Friday, 19 December 2014

NOTHINGNESS in the Linear Gallery, UCA Farnham Fine Art

In direct contrast to the exhibition CONSUME, the group exhibition NOTHINGNESS has opened in the Linear Gallery at UCA Farnham. The work features the work of students across each learning stage and explores a range of approaches to making that circle around existentialism as a starting point for the work.


Christopher Beattie

                                 



Sophie Bownes

Sophie Bownes produced work in response to the work of other students, to create subtle site specific interventions by delicately painting the shadows cast by all of the works exhibited.




Charlotte Bradley 











John Connor








Holly Ruse




Bridie Mason





Thursday, 18 December 2014

UCA Farnham Fine Art in CONSUME in the Elaine Thomas Gallery




UCA Farnham Fine Art students Max Leach, Pippa Ward and Gloria Alderson-Nemeth had work curated into the current exhibition "CONSUME" in the Elaine Thomas Gallery. 

Work spanning artist video, sculpture and installation will be open to the public until 5th January 2015.


Gloria Anderson-Nemeth

It's All Shit At The End Of The Day 

The geometric precision fails to contain its slime, proving the contaminating matter to have no boundaries. These paintings using food explore the affective tension between desire and disgust and the perpetual visceral sexual body.








Max Leach

Chit Chat

With reference to structural film, this work responds to encounters that exploit contingency and social codes, which are present within given scenarios and are encountered within the everyday. Abjection is explored via a repetitive and banal action with the mouth.






Pippa Ward

Sphere

The sphere contains between seven to ten thousands bags. It has taken three solid weeks of collecting bags and industrial plastic from three local supermarkets.  The material has been gathered from their ‘recycling’ bins.
The work began its life out of a concern for the amount of plastics in our seas. It now seems to be more about consumerism, waste and confusion over recycling.  It is also about our dependence on plastic. 





Wednesday, 17 December 2014

UCA Farnham Fine Art Student Success - Ranger House Exhibition, Guildford

A selected group of UCA Farnham Fine Art class of 2014 graduates currently have work exhibiting at Ranger House Art Prize in Guildford, Surrey. The exhibition opened this week and it will be on exhibition until the summer. 
The students selected from UCA Farnham Fine Art encompass abroad range of approaches to making. Louise Scillitoe-Brown, Isaac Willis, Anna Garrett, James Alexander Brown, Esther Thomas, Rachel Day, Anna Jones were selected with the latter three receiving a cash prize for their work.

Louise Scillitoe-Brown



Isaac Willis






Anna Garrett




James Alexander Brown



Esther Thomas


Rachel Day




Anna Jones


Tuesday, 16 December 2014

UCA Farnham Fine Art Student Success - Mervenill Emiroglu

UCA Farnham Fine Art student, Mervenil Emiroglu, who graduated this summer has work in her second exhibition within a month. Merve's work will be in a group show at the Trispace Gallery in South London until January 6th.




http://trispacegallery.com

Monday, 15 December 2014

UCA Farnham Fine Art Student Success - Lizy Bending

Lizy Bending who graduated in July this summer has been award the Ochre Print Studio Artist in Residence 2015 Award. Lizy has been very busy throughout 2014 with a told of 16 exhibition projects this year!



https://feelfreecompany.wordpress.com


Friday, 12 December 2014

Proambition - UCA Farnham Fine Art Student Zine

Last month UCA Farnham Fine Art students produced and distributed the student zine, PROAMBITION. 

The zine is a collection of musing, images, interviews and reviews collated from students studying across fine art at UCA Farnham. The second issue of the zine will be out shortly, but until then, this is just some of the content.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ak0WhjZyU50












Srin Surti at ASC Window Space, Erlang House, London

UCA Farnham Fine Art tutor, Srin Surti currently has work exhibited in the ASC Window Space at Erlang House, London until the 5th January.



http://www.srinivassurti.net

http://www.ascstudios.co.uk/event/asc-window-space-srinivas-surti/



Thursday, 11 December 2014

UCA Farnham Fine Art Student Success - Morwenna Lake



UCA Farnham Fine Art student, Morwenna Lake, has her 2nd exhibition since graduating this summer. Morwenna's sculpture is part of "X Marks the Red Dot" exhibition at Studio1.1 an artist run gallery space in Redchurch St. London. The exhibition is open until 4th January 2015.

http://www.studio1-1.co.uk

Student Moving Image Work in the Linear Gallery

4 Students studying Fine Art have work being screened in the Linear Gallery at UCA Farnham. A showreel of the work below presents the work and the 4 students from year 2 & 3 BA (Hons) Fine Art and MA Fine Art explain their work and reactions to it being screened in a public space with the college.


Elizabeth Simmons

This work explores subverting expectations about the domestic and everyday with "The Uncanny", to challenge and affect the viewer with an unsettling and visceral film.

Melissa Short

Inhale, Exhale was a video piece that intended to make the viewers aware of their own respiration process through the viewing of an intimate close up of the lips or mouth opening and closing by a performer. It intended to evoke an intense feeling of being uncomfortable in the act of viewing something on a screen, yet give the sense of domination by being able, through the use of technology, to be in a very intimate area of a persons face without the object being aware of the gaze upon it.
The video piece also is an on-going commentary in my work about the connections people have with viewing and experiencing sexual and intimate parts of the human body through technology and how the experience differs when the experience is in real, physical life.
The piece was a recording of a performance that gave a sense of urgency about the necessity of breathing. Yet the cropping on the screen for the piece perceives to be very intimate. The frantic movements of the multiple layers of videos on the screen persisted for the viewers’ gaze to attempt to keep up with the screens as they moved quickly and erratically.
The piece explored my own face, and I feel it objectified this area of my own body. Which meant that having the video installed in the Linear gallery gave myself as the maker, and the performer in the video, a slight sense of embarrassment. This was because of the fact that the video invites the viewer into an intimate area my own body. But the viewer has not been given an identity for whom they are watching, it seems completely anonymous.
Anonymity is becoming something very powerful in current day with the use of technology, the web camera and the Internet in general. This experimentation on anonymity, the absurd and the abject are all themes that are being brought to attention in my video works and practice at the moment. Having Inhale, Exhale placed in the Linear gallery helped me to confirm ideas and thoughts about how my work would be perceived in a public space.
Inhale, Exhale is only the beginning of video works to come from my practice. I intend to explore objectification through the use of the abject, the absurd and a handful of cropping of screens.


Vanisha Patel

'Seeing II' (We Are the Champions) explores ideas of appropriation, religious conflict and media censorship. As well as this, the work focuses on the idea of perception and how this can be altered. Following the previous work I made, 'Seeing', I wanted to continue to explore how audio can change the tone and sense imagery can have and how our perception can change according to this. 'Seeing II' takes on a much more humorous approach in comparison to 'Seeing'. The choice of audio mocks the imagery and opens up and new way to view the imagery in comparison to the original footage. 'Seeing II' engages media censorship and the way things can be distorted in order to evoke a certain emotion or reaction. My intentions in making this film was to create humour and annoyance. Judging by some of the viewers reactions to the film, this was achieved. Following a complaint that was made about the work has only encouraged me to make this work available to a wider audience. I would like to submit this work to online viewing platforms and see the response it receives. I understand that this work is very controversial and has potential to be problematic, however I feel that it is important in order for the work to be successful. 


Cathryn Quail

With this piece I was exploring how we use signifiers, (images) to piece together a narrative.  Within my work I am exploring how I use pre-existing material to construct/ re-narrate events which I personally have no experience of, and through doing so I am able to weave in new narratives and blur the lines between what is actual and what is in fact fiction.  I am also looking at how historical events and events in general aren't isolated and how imagery within history is reflected and reoccur. It's always quite strange presenting a film and in a way more resolved as you are getting off of a computer screen and out of a context which to me is very domestic and familiar.  Of course there are always going to be issues with the use of preexisting material and establishing authority and ownership of the material but what I find is with the era from which I extract my source material is in a way so far away and so easily assessable on the internet there's a strange unspoken right to use that material. The aesthetics of the videos I use obviously contextualise the film within the era from which they're sourced but, this further feeds into the idea I'm exploring surrounding the repetition of imagery. And one thing that has occurred is that particularly with this film, as the anchoring narrative of the Iranian Embassy Siege isn't known to all, to some it felt a bit like a history lesson, and as though I was bringing attention to another bad thing that's happened in the world and from this I've started to reconstruct well known events, such as the assassination of JFK but through reflective images.  I also find that when people put material onto the internet they're willingly sharing it with the anonymous masses. It's important for my work to get it public as I feel that until it isn't presented it doesn't exist, it's a strange thing whereby it only exists on my computer's hard drive as binary code and actually presenting it makes it more physical and actually exists in a concrete reality.  

















Wednesday, 10 December 2014

Figurative Painting in the Linear Gallery

Students in years 1 & 2 studying on the BA (Hons) Fine Art course at UCA Farnham have mounted an exhibition in the Linear Gallery of figurative painting. The exhibition "Salon!" explores the salon exhibit format with an alternative hanging of work.




UCA Farnham Fine Art Student Success - Denise Walsh

UCA Farnham Fine Art student Denise Walsh currently has work exhibited in "Journeys" at the Oxmarket Centre of Arts in Chichester. 

The exhibition is from 9th until 21st December.



http://oxmarket.com

Tuesday, 9 December 2014

Grant Petrey in InActu 2014, at the University of Brasilia, Brazil


UCA Farnham Fine Art tutor, Grant Petrey has work screening in InActu 2014, in the Institute of Visual Arts at the University of Brasilia, Brazil from 8th until 15th December.



Monday, 8 December 2014