States of Play Exhibition
States of Play Exhibition ©

Hull News & Pictures

Play is an idea often reserved for the realm of childhood, for a time when responsibilities are fewer and the imagination is wilder.

But a new exhibition at Hull’s Humber Street Gallery has revealed the ways in which play is ingrained in our day-to-day lives – in our workplaces, in our politics, and on our streets.

States of Play featured the work of 16 British and international makers whose work falls under five central themes of wonder, possibility, freedom, game play and masquerade. The works on show offered an innovative approach to play, ranging from a game of table tennis frozen in time to a lampshade that knits itself. Some artists made specific reference to the local environment, and London-based design duo Silo Studio referenced Hull’s historic links to industry by creating an installation of metal pineapples in a playful nod towards the location of the gallery in Hull’s former Fruit Market district. Silo Studios worked with local manufacturing firms to galvanise metal pineapples made out of mesh and stainless steel, which were displayed both inside and outside the gallery. In the video below, featuring interviews with Silo Studio’s Attua Aparicio Torinos and Oscar Lessing, learn more about how they were made.

Many of the works in States of Play used everyday materials to emphasise the ways in which playfulness is embedded in our everyday lives. French artist Pascal Anson played with visitors’ ideas of reality and physics with his installation of chairs dangling from the ceiling, seen in the photo below.

States of Play Exhibition
States of Play Exhibition ©

Tom Arran

States of Play Exhibition
States of Play Exhibition ©

Tom Arran

States of Play at Humber Street Gallery
States of Play at Humber Street Gallery ©

Hull News & Pictures

States of Play Exhibition
States of Play Exhibition ©

Tom Arran

A number of works in the exhibition took digital technologies as their medium. Combover Jo, the exhibition’s in-house robot, was on hand to greet visitors as they wandered the gallery. Jo was designed by Cardiff-based artist Paul Granjon, and visitors were able to steer its movements via a control station in a corner of the gallery, guiding it around the room and conversing with adults and children alike using basic phrases. In the photo below, see a visitor interacting with Jo on the gallery floor. Austrian design duo mischer'traxler’s installation Colour Breeze was commissioned by the Crafts Council and featured hanging lights that were activated by visitors touching or blowing on them, creating a luminous environment. Photos of visitors interacting with Colour Breeze can be found above.

States of Play reminds us that creativity is all around us and invites us to inject renewed playfulness into our daily lives.

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