Sarah Hobbs

Issue 132

A desire to construct psychological space has always been the driving force behind my work. It is an exercise in topoanalysis – the psychological study of the sites of our intimate lives. I examine how our surroundings swirl together with our psyches and couple with the state of our current society to create our psychological outlook. Installations are created in domestic or other private spaces, each representing a thought process or a subconscious drive. Everyday or readily available objects serve as psychological signifiers. Singly, these materials are mundane, but collected and arranged to excess, they take on a heavier meaning. 

These images represent the behavioral residue of anxious energy and flights of thought, physically carried out to the extreme. The idea of turning away from reality and doing something rash or impetuous, simply as a release or as a way of feeling one has control over something, some act of creation or destruction, acts as a psychological panacea.

The spaces we create for ourselves can either assuage or exacerbate our inner and outer conflicts. For many years, I have been creating large-scale photographs as well as site-specific installations from these ideas. It seems all the more important now, with the general psychological and sociological state of our world today.

Sarah Hobbs lives and works in Atlanta, Georgia.
To view more of Sarah’s work, please visit her website.

Permanent Marker (Occupied Room)

Permanent Marker (Occupied Room)

 
Escapism

Escapism

 
Untitled (Voluntary Mental Facility)

Untitled (Voluntary Mental Facility)

 
Prom Forever (Basement)

Prom Forever (Basement)

 
Alarmist (Motel 6)

Alarmist (Motel 6)

 
Untitled (Spare Room)

Untitled (Spare Room)

 
Until I See Something Good

Until I See Something Good

 
Searching for a Portal (Storehouse)

Searching for a Portal (Storehouse)

 
Emotive, Methodical

Emotive, Methodical

 
Living, But Flood Ready

Living, But Flood Ready

 
Operable Arrangement (Hang-out Room)

Operable Arrangement (Hang-out Room)

 
Private Nature

Private Nature

 
Avoidance

Avoidance

 
Untitled (Social Phobia)

Untitled (Social Phobia)

 
Nosiness

Nosiness