D.O.B:
Julia Feyrer (b. 1982, Lkwungen Territory, Canada; lives/works: unceded lands of the Tsleil-Waututh, Skxwú7mesh and Musqueam) roots their practice in a material engagement with celluloid filmmaking and sculpture, with emphasis on the body’s relationship to these media. They conceive of the camera as a bodily extension of the human sensorium—a device through which one can feel time and perception, and thereby aid or alter one’s experience of the world. Feyrer has an interest in herbals, which relates to this experimentation in aiding and altering perception. In their approach to sculpture, they incorporates material and objects from home and studio into cast objects and installations—from brushes and moulds to mirrors, coins, and herbal remedies. Feyrer often links their film to their sculptures, by positioning the gallery installation as film set; this method also creates overlaps from one project to the next. In their film Escape Scenes (2014), Feyrer takes a classic...