<\/a><\/p>\n \u00a0Brings together the work of several artists from around the UK working in a variety of media whose work deals with this essential human emotion. Each taking a different approach and showing us what hope means to them.<\/p>\n Meet The Artists………………..<\/em><\/p>\n Anna MacDonald:<\/strong> Anna Macdonald is a dance artist and acamdemic from the North West, UK, whose practice spans site-specific events, installations and screen-based work. Her art explores the delicate tension between contingency and structure and looks for ways to express how people make a transient world feel reliable enough to live in. She specialises in working directly with the public, finding ways to intensify and articulate people’s experiences so that they can be understood by others.<\/p>\n “Last Autumn, a group of people of different ages were invited to stand underneath a tree, and try and catch the leaves as they fell. Although it is almost impossible to predict when leaves will fall, it is equally hard not to believe that, if you just wait long enough or look hard enough, you won’t eventually get one. As such this film provokes ideas about luck, chance and how far we feel we determine our successes. It is a bittersweet work that looks at the complexity of uncertainty and the physicality of hope.”<\/em><\/p>\n<\/div>\n <\/p>\n <\/p>\n Becky Ciesielski<\/strong>: Becky’s work explores memory, trace and liminal spaces; the meeting point between different realms through space and time; where\u00a0Other\u00a0realms (memory, the unconscious, the imaginal) erupt, trickle, seep, breathe their way into this moment, the so-called ‘Everyday’, now.<\/p>\n Her practice spans video, installation, photography, sculpture, drawing, and text. A background in psychology research, alongside a lifelong interest in humanness, underpins her art practice.<\/p>\n For this exhibition we show her work I Still Breathe<\/em>.\u00a0 She has decided not to explain the piece, prefering the message to be ambiguous.<\/p>\n <\/a>Still Breathing (2014)<\/em><\/p>\n “Still Breathing’ speaks to the magic of a moment; the vastness of time, of the elements, all held and reflected in a precious moment, in a tiny cup.<\/em><\/p>\n For me, tea and the whole ritual of tea making, drinking, and appreciating, provides a doorway into my inner world, and a deeper connection with the outer world through my senses….. This piece is a reflection, in every sense, on that sensitive, alive space within us and within the world , where inner meets outer……..reflecting whatever is there.”<\/em><\/p>\n Beth Davis-Hofbauer:<\/strong> Beth is an artist from the south coast of England whose work examines what it means to be human, her experience of chronic illness and severe anxiety influencing much of her work.\u00a0 We are exhibting two of the pieces from her Transience<\/em> series which were recently shown at Aspex Gallery in Portsmouth for this exhibition.<\/p>\n <\/a>Natural Causes, 2014<\/em><\/p>\n “Transience uses a festival as an allegory for the transient nature of our existence.\u00a0 I visited the festival site and neighbouring village numerous times before the start of the festival, documenting it before the festival, during construction and then through the festival and its removal and the village and farm returning to normal.\u00a0<\/em><\/p>\n It amazed me how this entire small town comes into being for a few days before it disappears and life carries on as before, much like how our own lives are just brief moments in the passage of time.”<\/em><\/p>\n Denise Walsh:<\/strong> Denise Walsh is an artist from the south of England.\u00a0 She recently graduated from the University of Creative Arts in Farnham.\u00a0 In HOPE <\/strong>we bring you some of her sculptural work that explores her personal relationship to illnes and hope.\u00a0 Denise Walsh has suffered from a debilitating spinal condition for the last 27 years and she has had to learn to modify her lifestyle to enable her to live an active life.\u00a0 She has done this through pacing and this is reflected in her work.<\/p>\n \u00a0<\/a>Where Landscape is Both a Refuge and a Prommise of Freedom<\/em><\/p>\n “\u2018Where Landscape is both a Refuge and a Promise of Freedom\u2019 communicates the discipline and restrictions of \u2018Pacing\u2019 juxtaposed with the sense of freedom gained from walking, by way of the rigid metal structure encasing the natural found materials. This sculpture contains chosen found objects collected over a month of walking. These objects will of course change and decay over time, simulating the delicate balance of our relationship with nature.”<\/em><\/p>\n <\/p>\n <\/a>Invasion of My Being<\/em><\/p>\n <\/p>\n “\u2018Invasion Of My Very Being\u2019 is an original work based on MRI scans of the artists\u2019 spine and pelvis. Having collected a number of scans over the years due to a spinal problem, they are in themselves a rich source of material. Making this work involved constructing a 3 dimensional object in clay using the scans as the starting point. The resulting work was then encased in a 3-part mould and cast in bronze using the lost wax casting method.<\/em><\/p>\n Choosing bronze as the medium, which is a treasured material together with exhibiting the work on a plinth; has the effect of elevating the status of this object. This is a deliberate decision by the artist whose intention is the make something beautiful out of something that is diseased and dysfunctional.”<\/em><\/p>\n <\/p>\n <\/p>\n Margaret Marks: <\/strong>Margaret is an artist from the south coast of England.\u00a0 She works in a variety of media, in everything from sound to textiles and film.\u00a0 She was recently commissioned to make an art book by The Spring<\/em> to commemorate World War One.\u00a0 Her work can be both light and serious at the same time and she is an artist we have admired and genuinely like since we first met her.<\/p>\n <\/a> Smile<\/em><\/p>\n “<\/span><\/span><\/span>This work consists of a series of 9 sewn images, illustrating the formation of a smile from sad to happy. Modern research states that as well as our feelings producing an appropriate facial expression, we can affect our feelings or mood by \u201cputting on\u201d the expression.\u00a0 Smile, and you are more likely to feel happy, than if you put on a sad face. “<\/span><\/em><\/p>\n <\/p>\n <\/p>\n Marilyn Mango:<\/strong>\u00a0 Studied Fine Art at Portsmouth University, Hampshire and gained a BA Hons (1st) followed by an MA. She has lived and worked in Europe, Asia and America and regularly visits Australia. It is this itinerant spirit that informed and inspired her latest series of paintings ‘My Sky is Your Sky’. With her present studio in the UK, overlooking the horizon of sea and sky, Marilyn Mango is ever conscious that whatever our creed and race we are all look up at the same sky. The artist sees hope in this unity.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n