Cecile Johnson Soliz is intrigued by what happens when function, reproduction and public spaces come into art. Unable to find suitable workwear for her cold studio, she designed ‘Women’s Workwear, (Prototype)’ and hired a pattern-cutter to produce prototypes. She aims to have patterns made and printed for others to buy, adapt and make their own workwear. She is curious about why there are so many objects needed that do not yet exist.
William Roberts works full-time as a technician, and uses a mobile app as his painting studio. He works onto the screen before becoming his own technician to scale up the images, or using other painters to make the 'real' paintings for him – trading time for money. He sees his artist self in the third person; his technician self is not the same person as the artist.
Gaia Persico makes observational animations of cityscapes in which human presence is implied rather than seen. She observes these snapshots of urban infrastructure and sprawl from hotel rooms which double as a live-work studio between jobs. Using portable, accessible means to make work, Persico’s response to a place is disorientating. Her hotel world isolation limits connection with what lies beyond her window. We watch with her, held captivated between a non-event and the expectation that we will be shown otherwise.
Sam Venables started out as a tailor at Levi’s and still works for the company across the country. The cycle of working in order to support her practice, or incorporating bespoke skill sets (such as shop fitting or sign writing) into it, is both financially necessary but has also become a place of research: 'I have worked as a visual merchandiser developing a visual language for a brand, and thinking about the retail space as an exhibition space to communicate objects of value.'
Ruffles is formed by a collaboration between Clare Charles & Becca Thomas who met in London, sewing knickers to make ends meet. Ruffles – a misspelling of an Italian snack bar – is an ongoing project that looks at the labour of hosting. Individually their practices transgress set boundaries in material practice to create social and civic-based work. Their role in making work can often be eclipsed by its function or use within a community. For this exhibition Rufles are producing a Kiosk – a sculpture that is also completely functional as a portable condensed workspace/ hub/ kitchen/ bar, wherever it is moved.