcot Chapel, Bath since it closed for lockdown 2020.  It features 4 women artists: Fiona Campbell, Kelly O’Brien, Kate McDonnell and Nicola Turner, and celebrates the importance of materials through contemporary sculpture and installation art. Large-scale objects and interventions will interact with the architecture of the Chapel.  We are each driven by our materials and engaged with sustainability in our practices. The exhibition runs  27 April - 1 May, 12-6pm daily at Walcot Chapel, Walcot St, Bath BA1 5UG. Private View Tuesday, 26 April, 6-8pm

Special Events: https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/materiality-tickets-295143270467

Salon, Thursday 28 April, 7-10pm.  Join us in the candlelit Walcot Chapel to eat, drink and share thoughts on materiality, facilitated by Professor Alf Coles. Tickets: £10.

Sculpture Workshop with me, Sunday 1 May, 11am-1pm.  Focusing on flora and fauna, you will be creating a sculpture using recycled and found materials. For ages 10+ to adult. Tickets: £12.

Artist Talks, Sunday 1 May, 2.30-3.30pm. An informal, in depth look at the works and our practices.  Clare Whistler will be performing her work reflecting on the exhibition. Tickets: FREE!

Numbers are limited so book your place now! Hope to see you there:-)



SAW Greening Art Workshop: 

I’m leading a FREE workshop specifically for Somerset Art Works members, 22nd April (Earth Day), 10am-12.30pm, Somerset Earth Science Centre, Moons Hill Quarry, Stoke St Michael, Radstock, Somerset BA3 5JU. Parking on site, free teas/coffees.

The workshop will investigate artists’ environmental responsibilities, looking at key concepts of Climate Change and the role of the arts: how we can make our practice more sustainable. There will be a presentation, discussion and practical workshop covering a range of 2d and 3d activities using homemade, recycled and found materials.  You’ll be able to create something to take away, and have permanent access to an online resource pack full of relevant information around Greening the Arts. Funded by Somerset Skills & Learning.

It’s free of charge, but £15 deposit is required to secure your place. Full-refund after you attend the event. Book:  https://somersetartworks.org.uk/2022/03/saw-greening-art-project/ Do join me if you’re a SAW member!


International Biennale ‘Transfiguration' NCTRI, Taiwan

It’s the last couple of weeks of my exhibition in Taiwan, 12 Nov-12 April ’22.  I received 2 beautiful exhibition catalogues - see below and here. A short film about my work for the exhibition will be broadcast soon..



I’m still working on ‘Martyrdom of the Ten Thousand', inspired by the plight of pangolins, trafficked and slaughtered in thousands. The installation will be part of an exhibition Together We Rise at Chichester Cathedral with Royal Society of Sculptors members, 27June-6 September, curated by Jacquiline Creswell.

Here’s a film clip about the work:


Circle of Life

Circle of Life is a school project I’m involved in via SPAEDA. I’m working with primary schoolchildren making headdresses, masks and costumes using recycled and found materials, inspired by the Lion King production, African art and ecology. These will come together in a final story/dance performance later this week.


I’m taking part in the Artists for Ukraine exhibition and silent auction, at Black Swan Arts, Frome between 1 - 24 April. Do visit and bid!

New Beginnings, donated to Artists For Ukraine

Delighted to be featured on Art From the Heart winners in March: https://www.artfromheart.co.uk/post/artists-of-the-month-winners-march-2022


Do support by visiting and purchasing from my shop.

I hope to see you at one or more of these events, and in the meantime, warm wishes to you!

Highlights 2021; Looking Ahead 2022 by Fiona

Happy New Year!

Photo credits from top: Snakes and Ladders (I) - Barry Cawston; Hope of a Tree - David Bird; All The Colours, ArtFirst - Laura Hylton; Octopus - Steve Richardson; Loft Residency - Dan Hopkins; Glut - Paul Tucker, Courtesy of The Ingram Collection & Unit 1 Gallery; Pyre - me; Hope of a Tree - Linda Ashe; Me installing Snakes and Ladders (I) - Kathryn Sewell

A few highlights from 2021.  It was a tough year, but with plenty of highs. I met and worked with some wonderful people, and grateful for all the support from friends, family, buyers, organisations and followers. 

It was great to have a short film made about my practice, commissioned by Art UK in partnership with Culture Street and Royal Society of Sculptors.  Aimed at secondary schools, it’s one of 10 films about sculptors’ techniques. 

I was delighted to be awarded first prize for Round Lemon’s anniversary exhibition ONE. I gave an artist talk and interview as part of it.

Thanks to Chris Greenwood Red Line Art Works for inviting me to give a Zoom talk.

Touring Inch by IN:CH was hard work but fun along the way. Collaborating with 10 other artists, we showed in some amazing spaces over 4 months, got funding, found new ways to show art and involve the wider community. I worked with Shirley Sharp on performative window drawing and shadow drawing events, and led workshops.  The research and development of work was as exciting as the final outcome. Thanks to all venues and funders including Somerset Skills and Learning, Somerset Art Works, The Arts Society and many other supporters.

It was wonderful to be selected for Wells Art Contemporary at Wells Cathedral. Snakes and Ladders (I) was suspended in the South Transept. Thanks to excellent curators Simon Periton and Robin Sewell.

I was thrilled to be a finalist for the Ingram Prize 2021.  My selected piece Glut was shown in a beautifully curated exhibition at Unit 1 Gallery along with some brilliant artists. Thanks to Jo Baring, Stacie McCormick and Alison Price.

My short film Life in the Undergrowth was part of In Pursuit of Spring at Black Swan Arts.

I loved my Loft Residency, which gave me a chance to explore, develop, make new work and document pieces in an incredible space. My solo exhibition was open during Somerset Open Studios.  Thanks to Heritage Courtyard Gallery and Studios for inviting me and for their support! 

Thanks to Spaeda Arts and Eastover School, Bridgwater for the Octopus and Sea Life wall commission. It was lovely to work with primary school children in the making of it and see their reactions when it was installed.

I enjoyed chatting to Polly Hall about my work for her Procrastination Station podcast.

I’m grateful to Seed Sedgemoor for commissioning All The Colours for Art First. It was a big learning curve: I designed a lenticular (holographic/moving) image of a chameleon changing colours for Buses of Somerset, made up of the community’s images, some created in workshops I led. 

I was really delighted that Pyre was selected for the International Biennial Exhibition Transfiguration: From Nature to Art in Taiwan, which is on exhibition at the National Taiwan Craft Research and Development Institute until 10th April 2022.

Thanks to Sculptors Drawing Space and Royal Society of Sculptors South West for ongoing zoom meetings led by Simon Hitchens.

I ran my second sculpture course last year, got to know some great artists through it, and am about to run my third (10 Jan - 13 Feb). I still have a few spaces so if interested, see this showreel for details.


Images: Martydom of the Ten Thousand (working title), for Chichester Cathedral

In the studio. Photo by Jack Robson

Sketch: ideas for installation

I have some exciting exhibitions lined up for this year including Together We Rise at Chichester Cathedral with Royal Society of Sculptors curated by Jacquline Cresswell, and Materiality with Kate McDonnell, Kelly O’Brien and Nicola Turner at Walcot Chapel. Fingers crossed it doesn’t get cancelled again.

I’m working on a large installation for Chichester, inspired by the plight of pangolins. Stitch by stitch, forms are emerging and a growing collection of bodily forms are gathering in my studio.  I’m using recycled materials that are hand-sewn, wrapped, tie-dyed with home-made plant inks, and waxed over woven structures.  It’s going to take me a few months, but I’m enjoying the labour-intensive process.  Louise Bourgeois said ‘The act of sewing is a process of emotional repair’. 


Here’s to a greener year in 2022 full of love, kindness and creativity!