05 March 2016
— 26 March 2016
S1 Bursary Holders: 2016
S1 Introduces presented new work by the 2015/16 S1 Bursary Holders, James Dixon, Charlotte Milnes, Sophie Robinson and Sam Whyte. Four BA Fine Art graduates from Sheffield Hallam University who were selected to take part in the bursary programme based on the strength and diversity of their individual practices.
Established in 2009, the S1 Bursary Programme supports fine art graduates from Sheffield Hallam University during a critical time of any artist’s career – the first year of professional practice following graduation. The programme provides a valuable opportunity for recent graduates to benefit from working within a professional artist studio complex through the provision of subsidised studio space, mentoring from S1’s alumni, and the opportunity to present new work in the concluding exhibition S1 Introduces.
For the exhibition, James Dixon presented a number of videos produced at the wool factory where he worked part time in Bradford. Hypnotic and repetitive machine processes were captured on film, which were only occasionally interrupted by the presence of a factory worker. Accompanying the film was a sculpture made from a ton of wool salvaged from the factory floor.
Charlotte Milnes took inspiration from the location of S1 Artspace’s new temporary gallery at the brutalist Park Hill housing estate. Photographs of stripped interiors formed the starting point for a series of digitally manipulated images and materials salvaged from the site were transformed into a new sculptural assemblage.
Also taking inspiration from Park Hill was Sam Whyte who presented a new large-scale sculptural installation developed over several weeks on site. Daily forays across the abandoned part of the estate have resulted in debris and materials being collected by Whyte that he has incorporated into his new sculptural work.
Sophie Robinson’s film works explored where the ‘real’ collides with fantasy. Sweeping views of the bucolic English countryside are interrupted and fractured by glitches and ruptures as you realise you are looking at a digital rendering of a landscape courtesy of Google earth.