Sally Dixon- BA (Hons) Fine Art
Sally Dixon’s practice spans paper installations, projection, and sculptural works in plaster and wire, using the skeleton as a primordial architectural form through which space can be unsettled and reimagined. Drawn from encounters with museum-displayed skeletal structures, her work isolates anatomical fragments and reconfigures them beyond their biological function, shifting them from body to spatial framework.
Through processes of projection, fragmentation, and reconstruction, skeletal forms are suspended, displaced, and reassembled across architectural surfaces. Working iteratively, each abstraction becomes material for another transformation, allowing forms to drift between recognition and unfamiliarity. Rather than functioning as fixed structures, these fragments behave like traces or remnants, disrupting spatial stability and inviting slower, more contemplative modes of looking. In doing so, the work begins to speculate on alternative spatial possibilities, asking how environments might be differently conceived if informed by the adaptive logics of organic form.