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Joanne Masding: The Moveable Scene of the Page
Runs until Sunday, 11 May 2025 (See all dates)
- Time
- 11:00 - 17:00
- Venue
- The Bluecoat, Liverpool, L1 3BX
- Price
- Free entry
Masding’s playful exhibition investigates how images, objects and words link together.
More Information (Gaydio is not responsible for external websites)
Masding’s playful exhibition investigates how images, objects and words link together. Through a combination of sculpture, fictional writing and typography, Masding transforms the gallery into a space where language can mingle, collide and flow.
Following on from her 2024 book, Body of Pieces, the exhibition at the Bluecoat presents new writing by Masding and follows her strategy of using fiction to explore the nature of objects, their physical properties and how they relate to us. Masding describes writing as a ‘sculpting tool’ allowing her to defy the laws of physics and go inside objects. In the gallery, visitors will explore sculptures made from metal, ceramic, plaster and shimmering textiles which are suspended from a series of elongated copper sculptures. Pages of Masding’s new works of fiction will hang from these copper frames, for visitors to tear off and read.
The Moveable Scene of the Page also features Masding’s new alphabet sculptures, inspired by, and in the shape of Monster Munch crisps. This novel new typeface is formed by extrusion; a means of forcing soft material through a hole in a flat disc. Monster Munch is made using the same technique, but as this tube of material comes through the extruder it is sliced into individual, flat claw shapes. Masding’s ceramic letters become poetic sculptures, with phrases like “tongue tripping over a glazed ceramic marble” suggesting a collision of words and objects in our own bodies.
When working between the disciplines of writing, sculpture and performance, Masding is often thinking about translation, and how the essence of an object can change. When a drawing is made of a bunch of grapes, it is translated into a flat image and some information is lost (the weight) but something is also gained (small details are highlighted). When that image or artwork is written about, it is translated again into letters and spoken language.
Through her work, Masding gives us the opportunity to look closer at this translation process. She suggests that art is often a task of slowing the world down, and holding it in place so we can take a closer look. When we produce a drawing or take a photograph of something, we fix that object in place and study it. Masding’s work seeks to fix the act of translation in place, giving us the chance to slow down and examine the process.
Fri 4 Apr - Sun 11 May
Free entry
Following on from her 2024 book, Body of Pieces, the exhibition at the Bluecoat presents new writing by Masding and follows her strategy of using fiction to explore the nature of objects, their physical properties and how they relate to us. Masding describes writing as a ‘sculpting tool’ allowing her to defy the laws of physics and go inside objects. In the gallery, visitors will explore sculptures made from metal, ceramic, plaster and shimmering textiles which are suspended from a series of elongated copper sculptures. Pages of Masding’s new works of fiction will hang from these copper frames, for visitors to tear off and read.
The Moveable Scene of the Page also features Masding’s new alphabet sculptures, inspired by, and in the shape of Monster Munch crisps. This novel new typeface is formed by extrusion; a means of forcing soft material through a hole in a flat disc. Monster Munch is made using the same technique, but as this tube of material comes through the extruder it is sliced into individual, flat claw shapes. Masding’s ceramic letters become poetic sculptures, with phrases like “tongue tripping over a glazed ceramic marble” suggesting a collision of words and objects in our own bodies.
When working between the disciplines of writing, sculpture and performance, Masding is often thinking about translation, and how the essence of an object can change. When a drawing is made of a bunch of grapes, it is translated into a flat image and some information is lost (the weight) but something is also gained (small details are highlighted). When that image or artwork is written about, it is translated again into letters and spoken language.
Through her work, Masding gives us the opportunity to look closer at this translation process. She suggests that art is often a task of slowing the world down, and holding it in place so we can take a closer look. When we produce a drawing or take a photograph of something, we fix that object in place and study it. Masding’s work seeks to fix the act of translation in place, giving us the chance to slow down and examine the process.
Fri 4 Apr - Sun 11 May
Free entry
Venue
The Bluecoat
The Bluecoat, School Lane, Liverpool
Liverpool
L1 3BX
Dates
The event runs from 11:00 to 17:00 on the following dates.
Select a date to add this event to your calendar app.
- April 4th 2025
- April 5th 2025
- April 6th 2025
- April 7th 2025
- April 8th 2025
- April 9th 2025
- April 10th 2025
- April 11th 2025
- April 12th 2025
- April 13th 2025
- April 14th 2025
- April 15th 2025
- April 16th 2025
- April 17th 2025
- April 18th 2025
- April 19th 2025
- April 20th 2025
- April 21st 2025
- April 22nd 2025
- April 23rd 2025
- April 24th 2025
- April 25th 2025
- April 26th 2025
- April 27th 2025
- April 28th 2025
- April 29th 2025
- April 30th 2025
- May 1st 2025
- May 2nd 2025
- May 3rd 2025
- May 4th 2025
- May 5th 2025
- May 6th 2025
- May 7th 2025
- May 8th 2025
- May 9th 2025
- May 10th 2025
- May 11th 2025
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