Hammer Chen
£0.00
Hammer Chen is a multi-disciplinary printmaking artist. After graduating from the University of Arts London in 2016, she got the RE Gwen May Recent Graduate Award from the Royal Society of Painter- Printmakers. In 2017, Hammer founded her own printmaking studio in Shanghai (China), Wait and Roll printmaking studio. Hammer’s works are informed by the idea of memory, fleeting moments, nostalgia, and the sense of the cinematic. Her images are not from a lived reality, they are imagined memories, rebuilt from collective experiences. She starts from a photographic archive or subjects she is repeatedly drawn to —the light in the dark, the potential interaction of characters. It’s like a scene from a stage set, a kind of connected disconnection. The setting is open to interpretation, there is a tension or expectation, the anticipation of what is about to happen.
Quantity:
Hammer Chen is a multi-disciplinary printmaking artist. After graduating from the University of Arts London in 2016, she got the RE Gwen May Recent Graduate Award from the Royal Society of Painter- Printmakers. In 2017, Hammer founded her own printmaking studio in Shanghai (China), Wait and Roll printmaking studio. Hammer’s works are informed by the idea of memory, fleeting moments, nostalgia, and the sense of the cinematic. Her images are not from a lived reality, they are imagined memories, rebuilt from collective experiences. She starts from a photographic archive or subjects she is repeatedly drawn to —the light in the dark, the potential interaction of characters. It’s like a scene from a stage set, a kind of connected disconnection. The setting is open to interpretation, there is a tension or expectation, the anticipation of what is about to happen.
Hammer Chen is a multi-disciplinary printmaking artist. After graduating from the University of Arts London in 2016, she got the RE Gwen May Recent Graduate Award from the Royal Society of Painter- Printmakers. In 2017, Hammer founded her own printmaking studio in Shanghai (China), Wait and Roll printmaking studio. Hammer’s works are informed by the idea of memory, fleeting moments, nostalgia, and the sense of the cinematic. Her images are not from a lived reality, they are imagined memories, rebuilt from collective experiences. She starts from a photographic archive or subjects she is repeatedly drawn to —the light in the dark, the potential interaction of characters. It’s like a scene from a stage set, a kind of connected disconnection. The setting is open to interpretation, there is a tension or expectation, the anticipation of what is about to happen.