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Imogen Budetti:

BE/LONGING
 
Imogen Budetti
Sociology and Health & Society major
 

Having grown up in an artist community in San Francisco, I've spent much of my life learning about and making art. In recent years, my work has been influenced by my academic training at Wellesley: particularly, an interest in sociology and geographic information system mapping. Through my work I have been exploring how history persists today through family ties, identity, and the built environment. In light of these themes, research and accuracy are very important aspects of my work. Photography lends itself to the accuracy I value, and although I have been focusing less on my actual photography, the use of photographs remains an integral part of my practice.

 
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Ulster
paper, Dura-lar, black ink, archival inkjet prints
2021
Jewett Hallway Galleries
 
an open book spread. The left page is a map with the top half shaded in blue. The right page is a ghostly tan overlay of a figure with some sort of atmosphere, perhaps flames, in the background.
 
 
I decided to make this book after living in Belfast for 6 months. Because I lived there during COVID, I spent a lot of time walking through the city. Much of this project was informed by my observations and photographs from these walks. This book is an illustration of the physical manifestation of conflict, division, and sectarianism. The built environment in Belfast is in many ways responding to persistent conflict, and through this book I hope to elucidate how the built environment is not passive, but rather informs present identities and communities.
 
Appearing at the beginning of the book are GIS maps that I made. As far as I've found, my map is the most complete and up-to-date publicly available map of peace lines in Belfast. It includes all aspects of the built urban environment that act as impenetrable barriers: peace lines, freeways, and train tracks. In conversation with the walls is census data that illustrates the concentration of Protestant and Catholic communities.
 
an open brook spread. The left page is a hand-drawn recreation of a mural on a building depicting masked people with guns. The right page shows another mural of people with guns on a building under a sign reading 'EARLY KIDS' in cheerful font.
 
A small blue book on a stand  and white fabric gloves on a white pedestal. The wall behind is gray fabric, and there are 4 color photographs of Belfast locations pinned to the wall above the book.
 
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Jane
paper, laser toner prints
2022
Jewett Hallway Galleries
 
a digital drawing of a faceless woman with short blonde hair and a union jack dress holding a flag. Behind her are other women in a kind of conga line, with gray forms in the far background.   a digital drawing of blank white-faced women with black hair and clothing. In the background is green text repeating the phrase "Madeleine is a right bitch mother"
 
 
I've always been interested in oral histories. For this project, I interviewed my Gran about her childhood in England between 1940 and 1957. She was born as WWII began and was evacuated from London at only 3 years old. After the war, she attended a Catholic all-girls boarding school. Through her own words and my illustrations, this book shares her memories.
 
I decided to make this book an accordion so that it can be fully opened and viewed as a continuous timeline of her childhood. Research played an important role in the design of this book. I sourced the colors from popular house paints from the 1940s. The typefaces I chose would have been utilized in that time period-- Johnston, being the font of the London Underground, is still in use today. To create my drawings, I referenced family photographs. However, because many of these moments were not captured, I relied heavily on museum archives as well.
 
a white table with a very long accordion book opened across it
 
close up on part of an accordion book, showing illustrations of faceless people
 
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