Well Equipped: Assembling the Outdoors
Abstract
My research seeks to find methods of art making that can approach
the tangled layers of meaning, history, geology and intersecting
experience which make up a contemporary relationship to the
outdoors. This investigation is scaffolded by three key
approaches: The use of assemblage as a material and philosophical
practice, the development of an ontology for the outdoors, and a
situated and subjective framing of the landscape.
The question I ask is: How can I use a personal narrative in art
to make visible the complex layered systems that make up the
outdoors?
There are two interlinked sites of exploration in this research:
the shaping and defining of the outdoors as a potential field of
study, and the development of a layered, single protagonist
approach to developing sculpture in order to test the ways in
which this field might function.
I locate these arguments with reference to artists Rosalie
Gascoigne, Cornelia Parker, Ann Hamilton, Rebecca Horn, Julie
Gough and Dorothy Cross. These artists have made assemblage a
core focus of their practices over several decades. While
assemblage is a broad field in both contemporary art and social
sciences contexts, I have consciously chosen to situate my work
in relation to artists engaging with materials for their
linguistic, cultural and physical properties, and who are
concerned with site-specificity, place and memory.
Theorists, philosophers and historians including Edward Casey,
Simon Schama and Rebecca Solnit have informed my framing of the
term outdoors through their research into landscape theory and in
their arguments on memory and experience in the construction of
place. The writings of Lorna Finlayson, Marsha Meskimmon, Donna
Haraway, Brian Fay and Barbara Kingsolver have assisted in
shaping my approach to the single protagonist narrative; and Anna
Dezeuze and Sheri Klein were pivotal in the development of an
assemblage approach utilising humour to create a partially shared
experience.
The resultant artworks use clothing and items related to the body
in combination with outdoors imagery and found materials as a way
of connecting and integrating figure and landscape. In these
artworks I have explored the outdoors not only as a place in
which we enact our identity, as individuals and as a broader
society, but as a collection of entangled systems of which we are
a part.
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