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Archive for 26/03/2010

Collaging Finds and Bodies

Collage is one of my favourite ways for quickly making evident the connections between people, their bodies and the world around them.

In these recent pieces I have been combining found imagery and some drawings/paintings of objects that I have picked up whilst out walking.

snail-body.jpg painted-snail.jpg

I am planning on making more object-based work over the next couple of months, and to develop new photographic pieces such as Belonging and Tree Mask, which looked at the relationship between such objects and my body within specific environments.

belonging.jpg tree-mask.jpg

In addition I’m hoping to use video as well as still photography, so that I can link different environments and objects together through movement and sound. Almost like a multi-dimensional collage that comes together to create a stronger narrative thread; tying together places and objects through the actions of a sensing body, passing through the landscape.

louse-man.jpg

Epping Forest - Tracks and Sculptures

I’ve been working with Churchfields Infant School in Redbridge, NE London again this week, walking up from the school to their local patch of Epping Forest, with Reception children on Tuesday and Year 2 children on Wednesday.

arrange.jpg

Its the second of five monthly visits to the school between now and the end of June June, set up with A New Direction as part of the creative partnerships initiative.

hand-prints.jpg

The school are keen that different aged children learn from and interact with each other, that children’s voices are heard and acted upon, and that we use creative ways to explore and interpret the local outdoor space.

mud.jpg   run-on-paper.jpg

After using clay and making sketchbooks to document the children’s own school grounds in our last sessions, we decided to venture out beyond the school and suggested a range of ways to make marks and structures with the materials that the forest could provide.

bridge.jpg   group.jpg

The reception children were excited by the sensory experience of simply walking, and sometimes wading, through mud, finding ‘houses’ within the low tree canopy and climbing fallen trees, or feeling the wet soil on their hands and fingers before using it to make tracks and marks onto paper.

With the year 2 children we gathered natural materials and rubbish from the woodland and created arrangements and sculptures, following the children’s own ideas and interests, with the resulting artwork ranging from totems and pirate ships to a mother with child, and a floating world built inside a puddle.

tree-climb.jpg

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