'The Play Team' workshops start this evening!



Newsflash! The Play Team starts this evening at 5.30pm at ArtPlay (Birrarung Marr). For $5 a pop, you can tap into your inner kiddy-wink by crafting a 'toy' with Ben Landau & Alex Desebrock, the dynamic duo otherwise known as 'The Play Team'! (not to be confused with The A Team, but they certainly are an ace pair)

The Play Team is happening tonight, Thursday and Friday (1, 2, 3 September) from 5.30pm to 7pm.

So scrap that after-work pilates/yogalates/no lights no lycra workshop and make your way to THE PLAY TEAM!

To book, ring Bobby at ArtPlay on 9664 7900 or click here for further information.

For more info about The Play Team, visit their website.

Craft Cubed featured event: Stephanie Hicks 'A Short Season'



Celeste

Using the medium of paper, Stephanie Hicks' A Short Season looks at how our childhood recollections inform our understanding of it. Crafting her small-scale collages and three-dimensional sculptures from vintage materials gleaned from books, magazines and old letters, A Short Season is a collection of beautifully delicate paper works (including a range of colourful wreaths!).

The exhibition is on till this Saturday at NO NO Gallery in North Melbourne, so make sure you see it!




Elegy (detail)


My collages explore a shift in the relationship between children and the natural world. As a child growing up in Western Victoria in the 1970’s and 80’s, my relationship to nature was direct and experiential. Picking all the lemons off the tree in our backyard and squeezing them into jars which were left to fester in the dim light of our rambling garage; family picnics at the swamp - abundant yabbies, tree trunks (both upright and prone) and (depending on the time of year) water to navigate; cubby houses and kingdoms, built and conquered…

The element of the unknown is a feature of nature that has worked in its favour for generations of young and curious explorers. Now, fed by a culture of fear and risk minimisation, it is in turn something dangerous and overwhelming. Nature is also mediated through the screen, as events unfold on a catastrophic level on the nightly news and Internet.





Lovely big fish (detail)

Lamenting the pace at which children grow up, I also realise the many benefits they will experience today’s world. The unprecedented developments in technology and communication allow access to information far beyond the didactic knowledge provided in the encyclopedias I grew up with, and have used in my collages.

That being said, my grandparents had a collection of books, which was in my mind both extensive and simply amazing. It included the story books and annuals that my parents’ generation had grown up with, providing me with hours upon hours of blissful escapism. I am interested in unearthing the potential for these objects to work both with and against memory in speaking about a particular time of childhood. The series ‘Lasting Tribute’ is an exploration of these ideas.




Wild Lion


While I feel fortunate to have experienced my childhood in a particular place and time, through the process of making these works I have begun to understand that previous generations may also hold an idealised and nostalgic version of childhood related to their own experience. I am attempting to locate this within the contemporary experience of childhood which is obviously removed from me, experienced by my generation who are now becoming parents and re-experiencing childhood as a spectator.

- Stephanie Hicks




Again and Longing



Building a snowman

Emily O'Brien: HYPERBOLIC DOUBT




We hope you managed to catch Emily O'Brien's series of hand moulded polymer clay figures from her solo exhibition HYPERBOLIC DOUBT, which was recently shown at Mailbox 141 on Flinders Lane and guest curated by Kim Brockett.

Borrowing from childhood myth, fable and folklore, HYPERBOLIC DOUBT explored the less savoury side of twinkly fairytales, reproducing characters such as the Tooth Fairy, the Minotaur, Medusa, various old crones/witches/warlocks etcetera.







HYPERBOLIC DOUBT is a journey of co-discovery through integration of thought, feeling, agency, and selfhood, possessing a cognitive ability to distinguish the external world from one's own psyche. It explores philosopher, René Descartes process that doubting the truth of his beliefs could in turn determine which beliefs he could be certain were true.

'Several years have now elapsed since I first became aware that I had accepted, even from my youth, many false opinions for true, and that consequently what I afterward based on such principles was highly doubtful; and from that time I was convinced of the necessity of undertaking once in my life to rid myself of all the opinions I had adopted, and of commencing anew the work of building from the foundation...',
René Descartes , Meditation I, 1641


Photobucket









Emily O'Brien's jewellery designs engage with linguistic and conceptual themes that relate to ideas of perception and residual memory. At times, they manifest within the formal perimeters of the psychedelic aesthetic. Her miniature fine art objects, that can often be worn on the body as jewellery, assume a more intimate and human scale than traditional psychedelic art - rejecting many of the genre's phenomenological concerns in lieu of engaging directly with childhood deceptions and perception.

HYPERBOLIC DOUBT was on from 16 - 28 August at Mailbox 141.

Click here to view more images

Photography: Kim Brockett


Craft Cubed featured event: Carly Grace 'Encase'



Today's featured event is Encase by Carly Grace, an installation at TROCADERO Art Space in Footscray that uses a squillion (ok, maybe actually only a few hundred) can bases as the basis (pun!) of the work.



I have clear memories of drawing as a child, creating abstract patterns with swirling lines that covered large sheets of paper. I can remember the way I felt when I was drawing at this young age…musing, transient, engrossed in the process.

Encase is an installation that has been expanded from my drawing practice in recent years, large-scale drawings that are made from very small circles drawn in fine liner and repeated over and over again to create organic patterns.

This artwork is created from hundreds of aluminium can bases, some highly reflective and others dulled with patinas. They are attached to the floor and walls in dense groups and sparsely spread at varying heights. The vast quantity of circular forms creates an organic, asymmetrical pattern, like a skin over the surface of the gallery space. The viewer, having walked towards the narrow end of the gallery, becomes encased in the artwork.

My installation process is one of intuitive decisions about scale, form and tonal gradations, engaging the aesthetic and associative qualities of the materials within the context of the space. It is a playful, experimental process, one where I re engage in the reverie of these first childhood art experiences.







Encase
is on until 4 September at TROCADERO (Level 1, 119 Hopkins Street, Footscray). The gallery is open Wed-Sat from 11am-5pm.

Craft Cubed featured event: Alex Sanson 'Sculpture for the playground not the pedestal'



Presented by Alex Sanson, Sculpture for the playground not the pedestal does exactly what it sets out to do - create a fun environment for the young 'uns and oldies that's unfettered by troublesome 'please do not touch' signs!

Taking place at Alex's studio and garden, this event involves an interactive and kinetic sculpture that can be climbed, rolled, pushed and pulled, large-scale wind powered globes, small insect-like delicately balanced pieces to blow on, plus a very intriguing description of one sculpture as a 'huge rolling ball'.

Ooh!

Here's a peek:




Orbular radiator





Huge rolling ball sculpture perhaps?




Make sure you check it out! Hey and maybe you could even bring the kids!

Sculpture for the playground not the pedestal is on every Saturday and Sunday from 11am-4pm until 4 September at Metaform, Alex's studio. Metaform is located at 344 Old Drummond Road, Taradale.

Craft and Design as a Career: what a blast!



Our annual seminar Craft and Design as a Career took place a couple of weeks ago. Once again tickets sold out in the blink of an eye, no doubt due to this year's excellent line up!

Tackling the business side of things was Evan Lowenstein (Lowensteins Arts Management) about the GST's and ABN's of accounting, Rhiannon Hardinham (i dream a highway) giving advice tips on how to approach retailers (hot tip: don't turn up unexpected and towing work during shop hours), Lara Olsen (Energy Return) on running a successful and sustainable practice, Melissa Loughnan (Utopian Slumps) about commercial gallery representation, Grace McQuilten (The Social Studio) on founding her socially aware and engaging organisation, Jo Walker (frankie magazine) and Lucy Feagins (The Design Files) on how to garner media interest (hot tip/metaphor: media people are like monkeys who need to be fed your information like peeled bananas), Stephen Banham (Letterbox) on never undestimating the power of a graphic identity, and finally jeweller and designer Nina Ellis with sculptor Titania Henderson on developing your practice with a mentor.

A big thank you to all of our lovely speakers for presenting such wonderful ideas and thoughts, and of course Melbourne Museum, our ongoing partner for the event, who provide amazing staff support (we couldn't do it without Laura Murphy!), the theatre space and delicious tea breaks! And thanks also to in.cube8r gallery for their generous assistance in not just supporting Craft and Design as a Career, but for all of the wonderful ongoing opportunities that they provide to many emerging designers through their store on Smith Street.

And finally, not forgetting our own Lucy Piggin for putting together such a fantastic event. Yay Lucy and hurrahs all round!










Hi Michaela!



Two lovely Lucy's - Lucy Piggin & Lucy Feagins (L-R)


Lucy on the left is the organisational genius behind not only Craft and Design as a Career, but Craft Cubed too!





Jeweller & sculpture Nina Ellis on developing your practice with a mentor



Nina and her mentor, Titania Henderson




Lovely photography by Lily Feng

Casual Objects

To accompany Antuong Nguyen's current exhibition GEMINI SCORPIO at the City Library niches and projection space, here is a bit of writing by Kim Brockett.

Enjoy!




Casual Objects

Encountering Antuong Nguyen's new body of work in GEMINI SCORPIO, part of Craft Victoria‟s 2010 Craft Cubed festival, it is difficult to feel anything but curiosity and wonder at his blithe use of colourful common objects. I am reminded of a recent exhibition entitled Casual Object Garden and Other Material Matters presented by Carson Fisk-Vittori and Michael Hunter at Chicago's Roots & Culture Contemporary Art Centre in April this year. Casual Object Garden… is a lovely exhibition title, one that ties together the artists' more intuitive approach to the collection and presentation of everyday objects; an approach that is mirrored in Antuong's work. By adopting a playful and experimental air, Fisk-Vittori and Hunter explore the materiality of the objects used, and in doing so liberate them from their ingrained purposes.



Detail of Casual Object Garden...
Image credit: Carson Fisk-Vittori



Indeed, what I love most about Casual Object Garden… despite, or perhaps in spite of, having only 'seen' it on a couple of design-orientated blogs, is its title. In particular, it was the first two words 'casual object' that charmed me. For a while now I've been encountering 'simple' lifestyle blogs, magazines, shops, etcetera (but surprisingly no actual lifestyles yet) that promote a 'humble, honest' approach to living. Thus far I have had no means of articulating this situation and describing its particular nuance. The lifestyle in question is one that makes living look easy and simple, and it usually involves subtle aesthetics like slightly rumpled white sheets, natural wooden furniture, a verdant houseplant or three and inevitably, some 'casual objects' to finish the scene.



Image credit: You Can Make It Easy


It's always these casual objects that get me every time. I want to own these casual objects, or more accurately their owner's deft approach, and I do try. It's just that it's really difficult to be effortless… even verbalising this desire creates a dilemma as naturally the conundrum is that once you do attempt offhand placements and nonchalant arranging, everything just seems so contrived.

Which is why I am very much enamored by the works in Antuong's show. Here are a series of mostly everyday objects taken out of context and casually arranged into amusing formations through “constructed happenstance”, to borrow a term used to describe Fisk-Vittori and Hunter's exhibition.[1] In GEMINI SCORPIO this is manifested through various absurd formations: a length of fluorescent pink cord rests on a tennis ball; a trio of candy-coloured dish sponges balance on a checkered washcloth; an orthopedic foot pad spills forth from a plastic cup. Each as charming as the next, the six installations in GEMINI SCORPIO are housed in niches and contained within a fixed and constructed space in the bustling City Library, like little Shangri-La's of calm amidst the hustle.

However I don't think Antuong's purpose was to render the objects unfamiliar or to free them from any sort of banal everydayness, but rather to draw your attention towards the infinite nature and possibility of things. It's an optimistic outlook, the kind that makes your heart swell at the fact that so much possibility awaits you in this world. It's also the kind of sentiment that makes you instinctively shudder at the amount of corresponding disappointment that lies ahead… but grown-up reality aside, this is a thrilling optimism that is intrinsic to childhood, the latter being the theme of this year's Craft Cubed festival.

It's only as an adult that we can look back to our childhood and mistily remember things as they used to be, not as they were. As a child everything stretched out beyond us and into an infinite horizon. For me, Antuong's work is optimistic in that it seeks to return to this point in our lives, although to use the word 'return' is to suggest that we have perhaps, and in a way this is true, moved beyond this. We are now in possession of the concept of 'young' whether we are 20, 30, 40 or more. To be privy to the knowledge of what it is to be young implies the somewhat saddening thought that we are now 'old'. No matter what the humble lifestyle blogs and magazines tell us, life isn't that simple nor is it effortless; really, we need more than a few casual objects to get through it all.



To return to the cheerful idealism of GEMINI SCORPIO, the show hints at the possibility of what is now does not always have to be. In a similar way to how Casual Object Garden… seeks to “re-arrange pre-arrange non-arrangements”, so does GEMINI SCORPIO through its assortment of configurations that highlight the potential of objects.[2] Though the title's pairing of two quite incompatible star signs creates a neat juxtaposition against the poetic synchronicity of the works, the exhibition explores much more than this.[3] Instead it's about thinking, looking and treating things – objects or otherwise – in a non-prescribed way. It's about realising that sometimes working with what you've got might just be the best thing ever.


Kim Brockett
August 2010


[1] Karly Wildenhaus, April 2010
[2] Carson Fisk-Vittori & Michael Hunter, April 2010
[3] In fact it's actually a nod towards Antuong's star sign as a Gemini with a Scorpio rising, which apparently makes for an intense personality.


GEMINI SCORPIO is on till 30 August.

Craft Cubed featured event: Tait Store 'Did you PLAY to BE?'



Tait Store is the new showroom for Tait furniture and friends. Comprising of various design, art and craft practices Did you PLAY to BE? features Mariana Garcia-Katz (who will be at Craft Hatch in September presenting her label m2matiz), Peter McLisky, Jo Wilson, Nikolai Kotlarczyk, Dale Rock and Susan Tait.

Each artist was invited to create a 2D or 3D piece which best displayed the strongest childhood influence to shape their chosen career path.

Where did this passion come from?
Did it grow from PLAY?
Do you still PLAY?

Was it family, home environment or summer holidays?

Was the creative journey sparked by a specific event or simply the discovery of a certain material and what you could do with it?

Above all, the artists and designers will return to the inspiration of PLAY.




Dale Rock, Untitled 1972



Jo Wilson, wooden objects



Mariana Garcia-Katz, Betty is a chatterbox



Nikolai Kotlarczyk, fields of play



Peter McLisky, Splosh




Susan Tait, Boats imagined for journeys far


Did you PLAY to BE? is on until 3 September at the Tait Store, 176 Johnston Street Fitzroy (Mon-Sat 10-5pm, Sun 11-4pm).

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