FLORILEGIUM

A family of objects that looks to reimagine the traditional craft process of 2D flower pressing. Research was based at Kew’s herbarium looking at their archival methods for storing flowers pressed by their botanists. The findings led to the development of a body of work that enables a ‘modern day plant collector.’' The outcomes comprises a laser cut DIY flower press, letterpressed archival folders, hand bound field note books for the user to press collected flowers from a walk for display on the self assembled glass side table . The objects aim to enable biophillic experiences to improve mental well-being which is often experienced in built environments where contact with nature is minimal.

IMAGE| Research Kew Garden’s Herbarium

Photo | Research at Kew Garden’s Herbarium by Shannon Clegg


GRAVITATUS BOTANICUS

Introducing GRAVITATUS BOTANICUS: An indoor plant watering system that employs gravity for access to suspended planters. Crafted components include handmade terracotta slip-cast planters, handblown self-watering glass propagation pots, and hand-lathed brass pulleys. The pulley system, integrated with powder-coated black metal tubing, allows for easy lowering of plants without the need for a stool or ladder—ideal for reaching plants near the ceiling.

IMAGE | model making for pulley system

Model making for pulley system


BOUQUET

It started with a ragged old Victorian wooden tie press abandoned at a Wimbledon car boot for a bargain £1. The lucky find was pocketed and rehomed in my south London studio where it was deconstructed to explore a new way of working the traditional 2D craft technique of pressing flowers. 

Bouquet was born by investigating various traditional mold-making techniques in combination with CNC machining. The unique hand moulding process enables flowers to be pressed into various 3D vase-like forms. 

Flowers were harvested and gathered from local gardens, roadside verges, or if the sun was out, a field at the end of a train journey. 

This series of pressings looks to biophilic design, which reflects the human desire to connect with nature. Bouquet’s connection to season and place through the visual experience of gifting flowers helps satisfy this desire by bringing natural wildness into your home or workspace. 

Bouquet offers an extended experience of the traditional bouquet that normally lasts 10 days. Each pressing is a one-off and has a life span of 6+ months.

Bouquet is available on a commission basis.

IMAGE | Researching  flower preservation tests

Researching flower preservation tests


OUT OF SITE

EXHIBITION ESSAY | GREAT NORTH MUSEUM | NEWCASTLE

The Gallery of Wonder declares itself, laying bare its intentions, its dedication to the evocation of awe. We hunt compulsively for that utter abandon, and the search for marvel is boundless. The Gallery houses the objects collected along the way, a record of wonder provoked and pursued. It is home to the hoarders, the gatherers, the finders/keepers of the fascinating. These are the trophies of the chase.

And so follows Out of Site. This is also a collection of tokens. This body of work engages with the habits and nuance of place. The objects become musings on a landscape, the proofs of an encounter. Delicate and intriguing, the pieces perpetuate the search.

The work responds to the changing city of Newcastle, the flux of industry and regeneration, where natural growth is stunted and replaced with development. Landscape is standardised in such calculated and controlled regeneration; in our post-industrial cities the instincts of environment are lost as the wild spaces are pushed out into the margins. Out of Site concerns itself with this manipulation of landscape, and the impact of industry on natural spaces. As the title also suggests, the work harbours a sense of displacement. The pieces incorporate found materials as well as made objects, involving a range of techniques drawing from tradition craft skills and industrial methods. The found objects are removed from their environment or transformed through the making process and translated into different materials. Within a contained scale, inhabiting small spaces, the work reflects the way in which industrial growth tames and relegates, confining nature to pockets in the city, making islands of the wild.

On the outskirts, the waste and excesses of renovation pile up. The cast-offs mount on building sites and roadside verges- redundant, surplus, discarded. This collection explores these spaces in the same spirit as it encounters the wilderness, with the same sensitivity to the particulars of place, and tenderness to what can be found in the wreckage. This intimacy gives the found materials a renewed significance; they are re-discovered in the search, driftwood combed from grey forgotten beaches.

The process of making in Out of Site echoes this intimacy. The work pays tribute to the essentials of craft, with a strong focus on the hand-made. The use of traditional craft techniques emphasises authenticity and carries a sense of skills that are native to a place. This is contrasted with allusions to processes of mass production. Through slip-casting the found objects, this industrial process is re-appropriated for a private process of sense-making.

But it also returns to our desire to possess- we cannot simply experience a space, we must capture it somehow- photograph it, document it, keep something of it for ourselves to hang in our houses or on the walls of our galleries. Out of Site acts as an archive of investigation of place: a place changed, tamed. Rather than reaching a conclusion or moving to make an over-arching statement, the objects act as a series of suggestions, detailing and documenting this engagement with environment. The work occupies an unsettling space, each piece displaced but retaining something of its origin, as talismans of the wild and the ruined. 

IMAGE | Middlesborough skyline

Photo of Middlesborough skyline by Shannon Clegg


PRODUCTS OF AN ENVIRONMENT

Drawn to the everyday "Products of an Environment"  is a response to the agricultural landscape of south west Cornwall where material juxtapositions are used to remind us of the beauty and usefulness that come from simple things. It looks to provoke a dialogue with a society lost in mass consumption amongst a fragile ecology. 

Some objects specifically comment on how we build our ‘shelters’ in a domesticated environment, while others humour a society that places so much emphasis on the value of utility. 

The objects aim to have a sculptural impact, set within current thinking on environmental issues.

IMAGE | Ink drawiing of Cornish haybale 

Ink drawiing of Cornish haybale