Material and process
Ann chooses her materials for what they represent, “I choose bark cloth, because it refers to trees,” she explains, “Other people may not get that reference because a lot of people don’t know what bark cloth is, but it’s actually made from the inside of trees. So I use that to try and suggest the idea of trees.”
Her artistic teachers taught her to think even more deeply; beyond materials to process, “I learned to use processes as well as signifying elements,” she says, “So if I burn something, it’s usually because I want to give a connotation of destruction, vulnerability, that sort of thing. So it did change my approach, although I think my aesthetic, more or less, stays the same.”
Ann also discovered a new way of looking at art, “I discovered that fine art was really all about ideas,” she says, “I don’t like to be categorised. It’s very difficult to categorise what I do because I realised that I am on the margin of textile practice. And although I mostly include textile elements, I like to do things with other materials as well. It’s all part of the story really to try and create the narrative.
On the Brink
Ann told Take Two more about her award-winning piece, “Most of my work is environmental,” says Ann. “I’m really concerned with climate change, mass extinction and things like that and this piece was based on reading an article that was suggesting that 40% of insects could possibly be extinct within about ten years. And most of those insects would be pollinators, bees and butterflies.”
Ann decided on butterflies as her focus and set about creating pupa-like shapes, “I wanted to represent how not all of them would survive,” she says, “so the black ones were actually aimed at suggesting their demise. The bark cloth ones, the normal orangey-coloured ones, were the ones that were surviving, and the black ones represent those that would be lost.”
Creating the black pupa proved to be a challenge, “I don’t normally dye materials,” says Ann, “and I found it difficult to actually colour the barkcloth. I’d been burning the other orange bits because that was to indicate, would they survive, are they being destroyed? I thought I could try burning the barkcloth, But I couldn’t do it all black, all burned, because it would just crumble together, so I dyed them and not being used to dying, it was a bit of a disaster because they all shrivelled up. It took a lot of manipulation to pull them into shape. I thought that was better for the narrative because I didn’t get the more uniform l shape. Some of them were shrunk really small and others were sort of funny. It’s fed into the narrative.”