Monday, 21 July 2014

UCA Farnham Fine Art Student Profile 2014 - Eliel Jones




What have you explored in your work and why? 

Within the work I produced for my final piece (Carola Jane, 2014), as my practice resolution that is, I explored several themes that intertwined with each other and materialised conceptually and physically at different levels. At the very beginning, the work emerged unexpected from an encounter with a complete stranger. The documentation of this meeting and the series of events which followed formed the basis from which I started to structure and build an archive which was both real and fictitious. Within this material there were different layers of content which individually took a life of their own - a methodology which almost freely formed extrapolated stories that touched upon varied topics such as religion, politics or science.







Within this context the work started to develop into a solid amalgamation of documents, photographs, video footage, objects, facsimiles etc. which inevitable brought the subject of the archive as a contemporary medium into the forefront of my work. It was then when I realised how the work had the potential to explore the notion of information within the gallery space as a contemporary experience. How does an archive become a piece of art? How does information and research become a valuable contemporary experience for the public? How objective or reliable can it be within a contemporary context? And how, why and when should it exist there?

It was important for me to consider these themes for different reasons. Firstly, it was relevant for me to pursue a project which mainly parted from a personal experience. For a while I had longed to produce work which could serve as an interior reflection as well as maybe providing an external outlook into issues which we might all commonly share or have experienced; in this case the series of occurrences that unfolded could possibly speak of the experience of loss or mourning, the idea of events that could have happened but never did, the contemplation of a different past/present/future or a search of spiritual significance, amongst other things.


Secondly, I believe many of the issues touched upon in regards to the experience of information today both in and out of the art context to be relevant and appropriate to current issues and concerns within my immediate surroundings. - How do we know information is reliable? How do we distinguished between what is real and what is not? Where do traditional and seemingly more truthful sources of information such as archives, museums or books stand amongst forces such as wikipedia or google?


We are part of a society which is constantly encouraged to live or aspire to live a life of fiction - sometimes even cheered to tell our life stories as some kind of movie. It was important for me to somehow manage to confuse the viewer with the experience of information, but not necessarily to trick them; the audiences pre-conceptions certainly determined this and therefore the extent of the works success.

How did you develop the idea that produced your final exhibition work?


In order to explore how information is experienced within a contemporary context it was important to grant the work with the status of an archive. Referencing Taryn Simons A living man declared dead and other chapters  I envisioned developing a series of framed panels which would contain the main narrative of the story following a coherent structure. I also designed a cabinet that would contain some of the objects and facsimiles hoping to enhance the chronology and materialisation of the archive. The enlightenment came after trying out a hundred other options though. The truth is that, as much as the notion of the archive is essential when seeing and understanding the work in its current form, it was never the way I thought the project would materialise. It was only when almost all the material was gathered and the narrative was in development when it became obvious that an archive would suit the content best. I think from that point on it became really clear how everything was to progress and the practicalities that I needed to follow in order to produce the final exhibited work.

Where there any issues you encountered with the development and how did you overcome them or make use of them?

Well, as I mentioned earlier, arriving at the idea of using the archive as the format for the work wasnt a straight path. I remember experimenting with many different plans or outcomes. This was something that was always picked up at my initial peer and one-to-one tutorials, the fact that I was experimenting a lot but not really determining what the materialisation of this narrative - however peculiar - was going to be. I suppose I overcame them by really getting to know my work; the content, its potential, the ingrained concepts that it carried - even unconscious ones - and specially my thoughts or projections over it. When I really understood what the work was about - what I wanted it to say and do - identifying its final outcome wasnt that daunting; it almost came natural.

Who's work has been a significant influence on you? 

Too many just to mention briefly! But I suppose two undeniable references that have influenced my practice and my final piece in particular were artist Sophie Calle and novelist Paul Auster. Sophies practice was relevant in that it spoke to me very directly of the use of her personal life as subject matter, placing herself as both the author and character. Sometimes she established a very fine line between being a photographer and a performer, placing herself as well as the people she encounters in the realms of the fictional. This I thought was particular poignant when thinking of Carola Jane, and indeed her early work Suite Venitienne (1979) really influenced many of the strategies that I was later to employ/explore/re-construct myself.

As to Paul Auster, it seems silly now that I never made the connection between him and Sophie Calle. I was pointed out by a visiting artist that in fact Auster and Calle had collaborated on a work together, The Gotham Handbook in 1998, a few years after Calle had asked Auster to use her as a character for one of his novels, Leviathan (1992). Anyhow, I started reading Auster unaware of the connection with Calle before I started university. The first title I read was The New York Trilogy (1986) and I remember what really strike me at the time was the confusion he dawn on me as to the plot and narrative of the three different short stories. Then I read one of his more recently published novels invisible (2009) and again I was confused, but this time in regards to wether the fiction was much of a fiction or if there was any truth within the story. His style of writing, tone and ability to form endless different plots, characters and events within one same narrative has always fascinated me and indeed has influenced this particular work.




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Could you talk about the role of anthropology in relation to your practice?

I think that’s one of the reasons why I’ve always been so keen to learn about the life of others, strangers particularly; passers by, commuters on the train, anonymous online users on Chatroulette, an older woman living in her car… it provides me with an unlimited space for the imagination of an unfolded story. I don’t necessarily seek to study them, but people quite often end up as the subject of my practice, either directly or not.

Contrary to Anthropology, my practice and work as an artist doesn't pretend to seek or show factuality of any kind. I might part from real events or facts but objective concerns or accounts are almost never my field of interest; fiction and fantasy are normally what form my narratives. I am however, as mentioned in another question, concerned about the relationship between these two approaches and the lines that exist between them; history and memory, reality and fiction, truth or invention...

Maybe another aspect in which my practice links to this field is when considering my work methodologies and outcomes. I normally part from research and investigation immersing myself within the context of the subject. My work has repeatedly taken the form of books, archives, displays etc…materialisations which might be linked to an empirical study. 

I must say that I have found the politics of Anthropology troubling sometimes; the lack of a specific narrative maybe. I feel time and time again individual experiences have been alienated into a common ground of research and opportunities for the expression or understanding of these have been replaced by a wider perception of a shared history. The desire to study and confine a group of people by their social, cultural or national identity (even if clearly defined or not) kind of troubles me in vision of the "politics of representation" that have emerged in the past. 

Regardless of this there are examples on how Anthropology and Art can often meet in ways that are appropriate, relevant and nuanced like in the case of Susan Hiller or Joseph Beuys work and of course Taryn Simons. It is definitely a field that influences and defines my practice, a subject of study which I am keen to develop further and instigate at different levels. 


What do you think is the most significant thing that has helped you during your time a UCA Farnham?

UCA Farnham is a bit like a family. Not having an overwhelming amount of students as well as living in such a quaint little village such as Farnham has really proven to be an advantage when it comes to forming relationships with my peers, lectures and tutors as well as staff at the university. The amount of support, advice and encouragement that I have received from this cohort of people has truly provided me with invaluable memories, friendships and connections for the future.

What did you learn from the process of producing your Farnham exhibition?

I learned that in the future I should plan as if everythings going to go wrong. I think that would have really given me a bit more peace of mind and certainly more sleep!






What are you planning next?

Well, several things actually! I am currently a Summer Intern at a Salmon fishery in the furthest most remote northern point of Norway. This is mainly a temporary money job, but it is also a time that Im using to develop a film piece which is yet to be titled and a series of one-off documented performances (you can see some stills below). Im not sure what will come out of it, but at the moment Im just experimenting with the surroundings and responding to the immediate environment - that is the intricate relationship I have developed with the salmons (kidding, but not kidding!).









After that, its still a bit of a surprise!! The only thing I can say its that Im moving to the USA at the end of August and I will be there for a year working on something very exciting. I will very soon be able to update on the exact details of my adventure.

As to Carola Jane, my plan and hope is to materialise the archive into a book - almost like an exhibition catalogue - which might push further the idea of reality and fiction within the archive in  the context of the contemporary and the experience of information and research. I hope to do this within the next year. 

Interview about the development of Carola Jane from earlier in the year

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