Fri 5 Jun 20
Students on our MA Curating Studies degree haven鈥檛 let a pandemic and international lockdown stand in the way of developing their skills and have instead launched an innovative virtual exhibition challenging twenty-first century stereotypes of young people.
Originally planned as a physical exhibition in the Colchester Campus-based , instead moved online giving the students a unique set of curating skills.
鈥淭his experience has taught us to be flexible and how to adapt and handle different situations,鈥 said Grace Watson, one of nine students involved in the project.
It has also offered the team other positive opportunities: 鈥淲e have been able to work with a wide range of people and to include more artists than we would normally have space for,鈥 said Grace.
鈥淚t has given us time to experiment, to think creatively about how we can engage the public and artists to maintain a similar experience to one they would have in the gallery. Our exhibition can touch more people as it is no longer confined to gallery walls.鈥
"This experience has taught us to be flexible. It has given us time to experiment, to think creatively about how we can engage the public and artists to maintain a similar experience to one they would have in the gallery."
For the Love of Avocados is inspired by one thing the students, who come from all around the world, have in common, their youth.
Interested in specific themes, such as gender identity, environmental issues and politics, they sought to explore how young people today approach these topics and what the rest of the world thinks about how they respond.
鈥淵oung people today are criticised and deemed to be lazy and entitled,鈥 explained Sarah Lawrence, another member of the team. 鈥淏ut it is a lot harder to be young in modern Britain than people think, and that awareness is something we are trying to communicate.鈥
Young people often criticised for being unable to afford to buy property whilst spending money on coffee and avocados are shown in a different light in this exhibition. Works by artists such as Emma Noone show young people working or seeking alternative routes into academia and working to pay for their studies.
It explores the reality and inequalities of their everyday lives through digital paintings, photography, video and drawings, and features works, including a special commission, by Scott Young, an American artist living in Britain.
"Young people today are criticised and deemed to be lazy and entitled. The works show that we are active and making something of ourselves."
鈥淢ost importantly, the works show that we, as young people, are active and making something of ourselves,鈥 explained Sarah.
鈥淲e hope that from this exhibition young people will feel valued and heard, that they are in control of their own image,鈥 added Grace.
For the Love on Avocados runs until 26 June and is complemented by a series of online and .