Event Details
Leigh Bridges is an artist whose interdisciplinary practice builds on the legacies of romanticism and modernism to explore the possibilities surrounding DIY designed technologies in relation to idealism and use. Bridges lives and works in Winnipeg and holds a Master’s degree in Fine Arts from the University of Victoria. Bridges has exhibited widely in Canada and Europe, most recently at AGAlab Atelier Grafisch Amsterdam, Plan Z (Miguel Hernández University, Altea Spain), Arebyte 17 with Become Become (London UK), Paul Petro Contemporary (Toronto), and Gallery Simon Blais (Montreal). Her work is part of several private and corporate collections, including Bank of Montreal, Toronto Dominion Bank, and Global Affairs Canada. Bridges holds a position of Assistant Professor of Art and Design at the University of Manitoba. She is represented by Paul Petro Contemporary in Toronto.
The artist gratefully acknowledges the support of the Canada Council for the Arts and financial assistance provided by the Manitoba Arts Council.
For more information about Leigh Bridges, please visit www.leighbridges.com.
Artist Statement:
The starting point for Solar Noon is a series I completed while in residence at AGAlab (Amsterdam’s Grafisch Atelier) in April 2019. While there, I created eight large silkscreened, laser-cut prints which I imagined would represent landscape “reflected” on solar panels and also connect with ideas of atmosphere and light developed in my painting practice. I intuitively combined my own bitmapped landscape photographs and colour blends with linear schematics, some of which were popped out and folded into sculptures. I was interested in the optical pleasure of physically layering the ink, producing unexpected results in composition and colour while enjoying material idiosyncrasies. The act of printing, transporting large screens and moving physically around the work, as well as the optical resonance built up was also critically important to the sense of specificity implicit in these monoprints.
I developed the Energy Collector die-cut posters using a more meticulous, almost wholly digital process while referencing instructional manuals and commercially conceived off-the-grid technologies. I’ve framed these “prototypes” as a small edition and have presented the offset printed piece as a stack in the gallery, with some available for viewers to take. With this work, I’m interested in “design dissemination,” exploring the more widespread distribution possible with commercially printed multiples.
Finally, the Solar Array animation picks up on the unfolding and installation of the imagined technology, once again employing “instructional poetics” to show the array’s solar alignment and the sun’s stoic movement across the sky. Here I was interested in the atmospheric details, the small sounds, and the shifting lighting conditions. This work engages with romantic imagery while pondering the ameliorative potential of design and technology, framing the landscape while suggesting an intimate and evolving connection with the environment.