Feel Comfortable To Touch This Work

Installation

 

Name: Chloe Beecham

DOB: September 1994

Place of Birth: Lincolnshire, United Kingdom

Occupation: Trainee teacher

I am a textile artist and a recent graduate from Manchester School of Art. I specialise in mixed media, with a focus on embroidery techniques. Concept and process are of equal importance to me, and I often use one to convey the other. I find inspiration in the way things make me feel and am drawn to details that are often overlooked.

As an artist, I am interested in pursuing ideas concerning motherhood, and specifically, the dynamic that surrounds the mother/daughter relationship.

Installation

Recent work is sculptural in its outcome and is site-specific in both its design and articulation. Embroidery techniques such as the buttonhole rouleaux fastening are utilized and then pushed to epic proportions. Soft cloth is utilized to form heavy sculptural line qualities that sweep and soar through the air or hang limp and lifeless. This cloth based line has its origination in drawings made on paper; ink, gouache and pencil that moves at different speeds as it is pushed and teased around a sheet of paper.  Cloth enables this line to escape the two-dimensionality of the paper and to literally become ‘drawn’ within an actual three-dimensional space.  The scale of the work directly aims to engage the viewer; but it is not particularly embracing. It shields, it dissects but it is also black and monolithic. There is much discomfort here.

Installation Sketch

Installation

Installation Detail

I respond primarily to spaces. I am fascinated by the way people use spaces, particularly public spaces, and find it interesting to consider the way I could change the way people respond. I am enthusiastic about showing my work in non-traditional gallery spaces.  The way in which a person behaves in a space is really interesting to me. It is something that is often dictated by social norms. For example in traditional art galleries, members of the public are more than likely forbidden from touching and interacting with the work. This is an idea that I aim to challenge within my work. It is important to me that people engage with my work, and feel comfortable to touch and manipulate what they see.

Textiles Practice

Textiles in Practice

Installation Detail

Detail (rubber binding)

My practice is very process led. My textiles background has encouraged me to be very tactile. This has coloured my view of my own practice, and has led me to create work that people are drawn to interact with. I’m interested in texture and line, and the use of scale to engage the audience. I am mostly inspired by space- particularly the idea of using space as a canvas. I enjoy the notion of using “dead spaces” and voids to create something where there was once nothing.

Installation

I’m currently studying to become a Higher Education lecturer and my aims for the future are to teach alongside continuing my practice. I would also like to undertake an MA in Fine Art in the near future.

Wax Detail

©Chloe Beecham

Expressive Painting in Fashion

drawing

Name: Emily Eason

DOB: November 1993

Place of birth: Nottingham, United Kingdom

Occupation: Freelance Textile designer

 

My project explores time lapse through diversion, the process of exposing light and shadow. My initial inspiration compares how line and movement interact with light. I used various photographic techniques in this practice, to fulling capture fluidity of motion, at first I studied smoke and fire. Progressing into focusing on the smallest of details in the tendrils of movement as fire becomes smoke. Expressing the concept of free-form. Not conforming to a regular pattern, structure, shape or constricted movement. Playing on the abstraction of line, light, darkness and negative space.

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The processes I used to record and express this, ink and bleach expressive painting, development the motion and fluidity into my designs. I documented the complexity and vast detail involved in a split second of movement, contrasted by documenting this as it is created and seen by the naked eye.

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I used a variety of knitted techniques to create a juxtaposition of fluid motion and the structure of block knitting, one example would be lively pleats, crossing paths with structured lines or racking the needles bed while pleating colours on top. Then screen printing my drawing of the motion on to my fabric to advance my concept further developing my original free form idea. The use of these techniques on top of my original designs gave the appearance of flexibility and diversity in motion.

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For my final project I created 5 knitted garments on fine gauge Dubied knitting machines, enveloping these design ideas by screen printing with illuminating dye to make it truly part of the fabric . Explaining my inspiration and research. I documented the vibrancy and energy in a professional photoshoot, and gain knowledge throughout this whole process. The idea of combining, developing and manipulation processes; and how we can alter movement and detail.

I graduated from Manchester metropolitan University in BA textile in practice and now work as a freelance textile designer. Through this I am now developing my design personality and making skills.

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 full-edited-illustration

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©Emily Eason