Brie Barnacle

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Brie is an experimental printmaker who explores the medium of landscape as metaphor for her own lived experiences of mothering, family and self-discovery. Her evocative, often fragmented images, allude to the contemplative and regulating nature of the outdoors as a terrain of connection and redemption. The fragility, complexity and shifting nature of the landscape mirror the landscape of parenting, where a sudden awareness of your own mortality goes together with a desire to foster and preserve memories. Some of Brie’s current work has been made in collaboration with her sons who have undertaken photographic documentation of their family walks. In this anthropic time, Brie’s work is made in urgency, documenting and attempting to preserve and protect memories of precious spaces and moments that are slowly disappearing.
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Brie is an experimental printmaker who explores the medium of landscape as metaphor for her own lived experiences of mothering, family and self-discovery. Her evocative, often fragmented images, allude to the contemplative and regulating nature of the outdoors as a terrain of connection and redemption. The fragility, complexity and shifting nature of the landscape mirror the landscape of parenting, where a sudden awareness of your own mortality goes together with a desire to foster and preserve memories. Some of Brie’s current work has been made in collaboration with her sons who have undertaken photographic documentation of their family walks. In this anthropic time, Brie’s work is made in urgency, documenting and attempting to preserve and protect memories of precious spaces and moments that are slowly disappearing.
Brie is an experimental printmaker who explores the medium of landscape as metaphor for her own lived experiences of mothering, family and self-discovery. Her evocative, often fragmented images, allude to the contemplative and regulating nature of the outdoors as a terrain of connection and redemption. The fragility, complexity and shifting nature of the landscape mirror the landscape of parenting, where a sudden awareness of your own mortality goes together with a desire to foster and preserve memories. Some of Brie’s current work has been made in collaboration with her sons who have undertaken photographic documentation of their family walks. In this anthropic time, Brie’s work is made in urgency, documenting and attempting to preserve and protect memories of precious spaces and moments that are slowly disappearing.
Angela A'Court UKPS
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