Lip-Sync at the BCU Steamhouse

A work of public art by Holly Hendry at the Birmingham City University SteamHouse called Lip-Sync. Located to the corner at Jennens Road and Cardigan Street in Eastside.


Public art: Lip-Sync

Designer: Holly Hendry

In association with Eastside Projects

Location at the Birmingham City University SteamHouse, corner of Jennens Road and Cardigan Street in Eastside.

Lip-sync is a major new public artwork for Birmingham by Holly Hendry commissioned by Birmingham City University and curated by Eastside Projects.

Commissioned as part of the £70 million STEAMhouse project the large scale sculpture draws on both the history of the building as the headquarters of The Eccles Rubber and Cycle Company, and its new function as a centre for collaborative innovation where immersive technologies and digital fabrication meets hands-on making, research, business support and community building.

Made from rolled, formed and lasercut steel, with smaller hand-cast elements, Lip Sync’s surface features cartoonish, body-like shapes co-developed with students from Birmingham City University and pupils from Chandos Primary School in Highgate in a series of ‘exquisite corpse’ workshops where individual drawings lead from one to another to create a collective collage.

Details, marks and forms from the workshops were fed into computer software where they were simplified, and amalgamated into a colourful and apparently continuous ribbon, a fluid band which weaves through a series of industrial rollers, appearing from and disappearing into the ground – perhaps even flowing underneath the building, or the city. On closer inspection it becomes clear that Lip Sync’s surface is made up of a puzzle of individual elements that are rolled and fixed together, different parts engineered, coloured, stretched, and flattened by multiple industrial processes.

Lip-sync’s structure echoes the Jacquard Loom, a textile weaving machine in which thousands of punch cards were used to produce fabrics with patterns of almost unlimited size and complexity. The loom, and the Jacquard cards which it reads, is considered the earliest example of computer software. Its punch card system led to the binary system of ones and zeroes that underpins modern computing.

Hendry’s work uses the language of slapstick and cartoons to create joyful and materially rich sculptures which explore the role of the human body in industrialisation and encourage us to think about our current, and future, experiences of being human in relation to new and expanding digital technologies. This is her first permanent public artwork.

Lip-SyncLip-Sync by Holly Hendry at the BCU SteamHouse (July 2023). Photography by Elliott Brown

 

Lip-Sync seen on a guided tour, April 2023.

Lip-SyncLip-Sync by Holly Hendry at the BCU SteamHouse (April 2023). Photography by Jack Babington

 

Lip-Sync behind barriers in April 2023.

Lip-SyncLip-Sync by Holly Hendry at the BCU SteamHouse (April 2023). Photography by Elliott Brown

 

Lip-Sync fully unveiled in July 2023.

Lip-SyncLip-Sync by Holly Hendry at the BCU SteamHouse (July 2023). Photography by Elliott Brown

Project dates

20 Jul 2023 - On-going

Passions

Art; Culture & creativity, Education, Modern Architecture

Contact

Your Place Your Space

Jonathan Bostock

0121 410 5520
jonathan.bostock@ yourplaceyourspace.com