Posts in Highlights Category

Sam Parker Reflects on LOOK Climate Lab 2024

It’s the last week to catch Open Eye Gallery’s LOOK Climate Lab 2024, featuring new work in progress from Mishka Henner, artist-in-residence with Energy House 2.0.

Team Assistant, Sam Parker, attended the LOOK launch event back in January, and here he shares his thoughts on a few of his favourite works from the exhibition in Liverpool.

1. Executive Decision by Mishka Henner

Mishka Henner's large scale work Executivie Decision, comprised of three large blankets hung on a white wall. The blankets show a forst on fire, with a man in a buisness suit looking out towards the destruction in the style of Caspar David Friedrich's Wanderer Above The Sea of Fog.
Executive Decision by Mishka Henner installed at LOOK Climate Lab 2024, Liverpool. Photography by Rob Battersby.

Sam Parker: To start with, I can’t not mention Mishka Henner’s new work Executive Decision. One of our current artists-in-residence at Energy House 2.0, Henner has begun to develop work with the AI Midjourney, creating his own worlds and imagery using prompts that continuously manipulate the work.

The layers of the work really draw me in. The work itself depicts a man in a business suit, not panicked by the prospect of fire, but to me, he seems content or even relaxed. Combined with the title of the work, Executive Decision, it makes me think of the government and organisational decisions that continue to do our planet harm; an ‘executive decision’ to damage the already depleting health of the environment around us. 

I’m also really interested in Henner’s use of artificial intelligence, particularly at this time when conversations about AI are so contentious. The painterly aesthetic of the piece seems to point towards the way AI may make traditional labour techniques redundant. From a distance, and with no knowledge of Henner’s work, you’d be forgiven for thinking it was a painting – drawing inspiration and source material from historical artwork when discussing the work with Henner ahead of the exhibition, he rightly said it could be “indistinguishable from paintings.” 

Along with this, Henner has deliberately used a service that prints on demand for this work – highlighting another problem that we as a society are facing; the mass production of goods with no care for the environmental impact of said production. The work speaks to the nature of modern culture; we can make and sell anything, without care for the process and impact of its production.

To me, these things combine to make a truly thought-provoking work, which describes contemporary problems, the diminishing viability of hand-crafted products, and the almost glorification of destruction that we as a species cause. 

2. Strange Eden by Mario Popham

Strange Eden by Mario Popham installed against a white wall in dark wood frames.
Strange Eden by Mario Popham installed at LOOK Climate Lab 2024, Liverpool. Photography by Rob Battersby.

I really enjoyed the variety of Mario Popham’s work on display here; the striking photographs, and also the experimental methods employed in a couple of the more abstract pieces. Particularly the layered pieces that literally stick out from the surface, giving an impasto aesthetic as the deep black colour prickles out from the imagery. This experimental approach interests me as someone who both photographs and paints. The material composition of the piece is also apt, using coal and other materials from the Brickershaw Country Park; which used to be a coal mine. This adds depth and connection to the source of Popham’s work.

Detailed view of Strange Eden by Mario Popham hung against a white wall in dark wood frames. The work is comprised of black and white abstracted patterns.
Detail View: Strange Eden by Mario Popham. Photography by Rob Battersby.

There is something otherworldly about Popham’s work – in terms of shape and form, some of the works are almost reminiscent of the aliens and their language from the film Arrival – ink-like forms suspended in the air, travelling within something akin to a circulatory system.

3. Co-Creation with the Environment by Lizzie King

Abstract artwork by Lizzie King's Co-creation with the enviroment series.
Abstract artwork by Lizzie King's Co-creation with the enviroment series.

Details from Lizzie King’s Co-Creation with the Environment series. Courtesy of the artist.

Alongside Popham’s work, current MA Contemporary Art student and previous Graduate Scholar with the Collection Lizzie King also presented some beautiful experimental pieces that use nature itself to create the works on photographic paper. These works also provide this cosmic feeling and aesthetic; looking to contain special formations of stars, gases, and other astral bodies.

Scuffs and scratches, dirt and debris – King uses the unpredictability of nature to further enhance the works itself, using sustainable processes the work combines analogue processes and nature into one complete package.

LOOK Climate Lab 2024 installed at Open Eye Gallery.
LOOK Climate Lab 2024 installed at Open Eye Gallery. Photography by Rob Battersby.

From what I understand the prints are not fixed, and so are still altered by light – In Open Eye Gallery they are covered with a cloth that has to be lifted to view the work. I find the prospects of this quite interesting, as over time, the prints will change with each viewing until eventually, the print has become overexposed; along with the materials that have been kept on the surface, this could produce wildly varying results allowing all to ponder which element created certain colours and forms– it’s exciting!

4. Kherson by Nazar Furyk

Kherson by Nazar Furyk installed at LOOK Climate Lab 2024.
Kherson by Nazar Furyk installed at LOOK Climate Lab 2024, Liverpool. Photography by Rob Battersby.

I also wanted to discuss Nazar Furyk‘s series of photographs taken within the Kherson region in Ukraine. Given the contemporary nature and global political situation surrounding the war in Ukraine, Furyk explores the ramifications of the conflict; not just the military action, but the people who continue to live through this, how it affects them, and how the war ultimately affects them as individuals.

Furyk shows us rubble, rubbish, murky waters, claustrophobic offices, books in the open, an abandoned football, destroyed infrastructure, and the resulting contaminated area from the destruction of fuel and chemicals – which then made its way into the Black Sea. Furyk visited this region several times, including immediately after the destruction of the Kakhovka Hydroelectric Power Plant dam. A sustainable energy source destroyed – this begs the question: how will they recover? With so much lost, and the war not even over yet, how will they rebuild? Will the damage done to the environment ever be rectifiable?

It was interesting to compare this work to Stephanie Wynne’s Erosion work, where she explores the structural waste as a result of war and how post-WWII era Liverpool had to deal with the waste from bombed homes. In this case, tonnes of rubble from the bombed homes were dumped on a mile-long stretch of coastline – will something similar be the fate of Ukraine’s post-war waste?

Stephanie Wynne's Erosion series installed at LOOK Climate Lab 2024. The images show costal scenes, installed against a white wall.
Erosion by Stephanie Wynne installed at LOOK Climate Lab 2024, Liverpool. Photography by Rob Battersby.

There is one image that Furyk has captured that stood out from the rest for me; taken after the dam’s destruction, arid cracked ground, debris, and a sense of barrenness – green leaves rise from between the cracks, flowers bloom and shed their petals amidst the chaos. Life finds a way, and life goes on.


LOOK Climate Lab 2024

There’s still a week left to catch LOOK Climate Lab 2024 at Open Eye Gallery Liverpool. The exhibition closes on the 31st of March.

LOOK Climate Lab is a biennial programme exploring how photography can be a relevant and powerful medium for talking about climate change. The programme sees the gallery transformed into a lab: bringing together researchers and artists to test their ideas and encouraging our audiences to discuss systematic changes needed for dealing with the climate crisis.

Find out more about LOOK Climate Lab and visiting Open Eye Gallery over on their website, here.

Energy House 2.0 Artist-in-Residency Programme

In partnership with Open Eye Gallery, Liverpool and Castlefield Gallery, Manchester, the University of Salford Art Collection is currently hosting two artist residencies at Energy House 2.0, the unique, world-leading energy performance facility at the University. Mishka Henner was awarded the first of two 18-month artist residencies in early 2023. Emily Speed was awarded the second residency in summer 2023. Both artists are developing new work in response to Energy House 2.0’s research, exploring themes of the climate crisis, net zero research, and the future of housing. Find out more about our residencies here.

Sam Parker

Graduating from BA(Hons) Fine Art at the University of Salford in 2023, Sam joined the Art Collection team as a graduate associate in October of that year, working closely with the team to develop collections care, technical installation, and his own curatorial skills.

Sam is continuing to explore all avenues of knowledge in the curatorial world whilst aiding in exhibition installations, artist development, networking, planning, and the inner workings of the Art Collection.

He also maintains a fine art practice with an interest in sound, music, and synesthesia – how audio and visual mediums can come together to create enhanced experiences. Find out more about Sam’s fine art practice here.


2024 Graduate Scholarship Scheme: Open for Applications

Now in its 10th year, the annual Graduate Scholarship scheme, run by the University of Salford Art Collection in partnership with Castlefield Gallery, is now open for applications. This year, we are delighted to announce additional support from Wallace Seymour Fine Art Products for the Wallace Seymour Painting Scholarship.

First established in 2014 to support artists in the crucial first year after graduation, the 12 month programme grants graduating students from the School of Arts, Media and Creative Technology time, resources and the opportunity to develop their practice within a supportive framework.

Scholarship packages are tailored but can include:

  • £1000 bursary towards e.g. materials, research or equipment
  • Studio space for 12 months
  • Mentoring, coaching and professional guidance
  • Research trips and networking
  • Opportunity to have artwork acquired into the University of Salford Art Collection

In 2023/24, we awarded five places on the scheme, with studio spaces including Islington Mill, Paradise Works and Hot Bed Press. The programme evolves each year as we endeavour to offer opportunities to the graduates we think we can best support. Over 50 graduates have benefitted from the scheme so far.

Eligibility: 

The scheme is only open to University of Salford final year undergraduates from the School of Arts and Media (who are due to graduate or complete their studies in July 2024) – plus there will be a maximum of one scholarship open to an MA graduate (due to graduate or complete in September 2024). Applicants who will be undertaking further study at the time of the scholarship (e.g. starting an MA in 2024) will not be eligible. Further information and guidelines are available below.

Accessibility:

We aim to remove any barriers, bias or discrimination that prevents individuals or groups from realising their potential, and to develop organisational cultures that positively value diversity. If you have access needs and wish to discuss these in relation to the application, interview, or the opportunity more broadly, please contact: S.A.Parker@salford.ac.uk

How to Apply

Open for applications from: Monday 18th March 2024
Application deadline: by 9am Monday 29th April 2024
Late or incomplete applications will not be accepted.

Shortlisted applicants will be interviewed in person on Tuesday 21 May 2024.

To apply, please read the guidelines and complete the application form.

Click here to download the Application Form in Word Format or PDF Format
Click here to download the Application Guidance in Word Format or PDF Format

1) Complete your application form
2) Send an up to date CV (2 pages maximum)
3) Include image, video or sound files (and/or weblinks to these) – up to four files maximum
4) Email to Team Assistant, S.A.Parker@salford.ac.uk with the subject line “GSP Application Form 2024”

All the information on how to apply, eligibility criteria, application formats and further guidance is included in the guidelines.

For any enquires contact S.A.Parker@salford.ac.uk


Hybrid Futures Comes to Salford

We are delighted to share that we’re bringing Hybrid Futures, a new group exhibition exploring sustainability and the climate crisis, to Salford, launching in March 2024 at Salford Museum and Art Gallery.

Bringing together all the work from across the Hybrid Futures project, you’re invited to join us to celebrate the exhibition launch on the 21st of March.

Exhibition Launch: Hybrid Futures

5-7 PM, Thurs 21st March 2024
Salford Museum and Art Gallery

Open to all and free to attend, refreshments provided.
RSVP here: https://salfordmuseum.com/event/opening-hybrid/

A prayer room, water and dates will be made available to anyone observing Ramadan. Want to attend earlier? We will be offering a quiet hour ahead of the exhibition launch. Please contact Rowan Pritchard if you would like to attend from 4 pm.

Hybrid Futures is an ongoing partnership project from Castlefield Gallery in Manchester, Grundy Art Gallery in Blackpool, Touchstones Rochdale, University of Salford Art Collection and Shezad Dawood Studio exploring collective and more sustainable ways of working.

Marking one of the final phases of the 2-year project, the exhibition brings together the new works co-commissioned for Hybrid Futures from Shezad Dawood, Jessica El Mal, Parham Ghalamdar and RA Walden, each exploring universal threats of climate change, informed and inspired by their own perspectives and backgrounds.

Also featured is the wider work of the project including Collective Futures, a test bed community engagement programme and the findings and recommendations of Hybrid Futures’ Sustainability Advisor, Danny Chivers whose work has been integral to the project and the partners.

More to come from Hybrid Futures:

  • Interested in the behind-the-scenes of the project? The exhibition will be accompanied by a national symposium on 10 May 2024, where learning from Hybrid Futures will be shared. Find the booking and full programme details here on Eventbrite: https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/837365973167
  • Alongside the exhibition at the Museum, two additional works by Hybrid Futures artists Parham Ghalamdar and Shezad Dawood will be screened at the New Adelphi Exhibition Gallery, University of Salford, to coincide with the exhibition. Part of the Gallery’s art film season – showing works from the University Art Collection with an international focus – Birds or Borders by Ghalamdar screens 18 March – 3 April, and Leviathan Cycle, Episode 1: Ben by Dawood screens 10th – 24th April – visit the UOSAC website for full details.
  • PLUS: A new exhibition by RA Walden will open at the Grundy from 20 April – 15 JuneObject transformations through the coordinate of time is a solo exhibition of newly commissioned and existing works. Spanning sculpture, installation, text and moving image, the works in this exhibition mark and measure the passing of time. Drawing on reference points as varied as, quantum physics, the ecological crisis, ancient timekeeping and the life cycle of worms, Walden is asking us to consider time at both a macro and micro level. More specifically, as an artist with lived experience of a disability, RA Walden also uses their work to explore and express non-normative experiences of time. From sculptures made from hacked office clocks to texts that ask who and what defines, ‘work’, Walden’s exhibition also provides a poetic meditation on lives and bodies whose timekeeping does not conform to the supposed ‘norm’.

Find out more about the Hybrid Futures Project:

Visit the dedicated Hybrid Futures Microsite to explore the exhibitions so far, learn more about the artists & partners, and read about the work of Collective Futures now.

Hybrid Futures, a multi-part collaboration focusing on climate, sustainability, collaborative learning and co-production between Castlefield Gallery, Manchester, Grundy Art Gallery, Blackpool, Touchstones Rochdale, University of Salford Art Collection and Shezad Dawood Studio, and generously supported by Arts Council England and Art Fund with additional funding from Henry Moore Foundation.

? Download the full press release here.


Arts Council England Logo
Art Fund Logo
Henry Moore Foundation Logo

New publication: Some Days I Feel Triangle

Following artist Gwen Riley Jones’ 18 month residency with the University of Salford Art Collection, a new publication shares reflections on socially-engaged practice, youth engagement, and the relevance of collections today.

Browse online on Issu here, or download it online here, or you can get in touch with us to enquire about a physical copy (subject to availability).


Share your thoughts – audience survey now open

Share your thoughts
Audience survey – closes 31st March 2024

Take part here

Whether you are a first-time or regular visitor to our events and exhibitions, we’d love to hear from you. Your feedback is crucial to help us better understand our audiences and develop our future programming. 

The survey is anonymous and should only take around 5 minutes – but you may leave your contact details at the end if you’d like to be entered into our prize draw for a £15 cafe voucher with our partners at Salford Museum & Art Gallery.  Please note, the survey is open to everyone, but unfortunately any staff/colleagues at the University are not eligible for the prize draw due to tax regulations. One winner will be drawn at random and contacted by email.

Fill out our survey here!


Art Film Season – Spring 2024

We are excited to announce a series of artist film screenings from the University of Salford Art Collection, each with an international focus, at the New Adelphi Exhibition Gallery from March to June 2024.

Our campus gallery will offer a relaxed environment to enjoy films in person, or our visitors further afield will be able to watch the full programme online during screening dates.

In March we launch with a special documentary screening by Open Eye Gallery as part of the Home from Home: Photography in Ukraine symposium.

During March and April, works by Parham Ghalamdar and Shezad Dawood are presented to coincide with major new touring show Hybrid Futures with our partners at Salford Museum & Art Gallery. Ghalamdar and Dawood both consider issues around migration, welfare and climate. From May, works by Antony Barkworth Knight, Elliott Flanagan, and Nicola Dale & Florence Lam, each explore how we can communicate, collaborate and build relationships meaningfully across international experiences – both physical and digital.

Click here for full information, screening dates, and online screenings!


LOOK Climate Lab 2024 – Private View and Launch

RSVP – Thursday 8th of February 2024, 6-8 PM

OPEN EYE GALLERY

19 MANN ISLAND, LIVERPOOL WATERFRONT, L3 1BP


LOOK Climate Lab is a biennial programme exploring how photography can be a relevant and powerful medium for talking about climate change. The Open Eye Gallery has been transformed into a lab: bringing together researchers and artists to collaborate, test their ideas, and encourage audiences to discuss systematic changes needed for dealing with the climate crisis.

Open Eye Gallery - LOOK Climate Lab 2024
Photo cred : Rob Battersby
Open Eye Gallery - LOOK Climate Lab 2024
Photo cred : Rob Battersby

The exhibition is open now! However there is a private view and launch alongside the We Feed The UK project on the 8th of February, 6-8 pm. Come along if you can!

Featuring Stephanie Wynne, Nazar Furyk, our artist in residence at Energy House 2 Mishka Henner, John Davies, Mario Popham, Johannes Pretorius, Hellen Songa, one of our previous Graduate Scholars Lizzie King, and Gwen Riley Jones!


RSVP and find out more through the Open Eye Gallery website – link below!



LOOK Climate Lab is partnered with Gaia Foundation, Energy House 2.0 Salford, Royal Horticultural Society, The Tree Council, Impressions Gallery, Peloton Liverpool Coop, Wigan Council, The Mersey Forest, Liverpool ONE and many others to bring people and ideas together, explore the complexities of human-nature relationships and make positive changes to live more sustainable and connected lives.

Photo credit : Rob Battersby Photography


Is Anybody Listening? Symposium: Commissioning and Collecting Socially Engaged Photography

Free Admission – Thursday 29th of February 2024, 9:30am

Williamson Art Gallery & Museum

Slatey Road, Birkenhead, CH43 4UE


Our friends at the Williamson Art Gallery & Museum are hosting the last leg of the ‘Is Anybody Listening?’ tour, this also includes a thought-provoking symposium on the theme of socially engaged photography.

Craig Easton and Lindsay Taylor at the Craig Easton: Is Anybody Listening? Opening.
Gwen Riley Jones at the Craig Easton: Is Anybody Listening? Opening.
Craig Easton at the Craig Easton: Is Anybody Listening? Opening.

Facilitated by the Culture Lead for Liverpool City Region, Sarah Lovell, the symposium will explore the ethical considerations of socially engaged photography, and ask “What should we be collecting?”

Attending will be the award-winning photographer Craig Easton alongside socially-engaged practitioners and educators Liz Wewiora, Suzanne St Clare, and Gwen Riley Jones.

Expert Speakers include Sarah Fisher (Open Eye Gallery), our own Lindsay Taylor (University of Salford Art Collection), Laura Jamieson (LeftCoast), and Abdul Aziz Hafiz (Blackburn College).


There are limited spots for this event, so make sure you secure your place sooner rather than later!



Is Anybody Listening? Our Time, Our Place is presented by University of Salford Art Collection and generously supported by The National Lottery Heritage Fund. Special thanks go to National Lottery players.


End of Year Reflections

Lindsay Taylor, Curator, December 2023



As we approach mid December, I find it a useful moment to reflect on the last 12 months and to highlight some of the achievements.

The year started with the Craig Easton: Is Anybody Listening exhibition launching at Open Eye Gallery, before travelling to Blackpool School of Art in spring and arriving in Salford this autumn. The response to Craig’s work has been amazing – but the real impact has been through the different engagement opportunities for young people in each location. I think all those present at the launch in New Adelphi on the 2 November realised the difference this project had made on the young people present. It was a truly magical moment! We are talking to Salford Youth Service about how we can build on this success together.  A massive to thank you to all our partners, freelancers especially Kit Abramson, Victoria Sanderson and Gwen Riley Jones, and of course the National Lottery Heritage Fund for supporting the project.

We have also been busy leading the Hybrid Futures project with our partners at Touchstones Rochdale, Castlefield Gallery, Grundy Art Gallery, Blackpool, and Shezad Dawood studio, and with support from Arts Council England, Art Fund and Henry Moore Foundation. This is a multi-layered and complex project which tests new ways of working collectively to address climate change. I am looking forward to presenting all the new co-commissions by Shezad Dawood, Parham Ghalamdar, Jessica El Mal and R A Walden at Salford Museum and Art Gallery from March 2024. In tandem I have been participating in Collective Futures, an engagement programme bringing together different communities from across Salford, Rochdale, Manchester and Blackpool to consider the climate emergency through the lens of artists.  It has been fascinating to meet new people, to learn about how different artists approach the most important issue of our time, and to have space to reflect on what we could collectively do. We will be hosting a sharing event planned for 17th April. A big thank you to our partners, funders and the artists, plus our team of freelancers: Kit Abramson, Catharine Braithwaite, Danny Chivers and Kate Wafer.

On the theme of climate change – it has been a privilege this year to work with Prof Richard Fitton and his team at Energy House 2.0 on our artist is residence programme. Supported by Friends of Energy House 2.0 and presented in partnership with Open Eye Gallery and Castlefield Gallery we welcomed Mishka Henner in January and Emily Speed in July, each for 18 months. The conversations have been stimulating, wide ranging and have gone in directions no one would have predicted. I’m genuinely excited to see how Mishka and Emily interpret the work of the scientists and engage audiences in thinking about sustainable living – and can assure you this will be in unexpected ways!!!

In summer we appointed our tenth cohort of Graduate Scholars, and to mark the 10th anniversary of the programme we asked (outgoing Team Assistant) Rowan Pritchard to curate a booth at The Manchester Contemporary. She did a brilliant job, and with the support of Castlefield Gallery we presented work by 5 current scholars and alumni of the programme. It was wonderful to see Salford so well represented at the fair – with Paradise Works and Hot Bed Press hosting booths and with former Scholar Alena Donnelly from Islington Mill running a tufting experiment. By the end of the weekend we were all losing our voices from talking to so many different people about the artwork, the artists, the scholarship programme and of course our student offer in the School of Arts Media and Creative Technology. It was very helpful to have Rowan and Sam Parker (incoming Team Assistant) to share their personal experiences of studying at Salford, as well as having the support of  Phd candidate Nanke Ning. Well done everyone!

Rowan has now come to the end of her 2 year traineeship where she has developed her skills, grown her networks and built her CV. She reflects on her experience here. She has  been a pleasure to work with and amongst her many achievements has successfully led the team in the Green Impact Awards. A massive thank you Rowan and wishing you luck in all future endeavours. We also welcomed Sam Parker as our new Graduate Associate.  He has hit the ground running and you can read about his first few weeks here.

There are many other highlights – from touring The Storm Cone by Laura Daly to Blackpool, the Visibilities and Some Days I Feel Triangle exhibitions in New Adelphi, the Cecile Elstein display in Clifford Whitworth Library, loaning collection works to Bury Art Museum and others, and the various events we have contributed to or participated in. At a conservative estimate we have engaged well over 40,000 people both on campus and outside the university with the Art Collection in the last 12 months. 

It is also important to acknowledge the less visible work that happens in the background.  Having the art store facility has made a profound difference to how we can look after the collection, how the team works, and how we can engage students, staff and the public with the Collection. We have welcomed well over 100 people to the store including staff, students, as well as external contacts – curators, researchers etc, as well as youth groups from Salford. Stephanie Fletcher takes responsibility for caring for the University Art Collection and Art Store and has also led on several new acquisitions – you can find out more in a forthcoming blog. Thank you Steph for all your hard work and support.

This is my tenth year at Salford – and I approach 2024 with real excitement about the future. Partnership is at the heart of much of our work and true partnerships take time to develop. There feels to be a real shift in the city – with new and existing cultural and civic leaders coming together for the benefit of all people in Salford. I welcome this collaborative sense of ambition, exploration and experimentation, and look forward to engaging more people through new and existing partnerships in 2024. Finally I would like to thank the University leadership for continuing to support and invest in the work of the Art Collection team.

Wishing everyone a very happy Christmas, and a peaceful and joyous 2024.

Lindsay Taylor


Craig Easton: Is Anybody Listening & Our Time, Our Place

Craig Easton: Is Anybody Listening & Our Time, Our Place comes to Salford. Find out more about the exhbition tour & engagement programme so far. PLUS all the details of the exhibition at the University.