' I have always enjoyed collecting and storing
interesting objects. My work reflects a need to create something new out of something
old'
Jocelyn
Jocelyn will be putting on a joint exhibition with Tony Alcock at the Washington Gallery in the Spring of 2011
-Group exhibition at the Gwyn Hall, Neath, South Wales
-First solo exhibition at the Footlights Gallery at The Grand Theatre, Swansea,
South Wales
-Commission to produce promotional work for the Cardiff Sherman Theatre Christmas
production of "Ho Ho Ho"
-Group exhibition at the Gwyn Hall, Neath, South Wales
-Group exhibition at Rhondda Heritage Park, South Wales
-Group exhibition with Permanent Waves at St David's Hall, Cardiff
Solo exhibition at the Gwyn Hal, Neath, South Wales
-Book cover for Iona Books, for 'Friends and Enemies' by Ruth Burgess
-Feature in Artists & Illustrators (March)
Solo exhibition at the Signature Gallery, Mumbles, Swansea
-Commission to produce promotional work for the Cardiff Sherman Theatre Christmas
production of 'SWANSONGS'
-Joint exhibition with Theresa James at the Nevill Gallery, Llanelli, West Wales
Feature in Carmarthenshire Life magazine
-Solo exhibition at the Washington Gallery, Penarth, South Wales
-Group Christmas
exhibition at the Washington Gallery, Penarth, South Wales
-The All New British Naives group exhibition at the Mariner's Gallery, St
Ives, Cornwall
-Joint exhibition with Theresa James at the Victoria Fearn Gallery, Cardiff
-Group summer exhibition at the Mount Street Gallery, Brecon
-Invited artist for group Christmas exhibition at the Foyer Gallery, St David's
Hall, Cardiff
Fountain Fine Art Llandeilo,
Art Matters ,Tenby
-Deja Vu, Exhibition of Assemblages, Paintings and Jewellry
Jocelyn Prosser has work in collections throughout the UK
Jocelyn Prosser was born in 1964 in Toronto to a French father and a Welsh mother and holds UK and Canadian citizenship. After a family separation, she returned to Wales with her mother, later living with grandparents in Port Talbot, South Wales. At eleven, the young Jocelyn suffered the first of a number of traumas with the death of her mother, an accomplished writer and painter who had studied at Toronto University. A diagnosis of schizophrenia explained the tragedy, but the shock to her daughter was immense.
Jocelyn Prosser attended school in Port Talbot, where she showed an
early interest in painting, but she did not proceed with art studies, preferring
to begin a working life. She had however, already shown herself to be a collector
- not only of articles which are part of her oeuvre, but of ideas and influences.
There was her mother ('an artistic rebel') and an attraction to folk art - from
the primitive Haitian images to Frida Kahlo whom she sees as using art to release
emotional instability. Among her own eclectic primitive art collection are Shona
carvings from Zimbabwe and dolls made in the 1940's. She also cites Swiss painter Paul Klee as an original
with a visionary quality.
Her first real entry into the art world was in 1997, when she began to paint and exhibited in 2001. She recognises the group artcymru.co.uk for its part in helping her to gain confidence and begin more experimental projects.
In the years since, she has held three solo exhibitions and taken part in a number of group shows in Wales. Three years ago, her interest in collecting unusual keepsakes led to an invitation to produce an exhibition of jewellery, with each unique piece accompanied by a detailed history.
In
2007, Jocelyn Prosser began work on a more ambitious project in which she began
to investigate strands of her art and life through compositions of seemingly
unconnected articles. The result after a concentrated period of creation was
Deja Vu, a number of extraordinary assemblages that the artist has made from
her vast holding of objects trouves - found objects. These pieces - often set
inside wooden recycled boxes and drawers - were first shown at the Washington
Gallery, South Wales in Spring 2008.
Special thanks to my friend Therese James, who's website can be found here: