Marianna Simnett


Marianna Simnett is a London-based multi-disciplinary artist who works with film, installation, drawing, and sculpture. She is best known for her large-scale video installations.

Early life and education

Simnett studied at a musical theatre school as a teenager. She received a BA from Nottingham Trent University in 2007 and an MA from the Slade School of Art in 2013. She has a studio in Hoxton.

Themes

Simnett's work examines the perception and imagination of the body. In the works she has created to date, the themes of sickness and the intervention of medicine figure large. Themes of contamination, disease, violation, sexuality, identity, and metamorphosis Central to surrealist visions are issues of vulnerability, autonomy, and control. Simnett cites empathy, trauma, catharsis and the embodiment of these as important themes in her practice. Throughout her body of works and the works themselves is a nonlinear narrative of "bodily dread".

Recurring motifs

Botox figured in Blood In My Milk as well as The Needle and the Larynx, 2016, and Worst Gift, 2017. A recurring character, Isabel Maclaren appears as Isabel in The Udder and Blood Syncope features prominently as a motif in Simnett's work. Fainting is a central motif in Faint which was later expanded upon with Faint With Light.

Practice

Simnett works with non-actors: children, farmers, doctors, scientists. She make extensive use of abrupt transitions from one sequence to another. She offers a fragmented representation of multi-faceted reality. Simnett re-uses footage from early works; Blood In My Milk merges footage from her trilogy with Worst Gift, a reprise of The Needle and The Larynx.

Critical commentary

"Her recent work explores female subjectivity and bodily integrity as they relate to the power dynamics of the medical profession". "employed the forensic and macabre to elicit a visceral reaction from viewers" Simnett focuses on the dystopic consequences of technology through a psychosexual lens Simnett's work elicits a physical response though its depiction of physiological processes and techniques such as dreamlike sequences contrasted with hyper-real scenarios and the use of music. Simnett induces the same emotions, such as fear, that she enacts in her work. Her work has been said to combine mythic structures with the aesthetics of medical documentaries. "Simnett composes fanciful narratives, employing leaps of logic while creating intentional slippages among her characters’ identities, genders, and physiognomies". References Donna Haraway and Paul B. Preciado. Simnett's consideration of self-preservation mobilizes feminist concerns without becoming prescriptive.

Influences

Her practice has been influenced by Jenny Holzer, Barbara Kruger and Cindy Sherman. Simnett credits Bruce Nauman with getting her into moving-image work, and cites Derek Jarman as a "huge influence". Simnett has affinity to Mika Rottenberg.
"Transformation is much more my message than amputation—transformation is through and through my work. Everyone is always becoming something other than themselves.”

Works

Exhibited at the New Museum in New York, the Kunsthalle Zürich, the Serpentine Gallery in London.

Awards

In 2014 she won the Jerwood Foundation's Jerwood/FVU Awards. Jerwood commissioned The Udder and Blood.