Bonnie Kemske
Bonnie Kemske creates ceramic forms that are complete only when they are held. Cast by the human body, they are finished in soft textures that entice our sense of
touch. Bonnie aims to give those who interact with her artwork a positive and calming experience. One person said, ?As soon as I fit it to my body and found a place where it was comfortable, it didn?t feel cold or hard anymore. It felt as if I was hugging an extension of myself.?
www.bonniekemske.com
Laura Ellen Bacon
Laura Ellen Bacon?s large-scale installations are almost always built on site, allowing her to form work in a way that truly fits a site. The sculptures that she makes have a closeness with a host structure or the fabric of a building; their oozing energy spills from gutters, their ?muscular? forms nuzzle up to the glass and their tripping weave locks onto the strength of the walls. Whilst the scale and impact varies from striking to subtle (sometimes only visible upon a quizzical double take), Laura relishes the opportunity to let a building ?feed? the form, as if some part of the building is exhaling into the work.
www.lauraellenbacon.com
Annie Turner
Annie Turner?s ceramic art is closely linked with the river Deben and its surrounding environment where she grew up in Suffolk. Her sculptural ceramics are hand-built
stoneware that appear rusted from having been fired once, twice and sometimes on more occasions, and their surfaces are thickened and coloured with oxides and
slips. Turner?s sculptures are delicate yet possess a quality of strength that suggests movements of currents and the tides of the water, changing seasons and the passage of time.
Giles MacDonald
Giles Macdonald is a letter carver working with slate, stone and other materials. Giles designs and makes inscriptions ranging from plaques and tablets to architectural lettering. More than just texts, inscriptions describe experience, and their appeal lies beyond the words used. We sense this when we?re attracted to inscriptions we can?t read and whose language we don?t know. A linear text reflects the horizon in front of us. Inscriptions become a way of exploring the wider world and an acknowledgement of being alive.
www.gilesmacdonald.com
Shelly Goldsmith
Shelly Goldsmith engages with textiles within gallery and site-specific contexts, often responding to historical environments. Using methodologies and theories borrowed from forensic or psychiatry partnerships, she explores and presents latent experience and memory inherent in worn clothing, especially examining the fine veneer of cloth that stands between us and the world; often a veil to the interior storm.
Listening carefully to the stories the reclaimed garments present enables narrative to develop and imagining around their ability to carry memory, to absorb and reflect experience. These garments are often presented as a metaphor for common human states and present opportunity for self-reflection and personal insight.
www.shellygoldsmith.com