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    • Hannah Peschar Sculpture Gardens
    • Watts Gallery & Artist Village
    • Foyers Gallery
    • Heathlands Arts Trail
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    • Deck the Walls
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    • 6-8 South Street
    • MA in Fine Arts Degree Show
    • PintSized
    • SupaStore_Human
    • Bad News
    • FiliArts
    • MA and Postgraduates Show
    • SafeHouse2
    • Granular
    • Atkinson Gallery / Millfield School
    • University for the Creative Arts
  • Artist Statement
  • CV
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Dd Davies

Visual Artist - Sculpture and Installation
  • Artworks
  • Exhibitions
    • Hannah Peschar Sculpture Gardens
    • Watts Gallery & Artist Village
    • Foyers Gallery
    • Heathlands Arts Trail
    • Artist In Residency (UCA)
    • Deck the Walls
    • Millfield Summer Show
    • 6-8 South Street
    • MA in Fine Arts Degree Show
    • PintSized
    • SupaStore_Human
    • Bad News
    • FiliArts
    • MA and Postgraduates Show
    • SafeHouse2
    • Granular
  • Artist in Residencies
    • Atkinson Gallery / Millfield School
    • University for the Creative Arts
  • Artist Statement
  • CV
  • contact
Ferry Lights in the foyer of IBM's Head Office, Southbank. London, UK

Ferry Lights in the foyer of IBM's Head Office, Southbank. London, UK

Exhibition: From Contemporary to Corporate

June 6, 2018

I am very proud that an interactive sculpture I made, in collaboration with IBM’s CTO for UK and N.Ireland, Andy Stanford Clark,   has gone on display in the Head Office of IBM, Southbank, London. Not the usual audience for my work but one I am very happy about. The work had been commissioned and exhibited in a contemporary art gallery, Quay Arts on the Isle of Wight before it was installed at IBM on Wednesday. Quay Arts in conjunction with Arts Council England ran a series called Hidden Heroes on the Isle of Wight and Andy was one of the Islands heroes they decided to represent. The work not only shows a little of the technology that Andy’s has invented (he has invented a lot!) but also reflects themes within my work. Much of my work involves the public, whereby I  encourage the viewer to participate and interact with the work. There is a sense of community and connectedness about it.  Ferry Lights shows the position of the ferries as they traverse the Solent in real-time, mapping out their location with LEDs,  as they make their journeys between the mainland and the Isle of Wight where Andy Stanford-Clark lives.

To extend the theme of connectedness and community, we decided that the LEDs around the circumference of the sculpture were to be connected to Cheerlights, an Internet of Things project created by Hans Scharler, By tweeting “#cheerlights red (or whatever colour you like) your tweet changes the colour of the LED’s thus changing the colour of the sculpture. But as Cheerlights is a connected community, not only does your tweet change the colour of Ferry Lights but it also changes the colour of Cheerlights all over the world. There is something very exciting, empowering perhaps about standing in front of a sculpture and not just being able to change its state with one written instruction but knowing that hundreds of other lights in the world have changed state too, thus connecting physical things with a shared social networking experience. I must say I am also enjoying the fact that people outside the gallery setting, and/or the corporate environment, have some say over what colour the sculpture on the wall is going to be. At IBM’s Head Office today someone outside of the corporate setting is going to decide on what colour the sculpture on the wall outside the Franklin meeting room is going to be.   There is something joyful about being able to change the colours on the wall and affect the environment in a space you are not physically in and ‘interacting’ with people you have never met –perhaps someone’s day might be slightly nicer if the sculpture switched to blue, - their favourite colour.

 

In Art, Exhibition, Interactive Art, Technology
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Light it up

February 21, 2018

I really enjoyed going to see Age of Terror: Art Since 9/11, the highlight being The Twin Towers (2011)  by Chilean artist Iván Navarro’s. It has never been shown in the UK before and is truly stunning if you only go to see that one piece it would be worth the entry free and time spent in the museum.  I have seen infinity mirrors before, I have even made one, (ok two) in fact I made one very recently called Ferry Lights, a commission for Quay Arts celebrating the technology of Andy Stanford-Clarke.

I wonder sometimes about art works that incorporate lights, as many of my pieces do, I joked this week when some one came up to me and told me that Territory had been getting a lot of attention from people walking down the corridor, that is the Linear Gallery,  at UCA. My reply was "of course  it gets a lot of attention,  it lights up". Perhaps a little self-deprecating I know. I actually think the piece Territory is great, in fact, I would go as far to say that it has sparked a lot of ideas in me and others. It was make very quickly and I was under pressure at the time and so for me that was a great way of working, as much of my work is very laboured and thought out beforehand, all the working out going on in my head before I even think about picking up some material.  Document, document, document the the creative process but it happens so quikcly in my head that I am five iterations on before I remember to write something down at least. Even if the art is bad, not too well thought out, terrible in fact - light anything up and for some reason it becomes passable. People may not like it but they won't hate it.

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In Archive, Art, Exhibition, Other Artists
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Exhibition: Linea Gallery - Territory

February 16, 2018

We have crits next week on the pieces set up in the Linea Gallery at UCA. Looks like mine got critiqued ahead of time. It appeared to have attracted some attention online when a student walking past took a photo of it and posted on UCA Farnham Freshers like of my piece. He now wants to buy it. He said I was a "3D Banksy".

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In Archive, Art, Exhibition, MA, Political Art

Exhibition: opening Night of Hidden Heroes

February 11, 2018

I am just too tired to write anything, but want to show some pictures. ........

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The opening of Quay Arts Hidden Heroes opened yesterday. 

The opening of Quay Arts Hidden Heroes opened yesterday.

 

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I am just too tired to write anything, but want to show some pictures.

In Archive, Art, Interactive Art, Exhibition
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Staying true to your practice

January 24, 2018

The leaflet pile next to #DicktatorDon you see in the photograph shows  how to apply for one which is my art practice, that of collaboration, co-creation and interconnectedness. 
I was asked to supply a limited edition of #DicktatorDon, my interactive felt, fabric effigy of Trump.  The offer came from Sarah Staton  and her super cool,  SupaStore The premise of #DicktatorDon is that he is not for sale, or at least had not been up to the point at which Sarah approached me. I loved the idea of him being in  SupaStore , which artist wouldn't? However, I also wanted to inform people of my art project and continue with it.    Sarah Staton was kind enough to hear about my art practice as I explained that #DicktatorDon was not something that I had intended to sell. It was her suggestion that I send the gallery a  leaflet that they could print off in the USA, explaining my project, I bore in mind that the USA  have different paper sizes and so made the design files in accordance to their requirements. I didn't get confirmation back that they had been able to print the leaflets out but  when I next looked on the gallery's  blog they had posted a picture of  #DicktatorDon with the leaflets sitting next to him. I am Supa grateful to the Supa Sarah and her SupaStore.

For more information about he show look here.

In Archive, Americana, Art, Exhibition, Other Artists, Political Art, Political
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Exhibition - Granular

January 5, 2018

The distinction within this group of artists is apparent. With their varying subject matter and methodologies, this show makes for an exciting exhibition, rich with ideas and concepts. The exhibition incorporates a diversity of multidisciplinary artwork. An array of mediums is combined, including photography, sculpture and installation. Artist in the show include.
Chris Horner Ÿ
Bianca Hendicott Ÿ
Mirta Imperatori Ÿ
Nerys Joseph

In Archive, Art, Exhibition, MA
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Commission to make an interactive sculpture

January 3, 2018

I am pleased to announce that I have been commissioned to make a piece of art for  Quay Arts, a contemporary art gallery on the Isle of Wight as part of the “Isle of Wight Hidden Heroes” project. The brief is to express Andy Stanford-Clarke’s status as being on the cutting edge of technology. One of Stanford-Clarke’s many contributions in his field is his real-time mapping of the ferries crossing the Solent. He is also a great advocate of the worldwide phenomenon, CheerLights so the piece will most probably incorporate both these elements.

CheerLights is an “Internet of Things” project created by Hans Scharler that allows people’s lights all across the world to synchronize to one colour set by Twitter. It is a way to connect physical things to a  social networking experiences. For example, by sending the following tweet from a twitter account “@CheerLights,  red”  the tweet  will cause a chain reaction and all of the lights across the world that have signed upto CheerLights will turn that colour. Until the next time some send a tweet to CheerLights requesting a different colour that is and then all the lights will change again.

 

In Archive, Art, Exhibition, Interactive Art
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How my work came to be in SUPASTORE

December 28, 2017

It was a lesson in just being brave and handing him out to people, so when artist Simon Bill came to UCA Farnham to talk to the MA and BA students about his work I was fortunate enough to have a tutorial with him where I gave him a #DicktatorDon. The next day I received an email from Sarah Staton, a senior lecturer at the Royal College of Art who was looking for work to go into her SupaStore- Human We Are the Product, a pop-up gallery in Denver, Colorado, USA.   Simon Bill had shown her #DicktatorDon and she thought it would be a good fit for so she contacted me via email to see if I would be willing to send the gallery three #DicktatorDon’s for inclusion into her latest Supastore.

A quote taken from her website: 
“Sarah Staton’s SupaStore is an art-translation-of-fashion pop-up store. Begun in 1993 on Charing Cross Road, London the SupaStore has popped up subsequently in galleries, museums, hotel foyers, from New York to Tokyo. Light gestures and works by artists, made specifically for the “store” context, resemble and mimic what fashion does & through SupaStore we explore how fashion and shopping circulates.”

In Art, Archive, Exhibition, Other Artists
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