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Writing my dissertation has led me to have so many ideas for artworks, in fact too many ideas for me to decide what to do next. I keep thinking about domestic rooms with patterned wallpaper. In the room would be something, or perhaps someone, to make the viewer uncomfortable. Nurses are another idea I have. Think Nurse Ratched in One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest – cold, cool, unfeeling, controlling. The opposite of what you expect a nurse to be. Maybe I should combine a nurse in a domestic space? I’m not sure.

I’ve been collecting images of nurses from the 1940s and 50s and I have found one I could work with. The colour will take a lot of planning as it is going to influence the way the viewer feels so I have been testing colour over the image. Perhaps after the months of writing my dissertation and not making artwork, I should stop thinking and start painting.

Image research

Experimenting with colour


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The Wizard of Oz (1939)

In the last scene of the MGM film The Wizard of Oz, Dorothy Gale wakes up in her bed to find herself surrounded by her family. She looks round to see the faces of the people she loves and says, “there’s no place like home”. Dorothy’s trancelike repetition of the phrase “there’s no place like home” condenses the meaning of what home means for each of us.  Home is a place we associate with familiarity, love, a safe place, a place of origin. When her Kansas home is uprooted by a violent tornado, Dorothy is terrified. She is transported to Oz, a wonderful place that is not her home (‘no place’), but all the time she yearns to return home. Oz is in fact Dorothy’s home, she never left home. Throughout the film she is surrounded by people and things she knows, but all of which have changed to reveal hidden secrets and emotions – creating the sense of unease, and the uncanny. Although Oz is not real, it is both like home, yet very unlike her home. It is no place like home.

Sarah Bale. (2015) Homesick [digitally layered image]

I took the tornado scene in The Wizard of Oz and created a range of images in Photoshop.  I wanted them to feel dreamlike, but also capture Dorothy’s terror as her home becomes a place of nightmares.

Sarah Bale. (2015) Homesick [digitally layered image]

I think the intense colour on this image works especially well and evokes the feeling of fear and anxiety. Home, or rather what is going on inside Dorothy’s mind, has become deeply disturbing.


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Orchidaceous was a collaborative project from last year with the Suffolk botanist Martin Sanford. Martin is an expert on orchids and so it seemed obvious we would work around that theme. Combing orchids and human sparked both our imaginations, so we began thinking about life processes that relate to both – birth, growth, sex, illness and death. Martin suggested we set up a Pinterest page. This would be a site on which we could exchange visual ideas throughout the project and where I could reference my artist research.

After an exchange of emails and meetings with the owner of Arlingtons Brasserie, Martin and I were invited to be part of Café Scientifique hosted by Arlingtons. The evening would include a display of my artwork, a talk by Martin and an ‘experiment’. The ‘experiment’ would be a test on the reputed aphrodisiac properties of Salep on willing members of the audience. Half the audience would be given coffee containing Salep while the other half would be given a vanilla-flavoured ‘control’ coffee.

With my work for Orchidaceous I wanted to explore our connection to nature through the notion of change. I began by looking at Mat Collishaw’s work Insecticide. These beautiful images taken by Collishaw are a haunting reminder of death. Velvet butterfly wings are crushed and torn, for the viewer this is both fascinating and repulsive at the same time.

My research began by looking at Charles Darwin and his marriage to his cousin Emma Darwin. I decided to use Emma Darwin as my starting point for a work which I wanted to have beauty but also have a sense of unease and sadness.

Detail of Beauty, Life and Sorrow

Sarah Bale. (2014) Beauty, Life and Sorrow [flowers, moths and butterflies]

Martin posted an image to our Pinterest page which I wanted to work with. As Martin and I had discussed life processes being applicable to both human and plant I wanted to create an artwork on the theme of life and birth. In my artist research I looked at the collaboration between Louise Bourgeois and Tracey Emin for the exhibition Do Not Abandon Me. For this series of work the human form is depicted in delicate washes of gouache on paper. What I love is the fluidity which is achieved by paint bleeding into paper in all directions across the surface, just as veins are seen under the skin. I made my final work in pastels. In hindsight, I wish I had experimented with paint and other media but there was the pressure of time. The finished piece hasn’t photographed that well but I’ll still post it here.

sketchbook research

Sarah Bale (2014) Quiet But Not Silent (18 weeks) [chalk pastel]

Glenn Brown is an artist who ‘borrows’ from the Old Masters. Images we are all familiar with are distorted in Photoshop and the colour is then intensified. Brown then spends hours recreating the image in paint. I liked the idea of creating portraits of Charles and Emma Darwin and perhaps include some of their children. I wanted to create work that was a little unnerving with strong colour. I think the final framed images which were displayed in Arlingtons worked well and I was very pleased with the piece of work. If I had more time I would have liked to reproduce one or more of the images in paint.

Sarah Bale. (2014) Anne Darwin [print]

Sarah Bale (2014) Darwin, Family Photographs [print]

Phallaenobsis (named by Martin) and Contract were my two final pieces for Orchidaceous. Contract was made in Photoshop and is a mix of text from Orchids a Pratical Handbook and 50 Shades of Grey.  The layout and design is based on a page in Darwin’s book Fertilisation of Orchids.

Sarah Bale (2014) Contract [print]

Last year I went to see the Sarah Lucas exhibition Situation: Absolute Beach Man Rubble at the Whitechapel Gallery in London. This has to be one of the most memorable exhibitions I have been to. Lucas is rude, funny, controversial and knows how to pack a visual punch, so inspired by her work I decided to make a small sculptural piece. Martin had posted a plant image to our Pintrest page and I thought this would be perfect for the theme of sex. I wanted to incorporate Orchids and insects in the work – a symbol for Darwin and life. This is the first time I have made anything like this and I’m quite pleased with it and it certainly got a good reaction at the Orchidaceous evening.

Sarah Bale (2014) Phallaenobsis [butterflies, moss, tights, orchids]

I hoped that in the end the viewer came away from Orchidaceous smiling, thinking and asking questions about our relationships with each other and nature. Work for the project involved continually experimenting with different media, which was a great learning experience. Also building working relationships with people during the collaboration was positive and rewarding, and has enabled my practice to grow.


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In my imagination I saw a girl who was a Raven.

Sketchbook drawing

Sketchbook work

Starting by making drawings of a model, I wanted to create the feeling of unease as if something was about to happen. Developing a palette of 6 to 8 colours for the painting was time consuming and experimental but of great importance as the work had to have impact. I wanted to suggest the mood and feelings of the figure I was painting and so used red for the background. The work was exhibited and sold in the Trafalgar exhibition at Prettys Solicitors in Ipswich.

Sarah Bale. (2013) Raven Girl [oil on canvas]
Take thy beak from out my heart, and take thy form from off my door!”
Here is The Raven by Edgar Allan Poe read by the wonderful Vincent Price:  Quoth the Raven “Nevermore.”


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Metamorphosis is a series of works which explore the past and the present, and how we change emotionally and physically. Initially inspired by the book of the same name by Franz Kafka, I have expanded this theme, looking at the vulnerability of childhood through to adulthood from the female perspective.

Family photographs embody a family by capturing individuals as they change. Each picture is an evocative emotional reminder of a special moment documented in a visual diary, which captures the passage of time. Private dramas are often hidden from the camera and yet infused inside each of us and with investigation a single photograph can reveal a deeply private family history.  A happy moment captured in a photograph becomes magical as a lost memory becomes revivified.

Idris Khan. (2004) Nicholas Nixon’s Brown Sisters [photographic print]

My artist research began with Nicholas Nixon’s Brown Sisters by the artist Idris Khan. Khan has created a ghostly image of four sisters from original photographs by Nicholas Nixon. Nixon photographed the sisters (his wife Bebe and her sisters) over three decades. Khan then condensed photographs taken by Nixon of the sisters to create a single layered image. The result is stunning reminding me of a smudged charcoal drawing.

Inspired by Khan’s work, I starting with images of my mother from childhood to a mature woman and put them into Photoshop. I experimented by overlaying and distorting the photographs to evoke the feeling of a lost memory or half remember dream.

Sarah Bale. (2013) Time [digitally layered image]

Thoughts and Whispers is a mix of old and new family photographs of female members of my family. I wanted to capture the feeling of uncertainty as a girl moves from childhood to adulthood.

Sarah Bale. (2013) Thoughts and Whispers [digitally layered image]

Using Time as my reference I decided to reproduce the image using different media. I am pleased with the delicacy of the print, which embodies the fragility of being female.

Sarah Bale. (2013) Bittersweet Echos [print]

Working with palette knives and a subdued palette I worked the image in oils. Applying the paint in a rich textured surface using the knives has revealed a new way of painting for me and is a technique I wish to develop further.

my process of painting

Sarah Bale.  (2013) Metamorphosis  [oil on canvas]

I developed the idea further with inclusion of beetles on the prints Time and Thoughts and Whispers.  I questioned the ethics of using insects within art but as I had been gifted a box of beetles from an entomologist reusing the insects seemed acceptable. Each beetle is a symbol for change and was named after a female member of my family. The finished work was exhibited in a popup exhibition at the Firstsite Gallery in Colchester. On reflection I do think that the work didn’t need the printed background and the beetles and would make a stronger image with the named beetles on a plain surface contained within the box.

Sarah Bale (2013) Time [photographic print, beetles]

Sarah Bale. (2013) Time [photographic print and beetles]

 Sarah Bale (2013) Thoughts and Whispers  [photographic print and beetles]


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