Dalziel + Scullion

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Dalziel + Scullion
Nationality Scottish
Known for Photography; Video;Sound; Sculpture
Movement Environmental art and land art
Website dalzielscullion.com

Dalziel + Scullion are Scottish based artists Matthew Dalziel and Louise Scullion who have worked in collaboration since 1993; their studio creates artworks in photography, video, sound and sculpture that explore new artistic languages surrounding the subject of ecology.

Dalziel + Scullion regularly collaborates with: musicians, naturalists, philosophers and scientists to make artworks that visualise aspects of our shared environment from alternative perspectives and to re-establish and re-evaluate our engagement with the non-human species we live alongside.

Biography

Matthew Dalziel was born in Irvine, Scotland in 1957.[1] He studied sculpture at Duncan of Jordanstone College of Art and graduated in 1988, continuing on to study documentary photography on the then singular course of its type in the UK established by Magnum photographer David Hurn at Newport College of Further Education in Newport. Matthew completed his education with a Post Graduate diploma jointly in Fine Art Photography and Sculpture at Glasgow School of Art and was awarded a merit of high distinction in both subjects. He has exhibited in numerous shows including the 1990 British Art Show and was a founding member of the Glasgow artist group Image & Installation; he served on various Scottish Arts Council Visual Arts Awards Panels and was on the board of directors for Photofeis, International Festival of Photography.[2]

Louise Scullion was born in Helensburgh, Scotland in 1966.[1] She studied Fine Art at Glasgow School of Art in the Environmental Art Department, graduating in 1988 with first class honours. She then exhibited in numerous shows including the 1990 British Art Show; she has served on various boards and committees including the board of directors of the CCA Glasgow, The Scottish Arts Council Visual Arts Awards Panel and The Creative Scotland award panel.[3]

In 1993 Matthew Dalziel and Louise Scullion began a collaborative practice, since then Dalziel + Scullion have produced a significant body of work that has been shown widely nationally and internationally including the Venice Biennale; Young British Art in Rome; The Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art, Edinburgh; The Australian Centre for Contemporary Art, Melbourne; Madison Square Park, New York;The National Maritime Museum, London and at The Meguro Museum of Modern Art, Tokyo. Their practice is currently based within the University of Dundee where they also teach in the School of Fine Art.[2]

Artwork

In the conventions of art history, the body is something to look at: nudes; figures in the landscape; portraiture. Dalziel + Scullion say something else – the human body is something to look with.[4]

Film & Video

  • Endlessly – 1997 – Video Installation comprising two large architecturally influenced constructions with back projected video.
  • The Pressure of Spring – 1999 – A video work that looks at a series of young people who lives are at transitional phases: between school and work place, between teenage and adulthood. With sound by Howie B.
  • Another Place – 2000 – A video work consisting of a series of location-based portraits filmed in the north east of Scotland in the village of St. Combs.
  • Water Falls Down – 2002 – Video work constructed in three parts, with sound by Geir Jenssen.
  • In the Open Sea – 2002 – The piece presents aspects of the wilder habitats we inhabit and how we access and control these spaces.
  • Raptor – 2002 – A video piece where a bird of prey inhabits the interior of a contemporary office space.
  • Genus – 2003 – A large scale 7 screen combined video projection. Genus was the culmination of Dalziel + Scullions 2-year Fellowship with the National Media Museum, during which hundreds of images from the museums archive were collected to create this work.
  • Earthdom – 2005 – A twin-screen video work that looks at the expansive landscape of the Fenlands and its liquid topography.
  • One Minute – 2005 – This work consisted of a series of 15 one-minute studies of cloud formations filmed over specific geographic locations within Scotland, presented alongside the premier of musician and composer Craig Armstrong's symphonic work.
  • Some Distance from the Sun – 2006 – An evolution of plant types, observing the major 'steps' that have taken place as plants evolved out of water to land, with sound by Mark Vernon.
  • The Earth Turned to bring Us Closer – 2006 – A three screen video installation shows over 240 video portraits shot in the city of Glasgow and is accompanied Craig Armstrong's composition Memory Takes My Hand.
  • Source – 2007 – In this video work, a journey within a landscape is experienced through the senses of a young boy; his eyes and ears become portals that sights and sound flow through.

Sculpture

  • The Horn – 1997 – An outdoor work in Polkemmet Country Park, commissioned for the midpoint of the M8 Motorway running between Scotland's largest cities, Glasgow and Edinburgh.
  • Modern Nature – 2000 – The work consists of six tall (varying between 5 and 6 metres high) aluminium structures, grouped like a glade of trees, which house solar panels powering a sound system.
  • Rain – 2000 – A temporary architectural structure that looked at the phenomenon of wet rainy weather.
  • Voyager – 2000 – Three full size expedition tents cast in aluminium.
  • Ontological Garden – 2003 – The work was made as a permanent outdoor piece for the Royal Aberdeen Children's Hospital.
  • Latitude – 2006 – Video installation comprising a steel tripod structure on which a projector and screen slowly rotate in a rising and dipping 360° arc.
  • Catalyst – 2008 – Catalyst is a permanent work sited in the cultural quarter of Dundee in Scotland.

Photography

  • Aura A – 2002 – Consisting of four photographic images that combine contemporary images of landscapes with archive images documenting influential human activity on the land from the mid-1800s.
  • Drift – 2001 – An installation comprising four large-scale photographic images, each image portrays different aspects of the animated forces that created the glacial valley of Jostedalsbreen in Norway.
  • Storm – 2003 – The installation takes the form of a 5m x 7.5m back-projection screen onto which a series of 26 different photographic images are projected each day.
  • More Than Us – 2008 – This work explores the habitat of the rare day flying moth, the slender Scotch burnet and examines the interconnected ecology vital for the moth's existence, this tiny moth can be found on just four colonies on the west coast of Scotland.
  • Unknown Pines – 2007 – A series of six 'studio portraits' of pine trees, focusing only on their bark surface, in each, different evolutionary variations are revealed, whilst other information such as leaf structure, scale and location are withheld.
  • Breath Taking – 2003 – A photographic Billboard Project in cities throughout the UK including Aberdeen, Birmingham, Dundee, Edinburgh, Glasgow, Liverpool, London, Newcastle and Manchester.

Awards

  • 1997 – Scottish Arts Council National Lottery Award.
  • 2000 – BAFTA Nomination (Best director, New Talent)
  • 2001 – Scottish Arts Council (Major Bursary) Visual Artist Award
  • 2002 – Carnegie Award, PESCA Award
  • 2002–03 – Fellowship, Museum of Photography, Film and television, Bradford
  • 2004 – Royal Incorporation of Architects Creativity Award
  • 2005 – The Eco Prize For Creativity, Creative Scotland Award, The Saltire Award For Art in Architecture
  • 2007 – The Saltire Award for Art in Architecture
  • 2008 – Short listed for the international Artes Mundi Prize

Publications

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Notes

  1. 1.0 1.1 . "Biography page". Dalziel + Scullion official website . Retrieved on 13 May 2009.
  2. 2.0 2.1 . "Dalziel, Matthew". School of Fine Art. Retrieved on 6 May 2009.
  3. . "Scullion, Louise". School of Fine Art. Retrieved on 13 May 2009.
  4. . "Essays page, Jay Griffiths". Dalziel + Scullion official website . Retrieved on 29 June 2009.

External links