Emma Pinsent
奥别产蝉颈迟别:听
厂耻辫别谤惫颈蝉辞谤蝉:听David Eastwood, Bianca Hester
Emma Pinsent is an artist, educator and arts-worker living and working between Arakwal, Gadigal and Darkinjung lands. Her artistic research employs site-responsive methods to examine the materiality of specific locations. Guided by fieldwork, walking, archival research, consultation, and material production, she responds to the latent ecological and industrial circumstances of specific places, which inform her sculptural installations.
In 2019, she completed a Bachelor of Fine Arts (Honours) at 91色情片: Art & Design, and in 2022 began a PhD (Art & Design) at the same institution, supported by the Australian Government RTP Scholarship. She has presented in group, duo, and solo exhibitions in Sydney, Brisbane, Canberra, Melbourne, and Tasmania at publicly funded ARI spaces and a commercial gallery. She has been a finalist in several awards.
Her PhD practice-based research, jointly supervised by Dr David Eastwood and Dr Bianca Hester and tentatively titled 鈥楶orous material afterlives of an intertidal zone鈥, examines how the porous materiality of a specific intertidal zone can transform an artistic response within the climate crisis. The project responds to Belongil Beach, an area where she lived previously, situated within the Arakwal coastline in the Northern Rivers region of NSW. It identifies porosity as a key material and ecological indicator of the site 鈥撯 a space of porous borders 鈥撯 where land and sea meet. Porosity is employed as a methodology for investigations of this zone. Artistic research is guided by fieldwork; consultation; archives; self-reflexive, embodied writing; material production; and site-responsive sculptural installations presented through exhibitions.
The research, conducted both locally and off-site, explores the entanglements between foreshore private property, erosion mitigation and histories of heavy mineral sand mining through a contemporary art context. Residues from past and present defunct sea walls, post-consumer waste, industrial mineral refinement and mining 鈥榬ehabilitation鈥, drive the material experimentation and site-responsive sculptural installations within exhibition contexts. The project proposes a site-responsive artistic mode that implicates the eroding materiality of a particular receding shoreline within a standardised contemporary art context, specifically, the white cube.
- Research area
- Research outputs
- Contemporary Art
- Place-based Artistic Research
- Sculpture and Installation practice
- Feminist and Oceanic Materialisms
鈥(Re)worlding porous materials in motion within the intertidal zone鈥. 2023 AAANZ Conference, Queensland College of Art and Design, Griffith University, Gold Coast (Southport), QLD.
Pinsent, Emma. 鈥楥lare Milledge: Imba虂s: a well at the bottom of the sea鈥. 2022. BAM, Issue 22 (2022): 52-55.
Non-traditional Research Outputs
Pinsent, Emma. Afterlives of access and amenity. 2024. Sculptural Installation. Duo exhibition: 鈥楶laces I鈥檝e been鈥, Canberra Contemporary Art Space, Canberra, ACT.
Pinsent, Emma. Weather we鈥檙e together. 2023. Sculptural Installation. Duo exhibition: 鈥楢 Leaky Exchange鈥, Sawtooth ARI, Launceston, TAS.
Pinsent, Emma. Fouls of the beach. 2022. Sculptural Installation. Exhibition: Nextdoor ARI, House Conspiracy, Brisbane, QLD.
Pinsent, Emma. Residual edges. 2023. Sculptural Installation. Group exhibition: 鈥楳ateriality鈥, DRAW Space, Enmore, NSW.
Pinsent, Emma. Through the hole of a shell. 2023. Sculptural installation. Group exhibition: 鈥榚rrant form鈥, Tiles, Lewisham, NSW.
Pinsent, Emma. Fouls of the beach. 2023. Sculptural Installation. Group exhibition: 鈥楥ool Change (in the middle of a heat wave)鈥, Abstract Thoughts, Darlinghurst, NSW.