Mia Roberts

Cardiff School of Art & Design

I am concerned with the notion of memory and the imprints left on a place. Exploring how a “place” is built from the remnants of intersecting parties, recycling history through the lived experience of new generations. This cycle of impact between person, action and landscape is something I explore. Taking placeholders of memory and representing them through a visual language of ‘manipulated appropriation’ in that I take objects from specific settings, adapting them within the studio to create work that has deeply personal resonance.

This I see this as trying to replicate the interplay between human and landscape. In a sense it's a form of carving of a name into a tree with a penknife. There is an application of self-history onto something with its own. My interest resultantly discusses the nature of ‘space and place’ and uses the dynamic of history and its effect on the landscape. Not only in an aesthetic sense but in the broader notion of social connection or what “home” constitutes. My exploration into this topic comes at a time where my previously established local identity has been shaken by the destruction of a local landmark and the death of family.

Memory displaces the notion of permanence and through a slow erosion recycles itself. Concrete foundations being left instead.

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List of Works

01
157 × 290 × 10cm
Concrete, steel fabrication, wood

02
93 × 89 × 8cm
Found object, concrete, impacted sand

03
230 × 49cm × 102cm
Red brick dust, rope, found object, aluminium oxide powder, concrete

All one installation: post-industrial bird feeder
“A hand held, slumped at the corner of a room in which we once played. He was a marathon runner. Building concrete forts with bare hands as a child the skin was left new, eroding older layers. Memory acts as a springboard to lives we no longer recognise, replaced by new ones embodied within objects of determined importance.”

04
Book: 25 × 25cm
“if idve known about death, idve wish id never been born”
Holyhead local at a funeral

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Niamh Tam