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Artist Talk : Tessa Campbell Fraser

Wednesday 10:30

Winchester Cathedral

Creator of the Whales installation. Join Tessa Campbell Fraser as she discusses her work and the making of Whales, followed by a visit to the cathedral to view the work with the artist.

#Art #Arts & Culture #Wildlife & Nature

Date

Wednesday 10:30

February 12th 2025 at 10:30

Event details

Address:Winchester Cathedral
9 The Close, Wessex Learning Centre
Winchester

Postcode:SO23 9LS

Tickets:£15

Contact Information:01962 857 275
box.office@winchester-cathedral.org.uk

Open hours:10:30am-12:00pm

Description

article thumb - Tessa Campbell Fraser

A unique opportunity to hear from the artist of Whales, an art installation inside Winchester Cathedral from 22nd January – 26th February 2025. Hear from the artist directly on what it took to create the three monumental sculptures of sperm whales which will hang in the majestic Nave of the cathedral.

 

Tessa Campbell Fraser is a British painter and sculptor based in Oxfordshire. Born in Edinburgh, she studied at Chelsea School of Art and afterwards established herself as one of the country’s leading animal artists. She has completed several major life-size, and larger than life, sculptures for clients including the late Queen Elizabeth II, the King of Bahrain, Knuthenborg Safari Park Denmark, William Grant & Son, the Household Cavalry and Sir Jackie Stewart. She has work in private collections around the world including Australia, South Africa, Monaco, and the USA, and has exhibited widely including at the Royal Academy Summer Shows, Sculpture at Goodwood, the Pitt Rivers Museum, Oxford and the Natural History Museum in London where she had a major solo show in 2004. In 2001, she was elected an Associate Member of the Royal Society of Sculptors and became a Fellow of the Society in 2004.

 

Campbell Fraser’s work is informed by her travels, notably to Greenland, which inspired a series of paintings and allegorical sculptures exploring the interspecies relationship between man and animal. She portrayed this in a group of sculptures for her Bishop and Bear series, which raise her concerns for the world in the face of the twin threats of war (and specifically people using religion as a pretext for conflict) and climate change (represented by the polar bear). She has been concerned with the effects of climate change for over twenty years and her sculptures offer a poignant and beautiful reflection on the symbiosis between man and animal, and how precarious this balance is for both, as man encroaches more and more into the wild spaces.

 

Always fascinated by the physicality of substance, texture, form and positive and negative space, she is now exploring this with new, deliberately chosen, natural, sustainable materials such as hemp fabric, wax, latex, leather, plaster, hair and wool. Using these materials, and the haptic techniques of folding, painting, drawing, pouring, melting and pinning, she creates fluid and protean pieces in two-and three-dimensional forms. This physical exploration of materials shapes her work viscerally and subconsciously through the spontaneity of the creative making process.

 

As an artist, Campbell Fraser has pushed herself into a sometimes uncomfortable and challenging engagement with herself as nature and animal and she asks us to do the same. Working in this experimental space, Campbell Fraser’s sculptures and paintings have become more abstract and intuitive.

 

In her current work, she focuses on the sperm whale as the most likely mammal with whom man could have an interspecies collaboration. She explores the whale’s "vocal" connections (coda clicks), their complex social lives, their expressions of love, suffering and compassion as a way to connect them to us. She weaves artistic and scientific strands that do not seek to explain the whale, but to convey the interconnections and mysteries of the natural world and our need to protect it. Campbell Fraser further investigates this sense of awe and mystery by interpreting her responses to the natural earth, volcanoes and glaciers. She interconnects and delves into the idea of the "breath" of these phenomena which link to the breath of every living creature and to the Gaia hypothesis. She will evoke her relationship with "remote", ineffable land and seascapes, which lead us beyond ourselves to "something greater than" ourselves – the "sense sublime of something far more deeply interfused".

 

Her work encompasses the Romantic concept of the Sublime, the belief that, "every Person, upon seeing a grand Object, is affected with something which, as it were, extends one's very being and expands it to a kind of Immensity". By doing so, Campbell Fraser reinvigorates the ideas of the Romantics for a modern audience, taking the viewer beyond the "material world" (as seen as a resource) to see "value" beyond the material sense.

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