'The Empty Nest' - studio image 2017.
Work discontinued.
This initial 'scratch' sculpture was shown in the Royal Holloway University Picture Gallery from November 2017 to March 2018. It was created to accompany the David Vilaseca Memorial lecture she was invited to give entitled 'On Truth'.
On a visit to Royal Holloway, curator Laura MacCulloch introduced Challenger to the work of Christiana Herringham, whose story impacted the making of this particular sculpture. A Victorian patron, suffragette and copyist, Lady Herringham's legacy of art forms a core part of the University's collection. One of the paintings in the Picture Gallery is of her two children, the youngest of which died at a very young age. Tragically, Christiana ended her days in various asylums.
'The Empty Nest' charts the chronology of intimate relationship. The sculpture speaks to environmental and socio-political concerns, referencing species dwindling after loss of habitat due to human encroachment, the make-shift housing for displaced populations with identifiable mental health problems.
'The Empty Nest' is made from found/gathered material (courtesy of HackLab in Edinburgh) and comprises of fire alarm cable twisted in a chaotic physical incantation reminiscent of basket weaving for rehabilitation.