Joya: AiR / Dana Hemenway/ USA
photo Simon Beckmann

photo Simon Beckmann

 
 

“Working alongside my partner and collaborator Matt Robidoux, I found myself drawn to experimenting with the natural clay processed from the lands surrounding Joya: AiR. Knowing that I would be making objects that were not permanent (as the clay would remain unfired), I found a sense of freedom to create unfettered and without ‘set’ plans. I borrowed textures and forms and worked intuitively with the clay, subconsciously referencing inspiration from the way architecture and land integrated at Joya: AiR, as well as a visit to the Alhambra prior to arriving in Parque Natural de Sierra María-Los Vélez. After a year and half of pandemic stress, this kind of making was very welcomed, and I will take these intuited forms, as well as the amazing colors and textures of the flora and geography gathered on daily walks back with me to San Francisco to inform my next body of work.”

— Dana Hemenway, July 2021 

Dana Hemenway is an artist, curator, and educator based in San Francisco. She received her MFA from Mills College and her BA from University of California Santa Cruz. Hemenway has had residencies at the Bemis Center for Contemporary Art (Omaha, NE), ACRE (Stueben, WI), SÍM (Reykjavik, Iceland), The Wassaic Project (Upstate New York), and in 2020 she was awarded a Residency at Recology San Francisco (scheduled for 2021)) . Dana is the recipient of The San Francisco Arts Commission Individual Artist Grant and a Southern Exposure Alternative Exposure Grant. She has a permanent public art commission in SFO’s Terminal 1. Dana has exhibited her artwork locally, nationally, and internationally. From 2015 – 2017, Dana served as a co-director of Royal Nonesuch Gallery, an artist-run project space in Oakland, CA. She is represented by Eleanor Harwood Gallery.


 
Simon Beckmann
Joya: AiR / Rupi Dhillon / ENG
photo Simon Beckmann

photo Simon Beckmann

 
 

“My practice and research situate themselves around the term Cultural Dysphoria. Cultural Dysphoria is a relatively new term which I hope to give weight, through my artwork and an upcoming PhD scholarship.

I came to Joya: AiR with the intention to explore the culture of antique water systems specific to the region, with the water systems of my native Punjab. 

Upon discovering the ways in which water traverses the land there, I explored indo-futurism, the body as a site, spiritual beings, cyborgs and climate in order to create a narrative based film which will release later this year in November.

As well as great studio space, time and a landscape which breeds creative thought, Joya also introduced me to four other great artists from San Francisco, Barcelona and Paris. This gave me a chance to collaborate and allowed me to think about my practise in an even more interdisciplinary manner. I’m looking forward to returning to Joya later this year to launch the film and also to see what new inspiration and meaningful connections it can bring.”

Rupi Dhillon


Rupi Dhillon is a British, Indian, (British Asian, Punjabi, and all things in between and beyond) multidisciplinary artist based in the UK.

She explores the relationships and connections we have with one another as well as how we formulate a sense of self. Through her arts practice she investigates how multiplicity in culture is conducive to the concept of belonging and space. She is interested in facilitating discourse around race, gender and social class and the performability of these social structures.  Using playful techniques, her current work reimagines cultural experience through gestalt expression, participatory performance, shared practices, gifting and attachments in found objects. 

Rupi was the recipient of the prestigious Gertrude Aston Bowater Bequest as well as the Inaugural AIS Award 2020 and Tate Liverpool Artists Award 2020. Rupi has both a BA Hons and MA in Fine Art. She currently works with contemporary art gallery Ikon in Birmingham as a Research Assistant for Ikon in the 1990s funded by the Paul Mellon Centre. This year she will be showing with Coventry Biennial, Niru Ratnam and more recently has had work acquired for New Art Gallery Walsall’s - Twenty Twenty Collection.



 
Simon Beckmann
Joya: AiR / Suwon Lee / VEN
photo Simon Beckmann

photo Simon Beckmann

 

About myself:

My name is Suwon Lee. I am a Korean-Venezuelan artist currently living in Madrid. My main interest through art in the past has mainly been to photograph landscapes and cityscapes, to grasp a concrete perception of space, place, and belonging. Ever since I left my hometown of Caracas in Venezuela back in 2016, I have moved three times and have been looking for a new place to call home. During that time, I have done residencies in Sao Paulo, Brazil, and Vermont, USA, as well as moving to my family’s home in Seoul, Korea. The uprooting from my country of birth and the nomadic lifestyle experience has guided me to begin research into an ongoing project about my family’s archive photos as well as a new project of self-portraits, something I had started working on in the beginning of my career more than fifteen years ago and had not continued until now. Throughout my life, I have constantly confronted the arbitrariness of social identifications and labels. Instead of confirming one identity over another, I seek to recognize in myself a fluid identity without limits. I wish to establish a relationship between the body, space, time and light. My goal is to use the self-portrait, the documentation of the body, as a tool for self-knowledge. 


Proposed lines of inquiry during the residency (February 2020): 

During a residency at the Joya: AIR program, my plan is to continue in this line of research into the self, this time using the privileged access to nature and the arid landscape of Almería to create works where human presence is portrayed in interaction with the elements, reconnecting with the land and being one with it. The connection between the physical body and the elements in the natural world is essential, as both are directly linked to the numinous, the divine power that permeates all the cosmos. Doing shots at night as well as during daytime would be my main focus, giving room for experimentation and allowing the process to dictate where the work goes to, without any limitations. 

Suwon Lee

Suwon Lee

The result (October 2020):

Self-portrait as consciousness of time (Autorretrato como conciencia del tiempo) Suwon Lee

Self-portrait as consciousness of time (Autorretrato como conciencia del tiempo) Suwon Lee

 

Today, October 16, 2020 I thank you, Simon Quentin, Donna and Simon David, for being here with me to inaugurate this site-specific installation. Thanks to Joya: AiR, I have been able to come into contact with the Earth, our precious treasure, our fountain of life and our home. 

 

Time has neither beginning nor end. There has always been and will always be change, which can be labeled as the passage of time.

 

I have lived through many lives in all conceivable life forms, from the unicellular, the invertebrate, the aquatic, the reptile, insect, animal and human form. From all realms of existence in the ten dimensions, I have been born again and again, and in this life I call myself Suwon. Born from the Good star and the Bright Jade, my name means fountain of cultivation. I have spent my life cultivating, nourishing, enriching, preparing and knowing myself.

Here in this barranco, I have known myself in this self-portrait made with stones, the ancient and wise witnesses of time. These stones, just like us, are the product of the coming together of the elements: fire, water, earth, wind and space. They are the very essence of the universe and they remind us that ‘As it is outside, so it is within the body’. 

Today, before you three who are my witnesses, I bury myself into the ground of Almería, I bury my symbolic body, and I merge with this land. 

I dedicate this piece to all my ancestors, the women and men who came together to bring forth life, and who faced hardships and trials in order to live a worthy life. 

This piece exists for today. It is ephemeral, and it may be destroyed by the force of nature or by the human hand. May it be a constant reminder of impermanence and of the consciousness of the passage of time. 

As the waters of the rain and riverbeds carry away everything in its path year after year, century after century, millenia after millenia, so may our lives also carry us towards the paths that we are meant to take and discover our purest essence and consciousness. 

May we all reach a splendid, pure inner world while still living in our imperfect, earthly one. 

 May you be safe

May you be happy

May you be healthy

May you live with ease

 

May we all go in peace. 

 

Thank you.

Suwon Lee

Simon Beckmann
Joya: AiR / Eva Grande / ESP
photo Simon Beckmann

photo Simon Beckmann

 
 

“The Joya: AiR experience has been a very enriching experience. JOYA is very respectful of the environment, the views are extraordinary and the sunsets take your breath away. When needing to emerge myself in the creative process of my project and my investigation into ceramics and materials suitable for visually impaired people the silence was very helpful. The best part are the hosts Donna and Simon which provided thoughtful conversations and exquisite food. I have created some wonderful memories while staying at Joya AIR.

I've dedicated more than 25 years of my life to my passion: art in many of its forms and colors. I've explored and experimented with different disciplines. Although my education and study were philosophy and psychology, I've always kept a link to the art world by also studying history of art, art drawing, painting and photography mainly in Madrid, but also in Paris. Recently I've graduated from the ceramic school of Madrid and the last two years I've focused on ceramic sculptures. During these years I've exhibited my work mainly in Spain, but also in Denmark, The Netherlands, USA, etc.

For me relief, colours and materials have been my main curiosity and interest during the making of my art works. For my work I've used and reused earth, glas, minerals, tree bark, straws, cork, ropes, threads, marbles etc on different surfaces like metal, wood, canvas etc. This has led me to dedicate a lot of time and reflection to search for colours and their shades, materials and their reliefs they are essential elements in my work.

The exclusion of women in art is a topic that is very important to me and to which I have dedicated several exhibitions. I consider women as the central and fundamental axis of life.

 I have taken into account climate change, my love for nature, animals, cinema ... and I have a particular sensitivity for minority groups. For a year I researched materials accessible to the touch to bring abstract art closer to blind and visually impaired people. In 1995 I held an exhibition at the Museo Tiflologico de Madrid - O.N.C.E (national organization for the blind in Spain). From that moment on there is always a work present in my exhibitions that can be touched, as a tribute to this group.

The impact of covid19 makes me think and dedicate part of this year to working on this issue.

At this moment, I working on my new web page”.


Eva Grande


 
Eva Grande

Eva Grande

 
Eva Grande

Eva Grande

 
Eva Grande

Eva Grande


Simon Beckmann
Joya: AiR / Paloma Navarro / ESP
photo Simon Beckmann

photo Simon Beckmann

 
 

“Recientemente, presenté mi libro: “Compendio de términos yunqueranos y otros de uso común” en el entorno privilegiado del Parque Natural de los Vélez y María, en Almería- España-.

Realmente un placer compartir la residencia para artistas JOYA: AiR, con la atención de sus anfitriones Donna y Simon… y participar de la experiencia con otros artistas: Eva Grandehttps://evagrande.es/,  Suwon Lee https://www.suwonlee.com/ y Simón Liningtonhttps://www.simonlinington.com/

Soy nacida y criada en Yunquera de Henares, Guadalajara, (https://www.yunqueradehenares.com/), como cualquier pueblo con un patrimonio cultural local diferenciado. En esta obra he tratado su léxico o vocabulario, señalando y ejemplificando esa diferenciación.

Este es un proyecto que inicio hace un par de años con el ánimo de recopilar, y que no se pierdan, palabras y expresiones de una intensidad idiomática y de una carga conceptual tan vigorosa que, por sí mismas, dan razón a esta tarea con la que tanto me he divertido.

Efectivamente, el objetivo principal es resaltar la CULTURA LOCAL … en ocasiones localizadísima diría yo. Hasta tal extremo, que de no pertenecer al entorno yunquerano no se entiende el empleo de muchos términos o locuciones que este COMPENDIO recoge; sencillamente el interlocutor forastero no comprenderá a qué nos referimos (términos tales como rodilla, culeca, poyata, zolocho, perrero, releje, machucho… en fin, son innumerables).

Ahora bien, en otras ocasiones los términos aquí definidos como yunqueranos (con similar o distinto significado), trascienden a esa localización. Son incuestionables los préstamos culturales e interacciones económicas, sociales, afectivas, etc., entre territorios limítrofes, y que se reflejan en la connivencia de términos y expresiones del lenguaje. Por ejemplo y concretamente, entre la franje occidental de Aragón y la oriental de Castilla se comparten términos como abanto, ahíva, an cá, balaguero…etc.  

Todos los idiomas del mundo se han enriquecido con estos préstamos que, con el tiempo, se comparten como si fueran propios.

Esta es la aportación a mi pueblo y mi reconocimiento a sus gentes”.

Paloma Navarro

Creció en Yunquera hasta iniciar sus estudios de bachillerato en Guadalajara.

Ha vivido en Londres y en Aarhus - Dinamarca.

Viajera impenitente ha recorrido Europa entera e innumerables países de América, Asia y Oceanía.

Es licenciada en Derecho por la Universidad Complutense de Madrid y Bacherlor en Filología Española por la Universidad de Aarhus.

Colabora activamente en temas relacionados con el Arte, organizando exposiciones de pintura y escribiendo sus presentaciones.

Es presidenta de la Asociación Solidaría con Centroamérica Agustín Drake, que financia becas de estudio a chicos y chicas nicaragüenses.

 
Joya: AiR / Ivan Clemente / ESP
photo Simon Beckmann

photo Simon Beckmann

 
 

Project S

 

 

“S, from Shibari, S -hug- its meaning in Japanese. S, of infinite curve, of a Moebius band that returns on itself so that there is no beginning or end, infinite knot, Srivatsa. S that emerges from the shadow, from where there is no beyond.

The rope as a border, border between the body and outer space. Border that oppresses but protects. After the border, nothingness, emptiness. For Nietzsche the human being is a rope between the animal and the transhuman, a rope over an abyss.

In Los Gázquez, at Joya-Air, I have developed this land art project where the forest become a theater of ephemeral installations. I have been tying trees, rocks, deeply immersed in the “barranco”, a microcosmos in itself, scenary of a battle between water, sand, stones, and branches of trees, where the wind whistles as a wolf at night. Here the rope, acts as a metaphor of the work done trying to prevent erosion, to preserve this place”.


Ivan Clemente

 

Ivan Clemente explores the reality that surrounds him, its materialization, its duality, the ambivalent and yes, the beautiful. Escaping from the Universe of the obvious is not easy, but he intensely tries. The complex, the dark, the brilliant, the hidden, the unknown, the plastic, the feminine, the abstract, captivates him, and keeps him, to some extent, prisoner. He feels comfortable working with the hybrid, with the juxtaposition of disciplines, in the world of thought, of ideas, of the conceptual process that leads to an idea, which in the end will be an image, or not. That mental process, for him, is an indissoluble part of the artistic fact.

 
 
Ivan Clemente

Ivan Clemente

Ivan Clemente

Ivan Clemente

Ivan Clemente

Ivan Clemente

 

 

Simon Beckmann
Joya: AiR / writer in residence / Felix Jiménez Velando
photo Simon Beckmann

photo Simon Beckmann

 
 

“Joya: AiR es un lugar perdido entre la naturaleza, rodeado por bosques de pinos, un lugar respetuoso con el medioambiente donde es fácil desconectar del ruido y el día a día y centrarse en el trabajo.

La casa es preciosa, llena de rincones donde sentarse a leer, pensar, descansar. Apenas hay contaminación lumínica y se puede disfrutar observando las estrellas de una forma que ya no es fácil de conseguir hoy en día.  La luz del sol entraba en mi estudio durante toda la mañana y tenía una buena vista del monte. Y si salía a la puerta tenía una cabra, una de las mascotas de Joya: AiR, al lado. Aunque la gente no lo sepa escribir cerca de una cabra ayuda. 

Donna y Simon son unos grandes anfitriones, siempre dispuestos a hacer fácil la vida allí y la comida es deliciosa. La cena, que preparaba Donna, y las conversaciones con ellos y los otros artistas durante la misma eran una buena forma de terminar la jornada.

Ha sido una experiencia muy buena que me ha permitido avanzar en unos textos atascados durante tiempo”.

Felix Jiménez Velando

Felix tiene un máster en guionista para cine y televisión por la Universidad Autónoma de Barcelona. Lleva trabajando como guionista desde 1999, periodo en el que ha escrito algunas de las series más exitosas de España, dos de ellas ganadoras del premio Ondas, el más importante de la televisión nacional. También ha escrito varias obras de teatro cortas, estrenadas en Madrid y Albacete. Actualmente escribe diálogos para una serie de televisión llamada "El Secreto de Puente Viejo". Ha dejado de escribir guiones durante un tiempo para centrarse más en su carrera como escritor. Ha publicado dos novelas infantiles y un libro de cuentos. El pasado mes de junio publicó una novela de humor en la editorial Planeta, una de las más importantes de España. Actualmente está trabajando en dos nuevas novelas.

 
Joya: AiR / writer in residence / Fionnuala Kavanagh / ENG
photo Simon Beckmann

photo Simon Beckmann

 
 

“During the lockdown, I got my saxophone out again after way too long. Amongst a pile of music, a half-finished drawing of a landscape slipped out. It’s not very good, and I am not just saying that to seem humble. I am not an artist. I couldn’t remember if it was somewhere I had been, or just a random image from my imagination. A rough sketch of a perfect triangle-shaped mountain, loose rocks and a big round sun. It didn’t spark joy in the confines of my dark Berlin room, so it was banished back to the pile. Months on, in the closing days of summer, the bad drawing crawled back into my consciousness. I was sitting in my studio in Joya: AiR, drifting away from the screen to look at my favourite part of the landscape, the perfect little point of the mountain. 

3 years ago I came to Joya: AiR as a volunteer. I painted the house, weeded and cooked, walked Fou Fou the goat, chatted with Donna and Simon and wrote a few sketchy poems about plants. I came away feeling very inspired and told myself that I would make it back to Joya: AiR, but as a writer in residence. It has taken quite a bit of work and a lot of random life events to bring me to this point three years on. So here I am. 

This time around at Joya: AiR I have been working on a book project titled ‘I Keep My Shadow Light’. It is creative nonfiction and it is about an integration course in Berlin. After I left Joya: AiR in 2017 I attended a state-funded integration course and wrote a series of essays, interviews and short stories about integration. Now I am transforming them into a story. I Keep My Shadow Light received funding from the Gwaertler Stiftung, which made it possible for me to return to Joya: AiR as a writer in residence. 

In the last three years I also created The Intimacy Project, which is a series of interviews and short stories exploring the nature of close, shared experience. I have also been writing features, interviews and guide pieces for the Berlin magazine LOLA. Aside from writing, I’ve dabbled in documentary film making. Here is a short doc I made with Leo Hyde: Poppe Gerken.

When I was working on my project at Joya: AiR, sometimes I took small breaks in my studio. I would watch a couple of wasps fighting or fucking (I couldn’t tell which), lie on the daybed (dangerous!) or doodle in my notebook. I have come away with another badly drawn outline of the perfectly shaped mountain that stands behind the residency. 

This time there are 3 lines, each one attempts to replicate the shape of the peak, all of them are just not quite right. There are also 3 accompanying keyholes. I have no idea why. This is a daydream doodle after all. I labelled this drawing ‘Joya: The beautiful line of the mountain’ to make sure that I won’t forget what it is this time, which must be a sign of progress.

Returning to Berlin, I stuck the original bad drawing above my desk. Now that I know what the unfinished sketch represents, I find it inspiring. It’s inspiring because it is on its way to being something better than it is, and it’s gorgeous, because of what it represents. I look forward to seeing what my impressions of the perfect mountain will be in 3 years from now”.

Fionnuala Kavanagh 

Fionnuala Kavanagh is a freelance writer based in Berlin.

In Melbourne Fionnuala worked for Amnesty International and Save the Children Australia. Her time in Berlin started as a content writer for Studio Olafur Eliasson's Little Sun. She has since worked on an exhibition about gender equality for the V&A Friday Late, written for the Berlin magazine LOLA, and created FATMAP'S adventure guidebooks. Freelance writing certainly brings you to many interesting places. 

Fionnuala studied philosophy and psychology in England and Australia. Her studies shaped her way of thinking and influence her writing on how we observe, introspect and connect. She has been working with words in Berlin since summer 2016.

 

 
Joya: AiR / Jessica Fairfax Hirst / USA
photo Simon Beckmann

photo Simon Beckmann

 

“My partner Eliu Almonte and I were among the first artists to arrive at Joya: AiR after the COVID closure. We live in Málaga, and while we were incredibly fortunate to not suffer great hardship during Spain’s strict lockdown, all the associated stress had nevertheless accumulated in every tissue, neuron and ligament of my body and brain.

Quite a bit of my work relates to lessons I’ve learned from my extreme sensitivity to environmental and cultural toxicity, on my journey from being a young hot-shot working in climate change in the Clinton-Gore White House through multiple breakdowns in my personal ecosystem, deviations of life plans, and the disruptive process of seeking a more sustainable life-path.

The world in which we applied to go to Joya: AiR had changed completely by the time we got there, and so any expectations or plans I had originally were out the window.  For the first few days I couldn’t ‘work’ - at least not as I pictured ‘work’.  I was in fact doing incredibly important creative work, that of slowly relaxing, allowing my cells to breathe and settle into being in this remote, quiet, beautiful place with no phone signal…

As a performance artist I usually do a lot of research for each project, I make plans, I collect objects or make video-collages, but I always know that my response to the performance site, whether the building, the landscape, or the city, will be a key element and material, and this cannot be predicted.   Even during the performance there are surprises, ‘accidents’, that enrich my artwork and make the difference between performance and theater.

So when I started going for walks in the pine forest around Joya: AiR, and I lay down on the earth to luxuriate in hearing only wind, birds, and my own breathing,  I knew to pay attention.  In the last few years I have developed a new extreme sensitivity, this time to mechanical sounds of a certain frequency, like the dentist’s tools, big power tools, high-powered hand dryers in public bathrooms - all have become intolerable and are almost impossible to escape.  I had been telling my loved ones that I’d been feeling that 2020 was scraping away all the insulation around my nerves, both literally and figuratively.  Lying on the ground amongst the trees at Joya: AiR, I felt like I could sense that insulation recuperating in real time, that I could allow all my senses to open without fear.

wild woman cabeza.jpg

Based on this feeling I created the Wild Woman, like a forest witch or goddess, who transforms from mere human, whose skin is covered with the green of the trees, the blue of the sky, sprouting a crown of feathers like the birds, and extrasensory eyes everywhere, eyes that also hear, feel, and sense the communication that scientists have proven happens among trees in a forest.

yo como venado.jpg

The white walls on both the interior and exterior architecture at Joya inspired me to experiment with projections/installation of a video I had been working on.

disoriented green.jpg

Rather than creating a narrative, or something to be viewed on a standard screen, I played with ideas for an installation, alternating disorienting sections of me underwater and footage shot by my brother flying his radio-controlled FPV planes with a tiny camera in the nose, so the effect is like those dreams of flying we all have had.  I played with putting the underwater sounds with the sky, or recordings of me breathing in the forest against seeing me underwater.  Then I experimented with projecting over arches, wooden window shutters, tilting the projector, into a corner, over an external window that someone opens and sticks their head out, on the rippled ceiling of the dining room.  No finished project, just good material for future work that I definitely would not have been able to do at home.  Thank you Joya: AiR.

Jessica Fairfax Hirst



Jessica Fairfax Hirst aka Palmer Fishman

I am a multidisciplinary artist, working primarily in performance, video, installation and 3D collage.  I have been a refugee since 2006 from the toxic habitat in the United States, having lived in Nicaragua, Spain and the Dominican Republic. 

I work with an expanded process of site-specific creation all over the world on themes such as neurodiversity and other forms of difference, sociopolitical issues such as human trafficking and the ongoing impacts of US interventions in Latin America, and various aspects of climate change and our place in the ecosystems we inhabit.

I have a highly sensitive personal ecosystem, such that I have been seriously impacted by my reactions to unhealthy environments, such as graduate art school in Los Angeles or a hipster Jerusalem neighborhood full of young people who party while toting enormous weapons.   I endeavor to make use of my mental and physical responses as another art material, and listen to what they tell me.

In addition to my Earth Systems degree from Stanford I have studied at the Energy and Resources Group at UC Berkeley, and Public Practice at Otis College of Art and Design.  I also cofounded a site-specific contemporary dance company, CatScratch Theatre, in Washington, DC.

Simon Beckmann
Joya: AiR / Eliu Almonte / DOM
photo Simon Beckmann

photo Simon Beckmann

 

“La Joya: AIR, es un Oasis existencial que modifica nuestra forma de ver, asimilar y entender la vida. Es un laboratorio conceptual en mi caso, que introdujo en mi cerebro, nuevos chips de aplicaciones multiples, un buen proyecto para el desarrollo del arte contemporaneo y el libre pensamiento”.

Eliu Almonte

Joya: AiR / Karen Birkin / ENG
photo Simon Beckmann

photo Simon Beckmann

 

“The essence of Joya: AiR is the people who have created it, Simon and Donna.  To get to know them, to witness the beautiful way they live their lives sustainably and creatively and the courage and conviction behind their decisions is an inspiration in itself.  The luxury of being able to lose oneself completely and spend all day being creative was exactly what I had been longing for and I was able to do this because of just the right amount of nurture.  I found myself waking up full of energy, looking forward to a whole day to be spent playing with new ideas and new mediums.  When it was time to return home I was completely recalibrated.   I would love to return one day, Joya: AiR is an experience that I will be drawing from for some time”.

Karen Birkin

BA art history at Courtauld Institue, London

Worked in film production and distribution and then changed career and worked as a restorer of 15th and 16th century Dutch paintings.

Completed two years of a BA in fine art at Coleg Menai in Gwynedd but was unable to complete due to starting a family..

Currently doing an MA in Fine art at Coleg Menai.

Joya: AiR / Corn Shuk Mei Ho / HKG
photo Solomon Beckmann

photo Solomon Beckmann

 

Joya: AiR residency to me:

- Majestic moment of the sunset view on the left and full moonrise view on the right of the residency site. 
- Silent time to restudy my notes and old thoughts and reorganise them

- Learning the colours, water, the plants from the rugged beauty of the inland chalkland landscape

- Appreciation of other artists' presentations and works on-site, including Simon and Donna's Oasis project, make impossible possible and contribute to nature and agriculture in the area

- Two new paintings and installations are inspired by the residency : 

Installation view: Vélez-Blanco - Simon and Donna’s back garden, Oil on canvas, 20.5 x 25.5 cm, 2020 

Installation view: Vélez-Blanco - Simon and Donna’s back garden, Oil on canvas, 20.5 x 25.5 cm, 2020 

 
Little blue Spanish belle - Lithodora Prostata, Oil on canvas, 20.5 x 25.5 cm, 2020

Little blue Spanish belle - Lithodora Prostata, Oil on canvas, 20.5 x 25.5 cm, 2020

 

Corn Shuk Me Ho is a painter. She sets out to explore the deepest levels of the human subconscious. The atmospheric, melancholic tones of her paintings evoke sensations of dislocation. These works document her interest in what is lost and what is found, the ambivalence between what is the fleeting memory and what is synthesized as a trace within the landscape.

Her paintings from Night Swims series had been awarded the D Contemporary Painting Prize in December 2019. She will have a Night Swims solo exhibition in D contemporary from 7th - 14th September 2020 in Mayfair, London. 

Corn Shuk Mei Ho

Joya: AiR / Yvette Monahan / IRE
photo Simon Beckmann

photo Simon Beckmann

 
 

“Joya: AiR is a haven from life.

The air is pure, the stars are vivid, the landscape is wild and sparse.
The food is delicious and nourishing and there is always a coffee bubbling on the gas stove.
The studios are filled with a crisp light from windows that frame the almond trees. The rooms are simple yet beautiful.

I went to Joya: AIR to have a break from the everyday, to be able to think clearly.
It is a place that enables this, there is room to reflect, a chance to travel inward and just be.

The conversations with the other artists were profound, hilarious, educational and heart- warming. They helped me understand why I was making work with their generous and considered thoughts.

Simon and Donna have created a very special place and I am very grateful for their life- long effort. I can’t wait to return”.

Yvette Monahan

Yvette Monahan is an Irish photographic artist. Her practice looks to further her understanding of three main ideas, namely intuition, transcendence, and narrative. She engages with different processes to investigate these precepts, incorporating photography, drawing, and print-making. Yvette aims to create images that reflect the inner world and outer spaces.


In September 2019, Yvette traveled to Unseen Amsterdam to take part in the Futures program, a European Platform of Photography to amplify artists.
In May, Yvette exhibited Beyond the ninth wave as part of PhotoIreland 2019.
Beyond the ninth wave was initially made for TULCA 2017, it was exhibited alongside other artists including, Yoko Ono and Bob Quinn.
In 2018, Yvette was invited to create Octopolis for Winter Papers.
In 2015, her project The thousand-year-old boy won the Solas Ireland Award. It was exhibited in Dublin, Belfast, London, and Salzburg and then published by PhotoIreland in 2017 as part of New Irish Works.
In 2014, Yvette self-published The time of dreaming the world awake.
Yvette holds an MFA Photography from the University of Ulster and a BA Geography and Economics from Trinity.
She is currently studying for a diploma in Art and Design at NCAD.

 
Simon Beckmann
Joya: AiR / Hanna Rozpara / POL
H_Rozpara.jpg
 
 

“I came to Spain in the winter –  I had departed from snowy and frosty Cracow and landed in Malaga where weather was completely different: warm evenings, palm trees and humid sea air. The following day I travelled to Vélez Rubio. From the bus window I could see the landscape of Sierra Nevada mountains and small Andalusian cities. In the late evening I finally arrived to Sierra de María-Los Vélez on a small dirt road among pines, rocky hills and blooming almond orchards. 

The Joya’s AiR house is beautifully located on a hill. There are beautiful sunsets, sky is clear and slowly turning from blue, yellow, pink to dark indigo. I divided my daytime between walking through natural park Sierra de María-Los Vélez and working in the studio on series of small paintings devoted to the idea of multiverse. 

 
Hanna Rozpara studio work at Joya: AiR

Hanna Rozpara studio work at Joya: AiR

 

Joya AiR is a place, where air is incredibly clear, there is no light pollution – the nearest small town is 12 km from the residency. During the night time there are breathtaking view of stars, the sky is full of stars which I had not experienced for a long time. Nowadays, it is difficult to find a place with clear night sky visibility. I was looking at the starry night sky and taking photos every evening. The view of numerous stars was breathtaking –  the space seemed to be so close that one could feel as being part of the cosmos.

 
Hanna Rozpara photo of the night sky at Joya: AiR

Hanna Rozpara photo of the night sky at Joya: AiR

 

I was taking my artwork, which I made shortly before residency, for my walks. I was taking photos of it in natural surroundings. The surface of the object multiplicates the view. I combined the surface of the object with natural materials, such as ground, branches or pine needles. 

 
Kolka multi installation by Hanna Rozpara

Kolka multi installation by Hanna Rozpara

Hanna Rozpara view from Joya: AiR

Hanna Rozpara view from Joya: AiR

 

The surroundings of Joya: AiR are beautiful, there are mountains, pine forests, meadows and almond orchards. Walking through a silent, natural park was a beautiful experience – sun, forest, orchards and mountains around. There was a house nearby, where sheep lived. 

 
photo Joya: AiR by Hana Rozpara

photo Joya: AiR by Hana Rozpara

 

At the residency I found calmness for artistic work and a rest from the hustle and bustle of the world. I was fully living in this place then and there, immersed in idyllic atmosphere.  

Now, at the times of global quarantine, I can hardly believe that I had an opportunity to stay at Joya: AiR. Remembrances from Sierra de Maria-Los Velez seem to come from another world”. 




Hanna Rozpara

 

Hanna Rozpara is an artist based in Sosnowiec, Poland. In 2014 she graduated her master degree at  Academy of Fine Arts in Katowice. In 2011-2012 she studied in Koninklijke Academie voor Schone Kunsten Antwerpen. In 2009-2013 she studied history of art at Silesian University. Now she studies at doctoral studies at Academy of Fine Arts in Katowice. She operates in many areas of art, made her works in many printmaking techniques, painting, intermedia art, site specific, and photography. She is also a music producent, creating mainly drone and ambient soundscapes. Some of her artistic realizations may be defined as ‘gesamtkunstwerk’.  Her works are about broadly understood topic of camouflage, formlessness and chaotic phenomena. The newest works refer to substance as carriers of ideas, post-apocalypse and philosophy. Some of her older works were devoted to the theme of war. 

Hanna Rozpara on Instagram

 
Simon Beckmann
Joya: AiR / Anna Norman / ENG
photo Simon Beckmann

photo Simon Beckmann

 
 

“It’s been two months since I returned to London from Joya: AiR and the Parque Natural Sierra María–Los Vélez. Yet the extraordinary light, the wild rosemary-scented breezes, the life-affirming sunrises and the profound sense of remoteness I experienced there have stayed with me, in a very visceral way. So, too, has the pace, dictated by the gentle hum of the bees (I was lucky enough to be there at peak almond blossom season), the rhythmic grazing of Fufu the goat, and the serenity of the vultures that soar on the thermal currents high above ‘Los Gázquez’ (Joya: AiR)– they know that rushing isn’t conducive to success or contentment.

I’d been struck during my residency by the value of simplifying life in and through the natural environment, and in some ways this was the perfect precursor to the Coronavirus-induced lockdown that began two weeks after my return. Over the past few weeks, lots of us have found solace and joy in woodlands and green spaces and this has reminded me of the intense feeling I had at Joya: AiR, where the wide skies, surrounding pine forests and undulating hills provide a sense of safety, belongingness and inspiration. It’s the ideal place to foster creativity and to contemplate how disconnected we often are from the earth, and the repercussions of this. 

But the beauty of Joya: AiR wasn’t just to do with the natural environment. Los Gázquez, the main house, is an easy place in which to feel at home, thanks to Simon and Donna, the most gracious and human of hosts. I worked as a travel writer for over a decade, and it has always amazed me how quickly you can adapt to a new place, how quickly it can become your new reality, when it inspires you (and conversely, how quickly you feel alone when it doesn’t). The house, with its stark white walls, artworks and curios collected over a lifetime, quickly felt like a place of both inspiration and retreat. 

Routines are another way we adapt to a new place. Rising with the sun (it rises later in Spain!), writing for several hours, then lunch on the sunny patio – this was my new normal. In the afternoons I went on walks – sometimes alone, sometimes with others – that took in almond groves, abandoned cortijos, expansive views and different vantage points of Los Gázquez. Dinner and relaxed conversation became the evening routine, sometimes preceded by a presentation. 

But gentle interruptions were as important, provided by Frida the Giant Schnauzer doing her rounds, chats over tea, or invitations from the sun to take a break. The staggered arrival of guests helped, too, to subtly shift the dynamic every few days. Things kept on moving and evolving over the course of the residency, organically, as they do in nature. When I arrived in late February, the almond blossom was covering the hillsides like a delicate light-pink blanket. When I left, two weeks later, it had all but gone, leaving the land looking greener and more dramatic. I would love to return to Joya: AiR to experience the landscape at other times of year. It feels like a place that will never cease to inspire”.

 

Anna Norman is a writer and publisher based in London, currently working on a book about her great-great-grandfather, David Parr, a working-class decorative artist in the late 19th century Arts and Crafts era. His own house in Cambridge, inspired by nature and the projects he worked on with William Morris, recently opened as a museum…

David Parr House

Casita Press

Anna Norman

 
Joya: AiR / Josie McMorrin / SCO-IRE
photo Simon Beckmann

photo Simon Beckmann

 
 

“I spent my first week exploring the area on foot and by car taking photographs and making sketches.  My work recently has been concerned with landscape and the changes made on it by human habitation over the years, so the area surrounding Joya: AiR seemed ideal, with man made terraces and almond groves alongside rocky mountains and wild rosemary. However I found the vast scale of this environment somewhat overwhelming and I retreated into the studio for my second week and began to make studies on a smaller scale/ making drawings from pieces of bark, rubbings of patterns in wood and stones and small found objects representative of the area.

After settling down, especially with the wood stove lit and warming the room, I found I began to formulate a clearer picture of how I might incorporate some of the elements of my stay into my printmaking and now I'm at home, in the cold, wind and rain, I realise I now have a wealth of resource gained from my stay to draw upon”.

Josie McMorrin

McMorrin attended Edinburgh College of Art graduating in Drawing and Painting in 1975. She taught art at secondary school level and continued to exhibit work, mainly though the Society of Scottish Artists. In 1998 she moved to Dublin, taught Art in Marino College and through them was involved in a local Arts Festival exhibiting a solo show with them in 2014. She joined Graphic Studio Dublin in 2017 and since then she has been developing her work through printmaking.

 
Exhibitions:
Impressions Biennial, Galway Arts Festival, the Graphic Studio summer and winter shows, hot press 20/20 print exchange, miniprint International Cadaques, Lessedra World Art Miniprint Sophia, Royal Ulster Academy Belfast, the New State Dublin, May Day communal print and in Greenacres Gallery Wexford.

 
Joya: AiR / Vicki O'Donoghue / IRE
photo Simon Beckmann

photo Simon Beckmann

 
 

“Joya:AiR!! A little oasis in the desert, there is a certain familiarity and comfort in the majestic mountains that remind me of home, so I’m immediately seduced! My work process is informed by the architecture, archeology, and visual language of the landscape, and therefore it is imperative that I physically connect with a place, to embody the fragility of what lies beneath the very ground we take for granted. Painting for me is like an archaeological dig, layering the now, revealing and juxtaposing with the marks of the past. I'm going to be in my element here exploring and understanding the fundamentals and the diversity of my new temporary surroundings, and how it differs from the landscape at home, considering the implications of climate change on both environments.

The main house flows sympathetically and unobtrusively complimenting its natural surroundings, the studio which I shared with Rennie is neatly tucked away behind the main house, so leaving the house every morning became part of my daily ritual, along with the making of the log fire,  which warmed us through the self imposed long evenings making art, the comforting whir of the wind operating the wind turbine, a constant reminder of our power source and remoteness.

I’m aware of the stillness evident even in the breeze,  there is a calmness a sense of place interrupted only by birdsong and the welcoming buz of the bees, watching the changing light revealing the grandeur of the mountains beyond, and the vultures in flight high in the sky above, dwarfed by the majesty of the landscape, the delicacy of the wild flowers blowing in the breeze, reminds me of the fragility of our planet and how small we are in comparison.

Discovering the Barranco was a truly magical experience for me, so enchanting it’s like a huge natural theatre, a surreal organic landscape, which snakes its path through the rock, where water has historically coursed its way relentlessly moving and repositioning rocks, uprooting trees and carving ravines, where, as a spectator I’m drawn back daily, to wonder at and witness the creeping shadows inhabiting this evolving landscape, the distinct smell of the Aleppo pines and rosemary, the silence punctuated by the distant sound of cow bells, upon the the necks of a local goat herd, and the intermittent sound of the woodpecker making his presence known, the abundance of fossils to remind me that this was once a sea bed, and home to ancient ancestors. Here, sitting upon a huge boulder I feel embedded, and connected to this place.  I’m overwhelmed by the sheer scale and presence of history and connection to this primeval landscape. 

As the sun sets in this magical place, a warm fire awaits in the house, around which memorable conversations, games and laughs, and new friendships are forged.  Not forgetting the laughs and further conversations had around the dining table, when our amazing hosts Donna and Simon joined us to share the delicious food, cooked up by Donna, always an unforgettable feast, for the eyes, stomach and soul. 

Thank you Donna and Simon for your warm hospitality and glimpse into your special life that you have carved out, and for sharing your space, lovely family, and of course Frida, Fufu, not forgetting the cats, and the incredible landscape with all of us kindred spirits, who came together, connected, shared experiences and forged lasting friendships. These memories will remain in my heart, inspire and inform my future creative practices”.  

Vicki O'Donoghue

Visual Artist

Vicki holds F.E.T.A.C Certificate with Distinction level 5 Fine Art, F.E.T.A.C level 6  Advanced Certification with Distinction. London Art College Distinction in History of Art.

She also owns and runs Blackwatch Studio, where she facilitates an open studio for artists, and many creative multidisciplinary workshops.

 
Simon Beckmann
Joya: AiR / Alessandra Naccarato / writer / CAN
photo Simon Beckmann

photo Simon Beckmann

 
 

“At Joya: AiR, I felt like I was between the worlds. It is a place where creative vision meets dry earth and wide sky, and I felt the past and the future cross there. The beautiful rebuilt home, the lost objects of the Gázquez family hidden throughout the pine forests, the eroded banks and dry barrancos. These acts of memory met the wind turbine and solar panels, the careful replanting of the land, the newly dug well: an environmental future I could believe in. And I was there to contemplate environmental futures, to lean into ecological grief and imminent threats and give them language. I did not expect quite so much joy. We ate, we laughed, we laughed more. Under that wide sky, one artist attempted to catch falling stardust on film. I’m fairly sure she succeeded. When it’s that quiet, you can hear the earth think. It sounds like an echo. It sounds like the sky turning indigo, and pink”. 

Alessandra Naccarato

Alessandra Naccarato is a writer based in Toronto, Ontario. She is the recipient of the 2017 CBC Poetry Prize and the 2015 Bronwen Wallace Award in poetry from the Writer’s Trust of Canada, runner-up for Event Magazine’s Creative Non-Fiction Prize, and two-time finalist the Edna Steabler Personal Essay Prize and Arc Magazine’s Poem of Year, as well as The Constance Rooke Creative Non-Fiction Prize, among other recognitions. Alessandra holds an MFA in Creative Writing from the University of British Columbia, and her poetry and non-fiction have appeared in literary magazines across Canada, including Room Magazine, EVENT, The New Quarterly, CV2, ARC Poetry Magazine, and elsewhere. She is the managing editor of Write Bloody North Publications, a newly released imprint of Write Bloody Publications (Los Angeles). Her debut poetry collection is Re-Origin of Species (Book*hug Press, 2019).

 
Joya: AiR / Rhianne Masters-Hopkins / GBR
photo Simon Beckmann

photo Simon Beckmann

 
 

“Being-in-the-world. A notion I am both familiar and a stranger to. A continuous and explorative conversation between self and place. This conversation has not been more immersive and intense than whist residing at Joya: AiR.

Mornings spent drinking tea, sitting in the studio window gazing out towards the expansive mountain landscapes, the scent of lemon blossom subtle, sweet. 

Afternoons amongst the wild rosemary and almond trees.. I found myself lost in the surroundings.

Evenings with beautiful company; listening to other’s tales of their numerous journeys, wine and stars.

The fruit bowl always laden with oranges.. the catalyst for reflecting on Being. Abundant and sweet. Peeled, eaten and used. Baked with sugar and the wild rosemary of the mountains. Eaten by self and by other. Being consumed by Being. Being consumed by Other. 

Joya: AiR was the catalyst for my Being. Being-in-the-world and Being-with-Other”. 

Rhianne Masters-Hopkins

Rhianne Masters-Hopkins completed a degree in Fine Art in 2013 at Coventry University achieving a 1st and went on to complete my Masters in Fine Art to achieve distinction. She has also trained to become a primary teacher and is currently Art lead in a local primary school.

 
Simon Beckmann
Joya: AiR / Lilian Cooper / NED-GBR
photo Simon Beckmann

photo Simon Beckmann

 
 

“I would definitely like to return to Joya: AiR. It was a brief but productive residency: I had creative space, every day I walked and absorbed the landscape. I grew fascinated by the worked landscape and the tilled soil patterns. I walked through blossoming almond groves and smelt wild rosemary. At night I dined on delicious food (thank you Donna), including some of the rocket that grows everywhere and flowered abundantly during my stay.

I work outside and I took a backpack and drew and photographed as much as I could. Most of all it was the new directions my explorations in the Sierra María-Los Vélez Natural Park took that have excited me. I carefully carried back a bag of clay to my studio at home and I wait to see what will happen. For me Joya: AiR was a time to think, to explore creatively, to be surrounded by other artists, good conversations and delicious food. My room was a little haven of quiet with an extraordinary view of an olive tree and the mountains beyond.

Donna and Simon thank you for inviting me. Your hospitality was generous and warm. Joya: AiR possesses an infectious creativity and it was a pleasure to be part of this”.

Lilian Cooper

 
Simon Beckmann