BFA Exhibition- Rachelle Soucy
Video/Sculpture/Instillation
Do you remember a place like a photograph in your mind? How do you remember a specific place? Do certain sensations remind you of a place or time?
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For the last few years the majority of my concentration has been to incorporate cityscape themes into my artwork. These images have taken shape from fanciful chaotic images inspired from the larger cityscape to more of a tranquil quality inspired by my new surroundings. I commenced my work on a two-dimensional plane, but I wanted more of an interactive feel, as our everyday environments have. I questioned whether a two-dimensional image was actually a realistic or natural representation. The time of day or human interaction can change a landscape’s shape dramatically. Both human and natural elements play off each other creating a mutating landscape.
This constant changing of aesthetics in real time gives the landscape a dynamic quality. I incorporated this notion into the formation of my interactive sculpture. There are geometric and organic shapes coming out from the wall creating an interactive backdrop for the projected video. The video images act as both kinetically and as visual sensations. As a visual artist, I choose the sense of sight to invoke memories of time and place, through the use of texture, motion and colour. Memories of a place are not necessarily like a photograph in your mind, but you are often reminded through sensations:
“The sense of place…does indeed emerge from the senses. The land and even the spirit of the place, can be experienced kinetically, or kinesthetically, as well as visually. If one has been raised in a place its textures and sensations, its smells and sounds, are recalled as they to a child’s, adolescent’s, adult’s body. Even if one’s history there is short, a place can still be felt as an extension of the body, especially the walking body, passing through and becoming part of the landscape.”
I have intended both geometric and organic forms to represent more than what they are. They form a sort of map making, similar to topography, representing three-dimensional natural and built formations. They can also represent other technological and organic elements that the viewer is familiar with.
This is an interactive landscape of the physical and visual attributes of places that I am familiar with and pass through daily, but this is not a representational landscape. It is a means to invoke personal memories of place for both myself and for others, through feelings and ideas people attach to certain sensations.
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Lucy R. Lippard. Being in Place. New York: The New Press, 1997. p. [34]