Julia Vance
With abstract calligraphic lines, Julia Vance creates sculptural forms in white Italian Statuario marble. She tells us how she created a modern altar, font and pulpit for a new church in Hønefoss, Norway, which replaced the previous church which had burnt down.
Julia Vance, Altar, font and pulpit, 2017, white Italian Statuario marble, New Hønefoss Church, Norway. Photo: RingBlad, Anne Gro Christensen
Julia Vance, Altar, 2017. Photo: Helene C Jenssen
Julia Vance, Altar, font and pulpit, 2017. Photo: Stefano Baroni
In this episode, Julia describes a piece she was finishing called Passage to Knowledge. Carved in black granite, this monumental sculpture is like a huge letter Q, signifying a question. It comprises a circle with a tail, and is a portal you can pass through.
Julia believes the value of questions is far more important than students being filled up with answers. Passage to Knowledge was unveiled in the schoolyard of the newly opened Flesberg school, Norway, in September 2019. Julia created the piece to honour curiosity and encourage children to engage and play with it.
Julia Vance, Passage to Knowledge, 2019, granite, 220 × 340 × 190 cm. Photo: Nicola Gnesi
Julia working on Passage to Knowledge at Studio Georgio Angeli, Querceta
Another work which plays with calligraphic forms is HOLD #2. This sculpture is inspired by the sweeping lines and curves of the letters H, L and D. The piece invites you to curl up inside the cavity and become the missing letter O. Before going on display in Holland Park, London, HOLD #2 was shown in front of the Norwegian Parliament.
Julia Vance, HOLD #2, 2013, white Italian marble, 160 × 140 × 140 cm. Photo: Stefano Baroni
The sculpture group WE-ME #5 was inspired by the idea that the word ‘me’ can easily be turned upside-down to form a ‘we’, much the same way an individual ‘me’ can join a group and become part of a ‘we’. First displayed in 2014 in front of Oslo Central station, the piece has wheels fastened to the side allowing members of the public to rotate the words.
Julia Vance, WE-ME #5, 2014, welded steel, 190 × 290 × 180 cm. Photo: Julia Vance
Since 2005 Julia has divided her time between Norway and Italy, creating her letter- and word-inspired sculptures. Having spent most of the pandemic in Norway, she is looking forward to returning to her studio in Pietrasanta to work on new commissions.
Credits
Producer: Sarah Monk
Sound edit/design: Guy Dowsett
Thanks to Coro Versilia for the music in Julia's episode. This extraordinary choir are an important part of Pietrasanta's artistic community and perform at many unveilings of finished marble commissions.
Music: courtesy of Audio Network
Sour Grapes 2 1449/47, Paul Mottram
World of Imagination 2568/2, Barrie Gledden, Paul Clarvis
He dragged me here and I went there in the morning and I thought, here everything is possible. To me it looked as if they were pulling the stone and it was the white marble. It was as if they were pulling the stone as if it was syrup, as if it was elastic, as if they could just swing it and push it and bend it. And I thought, this is much more than I’ve ever seen before. I had been working with stone before that in England and in Norway.
Julia Vance:So I immediately fixed the date that I would come back a month later or something to work. I think I made an appointment to stay for one month or maybe two. And that just continued. And that is, what, thirteen years ago, fourteen years ago.
Sarah Monk:Hi. This is Sarah with another episode of Materially Speaking, where artists tell their stories through the materials they choose. Today, I’m talking to Norwegian artist Julia Vance, whose creative journey began in calligraphy. Always interested in the three-dimensional form of letters and words, Julia’s work has been described as sculptural minimalist poetry. Her style is contemporary, but she often carves in the most classic of materials, marble.
Sarah Monk:I met with her twice before the pandemic. First, over a glass of wine where she told me about a commission for a new altar, font, and pulpit for a church in Norway which had burnt down. The church wanted to create something new which would connect to their worshipers in a very modern style. Julia also describes a piece she created with an offcut from the altar. Later, I met with her at her studios, Giorgio Angeli’s in Querceta.
Sarah Monk:It was a sweltering dusty day, and in 40 degree heat, she was sitting inside an enormous black granite ring, perfecting a work called Passage to Knowledge, inspired by the letter Q. She was working flat out, as the deadline was fast approaching to ship it to its new home, a school playground in Norway. Can we start by you introducing yourself? So your name and where you were born?
Julia Vance:Where I was born is really irrelevant because it was while my parents were moving around.
Sarah Monk:Okay. You don’t have an attachment to that.
Sarah Monk:Where do you consider that? Hamburg.
Julia Vance:Really?
Julia Vance:Yeah. I have my mom’s and my dad’s nationality, but I feel Norwegian.
Sarah Monk:And what are your mom’s and dad’s nationalities?
Julia Vance:Oh, sorry. He’s American. My mom’s Norwegian. Coming here, I’m one of many who has joint or treble or quadruple nationalities.
Sarah Monk:Really?
Sarah Monk:Yeah. So where were you brought up then?
Julia Vance:From the age of four, lived in Norway. And then I’ve been travelling since then because my family was split up. So I’ve always been swinging between airports and different traditions for Christmases and other holidays. I did have an artistic education, but I also was sailing for a year on a tall ship. I did printing.
Julia Vance:I worked in an advertising company. I needed a job. Then I narrowed in on lettering and calligraphy. Eventually that took me into working in the surface of stone with inscriptions and then suddenly found I was working more and more into this surface of the stone. So I went beyond working relief work and then suddenly it was sculpture.
Julia Vance:And that’s more fun.
Sarah Monk:When did that happen?
Julia Vance:About fifteen years ago. Before that I was working in relief for many years.
Sarah Monk:In relief carving?
Julia Vance:Mhmm.
Sarah Monk:What sort of things were you doing then?
Julia Vance:I was working in slate and working with line traces of a brush or a pen. It could be also legible letter shapes. And then it just needed more strength or force. When I was working in relief on a surface, the line I was looking for, call it a line, the shape, I was carving that away from the surface. And at a certain point I started doing the opposite.
Julia Vance:I kept what I had my attention on and I carved away everything around it and then it became freestanding. Before that I had travelled in Japan. I remember meeting a calligrapher, a master calligrapher. He was telling me without words really because he was speaking Japanese and I don’t speak Japanese and he didn’t speak English or Norwegian but he helped me understand how he was working on not just the line but the in between the lines was just as important. So I think this person really made an impression on me for several reasons.
Julia Vance:Anyway, I ended up turning the focus or a little bit of keeping, keeping what I had the focus on and carving everything else away.
Sarah Monk:And what brought you to Pietrasanta? How did you first hear about Pietrasanta?
Julia Vance:A beautiful friend started saying to me, ‘Ah, there’s a place in Italy which is called ‘Tata Tata Tata’ and I never got what the name was. And this was sort of before I had understood that you could look things up on the internet. And he said, you must go there. You would love it.’ And I thought, ‘Yeah, yeah, this is what all the older people say.’ And in the end he dragged me here. He was making a documentary about a Norwegian older sculptor called Knut Steen.
Julia Vance:He dragged me here. He was going to film this old sculptor in the studio. And I went there in the morning and I thought, wow, Here everything is possible. And to me it looked as if they were pulling the stone and it was the white marble. It was as if they were pulling the stone as if it was syrup, as if it was elastic, as if they could just swing it and push it and bend it.
Julia Vance:And I thought, this is much more than I’ve ever seen before. You know, I had been working with stone before that in England and in Norway. And so I immediately fixed the date that I would come back a month later or something to work. And just for I think I made an appointment to stay for one month or maybe two. And that just continued.
Julia Vance:And that is, what, thirteen years ago, fourteen years ago.
Sarah Monk:How did you learn the skills?
Julia Vance:I started learning to work in stone from a letter carver in England, Tom Perkins, who lives up near Cambridge. I stayed with him and his wife, Gaynor Ruff. It was a sort of exchange. I looked after a dog and I picked up some kids from school and in exchange I was learning how to carve. And then I went back to Norway and I was doing some carving there.
Julia Vance:I’ve not really gone to a school but always, you know, if you’re standing next to skilled people and you watch how they are doing, I’ve met beautiful people on the way who have, you know, maybe seen that I’m hungry to learn so they’ve lent me their tools or shown me some techniques. Sometimes now I see that I meet somebody who maybe has that same hunger, so it’s my turn to show some others in between how to do.
Sarah Monk:Did you start working in marble when you came here or did you continue in other stone?
Julia Vance:Yes, when I came here I started working in marble. Before that had well, funnily enough I’d worked also in Italian slate. Various types of slate: Norwegian, English, Italian. I’d worked in soapstone. I think I’d worked in granite.
Julia Vance:In Norway that’s the main material really, granite. And then coming here to Italy, the most easy material to get hold of is marble. It’s really what it’s all about.
Sarah Monk:What’s your favourite?
Julia Vance:It changes, it changes. Just now I’m working on some granite and I’m suddenly falling in fresh love. Can you say that? Falling in love again?
Julia Vance:The project I’m working on just now is a commission for a school in Norway.
Julia Vance:It started, I think two years ago. But the first year is just to get a contract fixed on paper and signed, which is important when you’re working on your own to have all the agreements safely noted down. They really wanted me to use some Norwegian local stone, and then I eventually found out they didn’t really even know the name of the local stone themselves. And I found out that I would do the commission down here in Italy again. And for me it was actually better to not bring Norwegian stone down to Italy and then back to Norway again, but to find some granite down here in Italy.
Julia Vance:It does turn out that it’s Brazilian granite, which I will then bring to Norway to warm up the little place called Fleursberg. I think that will work out really well.
Sarah Monk:The school commission. Can you describe it in words?
Julia Vance:The title is Passage to Knowledge. So for me, what is a school? A place where you mature, a little person will grow emotionally and mentally and physically. And so this is like a big circle and through this circle is a wave. And a small kid will be able to stand inside the circle on top of this wave.
Julia Vance:You can also see it as the letter Q, a huge letter. So a circle with a tail. I work with letter shapes, not always. So this is both a portal, something you can go through and I know with our bodies, I mean any hole opening, it attracts us. You want to put your arm through or try to see if you can fit your body through it.
Julia Vance:To walk through stone is also kind of magical. And then this, also resembling the letter Q which can be an abbreviation for the question and in connection with the school I find the question being the most important. Not all the answers. You can drown if somebody gives you all the answers, but the openness, the curiosity, the wandering, the fumbling around to find out, that’s important.
Sarah Monk:So it’ll be like a question in the schoolyard?
Julia Vance:Yeah, it will be in front of the entrance, the main entrance to the school. And on Wednesday next week they will start making the concrete foundation. They wanted me to come and check whether the foundation was done correctly, but I’m busy. I have to finish the thing here. So I think they’ll just have to make do with all the drawings I’ve sent them.
Sarah Monk:What other commissions have you done in the last few years that you’re proud of?
Julia Vance:A church in Norway burnt down, and they were wondering whether to make a copy of the old church, which was a wooden traditional building, or go totally modern. And they did. And with a very good architect company they finally decided to make a very modern new building. It’s a curved roof. It looks in profile like a ski jump.
Julia Vance:The input I got I initially got into the job because I was going to make the artwork of the floor and then they needed somebody to also do the altar and the pulpit and the font. They asked me if I could do this also. And I saw the drawings of the architects. The church wasn’t ready yet and I just saw this beautiful curve on the roof and I thought, okay, alright, that’s my key. And at the same time I was thinking, I’ve seen a lot of altars which look like big heavy boxes.
Julia Vance:For me this room where people are thinking, having their belief I don’t believe in particular religion myself but I am thinking and I have respect for the strongest thoughts we have. In that room it should be space and openness for all the thoughts. So the shape of the altar had to in some way convey openness. And so I ended up making it as a well all these three elements the altar, the font and the pulpit they are linked together in that they resemble as if you take three brush strokes in the air and then you freeze them. And so the altar is like a curve.
Julia Vance:You see through it, so the table, the surface for the priest to put the candles or whatever on top, and then it goes down on the side and it curves, and then it comes back again on the bottom. So you see through the table onto the priest behind it and the table part is hanging in mid air, in a way. And the priest’s first reaction when he saw the little model was, Oh no, the congregation, they can see my legs! And then the art consultant, she said, No, no, no, it’s okay because you’re wearing the religious clothes, so it’s not you they’re seeing, they are seeing the priests. Today he’s very happy with the altar, all the priests there.
Julia Vance:I even got a picture the other day where they had some young kids who were lying inside the altar with their little mobile phones, having a little break.
Julia Vance:But that was very exciting to make something which is going to be there for a very long time and it’s going to be the focus of people’s eyes for so many hours. So it had to also be clean, be strong, not distract, convey the openness. And then this curvy shape is repeated in all the three elements.
Sarah Monk:Yeah. It’s interesting because so much of the older marble work here was for churches. But I haven’t heard other people talk about doing modern work for churches.
Julia Vance:Yeah, well, it’s probably as close as I will get to doing religious work.
Sarah Monk:You’re working on a piece which was an offcut. I’m not sure if it was from the altar or from something else, but it looks different depths or widths from each end.
Julia Vance:For me at least, I find it interesting when approaching a sculpture, if is of such a size that I can walk around it, that I am drawn to the other side of it, that I need to look at it from different angles. Because if I can get all the information from one side, I don’t have to move. And then in one way it might just as well be a painting or a photograph or a drawing. It doesn’t have to be a surprise on the other side, but it can’t be a total different language on the other side. It has to hang together if it’s one piece, at least for me.
Julia Vance:The piece which we initially cut out of the inside of the altar, that material became the font. The font where the baby has the water on its head and all of that. So the font was sort of born from the altar. But the block was a little bit too big still. The slab which we cut off was 25 centimeters thick and that’s what I made this tall sculpture of.
Julia Vance:In a way I’m using perspective. Seeing it from one side it also has a boldness, it looks wide, big, fat. And then when you walk around it, then you understand that it is only very narrow, it’s only 25 centimeters, which is nothing. So it kind of kids the eye in a way. And I also just try to take away all unnecessary clean up.
Sarah Monk:It’s very beautiful. And what’s next?
Julia Vance:Then when this commission is done within the next month, my brain is free to start working on the commission. No, sorry, exhibition. It sounds the same. That will be a solo show I have up in Norway next year. And there will be some metal pieces, quartz and steel, and also some, well, marble and also some alabaster pieces.
Julia Vance:I haven’t got it all sorted out yet. But it’s a lot of time. Well, it’s not a lot of time.
Sarah Monk:It’s plenty of time. So have you got artists who you consider your influences? People either living or dead that you
Julia Vance:Oh, there are a lot of fantastic artists. There’s a Norwegian sculptor artist called Nils Aas who for me was one of the first magicians I got to know about in the way that he could in any material make something fantastic. If it was a steel thread or a piece of paper, just a block of wood. For me it means also a lot to see the work of strong female artists, but not just because they’re female. When I see the work of Barbara Hepworth, it just feels good to see.
Julia Vance:I remember sitting in one museum once watching one of her pieces and it felt a little bit as if I could see her thinking how she had been thinking when she’d been working, even though, I mean, she died a long time ago. Coming here to Italy, I really started understanding, oh, I’m just, you know, I’m one of many. Understanding that a lot of other people have made before me And in a way, we’re like a chain of beads, one after the other. Somebody’s been doing before me and I’m doing now, and somebody’s going to be doing after me again. I’ve been told that there used to be something like 60 little stone carving studios down in the center of Pietrasanta and you would hear whistling and the from the chisels because it was before you had music in your ears and an angle grinder.
Julia Vance:Okay, I use pneumatic tools, I use electric tools, I’ve also used robots. Now when I’m working on bigger pieces, I’m realising if I was to do all this by myself, it would be quite limited how many pieces I would be able to do. And so I get help in roughing out. And I’ve had people people, real people, rough out for me. And I’ve also used robots to rough out for me.
Julia Vance:It’s quite different, but in a way it’s doing the same job. I have to learn to work together with both. There are challenges with both and advantages with both.
Julia Vance:Well, it’s been a long big job, but two weeks left. And then it has to be finished because I’m going home to Oslo for the summer. So just some final details and mounting it together in just over a week’s time, just to make sure that the pieces fit together. We haven’t tried it yet. It will fit. And then wrap it up and put it in big crates and on the truck to Norway.
Sarah Monk:So how long does the packaging process take?
Julia Vance:Piero will come and and take measurements for the boxes on Saturday, and he makes them in his studio. So he just arrives with brilliant finished crates and we put them in. It takes with this half a day to put it in boxes.
Sarah Monk:So you’re sitting inside the circle which is the the o and behind you is the little bit that’s the Q.
Julia Vance:Yeah. Well, it’s that bit that bit. This bit here
Sarah Monk:What is this?
Julia Vance:It’s in two it’s in two pieces. The the wave which goes through the circle. Yeah. When I’m sitting inside here, it’s easier to get to these surfaces.
Sarah Monk:You’re in the shade, but it is like 40 degrees today, isn’t it?
Julia Vance:Yes. Yes. So I’m not doing much else than this. I’m not planning my taxes or anything else, serious thought wise.
Sarah Monk:Yeah.
Julia Vance:No, it’s okay. It’s okay.
Sarah Monk:Yeah. Do you sign your pieces, Julia, or not?
Julia Vance:Oh, God. I forgot that. Oh, sorry.
Sarah Monk:Do you put your name or do you have an icon or something?
Julia Vance:I put J Vance because if I just put J V, nobody’s gonna know who J V is. There are many J V’s. But Jay Vance, then people can find me if they want and the year. And I do that because I like to see that on pieces, whether it’s sculpture or drawing or films or music.
Julia Vance:I mean, I’m interested to know who’s done things, who’s made it. And I think it’s important that we do put our name on it.
Sarah Monk:And do you do some sort of send off or any of this time? Do you have like a drink and show your friends in peace?
Julia Vance:Yeah, yeah. We’re gonna do a small drink here probably over there in the olive garden like I did last time with the big pieces before I sent them off. And a friend is actually checking with a harpist. Maybe I’ll have some nice music, a little bit to eat. And it’s it means a lot to me to get the chance to show what I’m working on to my colleagues here. They are important to me.
Julia Vance:The choir here, the old guys, the old artigiani of
Julia Vance:Apezzano Monte, Coro Versilia. They are thinking of coming up and singing up in Skien in the Norwegian town when I have my opening. It’s quite amazing.
Julia Vance:So I’ll get some marble from here and I’ll get some fantastic older guys up for singing. Versilia, and I know them quite well and I’ve done some translation for them and I feel kind of adopted by them. And they have a twin town with Sheeran where I’m doing the exhibition.
Julia Vance:So they already have a connection. And then when they heard that I’m doing an exhibition there, they wanna come up again and do a concert. So I’m sort of moving Italy to Norway. I’ll be October in a little bit over a year.
Sarah Monk:During the pandemic, Julia has been working and exhibiting in Oslo, but she returned to Pietrasanta as travel restrictions ease to start on her newest commissions. So thanks to Julia Vance. You can see her work on her Instagram @JuliaVance one or on her website juliavance.no. And thanks to you for listening. As with all episodes, you can find photographs of the work discussed on our website, materiallyspeaking.com or on Instagram.
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