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Julia Winckler
“the artist [as] a conduit through which lost things are recovered”.
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Fabricating Lureland, Julia Winckler

25/04/2017  •  1276 × 900  •  Fabricating Lureland, Julia Winckler

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“the artist [as] a conduit through which lost things are recovered”.

Birds of Heaven (2005), Ben Okri

‘when everything connects, the challenge is to follow the strands to where they lead and accept what they say and where they take you’

Vera Frenkel

“Winckler’s work sings with love and art, and a delicacy and care that are rare and moving. She truly brings back to life some essence that had vanished. There is once again presence in the absence – in these haunting faces, their eyes dark and sunken, their expressions so recognisably and universally human.”

Review of Traces exhibition

Clare Best in The London Magazine, 3 May, 2012

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Julia Winckler is a photographer and senior lecturer at the University of Brighton, School of Media, currently working towards a PhD on Fabricating Lureland: a history of memory of place. She has also been education consultant for Kaitak, Hong Kong Baptist University for over ten years. Julia’s interdisciplinary research focuses on archival traces, memory and migration narratives.

Most recent journal articles include (with Adrienne Chambon), ‘Compelling Evidence: mobilizing the Carlton Hill photographic archive’, in Visual Methodologies (2017); and ‘Fabricating Lureland: site marking the pioneer bungalows of Peacehaven’ in Journal of Writing in Creative Practice (2016).

Julia has exhibited widely, including at the Brunei Gallery, SOAS (Retracing Heinrich Barth, 2008) and the Austrian Cultural Forum, London (Traces, 2012).

She is co-researcher on the SSHRC funded Children of the City: from street to playground (2013-2017), which mobilizes a collection of archival photographs of urban street scenes taken in Toronto at the turn of the last century and as part of this grant has co-curated an exhibition at City of Toronto Archives Gallery (2016-17), as well as Photographic Memories - Lost Corners of Paris: The Children of Cité Lesage-Bullourde opening on 8th March at the Alliance Française gallery in Toronto.

She works through layers of physical and cultural geography, history and memory, piecing together fragments that establish links between our collective past and present.

She is also an experienced arts facilitator, curriculum developer and lecturer.