Collaboration
Sally has enjoyed collaborative work throughout her career. Of collaborating, she says, “It’s really important for me as an artist to continually move forward. When you meet other artists and you work with other artists, you see things through their eyes. I would definitely recommend it.
I don’t think there’s an awful lot of funding out there to go and collaborate with an artist. But if there’s an opportunity to do it, whether it’s an under-the-radar collaboration or an official collaboration as a residency, I definitely would recommend it. I think if you work in your own little vacuum, you can move forward. There are artists who do that, but it doesn’t work for me. So the collaborations have really enriched my work and enriched what I do and how I see things.”
Meaning: Art vs Life
Take Two played a section of Sally’s showreel, which had a point that she wished to clarify, “When I say everything I do has a meaning,” Sally says, “I think my husband would disagree with that a little bit. I should stress that I’m talking about my work there. Because I do sometimes go into a room and forget what I went in for and then have to go back again. I just want to stress it is about my work. There’s a lot of my life that I don’t know what I’m doing!”
Teaching
Sally is a highly sought-after teacher, a role that she relishes, “The best thing about being a teacher,” she says, “is that sense of achievement, that sense of fulfilment, especially when people come back to you and say, ‘Oh, thank you so much for introducing me to that, I haven’t done that before.’”
Sally has an example of a student who she was critiquing during a live workshop, “We were saying, ‘You have an amazing body of work here, you can make a book piece, you can make a series of 2D pieces’. And this particular student was like, ‘I don’t ever resolve anything. I’m happy to have loads of piles. I’ve got loads of piles of work back at home. And we were like, ‘Oh, this is an amazing body of work. This could be an exhibition. And I was so pleased in the end that she did take them somewhere. And she emailed me afterwards and said how grateful she was that I bullied her into resolving it because the first time, she’s actually done it, and she felt pleased with her work.”