Jessica Harrison graduated with a Master in Fine Arts from Edinburgh University in 2005 and later received a Master of Fine Arts from Edinburgh College of Art in 2007. In her works on paper, she draws on a style of representation that is reminiscent of editions being produced in previous centuries. This style combined with a use of contemporary imagery lends her work a gravitas and, simultaneously, a sense of playfulness. Fear dominates the work: its creation, its pervasive nature and its manipulation. Fear is the main focus of her research, her motivation to make work and a personal obsession that generates the surreal, sinister and sometimes comical juxtapositions in her drawings and sculpture. She is quoted as having this to say about her works:
"I would describe my work as focusing on the division between the familiar and the unfamiliar, the interior and the exterior, and the fearful and the feared ending in a xenotransplantation of parts and a narrative of monstrosity. Portraits of fear, dislocated from the body – the work is the result of a guilty surveillance, an observation of that which is private, a peep show of anxiety."
Another great talent of artist Jessica Harrison is how she undermines and perverts the kitschy sentimentality of porcelain figurines by “breaking” them, casting a macabre twist on the familiar decorative art form. 19th-century ladies with vacantly blithe expressions hold their own severed, gory-edged head in their lap, gaily dangle their bloody eyeballs above them, and with fleshless, skeletal face recline daintily on a chaise longue. I would love to have these doll-sculptures in my home, they are such clever miniature subversions of prim and happy porcelain figurines, having a dimension of interest that the traditional harmlessly sweet figurines never possess.


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