11 questions with Sophie Dumaresq
Hello 2021. I’m very excited to be able to kick off the new year with an interview with the incredibly talented Sophie Dumaresq, who talked to me about her mesmerising work as a visual artist. Based in Australia, Sophie’s vibrant art spans from new media robotics and photo media to large and small scale sculptural installations. ‘Her work explores symbiotic cycles of consumption, destruction and creation demonstrating how as a species we relate, show empathy and evolve with and within our surrounding environment’. Read her inspiring 11 answers below!
Why hair?
I started to experience hair loss due to endometriosis and changes within my environment. I started to collect the hair not only from my self but also from other womb carrying humans. I also started doing research into possible relationships between exposure to toxins within the environment, the female sex reproductive system and the physical make up of hair itself as well as its symbolism. I found it fascinating that the nitrogen bonds in hair make it a wonderful fertiliser for soil while also being use historically as symbol of fertility and womanhood. Its symbolism and practical use in my work has further evolved but in my earlier works it very much was an exploration of the materiality of what it is to feel alien and toxic.
What's your relationship with nature?
Complex yet filled with love, but I do get frustrated when people place nature on a pedestal as being somehow separate from the human animal when we are part of it, warts and all. My work often stems from this frustration that things somehow need to be perfect to be worthy of our love. As an artist, the materiality of our world I find is my outlet for being able to love while acknowledging the good and the bad that come with all things.
What is The Hairy Panic?
So the Hairy Panic itself is a nickname for Pancium effuse which is a native species of “weed” here in Australia. It is toxic for livestock. In 2016, it invaded and brought the town of Wangarratta to a standstill.
My Hairy Panic tumbleweeds, named after the “weed” are large hand made pink tumbleweeds make out of fencing wire and chemically processed and dyed human hair that I then installed and photographed out on a cattle farm. I think what first attracted me to the project as a white, non indigenous Australian was when I read that the original Hairy Panic was described as being a “native weed.” I couldn't stop thinking about how can something be native but also a weed? It got me thinking about who decides when something is “toxic” or a “weed” and why.
The specific shade of pink of the tumbleweeds came from the colour of the pesticide Round up containing Monsanto Glyphosate that is still used here in Australia.
What's your favourite medium to work with?
Metal, there is something quite primal with an air of Frankenstein about it for me in the way it responds to heat and makes you aware of the particles in the air around you while you are working with it. I am at my happiest when soldering or sitting in a welding bay.
What's your favourite part of the creative process?
The actual physical act of making the sculptural works. While making the Hairy Panic, I spent weeks just sitting silently welding together the fencing metal or brushing and braiding together the hair. A couple of friends joked about me going insane but I think it was the most sane that I’ve ever felt during a project. That’s also I guess what someone who had actually gone insane would feel, so who knows.
What are you currently working on?
I’m currently collecting resources for my next big project while doing a commissioned collaborative work. I did just finish a recent project done on work by Australian environmental conservationists with endangered shore birds.
It was based on the use of human hair in socks as a more humane pest control measure against foxes. The scent of the human from the hair acts as a deterrent to the foxes to keep them away from the nests. For the project I made a series of images around the symbolism of the fox, my own white colonial heritage and the socks that I then created from human nursery fleece and human hair.
What's the one piece of art you'd love to make, but haven't yet?
The project I am collecting hair and metal to work on for next year. It is another sculptural land art installation similar in scale and aesthetic to my previous work “The Hairy Panic” but closer to my baby pink human hair wearing robotic cow skull “She” in themes of materiality.
If you could pick one person to collaborate with, dead, alive, or fictional who would it be?
David Lynch, I have the upmost respect for his creative process in terms of his belief in the power of the day dream and then how we go about materialising those images into the world. There is also just something about his ability to make the romantic ugly and in turn the ugly romantic.
What’s the best piece of advice you ever received?
I guess as an artist or creative, if you enjoy the meme, make sure you're putting in the time to actually read and understand the theory behind it. Which to me pretty much comes down to putting in the time to learn about the work of those who came before you and the heritage of your shared concepts and ideas. It doesn’t have to mean becoming an academic but for me it helped me feel less lonely within my art practice which I found helped dealing with things like imposter syndrome and that crippling sometimes paralysing doubt that most creatives experience at least once during the making process.
What's the one object you'd bring to a desert island?
It is a little boring but I think Heritage seeds for the win. One of my favourite authors is Octavia E Butler and if her Parable novels have taught me anything, it is that being able to grow your own food is essential. I can always break off a branch or find a rock to sharpen to use as a weapon and or tool once I am there.
What's your one message to the world?
Be active and curious about the world and don’t just listen to those who make you feel comfortable about your position within it.
Thank you for reading. Stay tuned for more 11 questions with artists, makers and creatives coming your way soon. Never miss an issue by subscribing to my mailing list, and in the meantime feel free to take a look at my blog and some of my work as an artist.