Ms R Louise Clarke

Job: Senior Lecturer, Fine Art

Faculty: Arts, Design and Humanities

School/department: School of Humanities and Performing Arts

Research group(s): Fine Art Practice Group

Address: The Gateway, Ð԰ɵç̨ (Ð԰ɵç̨), Leicester, UK, LE1 9BH

T: n/a

E: lclarke@dmu.ac.uk

W:

 

Personal profile

Artist/curator/writer Louise Clarke’s art practice embraces a range of media such as print, photography, drawing and recycled and scavenged materials to produce a variety of outcomes including installation, 2D and 3D works, multiples and architectural scale interventions.

These media are deployed in an ongoing interrogation of:

  • the articulation of utopia as a means to satisfiy politics, social relationships, ambition and daydreaming
  • the primal landscape as a blueprint throughout our lives, silently influencing our engagement with landscape and architecture
  • the ‘feral’ as a way of working and as a subject matter: our battle to control nature’s encroachment in both the physical and primal emotional realms.

Her specialisms are printmaking and drawing, in their widest application, as equally valid platforms with which to address and engage current visual art practices, debates and research.

A recent (December 2015) curatorial output was :Xenotopia, a group exhibition of 14 artists including Turner Prize winner Grayson Perry and Ð԰ɵç̨ alumni Theo Miller (artists: Emily Allchurch, Amba Sayal-Bennett, Berenika Boberska, Pablo Bronstein, Rachel Clewlow, Noémie Goudal, Sarah Anne Johnson, Katherine Jones, Catriona Leahy, Theo Miller, Paul Noble, Grayson Perry, David Price and Jenny Wiener). :Xenotopia was a wide-ranging creative audit of ‘out-of-place places’, particularly strange, fictitious architecture and ‘xenospaces’, imagined, meta-geographic locations that exist only theoretically, ethereally or subconsciously. ‘Xenotopia’ is a term coined by British writer Robert McFarlane to describe an uncanny landscape. Xeno is the Greek word for ‘other’, or that which is ‘different in origin’, while topia is the suffix deployed by Thomas Moore in his 1516 book, Utopia – a work of political philosophy manifested through the depiction of a fictionalized island society.

Through the expanded medium of print, each of the artists showing in :Xenotopia offered their own unique explorations and visualisations of similarly fictional but redolent places of psycho-geographic ambiguity or putative architectural fantasy. The works displayed a range of, often tangential, anachronistic or merely tenuous connections and approaches to the printmaking medium.

In 2016 Louise was invited to interview noted printmakers on the panel of the Make It Happen symposimum, the brainchild of artist and academic Ruth Sumner in tandem with Leicester Print Workshop, with the aim of interrogating methodology, practice and concept through printmaking.

A passionate advocate of drawing as a universal language, her practice, commentary and curation has been recognised internationally. She has previously led drawing symposia in Slovakia, Ecuador, Russia and Libya supported by the British Council. She has collaborated with artists and architects in drawing-related exhibitions in LA and Chicago and group exhibitions in Finland as well as group and solo exhibitions in the UK.

Louise has co-curated and programmed public art events through the Big Draw campaign since 2000, working with institutions such as the British Museum, The Natural History Museum and the V&A. In a similar role, Louise has worked with English Heritage as lead artist in a range of site-specific art projects.

Her fictional writing and cultural commentary are both a tool for research enquiry and collaboration as well as an explorative medium with which to articulate creative outputs. She writes a regular column in the quarterly The Saatchi Gallery Magazine: Art & Music and was its guest editor for a 2011 issue dedicated to the question ‘Is drawing still relevant?’, synthesising the work and critical thinking of a variety of cultural practitioners in order to survey drawing’s currency. The same year she judged the Saatchi Showdown: Drawing Competition alongside artist Dexter Dalwood.

Louise is currently working on both a publication and a further drawing-based exhibition related to :Xenotopia.

Louise Clarke graduated from Central St Martins in 1997 and gained her MA from the Royal College Of Art in 1999 and was a Fellow of the RCA in 2000. She was formerly assistant to the late artist Helen Chadwick.

Research group affiliations

Fine Art Practice Group

Publications and outputs


  • dc.title: Art Open Competition dc.contributor.author: Clarke, Louise dc.description.abstract: The Art Open at Harlow in an annual competition organised by The Gibberd Gallery. Louise Clarke was invited to be a judge along with Paul Hedge from Hales Gallery, London. The prize winner: Siobhan Dehaney, 'Nude Man', clay sculpture This invitation to judge the open with Paul Hedge came as evidence of peer recognition and of her presence in reviewing and commentating on art through the articles she has written for The Saatch Gallery Magazine: Art & Music This annual Harlow Open has been established for nine years and offers the opportunity for artists who have a connection with Harlow to submit work for exhibition. This year saw a record number of entrants with 165 pieces entered with 116 pieces being exhibited.

  • dc.title: NN Contemporary Art: Education Survey dc.contributor.author: Clarke, Louise dc.description.abstract: Louise Clarke was commissioned by NN Contemporary Art to research, devise and deliver a Pilot Education Survey. The commission was used to test, survey and document the potential and demand for an education remit for the gallery. The findings were will support future programming and funding applications for artists as educators. dc.description: Four workshops were devised by Louise Clarke to explore and expand haptic knowledge, practical learning and contextual referencing of contemporary art.

  • dc.title: Multiverse Redux dc.contributor.author: Clarke, Louise dc.description.abstract: Multiverse Redux 2015, was an afternoon of talks, screenings and a workshop, revisiting NN Contemporary Art's 2014 Northampton Multiverse season. Multiverse was a season of exhibitions and events exploring artists' worlds, hidden histories, and different ideas of the world we are in. In true spirit of the Multiverse, speakers Andy Holden, Michelle Deignan and Catherine Hemelryk, were revisiting a parallel Northampton Multiverse in this season finale and Louise Clarke's workshop aimed to evoke a visualisation of our parallel subconscious realm. Louise Clarke ran a workshop to explore the parallel world of Shadows: Using low tech prosthesis to explore and invent silhouette characters and visualisations of psychological inner worlds. Set in a universe where the very laws of nature are different, artist Andy Holden gave his performance lecture Laws of Motion in a Cartoon Landscape. Developed during his Stanley Picker Fellowship in 2010, Holden put forward an idea that we can use the laws of physics as they appear in cartoons to help us devise a possible way of understanding the landscape, such as: "1. Any body suspended in space will remain in space until made aware of its situation." Artist and filmmaker Michelle Deignan screened her new science fiction infused work filmed at Northampton's iconic landmark, the National Lift Tower. Deignan also talked about her practice, in which she creates factual and fictional narratives through video, film, text and photography. Catherine Hemelryk, Artistic Director at NN Contemporary Art and curator of the 2014 Multiverse Season, gave a tour through time and space, and looked back at the season with a parallel take. The Northampton Multiverse season launched in February 2014 with a large-scale, site-specific work by Australian artist Tanya Schultz. In the true spirit of Northampton Multiverse season, the exhibition was revisited in the imaginary realm, featuring the inverted work by Pop & Pip.

  • dc.title: The Case For Pencils: Pencils dc.contributor.author: Clarke, Louise dc.description.abstract: Image of Louise Clarke's tools - drawings of and by pencils dc.description: A new piece of art work relating to pencils and made by pencils.

  • dc.title: Bugbear dc.contributor.author: Clarke, Louise dc.description.abstract: The musician Darren Hayman invited artists to select a song from his concept album Bugbear and respond by producing a visual artwork. All the images were printed in the albums booklet. Darren Hayman's LP of seventeenth century folk songs called Bugbears is encased in deluxe packaging and accompanied by a massive booklet of Darren's notes, lyrics along with artwork by various artists; the 13 songs are illustrated by 13 artists, including Ant Harding of Hefner, Jonny Helm of The Wave Pictures, Pam Berry of Black Tambourine, Dan Wilson of Withered Hand, Robert Rotifer, Sarah Lippett of Fever Dream, Louise Clarke, Joe Besford, James Paterson and Matthew Sawyer. dc.description: The original art work produced by Louise Clarke for the booklet was a response to a specific track through a detailed drawing.

  • dc.title: Exquisite Corpsing dc.contributor.author: Clarke, Louise dc.description.abstract: In her latest drawing column, Louise Clarke enjoys the frisson of 'picture consequences'. dc.description: The use of games and tricks in order to overcome inhibitions regarding drawing with others and working together through a process.

  • dc.title: Inflated dc.contributor.author: Clarke, Louise; Davies, Emma dc.description.abstract: A commissioned collaboration with artist Emma Davies to make an original artwork. The project conception, development and production was commissioned by Full House Theatre with support from the Arts Council.. The proposal dealt with the need to have a portable artwork as a high impact façade for the touring element of the Full House Theatre. The outcome: 3 large scale inflatable sculptures incorporating drawings that referenced a traveling theatre and the history of Full House Theatre specifically.

  • dc.title: Sight dc.contributor.author: Clarke, Louise dc.description.abstract: Louise Clarke was commissioned to make a large scale group art work using projectors as a public participation event. The event was coordinated between NN Contemporary Art and The Royal & Derngate Theatre as part of Fun Palaces 2015. dc.description: Through engaged practice Louise Clarke worked with participants through projected images and multiple screens, layering and animating images combining analogue and digital technologies. Part of Louise Clarkes practice and research using drawing and art as an pedagogical tool

  • dc.title: Cutting up rough dc.contributor.author: Clarke, Louise dc.description.abstract: Montage is now firmly embedded in fine art education and practice, with John Stezaker's decisively cut photographic collages now as ubiquitous as Picasso's drawings in a Foundation courses' arsenal of references. In her latest column, Louise Clarke uses an invitation to hold a workshop at Fermynwoods Contemporary Art, in Northamptonshire, as a timely excuse to re-engage in the punk-style liberation of cutting out, photocopying and collaging.

  • dc.title: Casting dc.contributor.author: Clarke, Louise dc.description.abstract: Fermynwoods Contemporary Art works with vulnerable young people through their CE Academy Programme. Louise Clarke was invited to devise and deliver a workshop using her practice as the driver for pedagogy, communication, discussion and learning new skills and as part of Louise Clarke's commitment to engaged practice and alternative education. The CE Academy provides alternative education for young people who are permanently excluded from school, dual registered and for school age mothers. They work with practicing artists: 'To be an artist is often to be an outsider, and ..... we have watched how young people who have been excluded, find it easier to establish a rapport with our artists. They have an ability to connect with young people partly because they are not mainstream, but primarily because they have a passion for their practice that engages, enthuses and in many cases ignites in young people a desire to learn that has lain dormant for a long time.' (CE Academy, publication isbn: 978-1-36-7276345) dc.description: Louise Clarke provoked students to take a playful and experimental approach to mould making, using plaster to create small objects and sculptural forms. The emphasis was upon discovery through making rather than pre-designing an outcome. By deliberately working with materials from the beginning, rather by planning and designing, students learned to challenge and question through manual dexterity, take risks, question issues of control, work collaboratively and haptic learning.

Key research outputs

A recent (December 2015) curatorial output was :Xenotopia, a group exhibition of 14 artists including Turner Prize winner Grayson Perry and Ð԰ɵç̨ alumni Theo Miller (artists: Emily Allchurch, Amba Sayal-Bennett, Berenika Boberska, Pablo Bronstein, Rachel Clewlow, Noémie Goudal, Sarah Anne Johnson, Katherine Jones, Catriona Leahy, Theo Miller, Paul Noble, Grayson Perry, David Price and Jenny Wiener). :Xenotopia was a wide-ranging creative audit of ‘out-of-place places’, particularly strange, fictitious architecture and ‘xenospaces’, imagined, meta-geographic locations that exist only theoretically, ethereally or subconsciously. ‘Xenotopia’ is a term coined by British writer Robert McFarlane to describe an uncanny landscape. Xeno is the Greek word for ‘other’, or that which is ‘different in origin’, while topia is the suffix deployed by Thomas Moore in his 1516 book, Utopia – a work of political philosophy manifested through the depiction of a fictionalized island society.

Through the expanded medium of print, each of the artists showing in :Xenotopia offered their own unique explorations and visualisations of similarly fictional but redolent places of psycho-geographic ambiguity or putative architectural fantasy. The works displayed a range of, often tangential, anachronistic or merely tenuous connections and approaches to the printmaking medium.

This research output will continue with further outcomes being a possible publication and another exhibition utilising drawing as a way of investigating and articulation personal xenotopias.

Research interests/expertise

  • Feral
  • :Xenotopia.
  • Utopia.
  • Architecture.
  • Psychology of space
  • Primal Landscape
  • Printmaking
  • Drawing
  • Installation.
  • Fine art practices
  • Curation
  • Fiction
  • Cultural commentary
  • Art as education
  • Drawing as language.
  • Drawing in education.
  • Communication and learning through Drawing.

Areas of teaching

  • Fine Art.
  • Printmaking.
  • Contextual and Professional Studies

Qualifications

  • MA Fine Art: Printmaking / Royal College of Art, London
  • 1st Class BA: Fine Art and PhotoMedia / Central St Martins, London

Courses taught

  • BA Fine Art – Printmaking. Contextual and Professional Studies. Fine Art.
  • MA Fine Art – Fine Art.

Honours and awards

  • Elephant Trust – Production Grant – May 2004
  • Stanley Picker Fellow: Printmaking – Kingston University, Kingston – 1999-2000
  • Printmaking Fellow – RCA, London – 1999-2000
  • Printmaking Fellow – Gloucester University, Cheltenham – 1999-2000
  • Basil Alkazzi Research Travel Award – Research visit to N.Y, USA – 1998
  • Aylesford Newsprint Company – Selected Prize – December 1997
  • Faulkner Fine Art Prize – Judged by Bruce McLean – April 1996

Professional esteem indicators

Judge:

The Saatchi Gallery Showdown: Drawing: an online competition that gives artists from all over the world a chance to showcase their work and have it be judged by internationally acclaimed artists and curators. (Dexter Dalwood, Louise Clarke and Gemma de Cuz) 

Judge:

Invitation to judge Art Open (2014) at the Gibberd Gallery, Harlow along with Paul Hedge Director of Hales Gallery

External:

Anglia Ruskin – MA Fine Art and MA Printmaking

Review and cultural commentary:

Louise writes a regular column in the quarterly The Saatchi Gallery Magazine: Art & Music and was its guest editor for a 2011 issue dedicated to the question ‘Is drawing still relevant?’, synthesising the work and critical thinking of a variety of cultural practitioners in order to survey drawing’s currency.

Case studies

Review:
Nick Smith, Editor Relief Press reviewed :Xenotopia http://artmag.saatchigallery.com/xenotopia/

Review:
:Xenotopia - Exhibition Review
Paul Bayley ; Bayley, Paul 
Subject: :Xenotopia Exhibition, Utopia, Fine Art, Printmaking 
Citation: Bayley, P. (2016) The Saatchi Gallery Magazine: Art & Music. pp. 65 
Description:Review of :Xenotopia group exhibition. Curated by Louise Clarke. Artists in :Xenotopia Exhibition and future publication: Emily Allchurch, Amba Sayal-Bennett, Berenika Boberska, Pablo Bronstein, Rachel Clewlow, Noémie Goudal, Sarah Anne Johnson, Katherine Jones, Catriona Leahy, Theo Miller,Paul Noble, Grayson Perry, David Price and Jenny Wiener
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/2086/12238 ISSN: 2042-1648 Date: 2016-03 

Article:
David Sheppard musician compiled a play list for :Xenotopia which was published on  

Louise Clarke Portrait