Kristen Thornhill

BIO:

Kristen Thornhill is a student in her final year at MUN’s Grenfell Campus, focusing mainly in the areas of painting and photography. Kristen grew up in the small town of Winterland, and currently resides in Corner Brook. She has exhibited locally as well as in British Colombia and Harlow, England, during her three month study program there.

Though she often does commission work, her personal art tends to borrow from an interest in film and pop culture. Faces and food are her most common subjects. Her work can be found online at www.kristenthornhill.wix.com/artwork , or on Facebook as Kristen Thornhill Artwork.

 

 

1. Where did you first realize you were interested in art?

I’ve been drawing since before I can remember. It didn’t develop into anything serious until maybe junior high or high school, but it was always there.

 

2. What mediums are you drawn to and why?

Paint is my main thing, acrylic and oil. I think it’s the texture, kind of goopy and gross. I also really like ink. I want to get into tattooing, actually; I used to be into special effects makeup and body art but my skin can’t handle the products anymore. And there’s something I like about the permanence of tattoos, like it represents one specific moment in your life, even if the tattoo is just something you thought looked cool. Also a big fan of film photography for the same reason, it makes me be a lot more careful and thoughtful than digital.

 

3. How do you get ideas for your artwork?

I’m influenced by really mundane things. I paint things I see often. I don’t really consider myself to be that creative, I just recreate things that are already there, or stitch them together in a way that I think is cool.

 

4. What type of artists do you find influential and why?

I’m a huge fan of horror. Charles Burns’ “Black Hole” seriously changed my life. At the same time, I love art history. The Pre-Raphaelite’s, Watteau, Bosch… I like things that can be interpreted a bit darker I guess. Maybe those things aren’t always meant to be seen that way, but oh well.

 

5. What are the “big” themes you are drawn to in artwork?

Insecurities are something I deal with a lot, but I’m not in a way that’s obvious to the viewer. I just work through my own problems through the stuff I paint. To anyone else, it just looks like a self portrait or an ice cream sundae or whatever but it’s usually more personal than that. That said, I don’t think everything needs to be complicated and deep all the time. I also just paint stuff because I want to.

 

6. What do you think is the greatest challenge an artist working in Nfld & Lab faces?

We have a great arts community here, but there’s a bit of a pressure to either fit in as a contemporary artist or a traditional artist. There are limitations around both, I find. There also isn’t much appreciation for photography here outside of landscapes and portraiture, at least not that I’ve found.

 

7. What do you think is the best thing about working as an artist in this province?

There’s so much support here, not just from other artists but from the province as a whole. Not to mention inspiring. This place is beautiful and full of interesting people.

 

8. Where do you see yourself in 10 years?

A high school art and English teacher (after my BFA I plan to get a teaching degree), also a tattoo artist, with like seven Boston Terriers, spending 75% of my time in the back of a bright orange camper van.

 

9. If you werenʼt an artist, what sort of art-related things would you be interested getting involved in?

If I weren’t an artist I actually have no idea what I’d do. Everything I do is related to art in some way. Maybe I’d make movies or something. That’s still art though. Maybe a critic or something. I’d be a horrible critic though, I love everything.

 

10. If you could have one wish granted, what would it be?

I’d like to have the ability to freeze time. But realistically, I just want someone to take me on as a tattoo apprentice next year.

 


Lucas Morneau

BIO:

Lucas Morneau is an interdisciplinary artist from Corner Brook, Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada. Morneau received his Bachelor of Fine Arts in Visual Arts at Memorial University – Grenfell Campus in 2016, where he spent a semester abroad in Old Harlow, England, and will be a candidate for the Master of Fine Arts (Studio Art) program at University of Saskatchewan in late 2016. Lucas Morneau has exhibited  in exhibitions in Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada, including juried exhibitions at The Rooms Provincial Art Gallery andGrenfell Campus – Memorial University, and in exhibitions in England. Using photography, printmaking, sculpture, installation, and performance, Morneau’s work oscillates between  the known and the unknown, while playing with perception and healing the viewer.

 

www.lucasmorneau.com

 

 

1. When did you first realize you wanted to become an artist?

What I find funny is that I never really wanted to become a professional artist until I was in my second year of my Bachelor of Fine Arts (Visual Arts) degree. I entered the program with the intentions of going on to do medicine, but became hooked.

 

2. What mediums do you work in and why?

I am an interdisciplinary artist and am currently working with light and space. Originally a photographer, I realized that much of my work was influenced by light and wanted to work with light itself. From there, I started to do research into light and its effect on the body.

 

3. How do you get ideas for your artwork?

Light really has an influence on me. For example, the colour temperature difference between a tungsten lamp and midday light has had a big effect on my work. From there, I use minimalist structures as a matrix to hold the lights I use, whether they be LEDs or full-spectrum CFL lights.

 

4. What other artists influence your artwork?

I find that many people today use the word ‘inspiration’ inappropriately, as inspiration is something that is monumental and life changing. One artist that not only has influenced my work, but also has inspired me is James Turrell. During the summer of 2014, I and twenty other classmates travelled to the United Kingdom to spend three months studying. We went to galleries daily to view important works spanning from different time periods of art history. The pace was hectic. One day, our professor took us to see the Royal Academy’s Summer Exhibition. While there, I saw my first James Turrell installation, Sensing Thought, 2014. Sensing Thought had, at the time, made me slow down for the first time that semester and pause. Every thought, every emotion, and every stress had left my body as I sat in from of the vertical rectangle of light. After 15 minutes of looking at Sensing Thought. I realized how much time had passed. I forced myself to continue looking at other works. After a year of back in Canada, Sensing Thought’s lights are still glowing in my mind. The piece remains vividly glowing, slowly shifting colour. It became the turning point in my art practice, making me realize what I would want to discuss in my works and how I would want to show them.

 

5. What are the “big” themes in your artwork?

My work oscillates between the known and the unknown, while fooling perception to create a feeling of both comfort and ease. With my work, I hope to create a meditative experience while making the viewer question what they see before them and whether or not it is an illusion.

 

6. What is the greatest challenge you face as an artist working in Nfld & Lab?

Due to the fact that I work with computer parts and addressable LEDs, I have to order in the vast majority of my supplies, which increases the cost of my materials.

 

7. What is the best thing about working as an artist in this province?

The arts community is so accepting here, especially on the west coast of the province. All artists come together here, regardless of interest and their areas of specialty.

 

8. Where do you see yourself in 10 years?

I hope to see myself working as either a full-time professional artist or working at the university level as a professor while working part-time as a professional artist.

 

9. If you werenʼt an artist, what would you be doing?

I would probably be working in the field of medicine or psychology.

 

10. If you could have one wish granted, what would it be?

Frost breath. Joking. I would love to be able to have a solo exhibition at the Tate Modern.