Re:Call 7 Interview Katy Connor


Art has left the Building

Re:Call Interview


1) When were you at Bournville School of Art?

1996-7

2) What course did you study here?

Portfolio Foundation: 2 years, part-time
(First year was off-site in Sparkhill)

3) Who were your tutors?

Ted and Bob Jardine were my main tutors.
(Linda Matti set up the Portfolio course)

4) What area did you specialize in?

Fine Art Photography

5) What memories do you have of your first day at Bournville School of Art?

I loved it.

6) What memories do you have of your final show at Bournville School of Art?

5 of us independently set up our final show at the Custard Factory, “THRU”
We hired the space and prepped it, selecting works and invited everyone down for the PV. It was a real turning point for me in terms of collaborating and setting up artist-led stuff. I worked with 4 female Norwegian students, 2 of whom I’m still in touch with now - I’m going to Norway next month.

7) What piece did you do for your final show at Bournville and could you describe it?

3 series’ of large-scale, hand printed photographs.


8) Could you give just five words to describe your experience at Bournville School of Art?

Spent most of my time in the Darkroom

9) Could you indicate what creative activity you have done since your time at Bournville?

Worked in Video, film and TV production for 6 years, and taught creative video workshops in Birmingham schools/community centres etc.
Started to make my own work again, and completed my MA in 2009, at Dartington College of Arts, Devon (which has since been closed down)
Teaching Fine Art/Media: Falmouth University, Plymouth College of Art, and one year at Bournville with Sean O’Keefe and Steve Bulcock in 2006/7. 
Now have a studio at Spike Island, Bristol (since 2010)
Practice-based PhD candidate in Experimental Media (2015)


10) Could you describe your current creative practice/ideas/work?

My practice explores the poetics of media technologies; their capacity to infuse the senses and visualise patterns of thought and physical sensation - especially those at the edge of articulation, on the periphery of vision, behind closed eyes.

11) Could you say a little about the work you have chosen to include in the Re:Call exhibition?

Afterglow (2007) is a collage of digital and VHS video, super 8mm film, medical ultrasound and an electro-acoustic composition - made in collaboration with sound artist Helena Gough.

I wanted to address perspectives and power relations that were embodied in certain technology and media and also I became a little obsessed with this structure of Spaghetti Junction – as a kind of monolith, as a body, and a site of fertile leakage in the city. So Spaghetti Junction becomes this metaphor, explored and probed by different lenses…
Afterglow was a very intuitive collaborative process – we simply passed film and audio materials back and forth to each other, building these layers of sound and image that then started to fuse together into a kind of structure.
Supported by VIVID, Birmingham Centre for Media Arts

12) What are you working on at the moment?

A series of works that explore scale and space, through microscopy, satellite imagery and 3D print.

13) What are your creative plans for the future?

My PhD gives me the opportunity to explore and develop new work over the next 18 months. I’m very fortunate as I received funding from AHRC to complete it over 3 years.

14) Is there anything else you would like to add?

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