Anticipation , 2016
Ceramic, slate and rubber

These dancing feet awere made in ceramic stoneware and decorated in a pale blue Celadon glaze. A leather thong laces up one of the dance shoes suggesting that her physical body is laced into her ballet practice. The muscular toes evidence to the hours of practice it has taken to get to this point. In Renaissance art there was a focus on natural forms, but in the 20th Century artists started to use colours and shapes to convey meaning. Anticipation is both recognisable form but the colour blue suggests the disquieting point of anticipation that precedes transformation. Anticipation is a very personal work made by a mother for her daughter just before she goes out into the world; her feet identifying the path she hopes to take. The young woman’s feet become her dancing shoes; one foot poised as if to take off to dance into the unknown.

Helen Birnbaum is an artist who approaches society and science in a questioning way using sculpture, photography, film and sound. The starting point of much of her work is contemporary society’s relationship with world changing events such as climate change, new technologies and pandemics – through history and now. The aim has always been to communicate these ideas in the most accessible and humorous way possible. Some of her inspiration comes from the strange forms found under the gaze of the microscope, but the quirkiness and energy of 1960’s design also excites her and she strives to harness this dynamism whilst commenting on our own altered world.
Birnbaum uses hand building techniques to create hollow bodies, spikes and decorations to add to these dynamic pieces. Materials such as rusty metal wires, coiled telephone wires and found objects are incorporated into her work to enhance the designs. She has recently been integrating digital devices into her sculpture; sound, touch and vision now sit together widening the viewer’s experience. This is exciting art that will make you smile and always make you think.

In 2020 she hand built 130 life size ceramic hands in a work called TERRA FIRMA Leaky Boat which explore the eco-refugee crisis in the most vivid way. This work can be seen on her YouTube channel https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pfhzdgwq3u0

Helen Birnbaum was the winner of the Victoria & Albert Museum/Morley Gallery Ceramic Prize in 2018. She has sculptures in the Victoria Gallery, Liverpool's Permanent Collection and works on permanent display in the Liverpool University School of Engineering. Notable exhibitions include the Gordon Pathology Museum, Guy’s Hospital London; the ARB Gallery Cambridge and the World Museum, Liverpool paving the way for exhibition at ARTBOX, Basel, Switzerland. She has also exhibited twice in Athens. Since then she has exhibited at Glastonbury Festival and in Spitalfields, London, in 2022.

Website: https://helenbirnbaumceramics.com
Second website: https://significantbunchofviruses.wordpress.com
Instagram: www.instagram.com/helenbirnbaumceramics
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/helen.birnbaum.940/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/helenceramics
Audio/Video links

TERRA FIRMA Leaky Boat, YouTube channel https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pfhzdgwq3u0

The audio/video/QR code link to all four works in the CERAMIC TRANSIMISSION Series are shown here : ceramictransmission.wordpress.com/category/ceramic-transmission-phase-1-disease/ JudgmentSound scape:

SEE SOUNDSCAPE FOR:

1.DIVINE JUDGEMENT: https:credit Jade Brown
This rhyme was written about the Black Death.

2. BAD AIR Soundscape: credit Soundliketube
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kdV16Fv-A9k

3.. GERM THEORY: credit Motion Array
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I49LYnjZOis

4. WEB OF CAUSATION Soundscape: credit Maldera Film
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lDsghV7G3ko

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