Jo Chapman

Menu

  • Home
  • Art
    • ChalkStack
    • Other Poems
    • Alkerden Hub
    • Confluence
    • Timekeeper
    • Ascent
    • For Folks Sake
    • Boston Buoys
    • Art at Home
    • Breathe
    • Moda Hove
    • Blackwall Line
    • Linking the Greens
    • Field
    • Edward Street Quarter
    • Fire on the Water
    • Inosculation
    • Da Lightsome Buoy
    • Infectious Agents
    • Highwire
    • Barley
    • Dereham Cemetery
    • Protector
    • Dah-ly-lia
    • Mermadelica
    • Chelsea flower show 15
    • Chelsea flower show 12
    • Take-away Garden
    • Stoneham Park
    • Unpicked Meadow
    • Tall Oak
    • Keepsake
    • Secret Garden
    • Kenninghall Primary School
    • Fruitpicking
    • Lost + Found
    • Weatherdays
    • Wasted
    • Lace
    • Things As They Are
    • Strange Fruit
    • Dust
    • Missing
    • A Kind of Happiness
  • Drawings
    • Iceland
    • Conduction
    • Corners
    • Edges
    • Dust
    • Dust 2
    • Shetland
    • Crates
    • Sticks + Stones
    • Fragmented
    • Lost + Found
  • Community
    • Water, Nature and Science
    • West Earlham Infant School
    • Open House
    • Farm Arts
    • Fish Van Collection
    • Spacemakers
    • Kenninghall
    • Firstsite Youth Group
    • Gallery Games
    • The Drawing Room
    • Arc 07
    • Arc 06
    • Eastfeast
    • Vital Communities
  • About
    • CV
    • Contact
    • Artist Statement

Art » lost + found

Lost + Found
Lost + Found
Lost + Found
Lost + Found
Lost + Found
Lost + Found
Lost + Found
Lost + Found
Lost + Found
Lost + Found
Lost + Found

Lost + Found 2009

Brett’s Warehouse, Great Yarmouth

Commissioned to make internal artworks for the new development of an 18th century warehouse into a centre for young homeless people. Working with Jeremy Stacey Architects, Norfolk.

The work was an investigation into the maritime heritage of Great Yarmouth. The final text panels and steel drawings were a response to the loss that was a result of the many shipwrecks that were a part of life in the days when the port was thriving.

« Art

  • Home
  • Art
  • Drawings
  • Community
  • Contact
  • Site map & search

© Jo Chapman 2010-2025