Joanna Kori - portrait

Ventnor artist wins Quay Arts’ Open Exhibition

Quay Arts’ biennial contemporary Open exhibition features over 50 selected works by 35 emerging and established artists from across the south region.

The Open exhibition is formed as an open call to artists, to submit work of any medium, any size and any theme. Works include; painting, mixed media, illustration, photography, textiles, assemblage, video and print, and have all been produced within the last 12 months. Many artists present preoccupations with the land, the sea and memory. Works also explore ideas around preservation, conservation and domesticity.

The prize
One artist was selected from the Open 2015 exhibition for a solo show in Quay Arts’ West Gallery for 2017. The solo exhibition will include curatorial input, mentoring, marketing and installation support.

The selectors were; Dr Rachel Flynn, Exhibitions & Collections Coordinator, Dimbola Museum & Galleries; Nigel George, Eccleston George Public Artist and Quay Arts Trustee; Georgia Newman, Visual Arts Project Manager, Quay Arts.

The Winner
Ventnor-based artist, Joanna Kori was selected as the winner for Quay Arts’ Open 2015 Exhibition.

Joanna Kori recently returned to the Island after moving away as a child. Working as a mixed media artist and interactive instructional designer, she also provides adult, community and school workshops as a learning consultant for Jerwood Gallery, Hastings. Her works are in public and private collections.

Joanna Kori - gum paper artwork

Joanna’s work focuses on drawings and constructions. Her constructions in particular allude to the culture of domestic routine and the rituals of hospitality. They engage the still-life tradition from a contemporary feminine perspective.

Vessels
For the Quay Arts Open Joanna submitted a collection of casts/sculptures called Vessels made from gum-strip paper and linseed oil representing contemporary domestic tools and objects. They are housed in two display units with the gum-strip pieces inside, which emphasise the archaeological feel of the work.

The casts’ fragmented states suggests a kind of archaeology and piecing together of domestic activity from a bygone era, yet the casts are based on currentday implements. Joanna finds the domestic environments that women have historically occupied are rapidly disappearing, as women’s primary place has moved from home to the workplace and today’s kitchens being redesigned into shiny, empty, light reflective environments.

In Joanna’s previous work, using gum-strip paper coated in linseed oil, she constructs an empathetic study of domestic scenes and objects that opens a lived space between self and world. Using invisible thread, domestic interiors are reconstructed and transformed into suspensions and presented as animated, three-dimensional scenes.

The spatial qualities of the domestic objects and their relationship to fragments of furniture – kitchen sink, table or washing machine – intensify a sense of place. They form part of a process of remembrance, an extracting of the significant from the transitory and the ephemeral.

Future memory
For her 2017 West Gallery show, Joanna plans to respond to how the Quay Arts building and Island was occupied in the past and present. She proposes to create a series of ‘future memory’ gum-strip constructions and a series of pencil and watercolour drawings – observations of implements and equipment still in use over the ages, which will root the exhibition in the still-life genre.

The casts will aim to engage the still-life tradition from a contemporary perspective – working objects, domestic activity, the preparation for events and aftermath of feeding people (mimicking the Quay Arts Café on the ground floor below perhaps). Each construction will be made from her chosen material, gumstrip paper coated in linseed oil; suspended works would focus on areas of contemporary activity – utilizing the gallery’s height to create hanging systems with invisible thread to support the gum-strip suspensions.

Georgia Newman – Visual Arts Project Manager, Quay Arts said:

“It was an extremely difficult decision selecting one winner – we found many of the works in the Open 2015 to be of such high quality. We all felt Joanna’s concept and unique choice of material was incredibly evocative.

“I think responding to the Quay Arts building and local heritage will be a fascinating project and engage many viewers with contemporary visual arts. Winning the solo exhibition will help elevate her professional practice by a producing a very ambitious body of work, and we intend to support her throughout that process.“

For more information on Joanna Kori’s work, please visit her Website

Artists exhibiting in Quay Arts’ OPEN 2015 exhibition
Lilly Louise Allen, Zoë Barker, Luke Ellison, Michael Forrest, Karen Grainger, Ka Gray, Lynda Gray, David Hamilton, Howard Hardiman, Gillian Hawkins, Lisa Heath, Joanne Hummel-Newell, Akihito Izumi, Chris Jenkins, Trevor Jessop, Jess Jolliffe, Donna Jones, Lesley Jones, Joanna Kori, Penny Lochhead, Richard May, Steve Moberly, Lyndy Moles, Rob Moore, Katy Oxborrow, Lucia Para, Adele Pearce, Deborah Richards, Judy Rodrigues, Melanie Swan, Martin Swan, Brenda Ullrich, Ian Whitmore, Paul Windridge , Paul Woods & Maya Malfatti Woods.

Exhibition continues till Saturday 11th July 2015. Gallery opening times: Mon – Sat, 10am – 4pm

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