Watch 'Silver Futures', by filmmaker Matt Hulse

Photo: Julia Zinnbauer

 
Matt Hulse creates out of whatever is to hand – he transforms the everyday and banal into something striking, witty and beautiful.
— Glasgow Short Film Festival

Hidden Objects, Oxford is thrilled to share ‘Silver Futures’, by filmmaker Matt Hulse.

Matt Hulse is an artist, filmmaker, photographer, performer and writer. His films have screened at dozens of festivals and galleries in 25+ countries internationally. He has been nominated thrice each for The Jarman Award and The Margaret Tait Awards. In 2017 he was the overall winner of Germany’s prestigious Felix Schoeller Photo Award.

His third feature film can be found at http://soundforthefuture.com.

 

matt hulse ON SILVER FUTURES

“Working closely with Amanda Game, the silversmiths and St. Johns was an engaging and enriching experience. I learned a great deal from the team during the process of making the film. Silver is a particularly attractive material to the eye of a camera; from the point of view of the cinematographer, there was a simple and profound pleasure in engaging with it, and not least a sense of privilege.

Working with other artists and producers is part of what I do. I was pleased to be invited to find, in film form, with the generous inclusion of material by fellow filmmaker Julia Skupny, an eloquent summary of a project which had faced many challenges through Covid and illness but had still managed to create imaginative, strong new works. I had worked with the Hidden Objects team before on the What is Tapestry? event in 2020 and had previously made a film with and about one of the commissioned silversmiths Simone ten Hompel as part of her major Confluence/Konfluenz exhibition 2017. I was on familiar ground but in the very different context of an Oxford college."

Matt Hulse 2022

 
 
Eva Haghighi
Hidden Objects, Oxford remembers Tom Phillips

All of us at Hidden Objects, Oxford are very sad to hear of the death last month of UK artist and Oxford University alumnus Tom Phillips.

We were delighted to have been able to engage with Tom as part of our ‘What is Tapestry?’ project in September 2020. He designed the magnificent tapestry, woven by Dovecot Studios, that hangs in the Dining Hall of St. Catherines College. In his honour, we would like to invite you to view this short (and rare) video interview with the artist organised by one of our Micro Interns Isabella Lill as part of the 2020 project.

Eva Haghighi
Hidden Objects, Oxford launches Silver Futures project with new silver commissions

Hidden Objects, Oxford is delighted to announce the launch of a new project Silver Futures heralded by two new silver commissions for St John’s College, Oxford.

Maria Hanson and Chris Knight with the finished work ‘Here I Am’ in their Sheffield studio. Photo: Mark Howe.

Silver Futures has been developed by HOO curators, Amanda Game, a modern silver specialist and Matthew Winterbottom, historic silver expert and Curator of Sculpture and Decorative Arts at the Ashmolean Museum, Oxford with the support of Lauren Dyer Amazeen.

Silver Futures is designed to reflect contemporary responses to the historic process of melt and re-use of damaged silver in Oxford college collections.  We are hosting an ongoing conversation with several colleges about ways in which their damaged and disused silver objects might find new life within the College community through their melt and re-use for contemporary commissions.   If you would like to discuss joining the Silver Futures conversation, contact us here. 

St John’s College has been the first college to participate in Silver Futures with the active support and encouragement of Professor Hannah Skoda, Tutorial Fellow in History, Keeper of Silver and Vestments, and her colleague Dr. Georgy Kantor, Associate Professor of Ancient History, Official Fellow and Tutor in Ancient History, Keeper of the College Pictures.  

A shortlist of experienced silversmiths was proposed to St John’s and Sheffield silversmiths Maria Hanson and Chris Knight (working collaboratively) and London silversmith Simone ten Hompel were selected. 

Damaged objects awaiting melt. Photo: Simon ten Hompel

St. John’s have been outstanding and thoughtful patrons, creating a light touch brief which actively encouraged selected designers to consider different formal uses for the silver that would encourage a new engagement with the material, its physical and cultural properties,  within the contemporary College community. 

The melt of the selected damaged Collection objects took place in Sheffield in November 2021 with the assistance of the Goldsmiths’ Company, London and the Sheffield Assay Office.   The melt process was documented in film and photography by Julia Skupny and took place in the presence of the designers, Professor Skoda and Lauren Dyer Amazeen.  You can watch a video of the melt here.

The damaged objects are put into the furnace for melt. Photo: Julia Skupny

The silversmiths were invited to work directly with the melted silver, in its ‘raw’ form as a billet.   The commissions, both designed to hang on a wall, were installed in early September 2022 in the intersectional space between St. John’s historic Laudian library and its new Study Centre (2019) making a clear conceptual link between the old and the new.  

Maria Hanson, preparing ‘Here I Am’ for installation. Photo: Matt Hulse

Hanson and Knight chose to create a mirror form in silver and cast steel entitled ‘Here I Am’ and engraved with a verse from the poem ‘Mirror’ by Sylvia Plath commenting:

The aesthetic language used within the work is both symbolic and representational. The cast iron frames speak of the process of transformation through making, referring to traditional casting frames used within the manufacturing of silver forms.  The imposed surface treatment and colouring of the iron evokes the passage of time and gives resonance to the contextual positioning of the mirror within St John’s; on the threshold between the old and the new. The silver oval held within the cast iron frame, harnesses in its centre the reflective material properties of this noble metal which has been instrumental throughout history in the production of mirrors.

In the 21st century where we are constantly exposed to the digitised image of ourselves and others, this piece offers a moment to reflect, acknowledge and celebrate being here.

www.mariahanson.co.uk

https://www.chrisknightdesign.co.uk/silverware

Simone ten Hompel with her finished work ‘Things Change’. Photo: Julia Skupny

ten Hompel chose to create a low relief sculpture ‘Things Change’ which takes the form of a Corten steel panel embedded with an unmelted fragment of a Victorian silver tray; a silver representation of a plan of the St John’s Estate and the title words in silver in braille commenting:

From the early model I decided to include an unmelted fragment of the College Victorian tray.  I felt this would bring out the aliveness of the tradition… which I understand as a maker.    It is always part of my philosophy of making that I try to use materials that need to be used… have a reason to be used in a certain context.   The use of corten steel for me represents, as a material, the earth, the ground we are standing on. I did not use all the melted silver billet.  I have returned the remaining billet plus test sheet pieces, wire and dust to the St. John’s Collection so they have all original silver molecules back in the collection: some as a new work, some as a study collection of silver’s different states.

‘Things change’ is a transferable title: not only about states of being in metals… but being in terms of the times in which we live… the experiences we have…. throughout my life I have learnt to understand, and be, with difference and change due to my very profound dyslexia. 

Professor Hannah Skoda comments:

We are delighted to see the silver collection of St John’s invigorated and given new life by the Silver Futures project.  Tracing the development of the silver commissioned by, donated to, and recycled by the college tells us a great deal about how that community has evolved.

Our commissioned artists have more than fulfilled our ambitions for the brief and we are truly grateful.   Recycling a small part of our silver in this way is an acknowledgement of our profound connection to all who have gone before us at St John’s, whilst celebrating the growing diversity, intellectual ambition, and joy of being members of the college.

All the Hidden Objects Oxford team are grateful to the President and Governing Body of St John’s College for their support for Silver Futures; to the Goldsmiths’ Company, and London and Sheffield Assay Offices for their assistance with the melt; to Julia Skupny for her excellent documentation of the melt; and to Oliver Warner, Works Facilities Manager at St John’s for his assistance with installation. 

A newly commissioned Moving Image work by filmmaker Matt Hulse will be launched at St John’s in October and will be available for viewing online from late October.   Please check back to the site for details.

Visit The Silver Futures Project for more information.