Tuesday, 22 July 2025

Stop and look around

Hiding places (home from home) | 2025 | Digital print    
With new collaborative work coming to a standstill, Megan Calver and I have been turning over our archive to keep some kind of joint practice alive. What at first seemed like a stop-gap has turned into an interesting and productive experience.

The film The Signal and the Noise that I completed early this year was our first step in this direction. Megan was able to join me in generating some new footage, but the film's overall motivation was to summarise our making from the past 2-3 years in filmic form.

Now we're looking back over the past five years of work (and occasionally further) to resurrect ideas that were set aside – not because they were bad but because they didn't quite fit the moment. It's interesting what you understand with hindsight: how something you saw as preparatory or experimental adds up to something more substantial in the light of future developments.

For example, we had a series of mobile phone pics of us standing in a field with our coats on our heads. The action was serious but the documentation was casual. When Laura Porter approached us about contributing to a group show called Our Place at Studio KIND. earlier this year, we decided to do a little more production work on the images and stitch two of them together to put our effaced bodies in dialogue. The new print is titled Hiding places (home from home).

Now we've been selected for a show called Where are we now? at Thelma Hulbert Gallery in the autumn. We're drawing on some almost accidental shots we took of trees by flash-light at Durlston Country Park while in residence there back in 2022. The shots sat in a Google Photos album waiting for their moment and I'm about to get three of them printed up to gallery scale with a new accompanying text to make Night Piece (Swimming with Trees).

Although I work within certain repeating themes, I'm often focused on keeping forward momentum – and with some reason. I've found that galleries and commissioners usually seek out work that's no more than two years old. But that's resolved work. Few artists are short of ideas; it's having the time and resources to realise them that's challenging.

It's good sometimes to stop and properly explore what you've done, not just what you're going to do next. This moment of pause and reflection is turning out to be quite rewarding.


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