So last week I took my Best friend of 16 years to York for the day, we went window shopping, Teas tasting and exploring local Galleries. We had a lovely and cultured day. Our first stop was York Museum for the Aesthetica Art Prize Exhibition. Such a lovely little gallery space that compromised of a tiny old church , filled with light seeping through the beautifully and intricately painted stained glass.
During our visit myself and Arran came across some beautiful shop window displays, heavily painted and beautiful stained glass.
Whilst visiting the York St Mary's I discovered the artist Saliha Elhoussaini, I have featured some photographs I taken of her work on the day further down on this post.
Stained Glass features in York St Mary's
John Keane
John Keane was announced as the winner of the Main Prize for the Aesthetica Art Prize 2015 at the exhibition preview at York St Mary’s yesterday evening. Keane rose to national prominence in 1991 when he was appointed as the official British war artist during the Gulf War, and has continued to investigate the most pressing political questions of our time while producing portraits of notable individuals such as Mo Mowlam, John Snow and Kofi Annan.
The four exhibiting paintings from the Fear series (2013) draw on images from the great Stalinist terror of the 1930s, sourced from mug shots of arrested victims (some well known, some anonymous). Of monumental scale, these paintings are compelling portraits that tease out the essence of that most fundamental driver of human emotion usually to be found at the root of all violence – fear.
Collected from : http://www.aestheticamagazine.com/blog/aesthetica-art-prize-winners-announced-2015-awards/
Saliha Elhoussaini
A: What inspired you to create the Interdependence series?
SE: Interconnectivity plays a major role in systems and I wanted to exploit that. The thread allowed me to physically unite the front and reverse of a surface in a way that conventional painting and drawing could never do. The first few pieces I made were on canvas and card which meant the front and reverse would need to be viewed separately. Discontented, I told myself “I wish I could see the front and reverse simultaneously” and immediately I felt a rush of excitement, as I suddenly realised how to resolve this visual problem; I needed to experiment with transparent materials. I wanted tonal contrast between the front and reverse compositions and the semi-transparent properties of tracing paper which I had been working with in the past for the pin-prick drawing series was the ideal material to achieve this effect.
A: Can you talk about the techniques used in your drawings?
SE: My work is process led. I start off with graph paper on top of the tracing paper. Using a safety pin pencil, which I made myself, I punch the outline of a geometric composition. Then using the over-under technique I sew stitches on both sides. In some works, the raised stitches on the front follow a geometric pattern, whereas the reverse stitches are applied in a seemingly random manner. However this is not always the case as can be observed in Over-under Spiral 1, where the application of one basic rule, the spiral, generates an intricate geometric linear composition within the outline of an irregular polygon. In some works I use several layers of tracing paper to achieve several shades of grey; the thread lines fade more with each layer added, creating a mist of tonal gradation which resembles a graphite drawing.
A: Your work visualises aspects of the Chaos Theory. How does Interdependence reflect this complex ideology?
SE: Chaos Theory is the turbulent side of geometry; the thread that is woven in to the fabric of the universe. Chaos explores the transitions between order and disorder. However, disorder is not really random, just unpredictable. Chaos Theory is a broad topic and I’m visually exploring some of its elements; interconnectivity in systems, progression, order and disorder.
A symbiotic relationship exists between the front and the reverse in all the thread drawings; they create each other. In some works the reverse composition is seemingly chaotic and the front is orderly. Every stitch applied determines where other must go and the accumulation of all the stitches results in a complex matrix. However, in other compositions the disorder is executed differently as can be observed in Complete, incomplete quadrilaterals 1: the muted lines on reverse which complete the overlapping squares and rectangles recede in to the background, thus resulting in a seemingly fragmented grid. In Grid verses Herringbone 2, it is all about order and interconnectivity, however, the transitional stage between the grid and herringbone can be optically unstable.
A: As a shortlisted artist, what does the Aesthetica Art Prize mean to you?
SE: The Aesthetica Art prize is such a prestigious competition and I am really honoured to be part of it. I am absolutely thrilled to have my work selected and acknowledged. This is a fantastic opportunity for gaining exposure and creating new contacts, and hopefully opening the door to other future projects. Ahead of the show at York St Mary’s, I felt nervous and excited.
A: How does this work connect with your other projects?
SE: I’ve explored the notion of drawing through various mediums including Indian ink pens and pin-prick work, where I punch holes through the front and reverse of tracing paper and other materials. Now I draw with thread on tracing paper. I continue experimenting with different materials because I always find it exciting to challenge their original function. Although the core research enquiry has been the same for a few years now, I’m not afraid to branch out when the need arises as I have done with some of the works in Interdependence. By allowing myself the freedom to diverge and expand my ideas I am more likely to discover something new; I am addicted to serendipity, and that’s what keeps me going.
I collected this from : http://www.aestheticamagazine.com/blog/aesthetica-art-prize-interview-saliha-elhoussaini-shortlisted-artist/
Delicious window displays in York