Joya: AiR / Natalia Muñoz Izarra / ESP
photo Simon Beckmann

photo Simon Beckmann

 
 

“Tener una furgoneta estenopeica como cámara significa sobre todo la libertad de poder desplazarte con ella y llevar siempre contigo no solo tu cámara sino también tu laboratorio. Siempre que salgo, intento llegar a lugares alejados de los núcleos urbanos donde poder aparcar y montar el laboratorio para revelar las fotos que voy haciendo. 

En Joya encontré además la tranquilidad que necesitaba para terminar el proyecto en el que estoy trabajando. Nihil es un proyecto que nace de la nada y que se transforma en un periplo que explora su origen y su final. Este proceso se desarrolla en la naturaleza, que simula el entorno en el que crecí –en un pueblo pequeño de Burgos– y que me ayuda a identificar y analizar los vínculos que me conectan con ella.  Lo que yo creía nada se transforma y termina convirtiéndose en el todo en el que habito. Para este proyecto construí una cámara con una caja redonda que me permitía dar así esta forma a las imágenes como parte un círculo que se cierra”.

Natalia Muñoz Izarra

“Having a pinhole van as a camera means above all the freedom to move with it and always carry not only your camera but also your dark room. Whenever I leave, I try to reach places far from an urban centre where I can park and assemble the dark room to reveal the photos I am taking. In Joya: AiR I also found the peace of mind I needed to finish the project I am working on. Nihil is a project that is born out of nothing and becomes a journey that explores its own origin and its end. This process takes place in nature, which simulates the environment in which I grew up - in a small town in Burgos - and that helps me identify and analyse the links that connect me with it. What I believed nothing transforms and ends up becoming the whole in which I live. For this project I built a camera with a round box that allowed me to give this shape to the images as part of a circle that closes”.

 
Natalia Muñoz Izarra (pin hole camera van exposure at Joya: AiR)

Natalia Muñoz Izarra (pin hole camera van exposure at Joya: AiR)

Natalia Muñoz Izarra (pin hole camera van exposure at Joya: AiR)

Natalia Muñoz Izarra (pin hole camera van exposure at Joya: AiR)

Natalia Muñoz Izarra

Natalia Muñoz Izarra

Natalia Muñoz Izarra (biscuit tin pin hole camera exposure)

Natalia Muñoz Izarra (biscuit tin pin hole camera exposure)

Natalia Muñoz Izarra

Natalia Muñoz Izarra

Natalia Muñoz Izarra

Natalia Muñoz Izarra

Natalia Muñoz Izarra

Natalia Muñoz Izarra

Joya: AiR / Gong-won / KOR
photo Simon Beckmann

photo Simon Beckmann

 
 


“I've always craved that stillness.

Even when I danced, I looked for that inexplicable stillness.


Joya: AiR, discovered during an my journey , was my first MAP series.

The two weeks of my journey there have made me a stronger, deeper inner man.

I still remember the first meeting I couldn't forget.

The blue sky, the green , grey mountains, and the stillness I've been looking for. 

The place where I arrived after flying 20 hours gave me the calm I had been looking for.


Every moment was precious.


Like found a piece of a last puzzle.

Joya: AiR is A PERFECT PLACE”.



Su-young Park

Interdisciplinary artist Su-young Park (Gong-won)


https://www.hellosuyoung.com


Park Su-young, who artist name Gong-won, majored in traditional Korean painting at university and is currently studying choreography at the Korea National University of Arts.

Working on a mixture of hip-hop and improvisation movements, and working on a story called <Map Series> through space and connectivity.

2018 Seoul, Busan Improvisation Dance Festival,  2019 Jeju Improvisation Dance Festival, 2019 British Totally Thames Festival,  2019 Art Council Korea Interdisciplinary Art  <LOOK>. 

She is Performing various experimental performances.


 
Gong-won photo Simon Beckmann

Gong-won photo Simon Beckmann

Gong-won photo Simon Beckmann

Gong-won photo Simon Beckmann

Gong-won photo Simon Beckmann

Gong-won photo Simon Beckmann

Gong-won photo Simon Beckmann

Gong-won photo Simon Beckmann

Gong-won photo Simon Beckmann

Gong-won photo Simon Beckmann

Gong-won photo Simon Beckmann

Gong-won photo Simon Beckmann

Gong-won photo Simon Beckmann

Gong-won photo Simon Beckmann

Gong-won photo Simon Beckmann

Gong-won photo Simon Beckmann

Gong-won photo Simon Beckmann

Gong-won photo Simon Beckmann

Gong-won photo Simon Beckmann

Gong-won photo Simon Beckmann

Gong-won photo Simon Beckmann

Gong-won photo Simon Beckmann

Gong-won photo Simon Beckmann

Gong-won photo Simon Beckmann

Joya: AiR / Aurora Rosales / ARG
photo Simon Beckmann

photo Simon Beckmann

 
 

The silence,

the magnificent landscape,

the song of humming bees,

the smell of almond trees’s flowers,

the gradient of the sunset,

the heart warming dinners,

the talks before bedtime,

the goodbyes,

the distance to everything else,

the close connection to myself,

the writer that has a fascination with snakes,

the dancer that makes paper out of bamboo,

the sculptor that transforms the world,

the dog that wants to be a friend,

the solar energy,

the walks that refills you with energy and new ideas,

the subjective experience of time.

Joya: AiR was a before and after experience, where every little bit contributed to deeply connecting with my practice and myself.

I experimented with natural pigments and materials such as recycled paper, charcoal made from willow branches, turmeric, coffee and skimmed milk. I’m coming back to my studio full of sketches and new ideas.

Aurora Rosales

 

 
Simon Beckmann
Joya: AiR / Lorna Watkins / IRE
photo Simon Beckmann

photo Simon Beckmann

 
 

“I’m home now over a week but my heart is still in Joya: AiR.  Such a magical experience.  The landscape and weather catch your breath.  The cold mornings, then hot days and freezing cold nights, star gazing walking back from my outdoor studio and staring out my bedroom window to the mountains and olive trees. 

The cortijada is beautiful, adorned with stunning textiles, ceramics and glass.  A warm welcoming stove and even warmer welcome from Simon and Donna, our hosts.  Their love and passion for the land and this project is inspiring.  I got an understanding of living in rural España .  Simon’s presentation of their work describing the huge importance of water resonated with me.  On my daily wander through the almond groves, I discovered wells and reservoirs and the metaphor of the well running dry stuck with me.  How we must mind ourselves as we must mind our precious resources.  Joya: AiR minded me.

Such a slow pace of life.  Time felt elastic.  Ten days in one day.  No electric kettle.  Waiting for the kettle to boil on the stove became a gorgeous ritual.  The ritual of lighting the stoves, gathering kindling.  Time for thinking and listening.  I found myself recording sounds all day every day; the bees, locals at the farmers market in Vélez Blanco, church bells, birdsong, melting snow.

The most precious part of Joya: AiR was the people.  I met kindred spirits and collaborations are planned.  Ideas shared, belly laughs and tears of laughter at terrible jokes around the dinner table.  Very excited with where this experience will lead me in my practice in the months to come”.

Lorna Watkins

 www.lornawatkins.com .  www.instagram.com/lorna_watkins

 
Joya: AiR / Astrid Oudheusden / NED
photo Simon Beckmann

photo Simon Beckmann

 
 

“Coming up for AiR and there is something in the air at Joya_AiR. A warm and giving place, albeit with lots of snow this time.

In this secluded little world one can create a new tribe in two weeks

Full of plans I arrived, convinced I would leave Joya: AiR with a finished book. As with all plans, reality turned out to have a very different colour and taste.

The book is nowhere near its end, but lots of shiny ideas filled my head, soulmates found and different works being made. 

I ended up crocheting breasts, drawing and painting colours and landscapes, watching and doing little funny dances.

It was absolutely brilliant and amazing thanks to all the wonderful people. 

I will miss this place of wonders, connection, best food ever and nourishing seclusion”.

Astrid Oudheusden

 
Simon Beckmann
Joya: AiR / TeaYoun Kim-Kassor / KOR-USA
Teayoung.jpg
 
 

“The artist residency Joya: AiR is an inspiring place that provided me with a place to unearth many fresh ideas that awakened new projects. The program offers a setting for transcendent experiences of creativity due to the isolated geographic location and limited access to man-made sources. The place allowed me to move away from materials that I felt comfortable with and gave space for mental malleability when brainstorming new artwork.

Joya: AiR’s architecture and landscape plans are adapted to its geographical environment. The relationship between the residency’s architectural structure and landscape helped me to understand this particular geographical region and encouraged me to explore the surrounding fundamental elements in my artwork: Sun, Soil, Water, and Wind. 

My large-scale Cyanotype pieces constructed with balanced proportions of space and volume. The refinement of its geometric abstraction and the composition of the positive and negative spaces were created with forms, colors, light, as well as the link between art and nature. The two juxtaposed large-scale Cyanotype pieces are joined and oriented in the same subject matter, the transition from a constructed space to the circular and long-lined shape of the agricultural landscape resulting in abstract imagery. While I was creating these new works, I was able to be free from the limits within the conventions of what nature provided me. 

Many thanks to Joya”!

TeaYoun Kim-Kassor

TeaYoun Kim-Kassor is originally from S. Korea where she received her BFA in Fine Arts at Sungshin Women’s University in Seoul. She continued her research in Art Education as the Japanese equivalent of a Fulbright Scholar at Saitama University in Japan where she earned an MAT. In America, TeaYoun continued her exploration of fine arts in the MFA program at the University of Tennessee with a focus on Art Installation. Currently, she is teaching as an Associate Professor of Art at Georgia College & State University in GA. TeaYoun has been a very active artist having numerous exhibitions including at The Embassy of the Republic of Korea, Washington D.C., University of South Carolina Beaufort, SC, Museum of Contemporary Art of Georgia, GA, La Macina di San Cresci, Florence, Italy, Textile Arts Center, Brooklyn, NY, Montana State University Gallery, Bozeman, MT, Maryville College Gallery, Maryville, TN, The Folklore Museum, Sendai, Japan, and CESTA, Tabor, Czech Republic.

 
Simon Beckmann
Joya: AiR / Alicia Iglesias / ESP
photo Simon Beckmann

photo Simon Beckmann

 
 

“Las obras realizadas durante mi residencia en Joya:AIR están inspiradas en la obra “ L’air et les songes “ de Gastón Bachelard y en la naturaleza que rodea el cortijo de la residencia. Pero no me interesa la naturaleza con mayúsculas sino, cómo se habla en la obra de Bachelard, de la naturaleza que generalmente pasa desapercibida, de las “malas hierbas”. Partiendo de bocetos de las “malas hierbas “ he realizado durante la residencia toda una serie de obras realizadas con materiales reciclados (mimetizandome con el espíritu profundamente ecológico  de Joya: AiR) Me gusta desarrollar una misma idea utilizando diversas técnicas, de este modo he realizado durante mi residencia libros de artista, caja- objetos, bordados...tratando de transmitir la belleza de estas “ malas hierbas”. 

Alicia Iglesias

 
Simon Beckmann
Joya: AiR / Chae Lee / KOR
photo Simon Beckmann

photo Simon Beckmann

 
 


”I had a long journey on the first day of Joya AiR. I woke up from 2 am. I remember as my flight was 6:40 am. And, I think I took the wrong seat on the ALSA bus. However, I met Simon at Puerto Lumbreras to picked me up. Thank you. It was a fun journey to Joya: AiR because Simon told me stories about buildings, culture, Vélez-Rubio and Vélez-Blanco and more. I enjoyed! 

After I arrived at Joya: AiR, I had my accommodation and set up my studio space with a big window. The surroundings of Joya was so great. Move to dinner time! I had a wonderful dinner from Donna until the last day of residency. And, I did a few drawings on the first day. I believe I went to bed around 12:30 am.

On the next day, My mobile shows I slept 12 hours and 14 mins for the first night at Joya: AiR. I was so surprised to sleep over 12 hours. I walked around the building and took some photos. It was so quiet so I concentrated on the environment more. I felt nature.

It could have the same day but it was not the same; each day was different. Each day drawings are different and it seems to show new to me. And I realised my artworks are really affecting by experiences.  My artworks contain abstract, colour-field, geometry and perspective. However, my drawings include objects too. 

It was a lovely new residency experience because the previous residency was in Baker street London and its totally different environment. If it is possible, I hope to do another residency at Joya AiR in the future. Thank you so much to Simon, Donna, Lucy and artists (Molly and Alicia)”.

Chae Lee

Chae Lee is from South Korea, based in London. She completed her BA Fine Art at Goldsmiths College in 2018. Currently, she is doing an MA Fine Art at Chelsea College of Art.

 
Simon Beckmann
Joya: AiR / Molly Astley / GBR
photo Simon Beckmann

photo Simon Beckmann

 
 

“Alongside my intention to listen to the land - to absorb all the sense impressions and communications of the precious ecosystem JOYA rests in - was the worrisome possibility that there would be no depth of dialogue between me and the environment: that I would be rejected as a stranger, my London mind too frenzied to be permeated by anything other-than-human. 
On day two of my residency I woke to sharp October sunshine. I watched an olive tree from the window,  whose branches bustled in the wind, & noticing the change in light I hoped my presence had been quietly accepted.


What are we prepared to reveal to one another? 

The next morning, the sound of a bird calling from atop the studio chimney invited me outside into the freshness of the morning, to capture the sun spilling light through the valley. 
The plants were tender with dew, and the swift air wrapped around my body as I turned the corner of the house to the face the expansive view.  JOYA is a 360-degree experience. I felt encircled by the park, something to witness in every direction, and no doubt many things witnessing me. There are relics left by artists who have gone before me, and these spoke too. 

Such were the shining moments when other presences whisked me out of introspection and into relation, the praying mantis who crept into my studio, the goat bleating at sunset, & not least the ever endearing Frida, whose bark resonates deep in the bones!
What struck me at Joya: AiR was how skilfully and playfully we can communicate across languages and cultures: how we manage to share laughter, stories and symbols. I also felt grief for loss of languages we are living through – those creatures and cultures that no longer speak.  And the ephemerality of that. The smoke rushing from the chimney, swept sideways by the wind. 

A visit to the nearby 'Cueva de Los Letreros' left me pining for the romantic idea of a time in which folklore, magic and ritual were intrinsic to our understanding of place, and our relationship with animals and the cosmos. I was inspired by the narrative space made for mystery, which felt like a remedy to our techno-info-hungry society. My mono printing turned to red earth tones and crude marks. Time allowed me to be process led, uncomfortable at first, giving me the chance to explore new water-based techniques. 

2 weeks offered space for reflection on my direction as an artist / writer working in the time of climate crisis, a moment to become re-enchanted with the biodiversity we strive to protect, and to contemplate the acts of communication I play a part in receiving, interpreting, and transmuting. How can I be a node of connection in an ecosystem, rather than observer?

Thank you for your generosity in opening up your beautiful family home to support art residencies: an inspirational model of creative, carbon-neutral living, in a setting that is totally alive”.

Molly Astley


Molly Astley is an artist and writer, with a BA in English Literature, currently studying the Life/Art Process, Anna Halprin's Expressive Arts Programme. 
Her work questions the human / nature separation and explores the relationship between personal and ecological health. Automatic drawing, embodied awareness, observations of sensation and perception are core to her process. 

 
Simon Beckmann
Joya: AiR / Phoebe Marmura / CAN
photo Simon Beckmann

photo Simon Beckmann

 
 

“I’m looking forward to watching the sun come up behind the mountains today. It’s nearly 8 am and still dark outside. Looking out the tiny window from my bed the sky is slate blue and the mountains are a black, blurred, bumpy mass that border the valley. I can't yet see the ground, just that it is very still, unmoving, like a stagnant lake or pond. Even as the rain falls, and the mountains surrounding the valley are laced in fog, at Joya: AiR there is a wildness and beauty in the landscape that is ever-present. The earth is sandy white clay, like walking on pure holy ground. Past barrancos of clear water tiny mountain peaks of brush and prickly bushes envelope us.

It is easy to invent and then be whisked away into a magical, make believe world of your own at Joya: AiR. There is so much space to explore, and I found myself being fed by the land and the home. Daily walks evoke visions of wild cowgirls riding down the hills at dawn, and the calm shallow barrancos become rushing rivers”. 

 
photo Phoebe Marmura

photo Phoebe Marmura

 

   ~Goldie left home to travel the Wild West due to a severe case of ennui~

Goldie didn’t remember much when she awoke that morning. Yawning into early August air, her eyes opened slowly. Like a fresh baby, Goldie felt as if she was experiencing each sense for the first time. She was wrapped tightly in something soft, and cream coloured.. muslin, and laying on a mattress of feathers. Goldie smelled talcum powder, bacon fat, and musky desert marigolds, which were showing off their deep rust colored buds in a vase on the bedside. The world was sideways, she could see the edge of the brass bed she lay on, and a floor to ceiling bay window which was widely opened and barely covered by a starched, white, cotton curtain fluttering lightly about.

“I found myself, away from all of life's petty distractions, roused into a fictitious world of calm, ease, and excitement. At Joya: AiR I focused on writing and taking photographs, the beauty of the desert scape drove my characters. My desire is to create a book combining my love for writing, design, photography, touch, and smell. Something that is precious, tangible, and beautiful—something that will be treasured, much like the land and feeling at Joya AiR”. 

Phoebe Marmura



 
Simon Beckmann
Joya: AiR / Sonia Martí Gallego / ESP
photo Simon Beckmann

photo Simon Beckmann

 
 

“Para mí Joya: AiR es un proyecto vital a la vez que artístico, del que Simon y Donna consiguen que pases a formar parte de él durante tu estancia. Y, cuando te explican en profundidad lo que es para ellos Joya: Air todo adquiere una nueva dimensión. Todo está perfectamente entrelazado con el entorno, el clima, la orografía del lugar y las características culturales de la zona.

Trabajar allí en el guion del largo que estoy escribiendo ha sido una experiencia inolvidable. Muchas gracias pro todo”.

Sonia Martí Gallego

Guionista de ficción y creativa. Cofundadora en 2010 del Festival RIZOMA al que sigue vinculada como parte del comité de selección de largos para el Premio de Cine. Autora del libro de relatos Desnudo. Ha diseñado la estrategia de comunicación digital para varios estrenos destacados de la distribuidora Golem -La casa de Jack de Lars von Trier; Maya de Mia Hansen-Love, Gracias a Dios de François Ozon, entre otros- y ha sido guionista del proyecto ROBOTA MML de Itziar Barrio, película producida por Matadero Madrid (actualmente en postproducción) como parte de la residencia de la artista en mayo abril del 2019. Actualmente trabaja como freelance haciendo guiones y contenidos para diferentes medios.

 
Simon BeckmannRIZOMA
Joya: AiR / Maureen Nathan / GBR
photo Simon Beckmann

photo Simon Beckmann

 
 

“I arrive at Joya: AiR on the first day of December, stepping out of the Landrover that has collected me onto soil of pale grey clay. It rains for several days. Inside there are beautiful objects everywhere, both decorative and useful, that take shape in my sketchbooks.  Donna’s welcome is like a warm blanket around my shoulders.

Outside, the earth actually becomes clay encasing my feet whenever I walk about as I become part of the landscape around this solid house of creativity, warmth and camaraderie. Returning indoors as though stepping off the potters wheel, my thoughts become ceramics of the mind. Fanciful and yet, inside and outside, everything has been organised for the benefit of the creative process: if I’m hungry there’s food, if I’m tired I can sleep in my beautiful bedroom and my studio space is a haven that looks out over a Spanish landscape I haven’t experienced before. And there is a wood burner for added warmth. Heaven.

The rain stops, the air that surrounds the hills, mountains and barrancos becomes solid. As a fine artist who paints and draws, my world is flat: the picture plane. And here, there is another dimension at work that envelopes me. Shapes and space fill my mind and my sketchbooks. I cut up old magazines I’ve found by the kindling and logs, pin and stick them to paper creating shapes that echo what I’m seeing every which way I look, through the beautiful silky air of the Cortijada Los Gázquez (Joya: AiR).

I’m so happy to have two weeks to spend here as more people arrive, different disciplines, practices and points of view are discussed. Simon tells us about the creation of this project that he and Donna have devoted themselves to, together with their family. It’s an endeavour that allows me the luxury of time and solitude with my own preoccupations  and no pressure to ‘create’ something. As it becomes time to return to England my lack of expectation or planning for this residency rewards me with full sketchbooks, colour notes, collages that will give my next body of work its shape and form”.

Maureen Nathan

Maureen’s work is informed by memory and the world around her. She is interested in patterns and form with her pictures containing varying degrees of figuration and abstraction. Open in her outlook and relentless in her practice she happily follows her own interests and the process of making: intently haphazard.

You can see more of her work at: https://maureennathan.com

 

 

 
Simon Beckmann
Joya: AiR / Peti Collage / ESP
photo Simon Beckmann

photo Simon Beckmann

 
 

“Peti Collage (Julia Petisco) reside actualmente en Madrid y es Licenciada en Comunicación Audiovisual, pero hace poco más de dos años da un giro a su carrera y comienza su andadura en el mundo del collage de manera autodidacta. 

Apasionada de las artes plásticas y del trabajo manual, se centra en la producción en papel, hecha a mano y de diseño único. Le interesa especialmente el componente de sostenibilidad y reciclaje que brinda esta técnica, y que permite crear nuevas narrativas a partir de material existente. Centrada en temáticas como el papel de la mujer dentro de la sociedad, los mundos interiores y el medio ambiente, se decanta por diseños sobrios pero potentes visualmente, en los cuales impera el lema "menos es más", puesto que encuentra en el minimalismo un interesante ejercicio conceptual. 

Durante su residencia en Joya: AiR ha investigado y desarrollado nuevas técnicas de intervención de papel como el bordado o la incorporación de elementos naturales a sus diseños”.

Julia Petisco

Instagram: @peticollage    

 
Simon Beckmann
Joya: AiR / Telephone Pony / GBR
photo Simon Beckmann

photo Simon Beckmann

 
 

“Telephone Pony is Juliet Fleming and James Pickering. We are interested in shared seeing and combining our perspectives. Our work is created by negotiating and compromising on each others desires and needs in order to create compositions with consensus. We take visual cues from the surrounding environment and our own experiences. We both see differently but from sharing space and the things we see, our own perspectives come together as a shared reading of our context as a pictorial composition that depends on our knowledge and interests”.

https://www.instagram.com/telephonepony/

https://cargocollective.com/Telephonepony


www.goldtapped.com

www.julietfleming.co.uk

 
Simon Beckmann
Joya: AiR / Tia Vellani / CAN-IRE
T_Vellani.jpg
 
 

“Tia Vellani here. In my visual arts practice, I'm motivated by the unsolved questions of where music comes from and why we love it. I build outdoor, multi-player musical instruments from recycled objects. I invent and orchestrate multimedia collaborations that combine music, visual art and science. I create digital art and tapestries from music. I compose music inspired by visual art and science.

My favourite parts about Joya: AiR were the design of the studios, living spaces, and schedule (late dinners being the only scheduled activity). They encouraged interaction with other artists as well as independent practice. There were plenty of cosy spots to sketch, chat, eat, read, dream, and work. There was enough wifi to keep in touch and for a bit of research when I needed it.

In the beginning I struggled to decide how to spend my precious 2 weeks. Was I going to practice drawing, write a journal, compose music, or was I going to use up the entire time trying to decide? After settling in though, I was content to simply be, come what may.

I chose to give a talk about my work the day after arriving because I wanted my conversations to be engaging and relevant straight away. I'm glad I did because artists at Joya: AiR come and go and several people left shortly after I arrived. The few conversations I had with them were transformative, as was hearing about their work. I also received some good advice about restructuring the presentation of my practice.

I took a lot of solo walks during the days, absorbing the deeply ancient landscape and bringing bits of it back in my pockets. I eventually started taking a sketchbook with me, overcoming the ego-mountain that was holding me back from learning to draw.

The fire was lit every evening where people played board games, read or had the chats. I unexpectedly managed to find time to write an application for a curatorial studio visit. It was easy to concentrate with no responsibilities, including feeding myself. Donna's dinners were delicious!

The volunteers, Jette and Georg, were as much a part of daily life as the artists. Georg gave me some pretty intense introductory sessions in programming with JavaScript to enable me to carry out my musical programming ideas on my own. Jette and I played duets on the beautiful old piano Donna and Simon have in the living room and went on sketch-walks together.

I wasn't aware of the emotional healing that was taking place in me while I was at Joya: AiR until I got home. At Los Gázquez (Joya: AiR) I woke up weeping more than once, grieving an accumulation of life's disappointments. My first morning back in Ireland, I woke up singing Bach. Literally. I woke myself up... singing. And the sheer weirdness of it made me smile. I'm so very grateful to Donna and Simon for all the love and work they put into creating a safe, stimulating place where one may heal”.

Tia Vellani

Tia integrates art, music and science in her practice. She considers herself a visual artist though she has had no formal training. She’s played music all her life: classical piano at age 3, concert flute, voice and West African percussion. Her educational background is in science (Ph.D and postdoctoral experience in genetics, molecular biology, biochemistry and genomics). 

 
Simon Beckmann
Joya: AiR / Bryan Gerard Duffy / IRE
photo Simon Beckmann

photo Simon Beckmann

 
 

“Walking on (Joya) AiR.’ Quite literally! I was absolutely thrilled with my time here! This was genuinely one of the most exciting, relaxing and productive residencies I've been on. From people to place everything was easy going! Given that I had come from a stream of deadlines, schedules and life stresses, this was my opportunity to re-energise myself and reevaluate my art practice.

Like many people, it would be an understatement to say I was a little apprehensive and anxious coming into a new space, especially in a non-English speaking country where my Spanish is poor at best. The moment I met Donna and Simon I was put at ease. Joya AiR is in relatively close proximity to the popular Granada and Almería. However, travelling down the dark winding road at night to Joya AiR is a surreal haunting experience. When I arrived, the other artists and volunteers were so kind and made me feel right at home. 

With my worries loitering somewhere between Ireland and Malaga, this was the ideal breathing ground for creativity. You can come prepared with ideas and peppered with materials, or simply respond to the space with the resources you’re given. It was completely your decision. I chose the latter primarily because it was more practical not to be trucking suitcases of art materials across Europe. Mind you, the option to post materials there was also available. Whether you spent your time writing, reading, making art, performance, having a siesta or hiking it was completely up to you. I did a little of each. 

Like many visual artists before me I had an urgency to venture outdoors, walking and hiking for the first couple of days. I engaged with the land, and what Simon says about the land is just fascinating. From here, I developed a series of works and studies around the topography of the area. I thought a lot about how this isolated place was so exposed to the elements i.e. earth (mountains, landslides), water (flash floods), fire (light, sun, dry lands), wind (strong winds), void (surrounding echoes). These five elements became the foundation of the artworks I was to research, construct, and deconstruct.  

I used my computer and camera. I had no paper so I used toilet paper! I even used the clothes in my suitcase. I also involved my “learning” Spanish into the art. From the land I used signs, stones, fossils, poles, the mountains, echoes and the general environment. There were no deadlines or expectations from this residency, as the onus was placed on the development of work or enhancement of your practice. With that, work may well be completed in the duration of the residency, or simply six months after. 

Its wilderness was calming. Blue skies were welcomed. Lands awash with canyons (Barranco). Hills rippled the land. The architecture and design of the restored 5 farmhouses is simply divine. What’s diviner is the water system. Moreover, the development of a drilled well, solar panels and windmills blew me away. I’ll waste little time in also commending the complex sanitation system. In almost complete isolation, this dwelling would encourage most to withdraw, but for Donna and Simon it seemed like a challenge. This land can be ruthless, but decades of hard labour and commitment have given them both a great knowledge and understanding of this land. Their passion for ecology merges with art in this self-sustainable “paradise” that was for me inspiring, fascinating and refreshing. 

Whatever work you managed during the day, the evening times were spent interacting over dinner with fellow artists, performers, writers, and volunteers. To top it all off the food was exquisite, as Simon and Donna catered for all needs. Simon also brought his homemade cheese! With that, old stories were shared, deep conversations emerged, jokes had us in stitches and bad puns went unpunished. 

With spacious art studios, and comfortable private rooms, the residency also offered great communal and social spaces. I was especially delighted and honoured to be in the company of such wonderfully creative professional people. Everyday we immersed ourselves in art and philosophical conversations, and the artists presentations were exciting and a useful way to engage and create dialogue. Everything flowed so gracefully in many different languages. My fellow creatives were most kind, supportive and offered great advise. I have truly made friends for life in such a brief time. The only judgement came from the goat Fufu when you walked on her ground, or from Frida the dog when you didn’t pet her and she would retaliate by lying on your yoga mat in “downward facing dog”. The cats were far from perfect and weren’t too fussed either way but still deserve a mention. 

This residency was a joyas (!!!) one, and truly a breathe of fresh air. I explored new directions in my art practice; I was alight with ideas. Importantly, I had the time to develop them. This residency can be seen as a starting point for the emergence of new work as much as it can be a place for continuity of work. However, for me it gave the additional feature of losing excess baggage, metaphorically and literally. Time exists on a different plateau here in the hills! If I was to force an even greater bond with one place than what I have already established here, it is that the name “Brian” derives from the word “hill” or “high place” in old Celtic terms. In the end, I was only delighted and a little proud to wear my new Joya AiR t-shirt, which I bought to help support the good cause behind it. ( https://joya-tee.org/ ) This place is truly a playground for artists. All I wanted to do was art, and all I got to do was art. Space and time, what more could any artist ask for”? 

Joya AiR delivers! Slán.

Gracias, Simon, Donna and team.

http://www.bryangerardduffy.com/

 
Joya: AiR / Ruth Peche / ESP
photo Simon Beckmann

photo Simon Beckmann

 

 

“My approach to Joya: AiR was some kind of escape from the obligations and distractions of my daily life. I showed up with an open mind not quite sure of my expectations, in any case they were pleasantly surpassed by Donna’s welcome and introduction to the house on my arrival.

The first morning I woke up with the urge to climb a mountain to the top, to get situated in space. Furthermore, I needed some kind of challenge to prove myself, to feel free and fully connected to the environment. Once I accomplish that need, I felt the peace, energy and freedom to let the experience flow, with no pressure to do, engage or pretend, just being. I enjoyed sharing my morning yoga sessions with fellow residents who wanted to join, having the day for myself and then savouring delicious dinner between brave conversations and lots of laughs. Grateful to spend time with all the people I had the pleasure to meet, fellow artists, especially friendly Bryan and sweet Lucy, who generously dedicated some time as my model for the “Fascinators” project .

Nature around me was stimulating and contemplative. Autumn. The cold wind blowing was a confirmation of the arid climate and invisible forces of the environment. I was overwhelmed by the silence down in the Barranco, where everything was still, silent testimony of the ravages of torrential water meandering paths through the land, landslides and hanging trees. I got  inspired and obsessed with the cracks in the dried soil. That's where my creative work exploded, filling the cracks, drawing the lines with red stripes made from discarded shopping plastic bags. Feeling the force of erosion in earth as I was dismantling a work of art, made of up-cycled plastic objects, that had been exhibited outdoors for more than two months and removing the eroded parts by sunlight. It’s still a work in progress, I still have to review and debug the images of the interventions I did there. One thing sure, I was deeply moved by the information that Simon shared about aquifers and agricultural super-exploitation in the area, and how this could have been one of the factors that caused Lorca’s earthquake”.


Ruth Peche

 
 
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“My work has always been concerned with the effects of humankind abusing and depleting natural resources, polluting our soil and belittling our home Mother Earth, showing so little respect. For that reason I appreciate so much both the dedication and effort of Simon and Donna to build this place with such awareness and respect for the natural environment.

I still keep in my memory the piano notes played by Jetta (volunteer) heard from outside the house, while watching the olive branches move through the wind with the full moon in the background”.

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Simon Beckmann
Joya: AiR / Fernando Calzadilla / VEN
photo Simon Beckmann

photo Simon Beckmann

 
 

“I am more interested in process than in product. Processes are fluid, always changing like statements of relationship. I try to live an aesthetically conditioned process that is always reassessing its own path. This practice leaves traces. I consider those traces not as representations but as once-againnesses, always in relation to the previous one yet never identical”.

Fernando Calzadilla, Ph.D.
www.fernandocalzadilla.com

 
Joya: AiR / Carl Anderson / GBR
photo Simon Beckmann

photo Simon Beckmann

 
 

“When I first arrived at Joya: AIR I was taken aback by the sheer remoteness and silence of the ancient landscape. I can’t recall a time where I’ve felt so disconnected from society, so it felt great to wander around the mountains, collecting fossils as I went along, and this sense of discovery and being able to map the environment kickstarted my work. 

I began meandering through the gullies (‘las barrancas’) to source my own clay and the act of walking through these passages that had been carved out from the landscape felt like I was passing through time itself. I have occasionally thought about making work out of local clay but learning how to process it from the ground seemed intimidating, so I’ve never actually tried it. I devoted my time to digging down into the rocky floor and the experience of doing this by hand felt primitive, but it connected me to my surroundings, and I felt compelled to build sculptures in and around the barrancas. By doing this I felt a deeper connection the work I was making and working outside the context of a studio gave me a fresh perspective to my work. Joya: AIR is a wonderful and transformative adventure in a truly unique setting. Thank you to Simon and Donna for hosting such an amazing place for artists to work”.

Carl Anderson

Carl Anderson is a London-based artist working predominately in ceramics. By considering Paganism, Folklore and early Mythology, he creates a visual language that is archetypical of hazard and cautionary tale. Certain motifs often appear in his works: chains, dagger-like protrusions and brick cladding. These derive from an interest in how we perceive authority in social structures and how the objects themselves have the potential to become gestural forms of dominance and power. 


Carl attended the Architectural Association to study Architecture between 2009 and 2010 but left to pursue his interest in art. Architecture is still a big influence of his but his interests lie in materiality and form, as opposed to creating functional living spaces using computer-aided design. In place of this he decided to do a Foundation Diploma in Fine Art in 2012 at the Greater Brighton Metropolitan College. He undertook this course as a pathway to explore as many mediums as possible and it's here where he solidified his passion for sculpture.

www.carlandersonart.com 

 
Joya: AiR / Chika Annen / JPN
photo Simon Beckmann

photo Simon Beckmann

 
 

“First time I arrived to the residency, I was overwhelmed by the uninterrupted space.

Dried clay soils, spiky plants and buzzing of bee; somehow I found them subtle and tender

even though there was such a contrast with the environment where I came from.

The great nature swallowed me and I fell asleep in complete darkness and silence at the first night.

 

Sounds emerged from the quietness.

Lights illuminated surroundings from the darkness.

To see the process of defining the world, I started to face myself.

 

Noises echoed in my head and I kept reflect my practice and myself in the studio.

Perhaps I was confused vividness of the vast nature.

Different scales of space and solitary existence of myself different sense of time.

Each element changed my perceptions interactively. 

All the components which constructs my world fell apart.

Then I realised how I possessed massive information which I had no idea what exactly is.

 

I collected things as I did in my childhood. Stones, wood and rusty metal container; Smells, textures, colours and shapes.

Individual details evoke something else from my memories, experience.

The figurative connections among objects reminded me of the different structures of metaphysical world.

During the residency, I worked different media such as painting, sculpture, photography and performance to reconstruct objects from fragments surrounding me. Through the practice, I explored the pathways among objects, environments and me as a processor. The process made me dive in multiple layers of my own cognitive system.

It was very strange and alienated feeling to get back civilised environments after the residency. The residency opened me new understandings towards the relations to the world and me and also myself. The noises in the city tends to drown sounds to but now I can always remember the subtle but clear voices of objects that I found in Joya: AiR.

Great thanks for Simon, Donna, all lovely hosts and artists who inspired me and I am looking forward to return the place again”.

Chika Annen

 
Simon Beckmann