Joya: AiR / Nadège Mériau / FRA

photo Simon Beckmann

 

Joya: AiR / Nadège Mériau / FRA

‘When I arrived at Joya: AiR, I was struck by the lack of sound and light pollution (with nights so clear you feel closer to the stars) and an unusual sense of stillness. The light was almost too bright, sunsets almost too unbearably colourful and the singing of insects and birds almost too loud. The biodiversity there was so rich it felt like an assault to the senses. There was an instant feeling of joyful connection to the place.


So on I went, recording sounds on my walks every morning and evening, breathing and listening attentively. But what took me by surprise was the work I did in response to the beautiful studio space I was allocated. Somehow I felt I had to inhabit this space, and time, which I had been given. First I became fascinated by the resident insects and the sound they made as they went about their daily business, then I started to look at the view and the play of light flooding in through the window at different times of the day. I filmed it all, and spontaneously began to perform in front of the camera, which was something I had not planned.

 

If in the Night it Rains Tomorrow / Nadège Mériau


I enjoyed the natural structure imposed by the changing light and temperature. It was simply too hot to go out in the middle of the day and this provided time to rest and review what I had recorded and filmed in the morning.


The evening meals and talks with other artists provided stimulating exchanges and encouraging feedback on the new directions my work was taking.

I had intended to explore issues of care, self-care and medicine in relation to nature, technology and the arts by immersing myself in the wild environment, recording my embodied experience of the land (through film, photography and sound), exchanging with other artists, and reconnecting with Europe, after a long period of isolation. I did just that, and more’.

Nadège Mériau

Nadége completed an MA in Photography at the Royal College of Art in 2011 and was shortlisted for the Bloomberg New Contemporaries and the Conran Award in 2011, nominated for the Arts Foundation Fellowship and the Arles Discovery Award in 2012 and the Prix Pictet 2014. In 2016, she produced a participatory sculpture and an artist film for The Aylesbury As Home exhibition at the Geffrye Museum, with the support of Queen Mary University and the Leverhulme Trust. In 2020 , she was commissioned to make a short artist film and stills work for Nothing To Look But The Past, Tulca Arts Festival, with the support of Arts Council Ireland and Galway City of Culture 2020. Other recent shows include Fire: Flashes to Ashes in British Art 1692-2019, RWA Bristol, Auto//Fiction, Exhibition and Symposium, Dyson Gallery, Royal College of Art 2019, 209 Women at Portcullis House, Houses of Parliament and Impressions Gallery, Bradford 2019. Recent publications include xviii, stories of Tulca, Tulca publishing, 2021, SPUD published by Deirdre O’Mahony, Rot issue of The Learned Pig, curated by Julia Cavicchi, and Fire: Flashes to Ashes in British Art 1692-2019, Sanson & Company.