Epicormia Artists in studio development January – September 2016

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Artist Paul Andrew has been living and working with PTSD, depression and anxiety since 1997 following an unprovoked homophobic assault. Paul’s art practice has pursued an archival impulse since 1978. Currently he is working in his Ballina studio re-imagining a series of found negatives depicting the devastation on communities of the Western Front during the First World War. Designed as a series of “small antidotes” to the prevailing rhetoric of WW1 Centenary celebrations underway between 2014- 2018. His current research interest is the aftermath of war and the cross-generational impact of war-related trauma. In this series Ellipse-Portraits of Aftermath he is re-authoring portraits from a found archive collection as a series of digital provocations, or “strange postcards”.

 

During 2016 each of the six epicormia artists are focusing on eight months of self-directed research and development in studios while working remotely around the country in places as far North as Yeppoon, Queensland as far south as Gippsland Victoria and at private artist studios located in the Northern Rivers including Ballina,The Channon and Lismore.

Artist Jeremy Hawkes says:

I have been a practicing artist for over 25 years, working across many different media with a more recent focus on mark-making / drawing and digital imagery. I am interested in the Body as the first site of architecture we navigate and the intersections between this, pathology, and identity.

Using Epicormia as a starting point, I have researched contemporary theories on neuro-evolution and the biology of the self. Starting with mark making in response to these ideas I have attempted to engage myself as an epicormic agent, responding to my own pathological and neurological limitations in pushing ideas forward…and sideways.

I have delved into digital photography, returned to sculpture as a means of accessing the body’s response and continued to draw – ever more expansively and obsessively.

 

Jeremy Hawkes paintings "using Epicormia as a starting point, I have researched contemporary theories on neuro-evolution and the biology of the self..."
Jeremy Hawkes paintings “using Epicormia as a starting point, I have researched contemporary theories on neuro-evolution and the biology of the self…”

 

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