Javril is an artist and researcher, currently working out of Sydney, Australia.
Her creative practice is informed by how we construct meaning as we negotiate our way as individuals between the interior and exterior worlds. We are each singular entities bound by the parameters of subjective perception, our experiences played out in a seemingly objective setting: the ‘real world’.
Javril highlights how we examine, experience, and conceptualise the exterior world in order to make sense of it. We interpret, seek to construct meaning, always attempting to understand or relate. In order to examine these processes Javril experiments with a variety of approaches, from video to diagrammatic drawing, conversation, mapping, interacting, observing. These are all methods that humans have used to understand the world and relate to others, and which she appropriates in creative ways in order to forge new interpretations, communications and conceptualisations of the ‘real world’.
Javril has a PhD in cultural history from the University of Sydney. In her thesis (title: 'Hypersubjectivity as a creative vector') she theorised how certain individuals channel and heighten subjective experience and interpretations when desiring creative outcomes. She is currently teaching in the Department of Art History at the University of Sydney and has also taught in Paris and Shanghai.
Her creative practice is informed by how we construct meaning as we negotiate our way as individuals between the interior and exterior worlds. We are each singular entities bound by the parameters of subjective perception, our experiences played out in a seemingly objective setting: the ‘real world’.
Javril highlights how we examine, experience, and conceptualise the exterior world in order to make sense of it. We interpret, seek to construct meaning, always attempting to understand or relate. In order to examine these processes Javril experiments with a variety of approaches, from video to diagrammatic drawing, conversation, mapping, interacting, observing. These are all methods that humans have used to understand the world and relate to others, and which she appropriates in creative ways in order to forge new interpretations, communications and conceptualisations of the ‘real world’.
Javril has a PhD in cultural history from the University of Sydney. In her thesis (title: 'Hypersubjectivity as a creative vector') she theorised how certain individuals channel and heighten subjective experience and interpretations when desiring creative outcomes. She is currently teaching in the Department of Art History at the University of Sydney and has also taught in Paris and Shanghai.