Skip to main content

julietteflach
30th October 2018

Look up at art: Kate Daudy

Juliette Flach examines how artist, Kate Daudy, spreads human experiences across the seas through the power of art in her latest project, ‘Look up’.
Categories:
TLDR
Look up at art: Kate Daudy
Photo: Juliette Flach

For ten days, Manchester has been one of the hosts of the ‘Journeys International’ art festival. There have been a wide array of events happening all over Greater Manchester; a participant who remained throughout the festival was Kate Daudy, whose art projects did not fail to impress.

Messages were scattered around the city from Fish and Chip shops to the side of Selfridges. Her artwork is based on the traditional Chinese practise of writing over objects as both an expression of the current owner, and the meaning they place upon it. However, this latest project was also connected with, and inspired by, the experience of refugees.

During the early stages of the development of her art, Daudy visited refugees, asking what they wanted her to convey. One of the key messages she found refugees wanted to express, was an appreciation of the life we are leading on a day-to-day basis. From this beginning came both the ‘Am I my brother’s keeper?’ and the ‘Look up’ projects.

Both projects consist of diffusing messages through the use of colourful felt. ‘Am I my brother’s keeper?’ is an art installation in the Manchester Art Gallery. Daudy has covered a ‘UN High Commission for Refugees’ desert tent (which a family lived in for several months) in colourful, yet harrowing words, alongside bright crochet made by internationally displaced women in refugee camps.

The ‘Look up’ project broadcasts these important messages into the pathways of ordinary people living their everyday lives, making people across Manchester stop and take note. Whilst they perhaps do not fully appreciate the meaning hidden behind the letters, the ‘Look up’ project allows viewers to interpret them as they wish.

This is not a new concept. Throughout time, humans have expressed thoughts and feelings through words and symbols depicted on walls and objects. Although the medium, message, and motivations may change, the desire to put across a thought through art remains.

I found Daudy’s installations to be particularly poignant as she unites the messages drawn from the experiences of refugees and uses them to interrupt the day-to-day lives of those living miles away. Daudy takes street art to a whole new level, spreading human experience across the seas through the medium of art.


More Coverage

40 Years of the Future: Painting abstract exhibition review

The abstract and the figurative collide in the thought-provoking first installation of Castlefield Gallery’s 40th Anniversary celebrations

Review: Please Feel Free to Ignore My Work by David Hoyle

This month, Factory International’s Aviva Studios welcomes renowned artist David Hoyle, in a three week residency spanning multiple art forms.

Making Manchester #1: Anna Marsden

We’re kicking off our new feature, Making Manchester, by quizzing photographer Anna Marsden about her practice and what inspires her

Four women who make the art world a better place

To celebrate International Women’s Day 2024, we asked our writers to tell us a bit about their favourite women artists.