Clare Smith: archives
- Clare Smith
- Date:
- 2019-2020s
- Reference:
- PP/CSM
- Archives and manuscripts
About this work
Description
Digital material relating to Clare Smith's artistic process and the creation of Chemo Day drawings, including photographs of drawings, correspondence, audio for Sheffield Exhibition, material relating to book, and related records.
Publication/Creation
Physical description
Contributors
Biographical note
Clare Smith sadly passed away in the Pilgrim’s Hospice, Canterbury on the evening of Saturday December 10th 2022, after a long illness.
Clare Smith's work featured on Wellcome Collection Stories, in an article titled "Chemotherapy Day-Drawings": words and artwork by Clare Smith (May 2022).
Clare Smith, Artist’s statement October 2022:
Drawing is a way of slowing down time I become fully absorbed in the process, often not feeling present in the world but present on the paper.
Clare works from a studio in Dover. She has a BA in Fine Art from UCA (University for the Creative Arts) and an MA in Fine Art from UAL (Central Saint Martins) and has exhibited nationally and internationally.
Her mixed English/Chinese heritage informs her perspective on issues of identity and categorisation and choice of materials. Smith works across genres in drawing, print media, collage and moving image. Her recent work reflects an interest in memory, the marking of time and more recently narrative and the remaking of stories. There is a delicacy and fragility to Smith’s work, which reflects a constant sense of the precariousness of physical existence and a concern with healing.
“You are turning life’s experiences into art” (Mike Tonkin, architect, Tonkin Liu architecture)
“All my work has an autobiographical connection and comes out of personal experience, everything I have absorbed emotionally and physically. Inspiration is drawn from Chinese and Japanese ceramics, Indonesian and Malaysian batiks; places I’ve lived in, visited or remembered.”
Her abstract drawings have been seen in the context of early abstraction prompted by the availability of microscopy, and the possibility of seeing another world, just as real, but ordinarily hidden by virtue of its scale as well as Theosophy and Anthroposophy (Simon Bill, artist and writer) and for Jacqui Mcintosh “There are parallels to be drawn with the automatic and channelled drawings of spiritualist artists such as Georgiana Houghton and Madge Gill as well as the ‘pure psychic automatism’ of surrealism. ” Paraphrased from André Breton’s definition of Surrealism as ‘Psychic automatism in its pure state,’ 1924. Breton, André, Manifestoes of Surrealism, United States: University of Michigan Press, 1969, p.26
Drawing is a way of slowing down time I become fully absorbed in the process, often not feeling present in the world but present on the paper.
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Accruals note
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Identifiers
Accession number
- 2724