Guest bloggers: Gracia & Louise


To coincide with their current exhibition (A key to help make your own world visible, gallery 2), CLOG has enlisted fabulous duo Gracia Haby and Louise Jennison as very special guest bloggers.

Over the course of the next few weeks till the exhibition's close on Saturday 28 November, Gracia and Louise will be popping up intermittently on CLOG with posts covering anything and everything that inspires these lovely ladies.

They'll be posting once a week on a random day, so keep checking back with us!

PS. Craft Victoria will be closed on Monday and Tuesday and we'll be back on Wednesday. Don't miss us too much...

Introducing... Sarah McNeil

This Friday, get acquainted with Sarah McNeil - illustrator, knitter, artist, traveller, maker, do-er... the list goes on. After a bout of travel that saw her travel through Canada and the US, Sarah is currently in Tasmania at the moment spending quality time with folks. Time for some down-time in the land under the Land Down Under!

Terrible segues aside, CLOG is super excited to feature one of COUNTER's cutest makers (artist and work included) today, and for more about Sarah do check out her most excellent blog, the wonderfully-titled Everything.

Happy Friday everyone!

Tell us a bit about growing up…
For the most part I kind grew up in Christchurch, New Zealand. I always wanted to do something creative for my career, so studied fine art in University. Growing up was ok I guess... I'm glad I'm an adult now though.

You’re originally from Sydney but moved to Melbourne and now you’re in the midst of travelling the rest of the world… what brought about this wanderlust?
I was born in Sydney, Australia, and lived there for six weeks before I moved to Christchurch to live on a farm. My dad is a scientist and likes to travel a lot for work, so we moved around quite a bit during this time, including New Zealand and abroad. I think I've been to about nine different schools, not including university. I lived in rural Victoria for my last two years of high school, then Ballarat for a year of uni, and finally to Melbourne where I stayed for three years. I recently went to Canada and America where I travelled and made art. I guess If you wanted to know my life story, that’s a very concise summary.

I don’t even know if I do like travelling, it’s just what I have always done and what I will continue to do until I find out why. I like seeing new things and meeting new people, but it is rather stressful. I’m in Tasmania right now visiting my parents (they moved here two years ago and are now preparing to move to Ireland) and am about to move to New Zealand in the next few weeks (not sure where yet though).

Your paper bird brooches (pictured above) are wonderful! Could you tell us a bit more about how this work evolved and about its process?
I start with a few photographs of the bird I would like to make; draw up a pattern; cut out the pattern; place it on the various colours of card; cut them out with scissors and glue them all together (carefully!!!). The worst thing that could happen I suppose is if I smudge the card with the glue I'm using. Sometimes that is a bit frustrating if it happens during the last stages of making the bird and I have to make it again. I usually have to work in the morning, when my head is clearer and I'm ready for the day. Later on I always seem to get tired and can't focus as well, so I do knitting or shading in on my drawings. Or answering interview questions.


You’ve mentioned somewhere that you’re in the process of refining your possessions to fit into a single suitcase (pictured below). How is that going? What sort of items have you found to be essential to you?
I made it down to 18kg of possessions. It was an amount that I could carry quite easily, although I traded in my suitcase for a bag that was easier to carry when I moved from Toronto to Montreal earlier this year. It was really great just to have such a small amount of items – basically a pair of jeans, a pair of shoes, socks, underpants, t-shirts, sweaters, paper, pencils, scissors, laptop, tent, sleeping mat, toiletries, and some photos and drawings.

It was really great to feel so free and unburdened, but it also helped me to see that sometimes it is nice to have a little more than the basics for life around. As long as everything has a purpose (even if that purpose is to make you feel happy) and nothing is there just for the sake of being there. All purchases must be carefully thought out and considered.

What would your dream collaboration involve?
It would be having a really great friend whom I can lie around with making art with all day and just feeling so exhausted and happy, but not wanting to stop, because I don't want to waste any time. Also, pencils, paint, branches, soft natural materials and making sounds and turning them into music.


And last but not least, the making friends video that you and your brother made is wonderful! Could you tell us more about it?
It was an entry for a competition. We spent maybe two days on the knitting and filming part (two days with very little sleep might I add, we began at about 6pm and if you look behind me at the end of the film the sun is beginning to rise) and then my brother did the editing during the following week. I'd love to make more short films, hopefully next year while I'm in New Zealand I can set up a little studio with this intention in mind.




making friends


Sarah - eating almonds

A word from Gracia and Louise


Something mighty peculiar was afoot but I was hard-pressed to say for certain what it was II (left) and I (right)



Guidance for those curious,

A key to help make your own world visible is an amalgam of sentiment and prose pulled from the pages of Hermann Hesse’s novel Der Steppenwolf (1927).

Spoken in warm voice by Pablo to Harry: ‘I can throw open to you no picture-gallery but your own soul. All I can give you is the opportunity, the impulse, the key. I help you to make your own world visible. That is all.’ [1]

From such we took impulse and created a series of other worlds that lie hidden, other interior worlds viewed with twin ‘gleam of pain and beauty that comes from things past’.[2]

Often our work, be that created individually or a piece worked on collaboratively, is dotted with fragmented keepsakes, and that is especially true of the work we have created for this exhibition. A sense of nostalgia is never far from frame, but ‘nostalgia is not always about the past; it can be retrospective but also prospective’.[3] It can cast also a sideways glance and be likened to unrequited love: ideal, unreciprocated and satisfying. In so far as memory is concerned, it should not be relied upon.

Nostalgia comes as a word from ‘nostos’—return home, and ‘algia’—longing (or pain). Its roots, in word, are Greek, and it ‘seduces rather than convinces’[4], something which greatly appeals to us both for we like to work in riddles and puzzles, and what could be more puzzling than something as hard to pin into place as seduction?

The inner landscape and the greater literal world, the geography we map charts longing, and fragility is revealed along the way. But be forewarned, it is oft a pathway littered with red herrings. Our keepsakes, these objects gathered, perhaps they are not all they appear at first cursory glance. Perhaps these objects take, as Jean Cocteau once mused, ‘advantage of our habit of believing them to be immobile.’[5]

Shell masks from Manfredo Settala’s (1600–1680) own cabinet of curiosities, a 16th century German automation of Neptune seated upon a tortoise, and an owl in gold, enamel, agate and diamonds made in Dresden before 1718 have been both collected and drawn, and appear now alongside carvings displayed during yam harvest rituals in Papua New Guinea from the Masco Collection of Oceanic Art. Calling to mind a wonder cabinet of curious, they serve to bring together ‘liminal objects (suspended between art and nature, death and life) …investing them with new value, new power, new meaning.’[6] Yes, for you, we have, with brush and watercolour pigment, and scissors and paper as our primary tools, created both collections of curious and other worlds.

As you wander, let the words of the poet Joseph Brodsky guide you: “you cannot step twice on the same asphalt.” [7]

Travel well,
Gracia & Louise




[1] Hermann Hess, Der Steppenwolf (Australia: Penguin Group, 2009) 204.
[2] Ibid., 186.
[3] Svetlana Boym, The Future of Nostalgia (New York: Basic Books, 2001), xvi.
[4] Ibid., 13.
[5] Jean Cocteau, Beauty and the Beast: Diary of a Film (New York: Dover Publications), 101.
[6] Patrick Mauries, Cabinets of Curiosities (London: Thames & Hudson, 2002) 119.
[7] Solomon Volkov, Conversations with Joseph Brodsky (New York: The Free Press, 1998), 286.


Gracia and Louise's exhibition A key to make your own world visible is in Gallery 2 and is on until Saturday 28 November.

Read all about it: Shoe Show


The Shoe Show catalogues are finally here in all of their double sided, black-and-white + one pantone, 80gsm, A2 glory. And they look GREAT!

The catalogue features excerpts of interviews by assistant curator Kim Brockett with each of the six Shoe Show exhibitors (Emma Greenwood, Phong Chi Lai, April Phillips, James Roberts, Emma Shirgwin, and Tim Tropp).

The fantastic layout is by our good buddy Guy Dollman, with photography by Richard Brockett. Thanks guys!

You can pick up a copy of the catalogue from Craft Victoria, or if you like you can download it by clicking here (ps. it weighs in at a hefty 3MB).

PGAV Get Into Art! with Shoe Show's Emma Greenwood

To coincide with PGAV's annual Get Into Art! event, we decided to join in the fun by hosting a shoemaking demonstration by Shoe Show exhibitor Emma Greenwood.

Presenting an in-depth and enlightening view on the process of shoemaking (well as much as you could say in 45 minutes anyway), Emma spoke a group of about 30 shoe enthusiasts about the difference between calf and kid leather (calf leather is softer), what her favourite coloured leather is (navy) and even where she got her sewing machine from ($100 from a now-defunct family business).

The audience got a chance to touch and handle the tools of the trade - it was very hands on!

Fellow Shoe Show exhibitor Phong Chi Lai also dropped by to have a look-see and more importantly, lend support.

To view more photos from the talk, click here.


Photography by Kim Brockett

Opening night!


Our penultimate round of exhibitions for the year features three very diverse mediums ranging from our in-house curated exhibition Shoe Show's selection of six Melbourne-based emerging shoemakers, to collaborative duo Gracia Haby & Louise Jennison's delicate works on paper and artist books, to Karin Findeis' reflection on the practice of collecting via jewellery.

Opening to a welcoming throng of friends, family and fans, Thursday's opening was a blast! We hope you had fun too and thank you for coming. To view more pictures from the night, click here.

Shoe Show, A Key To Make Your Own World Visible
and sampler are on until Saturday 28 November.


Photography by Esther Van Doornum

Oh what a night!






Thanks to all who came to Thursday evening's opening night shenanigans - you guys drank through 40 bottles of bubbly and white wine - an indicator of a good time if we ever heard of one!

Photos from the opening night will be up early next week on CLOG and on Facebook so keep checking back with us. Have a happy weekend everyone!


Naomi Bishops: Eternity In It



"What nature delivers to us is never stale. Because what nature creates has eternity in it."




Film maker and textile artist Naomi Bishops creates landscapes, colour fields and sculptural objects using a combination of felting, appliqué, molar and hand stitch techniques. These images are of her white window - there's been some technical difficulties trying to photograph the black window... we're working on it!




Eternity In It is on display until 25 November.

Thanks Michi!


Gracia and Louise painted the bird picture above my desk. Not only is it beautiful, it's also sentimental - it was the first piece of art I bought for my office. Nothing distracts the eye from a cheap Ikea table than a beautiful piece of art, especially one from these talented girls. Their show is opening tomorrow night at Craft Victoria. See you there. I'll be the one with big blue Ikea bag.

Gracia Haby and Louise Jennison's exhibition in Gallery 2 entitled
A Key to Help Make Your Own World Visible opens tomorrow at 6pm, with artist talks commencing at 5.30pm

October Craft Hatch


A couple of weekends ago was the October edition of Craft Hatch. It was a lovely few hours with visitors streaming in throughout the day. We do love visitors!

Here's a peek at what happened:



Rachel Cooper (Frank and Dolly)

Sharon Margaret Russell


RMIT Gold & Silversmithing graduating students





Jessica Hyde (truth.be.told)

Gemma Patford (not today)


Elena Low



Crocheted collars and capes by Berri Drum (hand hook yarn)




Annemarie Blades (Button Tree)

The next market will take place on Saturday 14 November. Write it down in your diary!

Attack Decay Sustain Release

Now that Nathan's show has come and gone, here are some images from his exhibition to help you remember the good times.


We may have run out of hard copies of the accompanying exhibition catalogue, but you can still download it off our website
.

Still want more? Click here to read an interview between Nathan and Kim (Craft Victoria)



To view more images of the show and also of last Thursday's closing performances by The French and Free Choice Duo, click here.

We hope you managed to catch this wonderful show! Our next round of exhibitions opens this Thursday evening at 6pm, details are on the sidebar.


Photography by Esther Van Doornum.

Thanks everyone


A big thank you to all who came to last night performance/closing party, there was a great turnout and we couldn't have had a more fitting end to Nathan's exhibition.


A special thank you to Jess and Jarrod of Free Choice Duo for playing last night, to Esther for taking photos, and most of all a big thank you to Sam our cleaner for making all those beer bottles disappear (strange because we weren't serving drinks last night - where there's a will there's a way...)

Free Choice Duo



The French

Photos of Nathan's show will be up soon. Hold tight!



Photography by Kim Brockett

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