Graduate Residency Presentation Night
The NSF is delighted to present the National Sculpture Factory’s Graduate Residency Presentation Night with the recipients of the 2020 Graduate Residency Awards from MTU Crawford College of Art & Design, Limerick School of Art and Design, and Waterford Institute of Technology.
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For this presentation night each of our Graduate Residents will present on their own practice for about 15mins which will be followed by Q+A from the audience.
Our Graduate Residents are as follows:
Freida Breen – LSAD
Ossin Hanrahan – MTU CCAD
Philip Williams – MTU CCAD
Eve Russell – MTU CCAD
Susie Kelly – WIT
Freida Breen – LSAD
Sculpture & Combined Media Graduate Residency Award 2020
Freida makes sculptural work that is primarily concerned with temporality, scale, material and encounter. She pays close attention to the inherent character of materials and works with them in an intuitive manner, tracing a tensile line between the methodical – rigour, a sense of time in making – and the direct presentation of matter itself, as it is, or minimally influenced.
Recent studio practice has deployed grafting as an aesthetic and poetic modality, linking it to ideas of exchange, encounter and the transmission of affect, in the cumulative graft upon graft of maker/material/space/viewer and so on. As it seeks integration, the graft is in a dynamic if variable and contingent process of unfolding between merged bodies, as yet unfinished in time or space, it is ongoing.
Ossin Hanrahan – MTU CCAD
Contemporary Applied Art Award 2020
“Mathematics is a beautifully delicate instrument, which we have used like a crude tool to express the complex nature of the physical world through brute force.
While we are always trying to comprehend reality’s vast complexity in a binary form, we miss the finesse of analogue information. This is why fractal mathematics caught my attention, as it suggests that nothing is measurable, as everything has infinite detail. I find mathematics is a simple way to communicate complex information visually and without the use of text or words.”
Philip Williams – MTU CCAD
Fine Art Award 2020
“Through my work I want the viewer to question their reality through their own perception. I believe that it is necessary for people to question their surroundings and how they perceive it and my work aims to shine a light on how what the viewer may perceive as reality can be changed and altered.
I believe Reality is as frail as what we can perceive and if I can show how much our perception of something that isn’t moving or changing can be altered, then reality might seem less definite.
The idea of unseen elements has been within scientific theory for centuries and my research focuses on many theories that embrace the existence of an accessible dimension above what we can understand.”
Eve Russell – MTU CCAD
Special Kiln award for Contemporary Applied Art 2020
“The theme of my work is survival and the primitive fight to support life in a dangerous environment.
Weeds are inspirational to my work as they simultaneously embody a sense of unease and awe; Japanese knotweed is infamous for being the most invasive non-native species in Ireland. However, I admire the strength and determination of this plant to break through concrete. Irish city-councils are determined to destroy every last plant with systemic herbicides, regardless of the health benefits associated with this plant in treating certain illnesses e.g. cognitive diseases, cardiovascular disease and promoting good digestive health. I find comfort in thinking that there is a weed fighting back. In a chaotic urban environment this supports the constant quest to maintain life.”
Susie Kelly – WIT
Fine Art Award 2020
“Concern about the impact we humans and our ever-increasing ecocide have on the planet, and the future implications for children has become the driving force for my practice.
Eco anxiety around climate change aka a psychoterratic state, and the arrival of precious grandchildren have been transformative.
Curiosity about the concept of the post-Jungian autonomous psyche, collective unconscious and their influences on human behaviour is intermingled. Experience working with some of the most vulnerable people in society during my former career in Social Inclusion also seeps into the process, as does the reality that I live with mobility problems.”
We hope you’ll join us via Zoom on Wednesday 10th March at 6PM to watch our five residency recipients present their artistic practices
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Since its inception, the National Sculpture Factory’s primary objective has been to support the talents of artists, at all stages of their careers in exploring and developing their practice of art-making in all their forms of expression and production.
To this end, we have developed a very successful core programmatic strategy which creates the time and space for young artists to professionalise their practice straight out of college in a supportive and productive environment.
Residency awards include free studio rental for 3-6 months with some material stipends; technical and administrative support; curatorial and peer support; mentorship and free access to a number of our educational & technical workshops/lectures.
This year, we have given 5 graduate residency awards to 3 art colleges; MTU Crawford College of Art & Design; Limerick School of Art & Design and Waterford Institute of Technology.