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Ground Floor, Plan IV: Plan of Ground Floor Of Borley Rectory After it Was Destroyed by Fire on February 27th 1939, Showing Rooms Damaged by Fire and Print

Hannah Taggart

United Kingdom

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About The Artwork

Ground Floor Plan of Borley Rectory. Borley Rectory has been referred to as 'the most haunted house in England'. This was on account of the events that occurred there. The building and its ground were subject to phenomena such as ghostly apparitions, messages from the dead, poltergeist activity and phantom sounds. Borley Rectory was destroyed by fire, as the grounds burnt a nun dressed in grey was sighted slipping away from the inferno. The paper may appear a little crumpled as I have used old paper from the 1950's. I often draw on top of old plans. These plans often have large areas without any print. I have used these segments for the Borley Rectory drawings. I used old paper as I wanted the drawings them to feel that they have come from the past.

Details & Dimensions

Print:Giclee on Fine Art Paper

Size:12 W x 8 H x 0.1 D in

Size with Frame:17.25 W x 13.25 H x 1.2 D in

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I create sculpture, animation, installations, drawings and sound pieces. For inspiration I look to: Susie Templeton, Kara Walker, Yuri Norstein, Hew Locke, Susan Hiller, Ruth Ringgold, Tove Jansson and Willard Wigan. I'm currently creating a stop motion animation 'Heirlooms', which is about a group of children who are haunted by the faceless ghost of Peg Prowler. The voyeuristic aspect of my work may stem from a childhood wish to gain access to restricted spaces (such as a hidden room in a dollhouse). My work involves the frustration of being prevented from fulfilling wishes, by only allowing glimpses of these inaccessible worlds. By creating intricate, small worlds I am suggesting the desire to retreat from something threatening like society. Yet I am also interested in the contradictions and conflict this inspires; it appears that by reducing the world to a small and repetitious environment you create a sense of safety, but perhaps all you are doing is internalising the initial threat. Images such as rats eating from dining room tables not only evoke feelings of disgust but of childish play. I am perhaps attempting to control fragile memories and perceptions of childhood built on cardboard foundations. The structures I create are deliberately unsecure, unsound, in order to summon up an atmosphere of unease, this is a fragile world that could topple down at any moment. Cardboard is also interesting to work with, as it is often viewed as a 'poor' material, only salvaged by the dispossessed.

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