THE COLLABORATIVE PROCESS WITH HANNAH PERNER-WILSON AND JERUSHIA GRAHAM

 

This May The Creatives Project said farewell to resident Hannah Perner-Wilson as she accepted another residency abroad. But having already begun collaborative work with fellow TCP artist Justin Rabideau and Artist-in-Studio alternate Jerushia Graham (some of which will come to fruition this summer during TCP's outreach with One Love Generation), Hannah's legacy will live on as Jerushia takes up residence in her absence. As TCP prepares for this creative changing of the guard, it seemed like the perfect time to give both artists a proper Creative Process introduction to see where TCP is taking both of them in the near future.

Jerushia Graham (left) and Hannah Perner Wilson collaborating in Hannah's TCP studio.

You're both resident Artists-in-Studio for TCP. How has that benefited you creatively?

Hannah: For me it was great because I just moved to Atlanta last September and I set up my studio at home. One day I realized that it was really depressing to be at home all day by myself. I didn't know anyone in Atlanta and I wasn't meeting anyone, so I started Googling for studio spaces to rent. I came across TCP's call to artists while searching for a studio space so I applied for it. Getting it made a huge difference because I moved my studio to the Goat Farm and met everyone else who was part of the TCP residency program and others at the Goat Farm.

Jerushia: I had attended a Gather Atlanta meeting and was representing the Atlanta Printmakers Studio. TCP had a table there, so that's how I found out about it. I decided to apply because I had parts and pieces of stuff at my house and portions of things at my parents' frame shop [Final Touch Frame Shop in Jonesboro] and I just needed a space where I could spread out and know that I wasn't going to get interrupted. It's been beneficial to me for that reason, but also getting to meet other artists that I didn't know and getting to know the Goat Farm. I had heard about things going on there, but I had never been there. We're actually doing collaborative work because I met Hannah and Justin Rabideau through The Creatives Project.

Tell me about the work you've been working on together.

Jerushia: We're playing with automatons and objects that invite you to physically interact with them. So you can wind something or press a button and that might turn something or engage a small motor.

We're really excited about the concept we created for FLUX, we are continuing to build the project for a future showing. [TCP founder] Neda [Abghari]'s helping us locate a space to exhibit it.

Hannah: What's nice is that we can sit down in the same space and work side-by-side. When we started writing the proposal, we just met and talked. But we didn't actually start working on anything until we came up with these great ideas and this huge project. It actually can become very different when you sit down to work something out. Ideas change during the process, so that's where we're at right now.

 

Hannah, you're leaving TCP because you've been accepted into another residency abroad. Where are you headed?

Hannah: When I first moved here I planned to stay for at least a few years. Then work and collaboration opportunities came up in europe and I decided to move back to Berlin. Before leaving, I'm going to San Francisco to collaborate with some people at UC, Berkeley. Then I'll be in Vienna for a residency to create a new piece for a show. Then I'm going to Sweden on a grant to do another piece. So I won't be moving to Berlin until October.

While in Atlanta, working at the Goat Farm, I've spent a lot of time working on a pair of gloves for London-based musician Imogen Heap. The gloves have bend sensors integrated for each finger-joint so that they can detect movements and postures of her hands in order that she can control her digital music software more expressively. The whole gloves project was realized by an amazing team, and there is a wonderful "making-of" documentary that can be viewed online. Imogen performed live for the first time with the gloves in April, and the song titled Me the Machine will hopefully be released by the end of June.

You also recently worked on the  Rua | Wülf, a play based on Little Red Riding Hood produced by another Goat Farm-based group called Saïah. What was your contribution to that show?

Hannah: I got to know Tian Justman, who is a fashion designer with a studio at the Goat Farm, and she along with Saïah sent out an open call to all the artists at the Goat Farm to read the script and come up with ideas for scenes or costumes. One idea they kind of already had was that the cape that Rua wears lights up in one scene where she becomes of age. So Tian had designed the cape and another artist had painted panels attached to the cape and I embedded LED lights into the fabric. I designed the circuitry to be a nice visual element, then programmed the lights and figured out how the actress could trigger the lights during the scene. It should seem like the lights are coming on with her change of mind or mood and not look like she's pressing a button to make the lights become more and more intense as she is aroused. So we made some soft switches in the cape where she could just squeeze the fabric to control the lights. It was nice because I got to work a lot in Tian's studio, which is a really nice studio, and work with the people in the production and lots of the actors. It was fun to get to see bits and pieces of the play before actually seeing the whole thing.

Jerushia, you were an alternate who will be taking Hannah's spot in TCP now that she's leaving. How will that change the way you've been involved with TCP up to this point?

Jerushia: The way the alternate position works is you're not given a space unless one becomes available, however, you're still included in TCP exhibitions and promotion for it's artists. I participated in TCP's show last October at the Goat Farm and the work that I had in that show was a combination of relief printing, paper cuts and stitching. My background is in printmaking and fabric design, so I try and marry all the things that I like to do. That's pretty much what I've been working on until we started collaborating. With the collaborative work, we've been teaching ourselves through trial and error how to build mechanisms. So the stuff I'm working on now is related to making mechanisms visually interesting, not just because there's motion involved but with some added visual reward.

How will you continue your collaboration in Hannah's absence?

Hannah: I guess we don't quite know, but the way we've set ourselves up for building it is it's a series of mechanized boxes that can be installed. So we can work on them separately and bring them together at a later point. They're based on found objects, so we'll all be able to find found objects wherever we are.

Jerushia: There's also a fourth artist who is a costume designer in New York. She's originally from Jonesboro, where I live. So we're just bringing together all of our unique talents to see what comes of it.

 What can you tell our readers about your work and where can people find out more about it online?

Hannah: With my work I document a lot of the processes that I go through in making what I do. So I developed these techniques where I build something, I document it, then I turn it into a how-to instruction set for a project and post it online. I have a website called How to Get What You Want, which is all about bringing fabrics and electronics together and building sensors out of knitting steel yarn or felting steel wool or weaving and sewing circuits with conductive thread. Then I have my own website Plusea.at, where I document my projects without the how-to part.

Jerushia:  ArtbyJerushia.com documents my work through 2011. In terms of subject matter, my work is currently focused on the spirituality of craft. There's something that we transfer to the objects we make that come through to other people. When you've made something you've given them or made something they're using, I feel like there's a spirit that people years from now will encounter. Part of the series that I showed in October and that I've continued working on is called The Spirit House series.

Where might people find your work around Atlanta?

Jerushia: The Spirit House work is on exhibit now at The Chocolate Bar in Decatur through the end of the month. I have a quilted piece inspired by the prints up at the Southwest Arts Center through the end of next month. It was part of a show called Camouflage II, which was a collaboration between visual artists and dancers. The visual artists were curated, then a choreographer came in and created dances inspired by the visual work. On the night of the opening, the dancers were painted to actually camouflage with the artwork, then went on stage and performed the dances. 

a wall in Hannah'a studio

 

This summer Jerushia will be teaching a special workshop as a part of her TCP outreach with One Love Generation. Spaces are still open for youth and teen participants!

Check out the details:

SPEAK OUT! Street Puppet Workshop

1200 Foster St. NW Building B-11 Atlanta, GA 30318 [The Goat Farm]

June 25-30, 2012, 10a - 4p  

Video Session Saturday June 30 open to the public


People around the world have used street puppets to mobilize communities and large groups around a common cause or celebration. Come learn to build giant puppets and props. We will invite our friends, families, and communities to help us use these impressive creations to create a short video. The video will be used to speak out against bullying. You'd be surprised how much fun and how engaging taking a stand can be. Help One Love Generation speak out against bullying by signing up for the SPEAK OUT! Street Puppet Workshop.

Contact Jennifer Lester: jennifer@onelovegeneration.org, 424-229-1536

 

article by Jonathan Williams photography by: Neda Abghari

 

 

The Process of Printing with Ashley Schick

by Jonathan Williams
 After receiving the distinction of becoming one of The Creatives Project's resident Artists-in-Studio for 2012, Atlanta printmaker Ashley L. Schick is once again campaigning for votes. With one of her prints ("Return the Gesture") being chosen as one of 20 finalists for Akua's Fade to Black Small Print Competition, she could be representing TCP in a big way, which would obviously make us quite proud. But that's only one of the many projects this SCAD-Atlanta graduate has going on right now. After you go vote for her print (voting ends at 2 p.m. April 30), you can read this interview she did with The Creative Process. But GO VOTE FIRST.

 

Photography by: Neda Abghari

How did you get involved with The Creatives Project and how has it benefited you as an artist?

I heard about it from a friend who's an artist and it sounded like a really great opportunity. I like working with students and the opportunity to have studio space at the Goat Farm sounded awesome. I graduated in June, so I lost my studio space at school. I applied and was lucky enough to be selected. I've been able to work at the Goat Farm and meet the people there and I've also been able to have a mentorship with the One Love Generation, which has been phenomenal. To be able to spend time with the high school students and see where they are on their artistic paths and be a role model for them has been really rewarding.

Considering that you teach and create, it sounds like your TCP studio space almost doubles as a classroom.

We did a studio class with the students. I'm a printmaker by training and printmaking is a very equipment intensive process. I was lucky enough to be able to borrow a little press from a friend and I've been able to use water soluble ink, so it's not a process that uses chemicals or acids or anything. I demonstrated that process to the One Love Generation class. But for myself, I use the space as an artist studio.

You also work with accomplished sculptor Brian Dettmer. Tell me a little bit about that.

I am his studio assistant. I applied to be his studio assistant through the Working Artists Project, which is through MOCA GA [the Museum of Contemporary Art of Georgia]. They pay for the artists who win the Working Artists Project grants to have a studio assistant, so I got that opportunity. Then we burned through the hours that MOCA GA would fund very quickly because we did tons of projects. Then he hired me as his assistant independently. It's been really great. He's been a great mentor, directed me to different show opportunities and I've gotten to meet different people in the community through being his assitant. Just seeing how a working artist structures his studio time, press and publicity and even archiving his images and files has been a great learning experience.

Also, in the meantime, two of my classmates and friends from grad school, Laura Cleary and Shaun McCallum, and I have purchased a printmaking press and are starting our own professional print shop, Straw Hat Press. We're in talks with the Goat Farm to have space there and I probably wouldn't have gone to the Goat Farm without the TCP opportunity and making friends with everyone there. We'll also be demonstrating some intaglio printmaking from 1-4 p.m. in the Wieland Pavilion Lobby of the High Museum during the Print Fair, May 12th and 13th.

 

Goat Farm inspired paper cuts from the "On The Farm" series

Tell me a little more about the Akua contest.

I've been making these little prints in my TCP Goat Farm studio and using these non-toxic and low toxic inks. They had a call for works for small prints and there's a contest related to it where if you're chosen as a finalist your piece can be voted to be first, second or third place to get materials and a workshop for free. I was selected as one of the 20 finalists and during the month of April you can vote for my piece on their website.

Do you have any other creative projects in the works right now?

The print shop is taking up a lot of time. Another thing that lead us to starting the print shop, besides getting the press, was I've been able to work on this collaboration with Kiki Smith and Valerie Hammond. They're doing a print publishing collaboration, among other things, so I get to work as a printmaking assistant/master printer role for these print projects.

 

Justin Rabideau's creative process.

With his current show Waste Not, The Creatives Project Artist-in-Resident Justin Rabideau uses discarded wood and other items from home renovations to create sculptural works that resemble warped snow sleds, twisted railroad tracks and other mangled forms of metamorphosis. Showing at the Barbara Archer Gallery with the paintings of James Bridges through March 24, the show is a look at transitioning from one phase to another, with the found materials themselves inspiring their own backstory. As Rabideau prepares for his own transition from this show to his next projects, he talks to The Creative Process about his inspirations for this show and other upcoming events.


image courtesy of Romy Maloon & Creative Loafing Atlanta

Your work overall seems to often deal with themes of metamorphosis and transitions. Much of the work from this particular show has elements of things like bridges or, from my perspective at least, things like roller coaster or railroad tracks. When you were assembling this body of work for this show, were those subjects on your mind?

Metamorphosis and transition are definitely driving themes in my work. I like to think of an object or material as having a life. There is a past, present and future associated there. We imprint our lives onto the objects and materials that surround us. These materials change as we do; they develop their own languages, characters and histories. I try to tap into these ideas as I create my work. We all carry around our own life history with us, where you may see a bridge or railroad tracks I see the references to dilapidated houses or the way in which wood buckles and morphs with exposure to age, weather, time.

The idea of using discarded and found objects is a folk art tradition. Who are some artists, visual or otherwise, who have used similar materials, techniques or ideas that may have informed what you are doing now?

It would depend on what you mean by a “folk art tradition.” There are many artists out there that use found materials to create. I'm not certain it is purely a folk art tradition, but I do love and respect many folk artists. Robert Rauschenberg, Rachel Whiteread, Ai Weiwei, Martin Puryear, Duchamp, Sarah Sze and the Gee's Bend Quilters have all been influential artists for me.

You’re originally from Upstate New York and recently moved to Atlanta. What brought you to Atlanta and how have these different environments influenced your recent work?

I grew up in Upstate New York in a very rural town. My natural surroundings have always been very influential in my work. I suppose that I am always trying to connect myself to the environment that I am in. I actually came here from south Florida for work. In each environment that I have lived in I incorporate certain aspects of those places. In New York it was rocks and wood, Athens was Georgia clay and pecans, Florida was palm fronds and ocean and Atlanta has been the use of salvaged wood from the homes of the city. I reach out to these materials to tell a story of my relationship to the landscape and the environment that I am in.  

Your work was featured in TCP’s The Second Coming event at the Goat Farm and you are also one of TCP's resident Artists-in-Studio. What exactly does that mean and how has it affected your creative process?

Being with The Creatives Project has been an enormous opportunity for me. As a resident Artist-in-Studio I have been given the chance to create in a dedicated studio space - something that I haven't had in years. The process of creating my work involves power tools and equipment, space and time. Through the residency I have been able to create an entire new body of work in a dedicated workspace. My thanks go out to TCP and all those that support the programming. It truly has been an incredible opportunity.   

This show closes this weekend. What other projects are you working on and when/where will people be able to see them?

Currently I am working on a huge project for the Wonderglo fundraiser that will be happening on March 24. I am creating a sculptural table to seat approximately 250 people for the event. The table is created from salvaged wood and is a unique and custom piece of interactive sculpture. Also I will be installing a solo show, What Remains Remembers, in Florida that will be up from May 15 to September 15 at Palm Beach State College. I will also be leading a workshop in conjunction to this exhibit for the students there in September. I am also working on two collaborative works with some Atlanta artists that I hope will be happening this summer.