Thursday, 23 April 2015

UCA Farnham Fine Art Exhibition - FUTURITY

This final post documenting Futurity returns to the electric blue light that fills the James Hockey Gallery to look at the 2nd half of the student work there.






Diana Burch
BA (Hons) Fine Art
Year 3





Max Leach
BA (Hons) Fine Art
Year 3





Max's comments about the exhibition;

To sum my work up this film is an enquiry into reality and society through fragmented sequences to create a mosaic montage. There is a modernist or structural film formalism to comment on the condition of the future and the now  to explore consumerism, spectatorship and the abject performance of the everyday. 

The work follows a stylistic manifesto to give the work a textured and tactile surface, influenced by a lot of the structural films in the 1970’s. I would say they had some influence on the artwork I have been engaged with recently, such as Douglas Gordon’s films and his link to Bruce Nauman’s early work.

This is my 3rd time exhibiting artwork in the James Hockey Gallery and it’s a great opportunity to take work from the studio and publicly exhibit in such a huge space. For the exhibitions in Fine Art we are a creative community and everyone works together whether your work is selected this time around or not. These opportunities and this process has helped me improve my curatorial skills and a have a chance to get feedback from following students, tutors and visitors.





Cathryn Quail
BA (Hons) Fine Art
Year 3








Bridie Mason 
BA (Hons) Fine Art
Year 3





Julia Keenan
BA (Hons) Fine Art
Year 3








Rups Cregreen
Foundation Diploma Fine Art






Gloria Alderson - Nemeth
BA (Hons) Fine Art
Year 3





Gloria's comments about her work in the exhibition:


Oh Sugar: Pure, White and Evil is a set which contains the remnants of an act of absurdity that once took place, exploring and highlighting the irrationality and self destructive behaviours of our ever-consuming society.  Sugar has been chosen as the material to represent our desire to constantly consume products that are appealing yet destructive, with its connotations with the pure, white and evil. It is also an inquiry into the great volumes of sugar that flows through our bodies.

Influences include James Ostrer, Janine Antoni, Orlan, Andy Warhol and Matthew de Karsaint Giraudeau.

It responds to the theme of "Futurity" by creating a post-apocalyptic insight into our ever-consuming society.

It has been very challenging and slightly uncomfortable to present an installation as opposed to the performative work that I normally create, as I have found it difficult to understand how I feel about the piece as a resolved work. However it has been insightful to see what I would normally disregard as “the rubbish left over from the work” as a publicly displayed finalised work. 










Laura Rowe
BA (Hons) Fine Art
Year 1





Laura's comments about her work in the exhibition:

My work is exploring themes of repetition and order. With the use of readymade, easily obtainable everyday objects.

There are many different sources that have influence my work, chief of which is the postmodern concept of the readymade as well as theorists like Rosalind Krauss and "the Grid".

There is futuristic elements to my work with the metallic nature of the material, and the repetitive, dense structure, which I find resembles vast tower blocks or even a futurist material for building. 

By exhibiting my work in the gallery it has allowed me to experiment with scale, and really consider the longevity of the hanging methods I use. Prior to the exhibition I had not really considered the hanging of the work, or the finish, instead focusing on the making and experimenting. The installation and placement on the wall became crucial and had to be carefully considered, tested and discussed. The fact it was a group show meant that the curation was important and it was a useful in site into how such events take place, hi lighting the necessity for communication with other artists exhibiting in the space.





Vanisha Patel
BA (Hons) Fine Art
Year 3



Wednesday, 22 April 2015

UCA Farnham Fine Art Exhibition - FUTURITY

In this 3rd post, today we look at the work of students exhibiting in Futurity who are exhibiting in the Linear Gallery, Case Project Space, the Quad and Courtyard 2. 

Holly Collings
BA (Hons) Fine Art
Year 1







BA (Hons) Fine Art
Poppy Rippon
Year 2




Sophie Bownes
BA (Hons) Fine Art
Year 2




Edison Ma 
BA (Hons) Fine Art
Year 1




Erna Hulstein
BA (Hons) Fine Art
Year 3






Tuesday, 21 April 2015

UCA Farnham Fine Art Exhibition - FUTURITY

UCA Farnham Fine Art students from FE, BA & MA currently have work exhibited across 5 exhibition spaces on the Farnham campus. Yesterday's blog post looked at the work in the Foyer Gallery, today we look at student work in one half of the vast space of the James Hockey Gallery cast with the electric blue light of Futurity.


Mary Simmons
MA Fine Art
Year 1








Laura Olohan
BA (Hons) Fine Art
Year 3






Erna Hulstein
BA (Hons) Fine Art
Year 3







Rozelle Cregreen
Foundation Diploma Fine Art






Mollie Claasen
Foundation Diploma Fine Art





Chloe Napier
BA (Hons) Fine Art
Year 3









Charlotte Bradley
BA (Hons) Fine Art
Year 2







Monday, 20 April 2015

UCA Farnham Fine Art Exhibition - FUTURITY




UCA Farnham Fine Art students have taken over the campus to utilise 5 exhibition spaces that showcase their work. Students from across Further Education Foundation Diploma, BA (Hons) Fine Art and MA Fine Art had work selected for the exhibition.

This week the course blog will look at the exhibition with today's post focusing on the Foyer Gallery work that greets all visitors to the Farnham Campus.








Press Release

Futurity is panoply of ideas expressed in film, sculpture, painting, photography and installation. In Futuritythe future is considered not in perpetuity, but more as a site of anguish and concern. The future is history, tradition and ritual. The appropriation of objects, moments, and the materiality of the 'everyday'; a body of flesh, diseased, surveyed, violated. A body of thought: Modernism. TCP/IP, a network of networks, a gallery of the world. The macro and the micro. From life unto death. Consumerism and opportunism. Ecology and waste. Despair and repetition. Ornamentation and contemplation. Psycho-sexual drama. The incidental and the monument. There are no binaries, in futurity. No definitive answers, to what the future holds. Fragments. Here, art functions as a continuum as well as a rupture of time and space. Futurity Is an open submission exhibition selected and organized by UCA's Fine Art department and CulturalProgramme, Surrey at Farnham.    Selected from over sixty applications. this grouping of twenty five undergraduates, postgraduate and foundation students offer both a dynamic and fascinating cross section of work and ideas.


Richard Hylton


Julia Keenan 
BA (Hons) Fine Art 
Year 3






Julia's Comments about the exhibition
"As a student on the Fine Art course at UCA there are many opportunities offered to you. All students across the school of Fine Art from Foundation through to MA were invited to propose work for the show 'Futurity' to be installed within the Gallery spaces of Farnham campus.This was a great chance to experience the work outside of the studio spaces and in the public areas.

My methodology consists of creating 'objects' and images in the studio, these are then manipulated and subverted to create new context ,the images are suggestive of something which is suspended between a sculpture and an image. The objects as assemblages and collages, I position myself as a time travelling anthropologist presenting these things in the context of relics from a civilisation that no longer exists - from the past or the future - there is no linear timeline.

I create ambiguous 'sets' within which the objects are animated - virtual transmitted spaces in which the assemblage exists as a free floating signifier. There is a narrative element to the work, but this is part of my creative process and is not revealed, just suggested through the choice of title.
My interests lie around ideas of repression, inhibition and the unspoken through the context of psychoanalysis, this is reflected in my choice of materials. 

I hope to make thought provoking work which could be viewed as a comment on contemporary cultural issues.


I was delighted to have two proposals accepted for' Futurity', it has been a great chance to see the work in the gallery context and has informed decisions about my upcoming degree  work which is in the final stages of preparation. I used the opportunity to try a new way of showing the images as large vinyls reminiscent of advertising campaigns. Through this I have 'owned' a new process and it has been a good reflective exercise showing in a different way."


Joslyn Hobbis
Foundation Diploma Fine Art





Joslyn's comments about her work:
"I have been exploring going beyond the superficiality of the physical body and looking deep within. I am interested in people’s life experiences, memories and how they can leave traces on the constantly evolving landscape of the Soul - changing it, enriching it.

My work is influenced by my own life experiences, the stories of others and my love of small details, texture and the need to get to the bottom of things, making the invisible, visible. 

I am so excited to have the opportunity to exhibit my work to the public. I wonder what story my image will tell the viewers and what traces they will take away with them." 


Charlotte Baker
BA (Hons) Fine Art
Year 2






Gianna Grassi
BA (Hons) Fine Art
Year 3 






Jake Vella
BA (Hons) Fine Art
Year 2








Beth Reed
Foundation Diploma Fine Art







Carlie Simpkin
BA (Hons) Fine Art
Year 3






Erna Hulstein
BA (Hons) Fine Art
Year 3





Edison Ma
BA (Hons) Fine Art
Year 1