Showing posts with label Sculpture. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sculpture. Show all posts

Wednesday, 17 April 2019

Artistic Inspiration Across the Centuries; the Supernatural Knows no Bounds



Most artists will have a visual image that proves to be inordinately influential to them…. This is mine. 

This is one of the most curious creatures that I have ever seen - possibly because of the lack of recognisable face - but I can imagine a personality. 

I am confused and intrigued in equal measure. 
Although the creature is like nothing I’ve ever seen before, I’m neither repulsed nor afraid.

For a long time now I have asked myself, “What makes a creature a creature? What do you have to include in a 3D work to suggest a living being; something with anthropomorphic qualities?”  

This continues to be a recurring theme in my art practice. 

This small wax and sponge creature with a single doll's eye was made well before
Minions ever hit the screens. He featured in my video piece Trolley Happenings 2010.

I take my inspirations from many aspects of human life…. I’m fascinated by people, their personalities, interests and stories of their lives, and I’m also exceedingly inspired by places and the stories/folklore associated with them. 

The stories that I weave from these inspirations are at the heart of my art practice.

Deep Space Moolog my most recent multi-media installation was initially inspired by Cresswell Crags and the ancient cave drawings found there. Creswell Crags has been in the news again recently as markings on another of the caves have now been revealed to be 17th and 18th century Witches Marks.

My interest in this discovery was especially piqued because of the confusion over the origin and meaning of these markings; what were once believed to have been Victorian graffiti have now been verified as being marks to ward off evil spirits and stop them coming from The Underworld. Plus I am thinking about those people who journeyed to the cave and spent time there to make these marks; they had to overcome their fear of evil spirits just long enough to be able to carve their individual mark into the limestone rock. And lastly I wonder (just a little) about what sort of creatures witches or otherwise might have been part of this ancient world. 

Over the years my own living room shelves have played host to a range of arrangements of curious creatures, rocks, coral and mementoes from travels and experiences. A current ceramic selection includes Nessie (in miniature whiskey bottle form) as well as a crosseyed deer vase and squirrel handled cream jugs. 


A recent TV programme investigating the history of a house in Newcastle upon Tyne charted the story of the house through the lives of the various owners over the years. When the programme came to Joshua Alder (1792-1867) I was fascinated in particular because of the two very different occupations of his life; first as a cheesemonger and then in his later years becoming known and respected as one of the 19th century’s most important marine naturists and a founder member of the Natural History Society. His specialism was Nudibranchiate Mollusca (Sea slugs) and he travelled all over Britain collecting specimens. 

How could I not be interested in Joshua Alder… firstly as I myself was a cheesemonger in my mid 20’s - (as mentioned before in a previous blog post) 


Plus, look at Alder’s illustrations of Sea Slugs! These beautiful curious creatures; with sculptural forms, no obvious faces and strange frilly protuberances. What’s not to love!



Inspirations come along when you can make new sense of them and weave them into a new creative form that works within your particular art practice

The word Cryptozoology is new to me; it is a pseudoscience and subculture that attempts to prove the existence of creatures from the folklore record, such as Bigfoot and the Loch Ness Monster - it is neither a branch of zoology nor folkloristics. Cryptozoology is a relatively modern label which I stumbled across not long after reading a fascinating Wellcome Collection essay about Ulisse Aldrovandi the famous 17th Century Natural Sciences professor at the university of Bologna. Pouring over his illustrations of inexplicable creatures in his Monstrorum historia I pondered on my thoughts and questions about inexplicable creatures. In particular allowing myself to be unconstrained by 21st Century rationalism and entertain the fanciful notion that these creatures really could exist... 

The feathered monk and a child with multiple puppies heads; illustrations from Aldrovandi's Monstrorum Historia
I have found that by taking a non-linear approach my research and artistic curiosity is able to ‘connect’ disparate dots in history. 

  • The rigorous scientific research of Joshua Alder in the 19th Century.
  • The openness to possibilities that Ulisse Aldrovandi’s 16th century Renaissance era ‘scientific’ approach allowed him to take.
  • A 21st century pseudo-science (Cryptozoology) whose trademark is that it expressly does not take a mainstream scientific approach.

So what does this all mean for my creative practice? 
Allowing my mind to freewheel, I have been thinking of amulets, relics, reliquaries and creatures, animals and beasts associated with other supernatural realms and ways in which they might come together sculpturally or otherwise. When allowing doing this freewheeling thinking I ban self ridicule. I think of the most childish things like superheroes' 'sidekicks' ... a witches cat for example. I think about lucky charms and amulets that I have seen; these range from tasteless rabbit paw key rings to amulets in the Pitt Rivers Museum in Oxford.

At this point I am very definitely at the early stages of exploring ideas for a new body of work whilst at the same time working in a playful way making some physical proto-creatures along this theme of the Supernatural- sidekicks, partners, lucky charms and precious relics. 

A studio experiment 1. I try not to question too hard.

Studio experiment 2. 

 A sombre face to greet you on your return to the studio. Complete accident!

*******And if you really want to know more about the curious creature at the top of this post - including how it can smell underwater then follow this link. 

Thursday, 5 July 2018

Buggles my first outdoor sited Being - Burghley Sculpture Gardens




Celebration Event at Burghley Sculpture Gardens 16.06.18
How many excuses can I come up with for not publicising my recent Frillip Moolog activities  more loudly (or even that I haven't publicised them at all...)?

Well hello Buggles! 



Don’t answer please/ that’s a rhetorical question.

Anyway, here’s a run down....
Sept 2017- June 2018: I have been fully 'up to my armpits in alligators' in PGCE Design Technology training with Sheffield Hallam University and three placement schools in South Yorkshire and Derbyshire. 

My life has been completely: Backpacks, Lesson Plans and PowerPoints. 

One recurring phrase that has popped into my mind sporadically throughout the course has been a Brian Eno quote, “When you hit 50 it’s good to give your life a bit of a shake-up”. ........The thing is..... I thought that I’d already done that in 2014 (when I actually did turn 50) .... 

But here I am -  June 2018, aged 54 and with my fresh PGCE (teaching qualification).... How ‘shook up’ (in a good way) do I feel? 


But this post isn’t about teaching… no it’s about FrillipMoolog and the art I’ve made and got out there in this past year. 

Drum roll please….. ‘Buggles’…my first ever outdoor-sited FrillipMoolog being is currently lounging (sloth-like) across a branch on a (specially selected) tree bough in Burghley Sculpture Gardens.




It started with one of those ‘out of the blue’ e mails back in June 2017 asking if I'd be interested in submitting a proposal. Then a visit to Burghley to discover that, not only is the sculpture garden absolutely fantastic, but that there are also some great artists exhibited in the permanent sculpture garden too. 

I contacted some of my friends and thanks to very positive comments from Richard Bett and Lucy Strachan I got my 'finger out' and submitted a proposal. 



I'd already earmarked a tree at Burghley and these are my first very rough sketches of how my sci-fi 'sloth' might look

However, I was still quite overwhelmed by my teacher training responsibilities so at this point I was still not sure if I would have the time to make a suitable FrillipMoolog being in a way that I felt comfortable with. But in true Kirsty fashion I had already identified some materials that I thought I’d like to work with and so had begun a (tentative) materials purchasing spree. 



I’d bought more than £100 worth of these faceted metallic cocktail goblets before I'd actually decided on the final design of Buggles.

I could see a lot of potential in these segmented lids especially as I've been fascinated by segments for a loooong time)





Like I’ve said before, playing with materials is a serious part of my practice. I still smile to myself when I hear myself giggle in this video that my son filmed back in Feb.

Installation happened in early April and the Otherworldy show runs until the end of October 2018. I’m really grateful to Mike Shaw for inviting me to submit a proposal and also very glad that I accepted the challenge as it proves yet again that it is worth pushing yourself out of your comfort zone.


I’ve learnt a huge amount this year:
  • What it takes to be a professionally qualified teacher.
  • How much I enjoy working with young people.
  • How much I love being in my studio, playing with materials and making new work.
  • How much I value the support and encouragement of the people that I surround myself with (they know who they are).


The 2018 Burghley Sculpture Garden exhibition explores the surreal, strange, magical, cosmic and interplanetary. The sculptures in the show span our world and the known existence; exploring the geological, the celestial, and the extra-terrestrial.
Exhibiting Artists: Mark Beattie, Anthony Carr, Dallas Collins, Colin Furze, Andy Hazell, Kevin Hope, Conor Hurford, Darius Martisius, John McDonald, Michael Marriott, Denis O’Connor, Joanne Risley, Pete Rogers, Ben Rowe, Kirsty E Smith, Jim Unsworth
Show runs until 28.10.18