Artist

05.Hazel Barron-Cooper Exhibition

Hazel Barron-Cooper (England)

I create paintings and gather words and poetry from local people about the place in which they live. I then integrate these texts into the paintings. I am creating a small anthology of the poems I have been kindly given by members of the community.
In 2023 at the invitation of Professor John Williams from Sophia University , Tokyo, I visited Kitaushima on Sado island and made several paintings and poems about this intriguing place . We also held a community event painting in the village hall I intend to build upon this and create more work inspired by Kitaushima and the surrounding area with co-creations from the people who live there. My work looks at place names, customs, traditions, folklore, climate, dialect and disappearing words, and the non-human such as plants and animals. All of these elements come together to create local distinctiveness and sense of place which helps us to both look back to the past and forward to the future.

Art Details

  • Art Number:05

  • Year of Production:2024

  • Exhibition Period:August 11 (Sun) , 2024 - November 10 (Sun) Closed on Tuesdays and Wednesday (excludes national holidays)

  • Admission Fee:¥0

Venue & Access

  • Location:Jorakuji Temple
  • Opening Hours:August-September: 10:00-17:00,October-November: 10:00-16:00
  • Closed:Open all day
  • Parking:Please park in a place along the mountain side of the road that will not disturb residents (it is not a no-parking zone).

Hazel Barron-Cooper

Hazel Barron-Cooper is an artist based in the North -East of England whose work focuses on landscape and sense of place. She is currently a postgraduate researcher at Newcastle University. At the centre of her work is her own creative response to the landscape in the form of paintings, sound recordings, writing and object collection. As well as this, an important factor is working with communities who live in the landscapes and gather their views and creative ideas. Currently I am working around the villages of Beltingham and Bardon Mill in Northumberland close to the ancient Roman structure of Hadrian’s Wall.