The Visual Artists' News Sheet – March April 2022

Page 39

Visual Artists’ News Sheet | March – April 2022

Career Development

39

One of Many JANE MORROW INTERVIEWS JENNIFER TROUTON AT QSS, BELFAST. Jane Morrow: Jennifer, you’ve recently had a major touring solo exhibition, ‘One of Many’, comprising over 100 works – oil paintings, embroideries, textiles, and artefacts. The scale and timing feel inherently intertwined with the struggle for abortion rights. Jennifer Trouton: For a long time, it felt like a quiet protest. I’ve been entrenched in making this hugely emotional work, thinking about how this is women’s history which must be recorded. It’s also personal because it’s about me as well. And it felt like I was still doing what I’d always done – what so many women do – which is circling around it, never talking about it. These are common stories. We should share them. JM: With a focus on painting, can I ask you about your process? JT: I’m not a painter’s painter. I’ve never approached a canvas, or any work, not knowing what I’m doing, or what it’s going to have on the surface. It’s entirely content driven, feminist work. But the stories of all these big issues can’t be told in a single piece. I don’t set out thinking “I’m going to make over one hundred pieces”; I explore the subject organically. JM: You’re not ‘just’ a painter either, in that you work across multiple media – what determines that? JT: I never refer to myself as a painter. 80% of my work is painting, but it’s also embroidery, or collages and assemblage – things that were ascribed to women and that were seen as women’s work, women’s subjects, and women’s craft. I make work that appears, on the surface, to be very pretty, but there’s a very dark subtext. JM: I wanted to ask you to elaborate on the beautiful surfaces of your work that lure the viewer in, and then – within the exhibition format and interpretation panel – you confront them with the ‘inconvenient truth’ of the works’ content. JT: I’ve had so many people message me to say how much the work resonated with them. They say, “we’d never shared our stories before”, or “I brought my daughter, and we had this conversation for the first time”. That’s what I always wanted for this work – to open a conversation. It’s also making people

consider that even though something is beautiful or well-executed, it can still have political weight or value. JM: Can you tell me a little about your colour palette? JT: I consciously selected a very nostalgic palette for this work. It’s got a lot of very muted, very retro – 1950s, 60s, and 70s – pinks, greens, dusky blues. A mustard, a brine. They all marry, running through the shelves, the paintings, the embroideries, and the colour blocking that I create on the walls behind the works as well. JM: Your painting extends beyond the canvas, connecting the works via a subtle network when they are in exhibition form – can you say more about that? JT: Women are resourceful. It can be a matter of survival. In the case of abortion networks here [in Northern Ireland], it’s incredible how it was all connected. And the trace of that is represented through a quiet little grid. It’s a very thin line, tonally just slightly darker than the wall it’s painted on, so you don’t see it at first. These networks helped women to find a way out of their situation, and the grid line takes the audience on that journey. JM: In line with a lot of the messaging currently around abortion campaigns – ‘abortion is normal’, and ‘we all love someone who has had an abortion’ – your work literally refers to, and also feels like, home. JT: The idea of home is probably one of the strongest things in my work. I’ve taken everyday objects and domestic space and repurposed them to be both familiar and unfamiliar. In the earliest days of this series, the work was very much about the objects – things like soaps and needles and herbs in tea. Recently, I’ve brought them together along with coded images of female patron saints – ones that represent marriage, childbirth, and childhood. Midwives, too. JM: Politically and socially, this struggle continues – do you envisage a time where this series of work feels resolved? JT: That’s not the point of it. Artists aren’t here to answer questions or to resolve things. We’re just here to shine a light

Jennifer Trouton, ‘One of Many’, installation view, Naughton Gallery, Belfast, September 2021; photograph by Simon Mills, courtesy of the artist and Naughton Gallery.

on them or at least express our experience of things. JM: I am always drawn to work that appears to be one thing but does another – whether that’s materially, thematically, or linguistically…. when something ‘everyday’ is deployed for other purposes. JT: Women took everything available to them and they repurposed those things into weapons and to ward against attacks on their bodily autonomy. The church used to try to control where women could go – or even live – because of the plants and herbs that were available to them nearby, which could be used for women’s health. You would be shocked at how many plants have a dual purpose and how many can be used both for fertility and for an abortion. I spent about a year writing an artist statement that didn’t use the word ‘abortion’ because it’s so loaded that even I had hesitancy in using it. JM: You’ve mentioned a few times [in our longer conversation] that you have a lot of shoulder pain from painting. I thought that the VAN readership might relate to your experience. How do you work around that? JT: Drugs [laughs]. My bad shoulder has come about because of painting daily for 30 years. I do worry – it’s an all-consuming fear – that I’m going to not be able to continue. I have cortisone injections. Another artist in the studio is helping me to come up with a kind of elbow rest, which should help. But for months, I just did embroideries. I’m a thinker, but I’m also a maker and I don’t outsource anything. If I can’t paint, I don’t know who I am. Jennifer Trouton is an award-winning visual artist currently based in QSS Studios, Belfast. Her work has featured in group exhibitions both nationally and internationally. jennifertrouton.com

Jane Morrow is an independent visual art curator, writer, and PhD researcher with a specialism in artist development. janemorrow.com

Jennifer Trouton, ‘One of Many’, installation view, Naughton Gallery, Belfast, September 2021; photograph by Simon Mills, courtesy of the artist and Naughton Gallery.


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Perseverance is Key. Kaye Maahs, Visual Artist

3min
page 42

Ghosts of the Revolutionary Past. Paul Doherty, Visual Artist

7min
page 41

Enclosed Garden. Vanessa Jones outlines the evolution of her paint ing practice to date.

4min
page 40

One of Many. Jane Morrow interviews Jennifer Trouton at QSS

5min
page 39

Look At Us, We’re Here. Catherine Marshall discusses the work of Pat Curran.

3min
page 38

Embodied Knowledge. Julia Mitchell What Makes Me A Painter. Mollie Douthit.

7min
page 35

Great Work in Marginal Places. Michelle Boyle Hoarder of Images. Brian Kielt.

6min
page 36

Vibrant Matt er. Natasha Pike Embodied Movement. Joanne Boyle.

7min
page 32

Marriage Story. Chanelle Walshe The Power of Things. Comhghall Casey.

7min
page 37

Sian Costello: Performing Apparitions. Theo Hynan-Ratcliff e

4min
page 34

Revenants. Kevin Mooney

7min
page 33

A Gesture of Othering. Stephen Doyle Indo-Persian Miniature. Amna Walayat.

7min
page 31

Abstraction As A Felt Sensation. Sarah Wren Wilson Not Now Death, I’m Painting. Alan Raggett .

6min
page 30

Remembering Zagreb. James Merrigan refl ects on ‘Dubliners’

6min
pages 28-29

Winter Group Show, Molesworth Gallery

4min
pages 24-25

Ronnie Hughes, ‘Isobar’, The MAC

4min
page 21

Ian Gordon, ‘The September Paintings’, RCC Lett erkenny ‘Patrick Graham: Taking Leave’, Hillsboro Fine Art

7min
pages 26-27

David Eager Maher, ‘Pinked’, Oliver Sears John Kennedy, ‘Edgelands’, South Tipperary Arts Centre

7min
page 22

Melissa O’Faherty, ‘Turning It Over’, RHA Ashford Gallery

4min
page 23

Mark Swords, ‘Tribuna’, RHA

4min
page 20

Nano Reid, ‘Adamantine’, Highlanes Gallery

3min
page 19

Paintings As Places. Selma Makela and Fionna Murray consider the idea that a painting can be a place in itself.

6min
page 11

Surface History. Serena Caulfi eld and Stephen Dunne discuss their painting practices and recent working methods.

5min
page 15

Beyond Language. Sinéad Ní Mhaonaigh and Dominique Crowley refl ect on the narratives of painting.

6min
pages 12-13

Beginnings. Nick Miller refl ects on the life and work of Patrick Hall

5min
page 16

This Energetic Thing. Nick Miller and Salvatore of Lucan discuss the alchemy and melancholy of painting.

6min
pages 8-9

Mick O’Dea, ‘West Northwest’, Molesworth Gallery

3min
page 18

Art Pervading Life. Diana Copperwhite and Cecilia Danell refl ect on the ways in which painting infi ltrates every aspect of life.

7min
page 10

The Impulse of the Work. Ciarán Murphy and Merlin James consider the intimacies and connections of painting.

5min
page 14
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