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The Second Chapter : Interview with Neryhs Wo (Korean ver.)

   ‘예술가의 뮤즈’를 탐구하는 이번 여정의 일곱 번째 대화는 다학제적 예술가 네리스(Neryhs)의 세계로 우리를 초대합니다. 홍콩에서 태어나 런던과 멜버른에서 수학한 이 작가에게 창작이란 깊은 취약성을 드러내는 행위이자, 개별적인 정신 사이에 필연적으로 존재하는 간극을 잇는 다리를 건설하는 과정입니다. 네리스의 작업 세계는 가슴 뭉클한 모순에 뿌리를 두고 있습니다. 타인에게 온전히 이해받고 싶은 인간의 갈망과, 완전한 연결이란 본질적으로 불가능하다는 인식 사이의 대립이 그것입니다. 개인적인 트라우마와 '생존 모드'의 시간을 지나온 그녀는 이제 예술을 단순한 미적 추구가 아닌, 필수적인 '치유'의 형태이자 삶에 건네는 '무조건적인 사랑'의 그릇으로 바라봅니다. 그녀의 작업은 고독의 무게를 자기 발견이라는 확장된 자유로 변모시키며, 잃어버린 자아를 되찾는 고요하지만 강력한 선언이 됩니다. 이번 인터뷰에서 네리스는 최근의 변화를 상징하는 작품 <27th>를 통해 자신의 진화를 반추합니다. 이 작품은 삶의 한 계절을 마무리하는 '종착선'이자 새로운 시대를 여는 '출발선'이 되는 전환점을 마주하고 있습니다. 그녀는 자신의 창작 과정을 '알아차림(noticing)'이라 설명합니다. 예술가는 명료함의 불꽃 속으로 용기 있게 뛰어들어 무의식 속에 숨겨진 진실을 들추어내야 한다는 것입니다. 네리스에게 캔버스와 설치 공간은 상처를 선명하게 마주하는 장소이며, '회화적 은유'를 통해 차마 말로 다 할 수 없던 것들이 비로소 형상을 갖추게 되는 공간입니다. 관객을 대하는 그녀의 태도 또한 인상적입니다. 예술을 '사랑'과 유사한 무엇으로 보는 그녀는, 작품의 의미가 관객 각자의 고유한 지각을 통해서만 비로소 완성된다고 믿습니다. 이는 작가의 본래 의도를 넘어선 대화이며, 우리 모두를 그녀가 남긴 파편들 속에서 각자의 이야기를 발견하도록 초대합니...

Interview with Vanessa Wenwieser (Enlgish Ver.)


Q. Welcome to U1 Gallery. We are deeply grateful for the opportunity to interview you. Thank you very much for your time. Could you please introduce yourself and your work? What inspired you to begin creating art?

A. Hello, my name is Vanessa Wenwieser and I’m an artist from Munich in Germany and I am so honoured to be interviewed by you.  

I have always been surrounded by art all my life, I had a grandfather that would take me to the countryside where he painted in water colour and my father was a great photographer; I enjoyed reading and poetry very much as well as music and was interested greatly by the world around me. I am a keen observer and there was not an art form that didn’t touch me deeply. I knew very early on that this is how I would like to express myself, but not yet exactly which medium, in fact, I enjoyed trying out new mediums and experimenting and still do, I see it as adding layers of depth and meaning to my work.

After graduating from school I studied at the Glasgow School of Art, as it has an excellent reputation and the most beautiful building designed by the Scottish art nouveau artist Rennie Macintosh. I have always been enthralled by the flowing lines of art nouveau and the use of nature within this art form, and to be able to study in such an amazing building was such an honour for me. 

I studied all art forms in the first year and then specialised in Fine Art Photography but even then broke out of the mould of what I was taught there and felt I just missed drawing and working more with colours and my hands, so I did a course in printmaking and I especially enjoyed screen printing, so I could use photography as well as painting and it gave me a lot more scope to experiment with.

Then I began to use Photoshop, learning by doing, experimenting using layers and often adding painting and printmaking to create texture. I really found it an amazing medium to try out new things quickly and see if they work.  I managed to create my own style in time, maybe through using the medium differently than it is taught.




Q. Could you describe an artwork or series from your oeuvre that you consider pivotal in your career?

A. I would say “Fear is like a forest”, it was really such a well received, powerful piece, it was full of flowers and spring blossoms yet dark at the same time, showing there is often another side to the expected. 

The female in the art piece  looked so proud and strong and it became my mission to portray women like this.

It received some prizes and was the beginning of my green and red phase, something I had taught myself through trial and error and it seemed to mirror my soul. I felt it was a real turning point in my career.

It was dark yet fiery, mystical yet full of flowers, passionate yet full of questions. It embraced my love of nature and at the same time showed females portrayed through my vision, as proud beings, at one with nature, willing to be at one with nature and not to destroy. So yes that played a very pivotal role in my art after that. 


Q. Could you elaborate on your creative process and the methods you use to express your work?

A. I am constantly creating art by observing the world and  then I suppose it takes a while to process and will often manifest itself like an epiphany when I least expect it or I have visions, sometimes I get very strong visions in that phase between sleeping and being awake, I get so many visions and ideas I write and draw them down, I always have a pencil and paper next to my bed in order not to forget. Then the next stage is to photograph the idea and I use other photographs to amalgamate them in Photoshop and draw on them and use texture to reveal a more painterly aesthetic that I love. 

I would love to continue to learn drawing techniques digitally and to use more multi media approaches in my artworks




Q. Are there any artists or specific works that have had a significant influence on you?

A. In photography, Duane Michals influenced me very early on, by showing me it’s possible also to re-create what’s on the inside instead of only capturing what one can see on the outside (what is thought of as intrinsically linked to photography). To capture what one can’t see, is what I strove for and still do. 

I was also influenced by Robert Frank who worked together with the beat poets and also made dark and highly emotive work that I admired and then later on, Brooke Shaden, who uses photography to manipulate her images digitally and comes out with sublime images that touch the soul deeply.

In painting the list is so long as I love art so much, I enjoyed Jugendstil growing up and had Gustav Klimt prints hanging over my bed, him and Botticelli greatly influenced me to express feelings and using nature and flowers within my art.


Q. Where do you draw inspiration for your work?

A. I suppose in a way I am constantly creating art; by observing the world around me, reading, watching films and listening to music and poetry. I like walking and taking photos and life is a constant source of inspiration as is traveling and looking at old churches or castles or modern buildings or sculptures, I love street art and other artists they inspire me greatly too. Images upon images are added in my mind, poetry becomes visual, stories an image, ideas become concrete and if there are things happening in politics those ideas come out in my work too. For example political things I am very fervent about like feminism and for inspiration I go all the way back to the ancient myths and legends and goddesses, to show the strength women have. 

The darkness in my work comes from my love of dark fairytales as a child like the brothers Grimm or stories about witches and vampires, I still am drawn to dark stories, I feel they have extra layers of depth, that stories where all is well, just don’t have. There is nothing that happens in my life that doesn’t, creep back into my art.



Q. What do you hope the audience takes away from your art?

A. I hope, some people, may take away with them, the feeling that they are not alone with their thoughts and emotions; that there is someone else out there who has similar ideas and worries, that although there is darkness there is always hope and one should ever give up hope. I would love it if they take a bit of wonder and magic with them too, to be surprised and to reflect upon this world.

Hopefully, I can help people to view women in a more multi dimensional light too, that would be brilliant.


Q. What is your dream project? Could you share your future plans and aspirations as an artist?

A. My dream project would be a commission for a book or more album covers, I have made some for friends, something very dear to me is to collaborate with other artists. 

Otherwise, an art book of my own one day, maybe a collaboration with another artist or a poet.

Exhibitions with friends where we have control of the space and make it a unique multi-dimensional / multi-sensory experience that everyone hopefully will remember for a long time.









Contact
Artist : 
Vanessa Wenwieser
Instagram : @kunstfabrikstudio

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