07 October, 2013

Q & A // Emerging Artist HANNAH GRACE




I love the carefully constructed chaos in Grace's work. A symmetry of deconstruction that is at all times pleasing aesthetically and quietly unsettling in it's ordered attack on familiar objects and patterns.

I've know her for some time (we both studied at the Arts University in Bournemouth) I thought it would be really interesting to interview her about her work. Hannah, I was really pleased to hear, was one of ten artists to win the Free Range Emerging Artist Award, earlier this year :)


Talk us through your physical process, how do you bring your works into existence?  Do you have a routine for creating work?
There are fundamental elements which reoccur within my work such as monochrome, geometric shape, visual illusion. I think in a mathematical way and love to order and catalog information.
I do a lot of research, finding images that I like, looking at artists that share my interests.
I then work a lot in my sketchbook, exploring ideas and learning skills that are necessary for the work.
Next I chose images that I have created which I think work and develop them into more finished outcomes.

What skills did you learn for your GLITCH project? How do you go about learning them?
I did a lot of research into how Glitch and similar technological processes have been used in artists work. I found a variety of “Glitching” software online which I experimented with and then translated these into handmade pieces. 

How do you know when a work is 'finished'?
When I feel happy with the piece I will stop and not alter it from then on, even if later on I think of new changes that can be made. I don't like to overwork the piece. 


How do you take into account the idea of viewership and audience experience when creating your work?
I think the time that I consider the viewer is when I am working out how to present the piece. I start to wonder how they will perceive what I have made and how they will interact with it physically and what their interpretation might be. 

How do you feel about the possibility of your work being misunderstood or misinterpreted?
I am always interested to hear what people think about my work but once I have finished and presented the work it's up to the viewer to react to it and interpret it in their own way. We hardly ever get to talk to the artist about their work. If we put a work into the public domain it's meaning and perception is then open to the individual. 

Let's talk about your maps. Why cartography?
I explore how cartography is assumed to give a reliable and objective description, and thus is given authority. But maps are inevitably abstract as a result of selection, omission and codification.  A fiction created from a factual observation, they present only one version of the earths surface. Cartographic rules give a network of assumptions which I use and exploit within my work.
I use the language of maps to explore connections, systems and networks. I archive, order, catalog and arrange information and when this process is complete I can then dismantle, deconstruct, manipulate and reconfigure it. Using a variety of techniques I intricately cut, score, layer and fold maps to distort them.


Why break systems and reconfigure what is seen as 'authority'? Do you see your art as a means of controlled anarchy?
I like to question why we give cartography this authority. I think patterns and systems are interesting when you see their flaws. I want my work to allow people to perceive these topics in a new way. 

What's in your dream studio?
I would love to be in a studio with lots of different creatives with whom I can share knowledge and put on group shows. The ideal studio would have facilities such as a print room, cafe, outside areas, computer suite, art supplies.

Are social interactions very important to your creative process?
I am quite happy to work alone but I think being surrounded by like minded people is helpful for the creative process. Talking to people about your ideas helps them to develop and you start to see them in new and interesting ways. Showing people your work gives you an idea of how different people interpret it which can help to push it further. 


Why do you think you were selected for the Free Range Emerging Art Award?
I was very surprised to be selected for this award but I put a lot of effort into making the piece and I feel the fact that it was an illusion was engaging to the audience and cartography is an interesting subject that everyone can recognise and relate to.

What's next for your artistic practice?
I want to change the direction of my work more towards illustration. I love drawing and it is the way that I express myself. 

Who are some illustrators whose work inspires you?
Pat Perry is one of my biggest inspirations at the moment. I love that he lives to draw. He travels around the world, basically just with his art materials and soaks up new experiences which he then pours into his work. 

Hannah plans to move to London in the new year and work from a studio where she can develop her portfolio and promote herself as a free-lance artist/illustrator.
She will be exhibiting at Aspex in Portsmouth as a part of the 'Someone and Something' exhibition in October as well as 'The Great Exhibition of Boscombe'.

If you are emerging in any discipline and would like to have your work featured on Streaks, get in touch :)