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Arteles Catalogue 2023-2020

Arteles Creative Center's residency artists and their projects 2023-2020

Arteles Creative Center's residency artists and their projects 2023-2020

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Silence Awareness Existence program / FEBRUARY 2022<br />

Jill Mueller<br />

UK<br />

www.jillmueller.com<br />

About<br />

I make art that explores what it means to be human – the<br />

inner and outer stories that make us. I have a specific interest<br />

in health, identity and our relationship to nature.<br />

The materials and techniques I use change with each<br />

project, responding to whatever the work calls for: from<br />

hands-on approaches that include printmaking, alternative<br />

photographic techniques, embroidery, painting and<br />

installation to digitally based work with archive imagery,<br />

creative writing and book design. I have several long-term<br />

projects in development that engage with personal stories<br />

from ordinary lives. These begin with interviews, writing, and<br />

building visual archives. The work takes shape slowly as a<br />

story unfolds, and these projects take years to evolve.<br />

I believe in the power of art to connect people – to each other<br />

and the world around them – and transform lives. The creative<br />

process and the viewer’s experience are as important to me<br />

as any finished artwork.<br />

I’m a London-based artist who was born in the US and lived<br />

across the globe. London has been my home since 2010.<br />

Finding my voice<br />

I came to <strong>Arteles</strong> with a documentary archive about a<br />

1954 mountain rescue co-led by my grandfather. I hoped<br />

to engage the material within a quiet environment where<br />

I could also have my own experience with cold, snow and<br />

long periods in nature. Each day I spent a few hours walking<br />

the forest, noting the qualities of snow in different light and<br />

temperatures, how it felt, the sounds it made under my feet.<br />

I spent my time observing the natural world around me while<br />

also revisiting a very different nature experience through<br />

70-year-old writings and photographs. Over an extended<br />

period of silence in my third week, I drew on everything I’d<br />

taken in to explore an imagined winter experience through<br />

a short story. Something cracked open within me in that<br />

process—as if my body knew that I needed to live my own<br />

(even imagined) story before telling someone else’s. Through<br />

this experience and conversations with fellow residents, I<br />

found a new way into the mountain rescue project and began<br />

to strengthen my voice within it. I became more playful with<br />

the material, stitching and gold-leafing over archive images<br />

and writing short creative texts based in my research. I left<br />

<strong>Arteles</strong> with many beginnings, threads of experience that I<br />

am weaving together in new ways as I continue to work with<br />

the material back in my studio in London.

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