Monday, 20 May 2013

After Hours: Lost & Found Manchester Museum






Over the past three years, the School of Arts, Design and Media at Stockport College has forged a reciprocal relationship with Manchester Museum, taking creative inspiration from its rich resources and producing visual material for display in the museum and beyond.

The work included in this After Hours event, by students, an alumnus and a member of staff from the BA Honours Contemporary Photography course, was originally a response to the theme of biodiversity, but has since evolved along a variety of related themes. Each artist has provided a brief account of his or her project overleaf.
After Hours: Lost & Found 16th May 2013
Artists’ Projects

Alex Keep


The mechanics of nature so often goes unnoticed. Photo Synthesis explores the secret life of a plant, its cyclical forms evoking the proliferation of life on many levels, as well as its inevitable decay. The work acts as a living image, a visual metaphor for the continual redistribution and degradation of bio-matter.

Breed is a different kind of living image, based on bacteria. Bacteria are truly omnipresent organisms, inhabiting every corner  of human existence, thriving under all kinds of conditions. This piece is an active sampling exercise, exploring growth, change and metamorphosis.


Alex Lawler
In a city, nature is often forgotten and neglected, pushed into sanctioned spaces such as parks and gardens. We forget about the persistence of nature, overlooking or destroying the plants that encroach upon our urban environment. This project celebrates these plants, recording them temporarily using the pre-photographic process of anthotypes and using the conventions of the museum to catalogue and display them.


Eleanor Mulhearn
Eleanor has an ongoing interest in drawing and memory. For this piece she has collected people’s memories of plants, birds and insects, producing interpretative drawings of these life forms in a way that reflects their absence. The project forms part of a wider body of work called The Cabinet of Conversations.


Michele Selway
A bridge can be more than just a link between two physical points. Castlefield viaduct has a rich history, representing both Manchester’s industrial heritage and, in its state of dilapidation, the uncertainty about the city’s post-industrial future. The structure has many echoes, posing many questions and stimulating debate. It can be represented from numerous perspectives - artistic, botanical, architectural and historical amongst them. It leads to unknown places, occupying  a liminal space between what it was and what it might become.


Jana Smoca

Jana’s project explores the biodiversity of one particular tree  and the area around it. It reflects the artist’s connection with forest environments, based on her personal experiences and cultural  heritage. Alternative photographic processes have been used to  create a poetic record of her findings and observations.


Jen Dimelow
Jen’s project, entitled Hidden, explores the metaphoric properties  of natural forms. Focusing on moth cocoons, she uses innovative photographic techniques to take the viewer inside these capsules, creating images that evoke the transformational processes that they conceal and protect. She also considers this in relation to human  psychology – how facets of individual personality can develop  over time.


Adam Swindells
Adam’s work draws on Zen Buddhist ideas of interdependency and equivalence. Through photographing cosmic scenes and microscopic natural forms, he encourages us to reflect on the relationship between the two, and on the common origins of all matter.

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