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Sarah Tulloch: ObjectImage is a poignant approach to the physical material of a photograph and a re-imagination of it into new forms.

Produktbeschreibung
Sarah Tulloch: ObjectImage is a poignant approach to the physical material of a photograph and a re-imagination of it into new forms.
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Autorenporträt
Sarah Tulloch graduated from Bristol School of Art and Design with First Class Honours in 2005. She was then awarded the UWE/Spike Island Graduate Fellowship 2006-7 and exhibited New Slide Works at Spike Island in 2007. At the same time she was selected for a Small Wonders Award with Picture This and her 16mm films entitled Double Exposure were selected for the shorts programme, Ways to Walk, at the Rotterdam International Film Festival, 2007. She was then awarded an AHRC grant to study full-time for an MFA at Newcastle University and was artist in residence at Moorbank Botanic garden during her final year. She graduated with distinction and a Rednile commission with Berwick Film and Media Festival followed. She was also included in a group show Oasis that featured work from Juneau projects, Tessa Farmer and Heather and Ivan Morrison. She has exhibited with Plus Arts Projects, London showing alongside artists from Tracey Emin to Matt Collishaw. She has recently shown new work Cut Series in RIFT at Baltic 39 and was awarded an arts council grant to develop her printing process for this exhibition. New work, Newspaper heads was recently shortlisted for Jerwood Encounters: Family Politics and showcased on the Photoworks website. Other projects include Galimaufry: representing a group of artists with similar interests in working and manipulating found images and objects. Their first show was in February 2012 at Bristol’s Motorcade/Flashparade. In 2014/5 Sarah was commissioned to make a three-channel video installation at the National Trust’s Biddulph Grange Gardens as part of the Trust New Arts programme. Sarah is currently working on production of a book of her works including Cut Series with Daylight books in the US. She is supported in this endeavour by Arts Council England. Alongside the book project Sarah has created Collage Culture with Annie O’Donnell and Katy Cole they will exhibit a part 1 and part 2 series of events and exhibitions relating to collage and photomontage making and the book format at NewBridge Project, Newcastle and Platform A gallery, Middlesborough in 2017. Further Links: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wwaxyk5RByI https://www.facebook.com/CutSeries https://www.sarahtulloch.co.uk http://thenewbridgeproject.com/portfolio/sarah-tulloch/ Marjolaine Ryley was born in London, in 1974. She studied for a BA (hons) in Photography at the Surrey Institute of Art and Design from 1993 1996. She gained an MA in Photography from the Royal College of Art from 1998-2000. Ryley has exhibited and published her work both nationally and internationally including exhibitions at Impressions Gallery, Bradford, Street Level Photoworks, Glasgow, The Palacio des Artes, Porto and Wolverhampton Art Gallery, West Midlands. In 2005 Ryley received a Research Development Fellowship to undertake The Last Picture Show’ a project looking at the changing nature of family photography in the digital age at the Photography and the Archive Research Centre’, UCAL. Her publications include Villa Mona - A Proper Kind of House (Trace Editions, 2006), Field Study 7 Residence Astral’ (PARC 2008) Growing up in the New Age (Daylight books, 2013) and The Thin Blue Line, The Deep Red Sea (NEPN, 2015). Ryley is currently Artist in Residence at the Dilston Physic Garden’ Corbridge, UK where she is working on a new project A Gardener’s Daughter’. Her work is held in the collections of the V&A and Serralves museum. She is currently a Senior Lecturer in Photography at the University of Sunderland. www.marjolaineryley.co.uk Matthew Hearn is a curator and writer based in Newcastle upon Tyne. He studied Fine Art at Newcastle University and since 2008 has been a lecturer on their undergraduate and postgraduate programmes. Since 2015 he has also been lecturing at Northumbria University. In 2012 he completed a PhD on the Locus+ Archive with University of Sunderland. Between 2004 and 2008 Matthew worked with Locus+ developing projects with artists including Chris Burden, Layla Curtis, Janice Kerbel and Leo Fitzmaurice. He has previously curated exhibitions at Globe and National Glass Centre, Sunderland and worked on projects with the Laing Art Gallery, NGCA, VANE, Workplace and BALTIC39. Matthew has contributed to various magazines and publications and has written widely around artists practice. He also co-developed I'll be your mirror, an online platform and events program designed to enhance and support dialogue, discussion and conversation in the arts.