Film / Video
Film / Video
Painting / Drawing
Sculpture
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Soul Song Sensorium
Sleeve Shock
Transference (Triptych)
Residual Morphologies Vesse I 2025
Moving image, single channel, sound 12 min 59 sec
Digital media, single channel, sound 14 min 23 sec
Oil on linen Each 60 × 70 cm
Recycled paper biocomposite, calcium carbonate dust, natural binder 40 × 32 × 32 cm
2024
2023
2025
jojotaylor100 Jojo Taylor
joseanecabral Joseane Cabral
the.armour.studio Jonathan Armour
joonbaeart Joonhyung Bae
Jojo Taylor is a British-Irish artist, singer and lecturer whose practice spans voice, sound, film and performance. Creating charged tableaux and site- responsive works, Taylor uses unconventional settings and everyday objects to explore sound’s psychological impact. Through visceral, often wordless expression, Taylor examines human connection, loss and the uncanny, reimagining life’s dilemmas and probing what it means to be human. Soul Song Sensorium is a performative, research-based collaboration between Jojo Taylor and Dr Asha Ward, with contributions from metal fabricator John James. Using wireless technology, live looping, and improvisation, it creates sound sculptures that challenge conventional communication and question technology’s role in shaping embodied experience.
Joseane Cabral is a multidisciplinary designer based in London whose practice bridges technical expertise with creative material exploration. Cabral experiments with transforming discarded and wasted resources into thought-provoking artistic objects. Cabral’s practice reflects an ongoing commitment to redefining materiality while fostering critical dialogue at the intersections of design, art and environmental responsibility. This vessel from the Residual Morphologies series is made from recycled paper fibres, stone-processing residues and natural binders. The hand-sculpted form and layered surface patterns evoke both geological strata and organic growth, reflecting cycles of transformation. By reimagining waste as a source of permanence and beauty, the work invites reflection on material renewal and shifting notions of value.
Jonathan Armour is an Irish artist based in London. Working across oil painting and time-based digital media, Armour explores the body and human condition. With a particular focus on skin as the threshold between inner self and external world, Armour seeks to render the digital visceral. Sleeve Shock is a video reflecting on the people Jonathan Armour has collaborated with, highlighting how outward appearance has long been a reason for exclusion within the art establishment. The work is also a transhumanist inquiry into the possibility of uploading human consciousness into a device and relocating it into a new body. The work explores exclusion, sense of self, disconnection and identity, and how these interact with outward appearance.
Joonhyung Bae is a Korean-American painter. He received his BA from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago in 2023 and is currently based in London. His practice is between figuration and abstraction, playing between the borders, which he believes is an evolution from his past formless, abstract practice. Transference (Triptych) is an attempt to trace a reverse chronology of life, from anatomical dissolution through vital eruption, and finally to the pre-form of living matter. Created from right to left over several months, the work resists linear time and asks questions that reconsider the structure of existence. In this transference, the body does not merely live, it transforms, recalls and begins again.
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