Practice

Jessica Jubb is a visual artist whose practice develops through sustained attention to environment, material and place. Time spent within natural landscapes provides an ongoing foundation for observing relationships, patterns and structures that recur across different scales.

Much of the work begins with native flora and the forms encountered within the Australian bush. Leaves, blossoms, seed forms, wing structures and surface patterns are observed, abstracted and reconfigured through jewellery, textile and sculptural processes.

Alongside these botanical works, the Nurture / Nature series explores more abstract relationships between geometry, growth, repetition and interconnected systems. Rather than representing specific subjects, these works consider the underlying structures that connect natural and human-made environments.

Jewellery functions within the practice as a form of small-scale sculpture. It occupies a space between body and environment, where material, structure and wearability become part of a shared experience.

Across different materials and disciplines, the work remains grounded in close attention to place and an ongoing interest in the relationships that shape the living world.