2025 ArtEvol Catalogue

Installation

Painting / Drawing

Painting / Drawing

Film / Video

333

334

335

336

Felled Tree Performance

That Joke Isn’t Funny Anymore

Early Evening When the Fruit Bats Fly

The Daily Scroll 2025

Mixed media Dimensions variable

Acrylic on canvas 40 × 40 × 2 cm

Acrylic 100 × 100 cm

Film 3 min 51sec

2025

2025

2025

sueharragin-artist Sue Harragin

_suhas__ Suhas Kambhampati

Stuart Hall

stu.lee Stu Lee

Sue Harragin’s practice captures the shifting moods and memories of beloved landscapes. Working physically and intuitively on the floor, Harragin responds to colours and textures as they emerge, shaping compositions that reflect the sensual and sometimes challenging character of the environment. Harragin’s work draws from the pink earth, dense foliage, and dynamic light of her surroundings, translating sinuous trees, vibrant leaves, and the movement of wildlife into emotive, immersive landscapes. Early Evening When the Fruit Bats Fly places clashing colour at its core to capture a shifting landscape that is both unnerving and sensual, with a sense of terror dwelling in its undergrowth.

stuartandrewhall

Suhas Kambhampati is a London-based multidisciplinary designer working across film, motion, and spatial design. Kambhampati’s practice explores the emotional and cognitive effects of digital culture, using immersive visuals and atmospheres to reflect on identity, overload, and contemporary rituals. The Daily Scroll is a cinematic and spatial inquiry into the cognitive erosion produced by the attention economy. By transposing digital fatigue into physical form, The Daily Scroll reframes distraction as a cultural condition, asking: what does it mean to be present in a world designed to divide our gaze?

Stuart Hall works with images drawn from everyday media, including tabloid cuttings, postcards, and magazines. These snapshots are digitally altered, recomposed, saturated, and pixelated before being transformed into paintings. Hall’s practice examines the processes of communication and representation, questioning whether altered images are any less real than their original sources. A re-imagined news photo. Tent, barrier tape, evidence of what?

Stu Lee graduated from the Royal College of Art with two master’s degrees and is currently pursuing a PhD in Queer Eco-critical Studies, specialising in attunement and loss. Felled Tree Performance is a two-screen film installation accompanied by a twinned woollen cord suspending a branch from a London plane tree. The work engages with tension and constriction, and responds directly to the gallery space and its architecture.

464

465

Made with FlippingBook Online newsletter maker