Joya: AiR / Dana Finch / UK
Dana.jpg
 
 

"I sit and write this in the studio, with its picture window looking out onto a perfect landscape, a low white wall, a row of olive trees, and the terraces of almond trees sloping away up the hill, where they merge with the Aleppo pines on the mountainside.

This evening it has rained, a soft, nourishing rain, much needed, and the land has changed colour, from white to warm brown. I hear it is snowing in Cornwall. I am glad I am away in a desert land.

I walked this morning out into the campo, up past the empty farmhouse, on the white road. The sun was shining and it was warm – I wore a t shirt on the last day of February. The white path took my breath away, literally. I panted and puffed up the hill. Simon told me we are at the same elevation as Snowdon, so it makes sense. A good excuse to sit and rest, and draw the rose-coloured rocks and scrubby plants at the side of the track.

I am not a painter of big vistas, but up there in the pale, clean air I couldn’t help but be drawn to the far views of mountains in every direction. I came to a crossroads, and sat down. I like the places where roads meet – there is a topographical openness, and a sense of possibility. The wind was getting up and blew my hat off, a black oval scuttling across the bright earth while I looked on in dismay. Luckily it was trapped by a helpful thistle and I was able to retrieve it.

I keep looking and looking at the small plants, the tiny spiny structures that grip the dusty soil for dear life. They are so perfect, and so delicate yet incredibly robust. I love their muted colours - pinky brown, pale olive, silver grey. And they are spiky and thorny so I have to be careful where I sit down. Yesterday I got a hand full of thorns.

The walk is circular and from different points along it I can look down and see Cortijada Los Gázquez in the distance, which is a work of art in itself. Low and long and white, with orange-pink tiles and the lone windmill whirring away, it looks like it has grown from the ground. It is a remarkable place, full of warmth, friendship and creativity. I am a painter but came here with no fixed idea of what I would do, beyond make a small film on my iPhone. I thought this would be a film about plants and rocks, but it has become a film about the spirit of the place, and its embodiment in the mysterious dog, Ptolemy.  I have also been painting every day in the studio, writing, and thinking, and most of all, looking. I am here for only one week – not quite enough time, but up here in the hills time is irrelevant. What is important is to be open to all the sensations, impressions, the people, the visual beauty, and the small things – the desert plants, the rocks and the white soil".

http://www.danafinch.co.uk/

http://www.tregonygallery.co.uk/artistdanafinch.html

5 Books

1 Journey to Ixtlan, Carlos Castaneda

2 Border Trilogy, Cormac McCarthy

3 The Lacuna, Barbara Kingsolver

4 As I walked out one midsummer morning, Laurie Lee

5 The Sound and the Fury, William Faulkner

 
Joya: AiR / Melanie Moczarski / New York /USA
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"This was my second residency at Joya: AiR. A year earlier, I had come and found that this wonderful space presented for me a new way of working, a fluidity with new and available materials that provided spontaneous ideas and experimentation.

The unlimited access to the clay that forms the ground as far as the eye can see was the material I knew I wanted to work with during my residency.

The Beckmann's were incredibly generous, providing me with space in their terraced garden to create a sculptural space meant to be physically interacted with. Three, separate areas to sit or lay on came to life through trial and error, and gave me an opportunity to become more acquainted with the textures and weights of the land. 

It was a truly transformative learning experience to work in this way, and this was only a fraction of what I bring home with me after this residency. 

This is a place of great beauty on every level, and it’s the people I shared with that brought the experience to life. The dinners with Simon, Donna, and the other residents, time spent in the different spaces of their home exchanging ideas and evolving my own, and the space to connect with myself and others outside of the context of my day to day life and my sense of my practice were nothing short of precious.

This is a place I will return to for as long as the Beckmann's will have me".

 

Melanie Moczarski

https://www.melaniemoczarski.com/

 
Joya: AiR / poet / Maxine Backus / Switzerland
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 'I have built up a body of poems which largely relate to landscape and knew that I needed a new landscape and a new point of cultural reference to anchor some of the themes. I went to the Joya residency hoping to find this. I did find this, and much, much more. The landscape itself, vast and deserted, moved me profoundly. The spaces in the house, the professionalism and warmth of our hosts, the fruitful and fun interactions with the other residents and the interns, the opportunity to be social or not, the motivation of seeing others absorbed in their work, it all fitted. My work started to become sparser and more directed. I am grateful to have had time in this place with these people.'

Maxine Backus

 

‘Bleak House‘: Charles Dickens

‘We have Always Lived in the Castle‘: Shirley Jackson

`Poem for the Day: One, ed. Wendy Cope; Two, ed. Andrew Motion

‘The Good Companions’: J B Priestley

‘Noon Wine’: Katherine Anne Porter, in Collected Stories

 

 
Joya: AiR / Athena Poilane / France
Athena.jpg
 

"My work is inspired by nature’s patterns and formations, and by the way time transforms them. I’m also fascinated with native handicrafts and the use of natural elements to create tools and artefacts. Joya: AiR has been the perfect place to immerse in an inspiring environment.

Coming to the residency has been an incredible adventure, both artistically and humanly. Donna and Simon have created such a special place for their residents, their beautiful and             respectful sense for their environment has been a true gift to experience. 

Meeting them and the other artists in residency has opened my eyes on the importance of surrounding oneself with people that inspire you, care and share a similar mindset. Being     surrounded with the landscapes natural beauty, and having the possibility to work outside with the elements has been liberating and inspiring.

I am thankful to Simon and Donna for their generosity and for having created this wonderful residency, it has been one of the most unique and joyful experiences of my life".

Athena Poilane

 

www.athenapoilane.com

 
Joya: AiR / Jasmine Bradbury / UK
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"Joya: AiR has given me more than I ever expected.

Being my first artist residency I had no idea what to expect and what would evolve within my art practice and myself. It has been a life changer.

I have endured a journey that has allowed me to explore deep parts of myself I never knew existed. I began my two weeks with a state of urgency to create sculpture as I find it hard to find the time and space within myself to create back in the UK. I quickly realised this trip was going to be much bigger than that. I found myself immersed within a beautiful arrangement, surrounded by creative and interesting people, within a mesmerising setting being the beautiful home to Simon, Donna and their two children.

My time here has reminded me what my art practice is all about and how important it is for my hands to take lead when creating my work. I found myself making clay from the ploughed fields and collecting material from the area – allowing myself to let go, play and trust my instinct with no plan what so ever. I think more importantly I have faced areas of myself head on and I am leaving with a great deal of confidence and excitement for the future.

The people that I spent my two weeks with have filled me with hope and I am elated that I have found some life-long friends. The variety of people and the variety of artistic discipline brought conversation to light, which was so important to my time here.

I can’t thank Simon and Donna enough for allowing me to have this opportunity and I hope to be back in the future".

 

Jasmine Bradbury

https://jasminebradbury.weebly.com/

 
Joya: AiR / David Kammerer / USA
 
 

"Over the last few years I have been exploring finger-style instrumental music (guitar, banjo, slide), with special attendance to improvisational techniques and hidden polyrhythms.  I have been greatly influenced by the composer Terry Riley, along with musicians Sandy Bull, Leo Kottke, John Fahey and in particular Henry Flynt.

Joya: AiR was a transformative experience!  I arrived with a vague notion of exploring minimalist longer-form instrumental works for guitar, and am leaving with a collection of well defined meditative guitar patterns and forms inspired by the natural beauty and creative environment in place at Los Gázquez.  Time, distance, and perspective were all recalibrated during my stay.   I am feeling wistful as I head back to my life in NYC". 

 

David Kammerer

https://kammville.bandcamp.com/

 
Joya: AiR / Helen Farley / UK
 
 

Jaunt

Observing

Yourself

Ambling

 

Astronomy

insights

Reading and Reflecting

 

"Currently studying in third year BA Fine Art Mixed Media at the University of Westminster, practice is at present centred around robotics and making machines out of found objects and incorporating casting through exploring the fragility of materials such as plaster and porcelain. These explorations of materials links to a sense of the fallible and humorous aspects within human failures. Whilst at Joya: AiR I have been casting components of the landscape through making moulds and then creating plaster casts from them, which are painted using fine particles of rock to make pigments from the landscape.

Joya: AiR can be found tucked away in the Parque Natural Sierra de María-Los Vélez, having the opportunity to come here has allowed me to step away from hectic London, as a means of allowing time to reflect on how my practice has been developing over the time I have been at University and has encouraged the use of materials that I wouldn’t necessarily use, as a means of detaching from comfort zones and moving away from preconceived ideas. Which in turn has allowed thoughts to form as to what to exhibit for degree show in May 2018.

Joya: AiR has allowed the opportunity to be independent in the day and then in the evening we all meet together for dinner, sharing laughs, life and creative insights. Joya: AiR has been my first residency and it has been really insightful with regards to discussing with creative minds from cross cultures and disciplines, ranging from poets to musicians and artists". 

 

Helen Farley

http://www.helenfarley.co.uk/

Books:

Hyperdrawing Beyond the Lines of Contemporary Art

The Nakano Thrift Shop - Hiromi Kawakami

An Artist of the Floating World - Kazuo Ishiguro

An Astronauts Guide to Life on Earth - Chris Hadfield 

Erwin Wurm - Erwin Wurm

John Wood and Paul Harrison with essays by Charles Esche and David Batchelor

 
Joya: AiR / Dana Venezia / Israel
 
 
 

Dana Venezia is a mixed media artist working within artist moving image and installation. She recently graduated from the Royal College of Arts and is based in London. She previously lived in Barcelona for 4 years studying and working...

She says of her residency at Joya: AiR...

 
 

 
 

Simon Beckmann
Joya: Air / Walter Lewis / UK
 

"I came to Joya: AiR with three objectives in mind. One was to simply to (re)learn to contemplate and be mindful. I seem to have slipped into a mode of living which involved constant ‘doing’. Second was to just simply respond as a photographer to this unique landscape. No concepts, no preconceived ideas - just ‘to be’ in the landscape and see what happens. Thirdly to research, so as to be able to articulate what I think my work is trying to achieve, how I am trying to achieve it and what this means in terms of how it is outputted. I had layers and layers of rambling thought collected over time swishing around in my head and not being particularly helpful. Joya: AiR seemed a wonderfully tranquil place to try and sort it all out!

So, what of the outcome. Well I’ve had wonderful and inspiring time just going with the flow, taking it as it comes. I’ve made some photographs which I am happy with and which I believe can be related to the nature of the environment and my ‘feelings’ towards it. More importantly the process of making those images has iterated productively with the thinking side of my visit. The clarity of the air has crept into my thinking and I feel I understand what I am trying to do better than at any point in recent years – and I think it leads to some ideas for outputting my work which I am finding exciting and uplifting. Too little space here for the details so I will just repeat some thoughts which have been more than helpful from Richard Povall of art.earth and Schumacher College in a talk/essay on ‘what is ecological art?’

‘An ecological arts practice is about a way of being in the world, open to all its wonder and complexities, feeling rather than seeing, expanding rather than reducing……a truly a praxic opening-out, a re-embracing of wonder, of enchantment, of the power of the mind and the soul.
A lithographic representation (Untitled 1966) of the ocean by Vija Celmens - a square of agitated water entirely without context, drawn in fine, extraordinary detail - is not a backward step towards representationalism or ultra-realism, but a spiritual meditation, a re-telling of a place to which we seem inexorably drawn'. 

http://www.artcornwall.org/features/Richard_Povall/Richard_Povall_Ecological_Art.htm

Walter Lewis

https://feedingbodyandsoul.com/

he Mersey Sound – Adrian Henri, Roger McGough, Brian Patten

Falling Awake – Alice Oswald

The Hundred Thousand Places - Thomas A Clarke

Ametsuchi – Rinko Kawauchi

The Living Mountain – Nan Shepherd

 
Joya: AiR / Joseph De Lappe / USA
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"My experience at Joya: AiR was rather incredible. I had come to this residency after several years of major life disruptions: the end of a 26-year marriage, moving from the Western US to Scotland for a new professorship at a university in Dundee. This was literally the first time I truly stopped moving in about three years time. I came to Joya to work in a new, yet old direction in my work. I was born colourblind, a red green deficiency. Last year I bought two pairs of Enchroma color blind correcting glasses, prescription, one set for indoor, one for outdoor. 

My goal at the residency was to paint. I’m a media artist and activist by trade, working in electronic disobedience if you will. In my undergraduate years in the early 80’s I was studying to be an illustrator. Painting was always a challenge for me as I could not properly work with colour, kind of like being a tone deaf musician if you think about it.

At Joya: AiR I found the time and place to dive back into painting – last time I tried such was 20+ years ago. It was an amazing experience – I have a new confidence in what I can see – working with colour now feels normal. Hard to describe but not having to ask for help with colour in this work allowed my hand to flow freely – very happy with the results. The environment at Joya: AiR was so conducive to this kind of focused, quiet work. I took daily walks in the desert, enjoying the colours, the space, the QUIET. Yes, it is so QUIET there…simply an amazing experience and allowed me to reengage with my creative practice after several years of personal life disruptions. I feel now renewed and ready to move forward on any number of creative fronts.

I hope I return to Joya: AiR someday and highly recommend the experience to anyone looking for a place of solitude and remove".

Joseph De Lappe

http://www.delappe.net/

 
Note* Joya: AiR is intending to expand the posts relating to resident artists/writers in the future. It is not obligatory (for those considering applying) but a means to expand the conversation with residents who have experienced Joya: AiR. We ask, in addition to your post entry text, for 5 books and 10 pieces of music (which can be found on the Joya: AiR Spotify account).
 

The Reenchantment of Art - Suzi Gablik

Inside the White Cube: The Ideology of the Gallery Space - Brian O'Doherty

Relational Aesthetics - Nicolas Bourriaud

Four Arguments for the Elimination of Television - Jerry Mander

Center for Artistic Activism (for additional reading resources) https://artisticactivism.org/reading-list/

Spotify joya_air

 
Joya: AiR / Hazel Dowling / UK
Dowling.jpg
 
 

A Performance To Camera-as text-as songs-as movement

 

 

"Pressure sensors in the feet communicate instantly with the brain, internal organs and other body parts, in extreme danger the feet must be prepared to participate in fleeing, they do this by processing environmental information gathered through the soles, helping the brain to determine how much oxygen to release, over time this communication speeds up and allows us to adapt to the rhythm of running.

Can traces of history and past events be found in our nervous system and in our muscles, can we discover these through movement?

This landscape demands that I give way to instinct and surrender to its pulse.

According to Lamarck genetic assimilation allows an animals response to environmental stress to become a fixed part of its developmental repertoire so that characteristics formed in a given environment can be inherited and retained, even outside of the conditions of that environment, Lamarck calls this phenotypic plasticity.

Knowing this landscapes requires knowing my body, a coordination of eyes and feet, even whilst watching the sky and the land, whilst calling out, sounding the mountain, sounding the well. I walk through clumps of silence, startling. I strategise over grains and potential scores, of dividing space, documenting human interventions, measuring the distance between trees and equalising space with a grid, offering a segment to the other artists...does this landscape choreograph me?

A fugue is a contra-punctual composition in which a short melody or phrase is introduced by one part and successively taken up by others and developed by interweaving parts

Or it is a loss of awareness of ones identity, often coupled with a flight from ones usual environment

There are bee's drowning at the old well. There is a trough with a plastic tube that runs into a bath, its a hot day but there is ice floating in the tub, it fixes the bees in a curving pattern that oscillates to the hum of those flocking to the water that pours from the arched mound of mud and bricks, through the tube, flooding the trough, into the tub., they circle with a low drone.

I keep walking, consuming every old stump, the shape of the dry wood, grains, almond shells, mounds of soil sitting in pyramids next to the shallow ditches, formed in their creation, one has a thick wadge of coarse bush protruding 

I pick up the sole of the heel of a shoe, a heavy sole, turned on in its side, you could say it was the shape of the mounds of the hills in the middle distance and the lumpy protruding old well, all formed with an arching top and a flat base.

Dung in the dining room, dung on the floor, the floor made of dung, dung surrounding the decrepit remains of a manger, climbing onto hardened dung, hearing the beetles tunnelling through, corroding, consuming, digging down, removing 8 tons of dung, collecting  it and drying it up then grinding it into a fine dust, cracking an egg through your hands to form a fine paint.

The weather report states that there is a 100% probability of rain, a deluge, it will fill up the fields and run down the barrancos and into the ramblers and off to the sea".

 

Hazel Dowling

 
Joya: AiR / Massiel Mafes / USA
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"I arrived at Joya: AiR with only a small pink sketchbook, oil pastels, and acrylic paint. I had no clue what I was going to make, but I was excited. Each day I would glance through the studio window and observe the beautiful Spanish landscape. I mixed a lot of paint, and created various color palettes. I often wrote down my thoughts and drew objects that caught my attention as I hiked up or down the hill. It was a bittersweet feeling to have to leave this place - a place where I met wonderful artists, had conversations about life and art, shared laughs, and learned about new cultures. I am very grateful to Simon and Donna for giving me the time and space to nurture my artistic practice, stay in their home, and eat their delicious meals. I left feeling inspired and ready to make new work in my studio in San Francisco. I will always remember this place as the hidden gem in Vélez-Blanco".

 

Massiel Mafes

 

https://www.massielmafes.com/

 
Joya: AiR / Brenan Duarte / España
B_Duarte.jpg
 

"De repente me he despertado, el silencio se podía escuchar, el tiempo no transcurría…

Al principio resultaba inquietante, pero tranquilizador.

De donde yo vengo (País Vasco) la cultura del ruido está inmersa en la sociedad vasca, cuanto más “jaleo” mejor.

Aquí he podido vislumbrar que la nada existe.

Ahora sé, que podré aislarme en cualquier entorno, gracias a mi corta estancia en la Cortijada de los Gázquez.

Sólo tendré que oler el viento de la sierra, acompañar con la mirada el vaivén de las ramas y mirar al cielo para perseguir a las nubes en su rápida marcha.

He comprobado que la soledad, es uno de los más preciados regalos".

 

Brenan Duarte 2017

 

"Suddenly I woke up, the silence could be heard, time did not pass ...
At first it was disturbing, but reassuring.
Where I come from (Basque Country) the culture of noise is immersed in Basque society, the more "fuss" the better.
Here I have glimpsed that nothing exists.
Now I know, that I can isolate myself in any environment, thanks to my short stay in the Cortijada de los Gázquez.
I will only have to smell the wind of the mountains, accompany the gaze of the branches and look to the sky to chase the clouds in their rapid march.
I have found that isolation is one of the most precious gifts".
 
Brenan Duarte
 
Joya: AiR / Andrew Morrison / UK
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"Like all printmakers my studio and my practice are full of stuff – presses and scroll-saws and routers, they assist the work but in their own way they become props; they are limiters as well as enablers. The need to get away from the studio is a need to get back to pencil/paper/scissors – to ideas that might suggest a process but not be dictated to by one. I arrived at JOYA (by bus; two and a half days from England) with rolls of black and white paper, a pair of scissors and the beginnings of a series of texts (about our relationship with wilderness) that I wished to match with simple images that I hope may end up being pages in a book.

The studio at JOYA gave me the opportunity to create new patterns for working days – to draw in the mornings, walk in the warm afternoons (the landscape is so ever-changing with that it would have been easy to do nothing else but walk and watch vultures), assemble pages in the early evenings and then meet with the other artists to talk and plan before the, always delicious, evening meal.

I’ve lived off-grid for two years in Wales – a short time but long enough to learn that attention is constantly demanded by the systems that sustain life and that one’s own artistic practice struggles to appear as vital. To live in such a demanding way whilst also providing such a welcoming, creative environment for others is testament to Simon and Donna’s sustained vision, tenacity and generosity".

 

Andrew Morrison

http://twowoodpress.co.uk/

 
Joya: AiR / Hangama Amiri / Afganistan - Canada
Hangama.jpg
 

JOYA: AiR residency.

"Four words that come strongly from my personal experience at Joya: AiR Residency: solitude, silence, serenity and sincere".

Arriving

"My first day of arrival at Vélez Rubio on Sunday December 3rd and soon meeting the lovely Donna Beckmann with her welcoming smile, has been a very special day for me. As we were driving towards the Joya: AiR while having a conversation, and looking through the window, the vast landscape had a nostalgic moment to my childhood memories of growing up in Panjshir Valley in Parwaan, Afghanistan. I felt a sudden warmth. And it felt very good to be at this remote, quite land".

Studio Time

"My time as an artist-in-residency at Joya: AiR program has been very productive, creative, adventurous and empowering. Being at my studio space with a big square window, not only inspired me to paint the everyday colour memory, but the warmth of sun from early morning to sun down inspired me to study the colour values of the nature, to experience the tranquil nature of the landscape and the fresh air surrounding the landscape. Especially delving my time into making art away from daily pressure and destruction—a space to focus solitude into my productivity.

At my studio space, I came with a proposed project to create work based on landscaping geography of Cortijada Los Gázquez in Almería, Andalucía. My current project “Gente de España” consisted of 15 small portrait paintings, oil on wood panel (11’’ x 14’’) that depicted portraits of local people in Los Gázquez and Vélez Blanco residents—overlapped against the stunning landscape of Almería. In this painting project, I used to go outside everyday with my journaling, sketching, and recording colour memory while also communicating with the Almerían people, knowing their taste of culture and language, then later brought my visual materials back to studio and used for later in my mixed media paintings.

Departure

For me what is more special about this residency was the interaction between other international artists. This has brought a challenging platform, a shared rich-cultural experiences, knowing about each other’s art practice and our day to day experience being at JOYA. Especially sharing our dinner time with Simon and Donna Beckmann has brought so much laugher, fun stories, and art/culture experiences. I will definitely miss those nights.

I would like to extend my warmest and most sincere thanks to Donna and Simon Beckmann’s generosity, hospitality, and critical view on my work. I will for sure miss each single day of my time at Joya: AiR, and I’m hoping to join the community once again to meet this extraordinary nature in summer time".

 

Hangama Amiri

 

http://www.hangamaamiri.com/

 

 

 
Joya: AiR / Charlene Clempson / UK
Charlene.jpg
 

"Joya: AiR enables you the chance to reboot and rethink your connection to art practice which  gives you time to rethink not only your practice but the methods used to create work in a sustainable manner. My initial plan was to document my time in Joya through image and text. I imagined that I would methodically work through the task at hand and careful transcribe each experience. Therefore, suturing art and life together as one piece of work - some of this was completed  but the sheer beauty of the place was both distracting and a wonder to view. 

Simon and Donna have created a space that does not conform to usual residency spaces and every aspect of the interior and exterior is well planned. Additionally,  dinner added to the social engagement and the food was delicious."

Charlene Clempson

 

http://www.charleneclempson.com/

 

 

 
Joya: AiR / Inma Gimeno Alcover / Spain
Inma.jpg
 

"Esta no es una experiencia, es "la experiencia" contigo mismo, con el entorno y con las personas que te acompañan.

Es un viaje al lugar donde es posible reflexionar, trabajar, crear, compartir, descubrir y descubrirte.

Paseos, naturaleza, espacio de trabajo, conversación, aprendizaje, un oasis en nuestro bullicioso mundo.

Realmente inspirador con personas encantadoras. Una verdadera joya".

Inma Gimeno

Joya: AiR / Marion Pauw / Holland
Marion.jpg
 

"I live in the middle of Amsterdam, which can be overwhelming sometimes. Especially the noise. There is always a car honking, a person yelling, a dog barking, a radio blaring.

First thing I noticed about Joya was the silence. I asked Donna if the vague sound in the distance were cars, but she said it was the wind in the pine trees. And then there was the wind turbine that sometimes would switch on for a couple of hours. Or an occasional bird.

I started taking long walks through the countryscape. Sometimes I wouldn’t even hear the wind. I would hold my breath to enjoy the nothingness.

On one of my first walks I was startled by a sound, it was like something was rushing towards me at a very high speed. I stopped dead in my tracks, unsure of what it was. Then I noticed it was the sound of wind blowing through a tree with yellow leaves. It almost sounded as if it were a percussion instrument. I’ve really started to like that sound. Every day I would look forward to hearing it, like a favourite song.

Today I walked past the tree for the very last time. I noticed the sound was gone. Too many of the yellow leaves had fallen now, as winter approaches. It made me a little sad, like I am feeling sad about leaving Joya:Air. But in the same time, I knew the leaves would return as I might some day".

Marion Pauw / writer in residence / November 2016

Joya: AiR / Liadain Evans / UK
LEvans.jpg
 

"I came to Joya for the chance to film out in the rural landscape, something I don’t have easy access to at home. I got what I came for, as well as so much more. To be able to take one step out the front door and be in the midst of breathtaking mountains valleys and skies is a wonderful feeling. Time at Joya feels very different, it completely slowed down for me, meaning I could feel like I had had a productive day in terms of making work, while also spending hours and hours walking in the mountains, reading, spending time with the other residents, and lapping up delicious food (and wine!).

While at Joya I was able to spend so much time alone which was one of the major positives for me, however the time spent with the other artists, volunteers, interns and especially Simon and Donna was a warm and unexpected experience. Everyone was lovely, encouraging and supportive. I really enjoyed the artist talks in the evening, it was very interesting to hear about everyone’s practice, and there was such a wide range. 

Donna and Simon are incredibly warm and welcoming. Their kindness and charm make you feel right at home. The house itself is beautiful, and it is incredible to see the day to day activities of an off-grid environmentally sustainable home".

Liadain Evans

 
still image from video work in progress at Joya: AiR by Liadain Evans.

still image from video work in progress at Joya: AiR by Liadain Evans.