Bio and images
“We all need to
understand why we are here; why we exist and how we exist,” observes Jessica
Julius, a Spring 2007 Resident Fellow at the Creative Glass Center of America.
Yet her work suggests that although she finds this question endlessly
intriguing, it is one to which she does not postulate or expect a definitive
answer.
The idea of an
evolving truth makes sense in the context of Julius’s on-going interest in
science, especially physiology, an area of study which is never exhausted as
each answer gives rise to new questions. In various ways within her work, Julius
consistently juxtaposes the specificity of scientific observation with the
mundane sometimes inchoate perceptions of lived experience. This disjuncture of
perceptions is manifested in the silvery glass models of eyes to which she
attached false eyelashes: silly yet rigorous and, yes, eyes in which we see
distorted reflections of our own eyes.
Julius’ 2006 MFA
from the Rochester Institute of Technology, followed up on studies of glass at
Tyler and Pilchuck. At RIT she moved “beyond the limited vocabulary of just the
material [glass]” to concentrate on photography, though mostly of glass.
Perhaps not coincidentally, both fields can be expressive and are inevitably
technically driven. Julius utilized glass with photography throughout her
graduate exhibition “Static Synapse.” Some glass images were cast from the
body, a technique which in this context functions as a primary layer of
imprinting. She then photographed or printed the casts as photograms.
The mouth, Julius
notes, can be “disgusting, beautiful and humorous,” qualities which make it a
flexible, multi-faceted subject. She used a negative cast of her own as the
basis of photograms. The witty, Clenched,
a 5’ long repeating row of teeth cast in glass sandwiched between horizontal
red lips, tells a story or perhaps half a dialogue.
Arbitrarily
reorganized body fragments, illustrate Julius’ interest in morphological and
physiological categories. Where does the finger end and the palm begin? In
addition to differently organized categories, Julius is engaged by “rules about
how things should look.” One of her installations in “Static Synapse” combined
casts of “hybrid” fingers and parts of hands with site specific drawing. Photograms
of these cast elements are labeled as if for scientific study.
Inspired by a
sick cat, the “Spit Print Series,” combines her interest in the mouth with the
observation of the ephemeral and of transformation over time. Julius drooled
onto a sheet of glass and used the bubbly saliva as the basis of a photogram.
The prints provocatively preserve and make beautiful something useless — even
repulsive (once it’s left the mouth).
Julius recognizes
an element of nostalgia in the most ambitious project she tackled during her
CGCA fellowship. With it, she moves from the body as a subject to a focus on
“how we experience things.” She made molds of old milk bottles from pastoral York, PA,
in order to make new glass bottles in the same pattern. The original “artifacts
that represent people and history” were made for the Julius Dairy, a
well-documented business which belonged to her family. Her father has around
fourteen different bottles from the dairy. Bottles from the Shepard Dairy are
owned by a grandmother’s family; Julius may also reproduce those. She hopes to
locate the factory where the bottles were made and incorporate this
information somehow in an installation.
She will make at
least one bronze mold into which she will blow as many as 1,000 bottles,
probably in white glass. She may also cast them experimentally in other materials, but probably not at CGCA. The range of casts will include a negative
bottle in a box. For one installation, she plans a yard-high pyramid of
bottles, as they might have been once displayed.
The
installation and narrative suggested by the bottles may be shown at the York
Historical Society, but Julius also views the milk bottle as an extension of
her on-going interest in morphology and taxonomy. She wants to think about containers
and “how we contain things,” as a broader category
Relating to her
family but in a more contemporary and personal way, Julius is experimenting
with glass parachutes. Small and light, they will be functional, at least until
they touch down. They are designed to “sacrifice themselves to protect the
object” they carry. This project relates to Julius’ brother who is currently
completing his third tour of duty in Iraq. “Every day has its emotional
weight,” she says.
Julius sees her
residency as an opportunity to experiment. “Since grad school I’ve wanted to
say more. Now I can say ‘I feel like doing this so I’m going to.'"