H. JENNINGS SHEFFIELD
  • Photographic Projects
    • Going Away From Here (2017-Present) >
      • Artist Statement
      • Chapter 1 | Black and White Images
      • Chapter 2 | Color Images
      • Going Away from Here Artist Book
    • TETHERED >
      • Artist Statement
      • Tethered (2011–2013)
      • TETHERED, revisited 5 years later (2019-2020)
    • The Collective Glitch (2015-2018) >
      • Artist Statement
    • Kalapana Gardens (2014)
    • A Momentary Glitch (2013-2014)
    • 16 Seconds (2011)
  • Video & Installation Art
  • PAST EXHIBITIONS AND LECTURES
  • ABOUT
    • CV
    • Contact
  • Collaborations
    • CONSTRUCTING THE PSYCHOGRAPHIC (2018)
    • FAMILY AS THE VERNACULAR (2014-2015)
    • Transitory Spaces (2012)
  • ACQUIRE PRINTS
  • Community Projects
    • 2005 Sculpture Invitational
    • 2006 Richmond Outdoor Sculpture Exhibition
  • Carol
    • Chapter 2: Color
    • People
Throughout my career as an artist, I have focused on how to convey experiences or emotional responses photographically. Since they are multidimensional, it is difficult to capture them in a single image. I am specifically interested in how to represent an incident or emotion in its entirety--illustrating all sides of the story in one singular image. It quickly became apparent to me how ineffective a singular image is in communicating the full spectrum of an experience or emotion. Over the course of multiple bodies of work, I have researched a myriad of ways in which to merge different representations of an experience or emotion into a single image.

In my body of work, Tethered (2011-2013), I photographed every 30 minutes for four months, documenting my life as I performed my daily roles of artist, mother, teacher, wife and daughter. This body of work investigated the tethering-effect we experience everyday, by portraying
what a specific period of time looks like during different days of the week, as I balance my various roles throughout the week. Pulling from thousands of images, I chose four to six images from the same time of day, but on different days of the week. Once selected, I digitally sliced the chosen images into vertical strips of information. I then reintegrated all the vertical slices to create a single, compressed image of time. Each print illustrates what a two-hour period of time looks like over different days of the week. Once compressed, as in real life, the different events and interactions inevitably merge into a singular life experience.
 
In my next body of work A Momentary Glitch (2013-2014), I utilized the universal language of Morse code scratched into the back of DVDs to create glitches, resulting in a new memory or moment. What if we could create our own glitches and mix our own moments and memories? Highly inspired by the methodologies of John Cage and his belief that "music composed through chance procedures could become something beautiful," I recorded everyday life moments around me. All of the recordings echo the idea of family moments or archives, and prompt the viewer to play witness to these intimate moments. I then edited the video clips and still images together into a digital timeline and burned the new timeline onto a DVD. Using the universal and visual language of Morse code, I inscribed words or descriptors into the burned information on the back of the DVD. The markings created disturbances in the video and catches in the progression of time. As the disturbances and catches in imagery occurred on the TV, I captured it with my camera. The resulting imagery blended multiple experiences into one, thus confusing the memory, and created a new moment.
 
In my latest research, The Collective Glitch (2015-2017), I again returned to utilizing Morse code, but this time as a visual matrix in order to bring multiple data sources together to merge them into one singular image. The Collective Glitch investigates the idea of collective imagery through appropriation. What would 16 different images look like when collected, deconstructed, and then woven together like the making of a tapestry? I requested ten images from a collective of people based on emblematic words. Some were images they personally photographed, some were images they pulled off the internet, and some were from personal family archives, however, all the images were personal and intimate to them. Utilizing a vertical version of Morse code, I deconstruct each image into code format. Then, I weave the code from all 16 images digitally back together to create a single, compressed image. The resulting image is an amalgamation of all 16 people’s images. As a result, the work invites the viewer to draw upon their own cultural experiences to define the visual data being presented to them. As a result, the work invites the viewer to draw upon their own cultural experiences to define the visual data being presented to them—asking the question, in today’s society, is this what portrait/family/home/hero/moment/fear/birthday/tragedy/hope looks like? 
ALL CONTENT © 2009–2020 H. JENNINGS SHEFFIELD
  • Photographic Projects
    • Going Away From Here (2017-Present) >
      • Artist Statement
      • Chapter 1 | Black and White Images
      • Chapter 2 | Color Images
      • Going Away from Here Artist Book
    • TETHERED >
      • Artist Statement
      • Tethered (2011–2013)
      • TETHERED, revisited 5 years later (2019-2020)
    • The Collective Glitch (2015-2018) >
      • Artist Statement
    • Kalapana Gardens (2014)
    • A Momentary Glitch (2013-2014)
    • 16 Seconds (2011)
  • Video & Installation Art
  • PAST EXHIBITIONS AND LECTURES
  • ABOUT
    • CV
    • Contact
  • Collaborations
    • CONSTRUCTING THE PSYCHOGRAPHIC (2018)
    • FAMILY AS THE VERNACULAR (2014-2015)
    • Transitory Spaces (2012)
  • ACQUIRE PRINTS
  • Community Projects
    • 2005 Sculpture Invitational
    • 2006 Richmond Outdoor Sculpture Exhibition
  • Carol
    • Chapter 2: Color
    • People