Sally Barker: ‘Sticks and Stones’
Clare Nadal writes
Stack by Sally Barker |
On a
suitably grey and misty morning in March, Artistic Programme Manager David and
I drove over the moors to Hebden Bridge to pay a studio visit to South
Square Gallery’s next exhibiting artist, Sally Barker, praying that our failure
to remember the trusted sat nav wouldn’t cause too much disaster.
I would
like to take a moment to describe my experience of the journey, since I feel
this is central to understanding Sally’s work…. ‘I find myself am amazed how quickly the green fields and hedgerows of Thornton are left behind and
instead we find ourselves high up on eerie, mysterious moorland. It is a
different world up here; we haven’t seen snow for weeks down in the valley but
up here blocks of snow stubbornly remain, like some otherworldly relic. Then
without warning, we suddenly find ourselves dropping sharply down into the
steep narrow valley and suddenly we are back in civilisation, fallen down the
rabbit hole into the centre of Hebden Bridge . Sally’s home lies up
another hidden fork in the valley, again taking us away from civilisation. As
we drive up the narrow road I am aware always of trees, dampness and rock,
covered in moss and lichens.’
This
constantly shifting world is the world Sally self-consciously engages with in
her artwork, exploring the interplay of the built and natural environment and
our relationship to the landscape around us. As she tells us, she regards her
role as an artist “somewhere in between that of a scientist, farmer and
gardener.”
As part of
exploring human intervention in the natural landscape, Sally is interested in
both how we cut into the environment and how we build onto it, physically
pinning it down. Consequently much of her photographic work explores images of ruins
on the nearby moors, in particular Top Withens, the famous ruin which is
popularly thought to have inspired Emily Bronte’s Wuthering Heights .
Contemporary Handmade Ruin at the Hushings by Sally Barker |
With such
features as these present in her sculptural work, ideas of history, time and
fragility are all evoked. Attached to the rough pieces of natural rock that
Sally scavenges for in her local quarry are Greek-like columns made from ice
and resin. Human presence is implied from the cast body parts she places in her
sculptures. These body parts, in particular the delicate nipple flowers and cast
heart, bring a sense of intimacy to these works; this is personal artistic
expression that the viewer is privileged access to.
Artmaking
is a highly personal process for Sally, both informing and being informed by
the course of her daily life. Her house is both home and studio space simultaneously.
In her dining room-come-workshop space, dvds share home with sculptures, vases
and architectural scaffolding structures sit side by side, and the piano and
photographic prints battle for centre of attention. The artist’s studio is not
some mysterious distanced and hidden entity, shut off in both physical and
metaphorical zones of creative expression, but something integrated into
everyday life.
As part of
this, Sally continually scavenges for local organic raw and found materials for
her sculptural work, often from her very garden. She is always keen to
experiment, the process of making being integral to her work. Recently she has
been using YouTube to learn how to knit with sheep’s wool and stitch pieces of
stone together with steel wire.
Architectural
elements are also important to Sally and have featured in much of her previous
work and conceptual thinking. Having built The Sally Barker Gallery (2000), a small
cardboard and polystyrene model which houses miniature versions of all of her artworks,
made on a scale of 1:100, she now has widened her horizons to “world domination”.
The Sally Barker Empire is to be the
realisation of this aim, a project aimed at encouraging self-promotion
and empowerment through architectural hijacking, annexing and the imposition of
her sculpture, in model form.
The Empire so far consists of a mix of models,
drawings, photographs and postcards: visions of galleries, studios and structures
designed and built in Sally’s name to promote her work. Some of these are
hi-jacked famous art institutions, subsumed into The Sally Barker Empire, such
as Hi-Jack Tate Modern.
Hi-jack Tate Modern by Sally Barker |
Sally describes this work as ‘sculpitechture’, quite
literally models which fuse architecture and sculpture. She is clear to
emphasise that whilst this playful connection to architecture exists, her
models inescapably remain sculptures ultimately. As she tells me, “I have no
desire to ever have them built; they exist as tiny monuments to artistic
vision. The intention is to offer total creative license, both with the models
and with the ideas they potentially house.”
This exhibition will feature
several of her ‘invisible building’ sculpitectures, architectural plan-like
structures, made in three dimension out of natural grasses. Housed within are
model scale figures, providing an almost utopian vision of a potential future
in society and architecture.
Sally is keen for her
exhibition to engage with its locality. To this end, she is creating a new body
of work that critically engages with South Square Gallery’s stone heritage and
history as a series of stonemasons’ cottages. Central to this will be a new
photographic work of the famous Thornton Viaduct. For Sally, the viaduct
exemplifies many of her conceptual ideas about landscape; rather than seeing it
as simply a testimony to historic architecture, she sees it as humans stitching
the two sides of the valley together with stone, a bid to negotiate and mark
the landscape.
Following on from Villa by David McLeavy, which is
currently showing in the gallery, Sally
Barker’s exhibition continues South Square Gallery’s summer season of exploring
contemporary art responding to space, landscape and habitation. During August
and September, the gallery space will once again be offered as a live in studio
for an artist to research and produce new
work whilst engaging with the gallery visitors.
Sally Barker’s South Square
Gallery exhibition opens on Friday 7 June and will run until 28 July 2013 .
1 comment:
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