
NOELLE LORRAINE WILLIAMS | In what ways does your work manipulate the viewer?
EILEEN FERRARA | The Pyramid Texts wall and floor work manipulates the viewer by creating
an enticing space with textures, colors and images. By creating a whole
environment on the wall and on the floor, I hope to draw the viewer
into this world, and get them to spend time looking closer at the story
and details of the work.
NOELLE LORRAINE WILLIAMS | In what ways is your work a manipulation of sight and touch?
EILEEN FERRARA | The work
is a visual story to be read or interpreted by the viewer. I
often use different materials, which is the tactile part of my work, and
the Bee Spellbook is a book for the viewer to page through. I like the
intimacy involved in allowing the viewer to hold the art as an object.
NOELLE LORRAINE WILLIAMS | How do you manipulate the material to rework our understanding of history and contemporary culture?
EILEEN FERRARA | With humor! In referencing ancient Egypt I am putting my story in a
place with which everyone will have some familiarity, but much of the
story is my own fictional fantasy
NOELLE LORRAINE WILLIAMS | How do you create a conversation around the manipulation of women's bodies?
EILEEN FERRARA | I am trying to have a conversation that works on different levels for example one idea that lead me to this project was our cultural
obsession for women to maintain youth and beauty sometimes seemingly at
any price. Looked at in another way, there are larger ideas – mortality,
death and resurrection.
NOELLE LORRAINE WILLIAMS |How does a shared dialogue and collective art process effect
what you create? How does it manipulate the idea of the individual
art creativity? How did the process speak to or not of the theory of a collective unconscious?
EILEEN FERRARA | For me art is never created in a vacuum, each individual artist's
creations are always informed by their environment, and what they look
at and experience. The shared dialogue process was a wonderful
opportunity to experience a supportive collective of women artists-each
working on their own individual work, but also helping to provide each
other with impressions and suggestions throughout the development of
each project. For me, I think it helped me to look at presenting my work
in a totally new way. It was also lots of fun to watch everyone's
projects develop in its own unique way over the course of the 6 weeks.