Language

English (en)

Date of Award

Spring 5-7-2025

Author's School

Sam Fox School of Design and Visual Arts

Author's Program

Art

Degree Name

Bachelor of Fine Arts (BFA)

Restricted/Unrestricted

Unrestricted

Abstract

This thesis explores the potential of archival and participatory practices to illuminate and disrupt societal barriers to genuine human connection, particularly those arising from productivity, routine, and capitalist notions of progress. Rooted in an extensive personal archive—over 70,000 photographs, hundreds of journal entries, and fragmented sensory experiences—my artistic process involves meticulously collecting, rearranging, and interpreting patterns within everyday consumption. Through iterative methods akin to artists such as Wolfgang Tillmans, I juxtapose images, texts, and found materials, embedding personal narratives and subjective insights to uncover deeper connections and overlooked truths.

Central to my practice is the critique of contemporary societal norms, inspired by philosophers like Brian O’Connor, who questions the destructive impacts of relentless productivity and advancement. In response, my work intentionally creates counter-environments that encourage idleness, collective play, and reflection. Projects like a large-scale Capture the Flag event at Washington University and communal installations challenge institutional expectations by fostering spaces that prioritize presence and interpersonal engagement over efficiency and output.

By employing humor, myth-making, and participatory disruptions, my practice not only highlights societal hindrances to connection but also proposes alternative ways of being together. The result is a transformative dialogue that resonates beyond the immediate experience, persisting through collective memory and storytelling, and ultimately redefining our understanding of communal interaction and resistance.

Mentor/Primary Advisor

Heather Bennet

Artist's Statement

Elliott Andrew is an interdisciplinary artist and researcher whose work probes the unseen systems that fracture human connection and well-being. Drawing from a continuously evolving personal archive—images, notes, field recordings, ephemera—he maps the rituals, obsessions, and technologies that shape our attention and values, from the endless scroll of social platforms to the ceaseless pursuit of status.

Beyond documentation, Elliott’s practice unfolds through participatory interventions that transform everyday environments into spaces of collective play and reflection. Whether inviting strangers to erect improvised cardboard structures, convening spontaneous street-corner performances, or facilitating open-ended communal gatherings, he creates temporary “anti-environments” that suspend routine and invite presence, curiosity, and shared discovery.

By weaving together archival collage and social experimentation, Elliott’s projects illuminate what our culture obscures—our longing for genuine interaction, our capacity for wonder, and the simple pleasures of unpressured play. His work offers both a mirror and a catalyst, revealing the barriers between us while opening paths toward deeper engagement, empathy, and shared creativity.

Available for download on Saturday, May 09, 2026

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