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CONTEXTS

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Anna Barriball

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Anna Barriball’s rubbings are at the interstices between drawing, sculpture and imprintment. She considers the act of rubbing to be like carving, the end point of the pencil slowly pushing the surface of the paper into an embossed shape of the thing impressed and based around “a more fully tactile and bodily type of looking”.

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Door[door 2004] pencil on paper 

Much like my own work, Barriball is interesting in surface, and it is clear to see in Door (2004) the deep commitment to materiality that defines all her rubbing works. Rather than simply creating an impression of something her work is about tracing a set of repetitive movements, trying to mark the movement of something structureless, discovering the traces of things through an embodied haptic experience. This is also something I am strongly interested in, and she has been a big influence for me in thinking about how to go about discovering the world through touch and imparting that experience to the viewer. Unlike her, I do not always cover every inch of the paper. My work is also about a connection with a place or space and certain narratives I have for them. I found that the feelings I have for an object, the way I see it through this haptic connection, and the way in which I wish to describe this sensory experience doesn’t not always lend itself best to total coverage of the paper’s surface. I am sometimes more expressive with my subject matter.

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Brick wall shutters, 2011, diptych, pencil on paper 

The way in which she thinks about the process of rubbing has also been very important for me. The tears, cracks, slippages, troughs and indentations of the paper's surfaces all, for her, show the movement which she traces. It is another kind of autobiographical way of recording her process, the gestures of haptic movement acting like a drawing that shows the experience via the deterioration of the surface through time. Her work, which touches on the expanded field of drawing and printmaking, plays much with notions of tension, narratives of “finding ways through surface”  and playing with our expectations of what we think we know but do not. These are things I am also engaged in research further and continuing to develop in my work. 

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