Come by at 2pm this Saturday 2 April to listen to the current exhibitors Liz Williamson, Martha McDonald and Danny Frommer speak about their work. This event is free and bookings aren't essential - just turn up!
Here are some extra details about this Saturday's artist talks:
Liz Williamson: New Textiles
Liz Williamson: New Textiles presents a new body of work, playing on ideas of shelter and memory, containment and bodily protection. The exhibition makes connections between clothing and the body; experimenting with different weaves, textures and structures, whilst exploring visual and conceptual territory.
Martha McDonald: The Weeping Dress
Martha McDonald is an interdisciplinary artist whose work features handcrafted costumes and objects that are activated through gesture, singing and autobiographical narrative. The Weeping Dress comprises a performance and installation arising from detailed research into Victorian mourning culture.
Danny Frommer: Fluffy Transmission
Fluffy Transmission is a new installation combining the soft and somewhat organic forms of pom-poms with the mechanically limited motion of a rotary transmission system. This 'mechanism' has not been assembled as a means toward an end goal, but rather to reflect on how machines operate, transmit forces and propagate values.
Photography: Lily Feng
Thursday, 31 March 2011
Wednesday, 30 March 2011
Lucky Charm fundraiser

2010 Craft Victoria exhibitor and dear friend Natalia Milosz-Piekarska has organised a charity auction of contemporary jewellery called Lucky Charm: Making Good Fortunte Happen in order to raise funds for the current situation in Japan.
The online auction can be viewed here and features about 50 contemporary jewellers including COUNTER stockists (in no order of awesome-ness) Karla Way, Elfrun Lach, Anna Davern, Phoebe Porter, Elizabeth Kennedy, Melinda Young, Linda Hughes and Vicki Mason as well as Inari Kiuru, Julia deVille, Katherine Bowman and Pamela Love. Phew! What a luminous list.
The online auction can be viewed here and features about 50 contemporary jewellers including COUNTER stockists (in no order of awesome-ness) Karla Way, Elfrun Lach, Anna Davern, Phoebe Porter, Elizabeth Kennedy, Melinda Young, Linda Hughes and Vicki Mason as well as Inari Kiuru, Julia deVille, Katherine Bowman and Pamela Love. Phew! What a luminous list.
L-R: Karla Way (bidding currently at $155 as of 30 March), Elfrun Lach (bidding currently at $50 as of 29 March)

Anna Davern (bidding currently at $180 as of 27 March)

Phoebe Porter (bidding currently at $50 as of 27 March)
The reserve price for all works is $30 and the auction closes at 11pm on 21 April. You can also donate if you'd rather not bid
Tuesday, 29 March 2011
New this week!
New in the shop this week are some wonderful ceramic homewares and jewellery by Hannah Lawrence. Check it out!
Homewares: prices start at $50 for a sugar bowl and up to $375 for a 7 piece tea set.
Jewellery!
Tooth necklace, $154
Bone necklace, $180
Crocheted silk bags (for your hopes and dreams), $60 (!!)
In store now! Come have a look :-)
Monday, 28 March 2011
Studio visit: Harvest Textiles

Earlier this month we had the fabulous opportunity of visiting Harvest Textile's lovely workroom in East Brunswick, here's a look at where they work!
In case you aren't familiar with this trio of lovely ladies - and you should be we hope! - Harvest Textiles is a label by a group of like-minded ladies: Lara Davies, Emma Byrnes and Jess Wright, who share a love of creativity, sustainability, community and collaboration.
Products include homewares, clothing, yardage and handmade DIY kits. They also run screen printing and textile workshops, seminars, exhibitions and events from their studio. Recent classes include watercolour painting, printing your own lampshades, wallpaper, teatowels, scarves, fabric as well as basic and advanced screenprinting classes. And that's just the workshops for grownups! The kids workshops also sound pretty awesome too.
In case you aren't familiar with this trio of lovely ladies - and you should be we hope! - Harvest Textiles is a label by a group of like-minded ladies: Lara Davies, Emma Byrnes and Jess Wright, who share a love of creativity, sustainability, community and collaboration.
Products include homewares, clothing, yardage and handmade DIY kits. They also run screen printing and textile workshops, seminars, exhibitions and events from their studio. Recent classes include watercolour painting, printing your own lampshades, wallpaper, teatowels, scarves, fabric as well as basic and advanced screenprinting classes. And that's just the workshops for grownups! The kids workshops also sound pretty awesome too.

The workroom/studio where the drawing and planning is done.
We visited while Harvest Textiles were hosting a tea towel printing workshop (we were there at lunchtime which is why there aren't any students about!)

Harvest Textile's Drawn Quilt which you may remember from their enCOUNTER exhibition last year!
In case you've forgotten, here's a refresher:
Drawn Quilt is a good example of the label's collective making process; incorporating individual designs to create a unified piece. The exhibition features individual drawings stitched together in a paper version of a quilt, alongside the final quilt design, hand screenprinted onto fabric. The work was inspired by the notion of the patchwork quilt - the three makers coming together with scraps and ideas to contribute individual 'patches' that then become part of the greater picture.
Click here to view more photos.
A huge thank you to Jess, Emma and Lara for their wonderful hospitality!! Harvest Textiles will be hosting a Winter market in late May, you won't want to miss out on that so stay up to date by visiting their website!
On another note, drop by Harvest Textiles this weekend to see Dawn Tan's pop-up shop! Launching on Friday 1 April from 5.30pm to 8.30pm, there'll be work produced in collaboration between Dawn and Harvest Textiles. And Dawn has also promised us that there'll be lots of...
Yummy things like recipe boxes filled with yummy home style recipes.. Tea towels! Aprons! Tote Bags! Posters! Yummy snacks will be served too! Well, of course!
Sounds like a done deal to us!
Photography: Kim Brockett
Thursday, 24 March 2011
Coming soon...

Harvest Textiles
Harvest Textiles are also donating 100% of the proceeds from their Red Bubble teatowel ($30, pictured right) to the Red Cross Japan and Pacific Disaster Appeal 2011.
Click here for more information.
Photography: Kim Brockett
Click here for more information.
Photography: Kim Brockett
Wednesday, 23 March 2011
Wednesday wants
It's Wednesday, we wish it were Friday (Friday) but luckily we've just received some beautiful new work in the shop that are seriously covetable! One thing that we're eyeing is Crafting a Meaningful Home, a series of DIY projects for the home compiled by Meg Mateo Ilasco. A stand out project is the doily rug by Jean Lee (pictured below) which involves some hand macrame action.
We know what we'll be doing during the Easter break!
Crafting a Meaningful Home is available for purchase on our online shop for $55 + shipping (to anywhere in the world!).
It's getting more autumn-y each day, which is good timing for us as we've just received new scarves, shawls, headbands and one beanie (pictured above) from local knitter Valerie Aston. Handknitted from yarn that was handspun by Valerie herself, these subtly coloured woollies are so luxuriously soft and snuggly!
Crafting a Meaningful Home is available for purchase on our online shop for $55 + shipping (to anywhere in the world!).
It's getting more autumn-y each day, which is good timing for us as we've just received new scarves, shawls, headbands and one beanie (pictured above) from local knitter Valerie Aston. Handknitted from yarn that was handspun by Valerie herself, these subtly coloured woollies are so luxuriously soft and snuggly!
Tuesday, 22 March 2011
Studio visit: Kris Coad
Our maker of the month this March is renowned Melbourne-based ceramicist Kris Coad. Working from her Gasworks studio in Albert Park, Kris has been a practicing ceramicist for over 20 years, dividing her time between her studio practice and being an educator. For the last few years Kris has worked full time in her studio, based at the Gas Works Art Park. Kris produces ceramic pieces for exhibition, a translucent porcelain tableware range for selected retail and pieces for commission.
In 2002 Kris was awarded a Masters of Fine Art by Research RMIT. During the same year she was the only Australian honoured at the Sydney Myer Fund International Ceramic Award Shepparton Art Gallery.
Kris has exhibited in over 70 exhibitions including the 3rd World Ceramic Biennale Korea, Dianne Tanzer Gallery Melbourne, Manly Museum and Art Gallery Sydney and Craft Victoria. Her work has featured in many magazines, journals and custom books including Ceramics Art and Perception International, The Journal of Australian Ceramics, Ceramics Monthly USA, Hand Made in Melbourne, Donna Hay, Vogue Living, Vogue Entertaining and Travel and Gourmet USA.
Her work has been acquired for public collections including Icheon World Ceramic Centre Korea, Parliament House Canberra, Shepparton Art Gallery, Manly Museum & Art Gallery as well as private collections within Australia and overseas.
Kris is interested in the spiritual and daily ritual of different cultures, the way an object, symbol, mark or shadow and its placement can trigger an emotional response. To interpret the anthropological sentiment behind beliefs, she makes contemplative pieces that have a stillness and silence in an increasingly complex world.
In 2002 Kris was awarded a Masters of Fine Art by Research RMIT. During the same year she was the only Australian honoured at the Sydney Myer Fund International Ceramic Award Shepparton Art Gallery.
Kris has exhibited in over 70 exhibitions including the 3rd World Ceramic Biennale Korea, Dianne Tanzer Gallery Melbourne, Manly Museum and Art Gallery Sydney and Craft Victoria. Her work has featured in many magazines, journals and custom books including Ceramics Art and Perception International, The Journal of Australian Ceramics, Ceramics Monthly USA, Hand Made in Melbourne, Donna Hay, Vogue Living, Vogue Entertaining and Travel and Gourmet USA.
Her work has been acquired for public collections including Icheon World Ceramic Centre Korea, Parliament House Canberra, Shepparton Art Gallery, Manly Museum & Art Gallery as well as private collections within Australia and overseas.
Kris is interested in the spiritual and daily ritual of different cultures, the way an object, symbol, mark or shadow and its placement can trigger an emotional response. To interpret the anthropological sentiment behind beliefs, she makes contemplative pieces that have a stillness and silence in an increasingly complex world.
What attracted you to ceramics in the beginning? Was it something you were always interested in?
I have always liked working in clay: the feel of the medium and what you can do with it.
How do you distinguish between your production and exhibition work conceptually, and how do you view your relationship between these two streams?
I make the tableware to be used, to be a part of the ritual of eating and drinking.
The exhibition pieces are more conceptual, a thought or something I have read or felt. The two streams of work are linked, they are both made from translucent clay. The seeing, or hint of what is in side through light and shadow, is very important to the work.
You’ve travelled extensively throughout Asia... what inspiration have you brought back that you’ve applied to your practice? Where are you hoping to go next?
I am interested in the spiritual and daily ritual of different cultures. I draw on my experiences from my travels for inspiration for my work. Next? I will keep you posted.....
What exhibitions/projects/commissions are you currently working towards?
I am just completing a commission for a private office in Melbourne CBD (pictured below). It's a five metre double sided screen made up of over 1,000 bone china leaves.
What has been an all-time career highlight for you?
Probably the last project I worked on, as it always leads you to the next!
If you could travel back to when you were at La Trobe Uni to give yourself advice, what would it be?
Focus and do not doubt yourself, it is all possible!
And finally, where do you look for inspiration?
My inspiration generally comes from travel and reading.



Click here to view more photos.
A long time supplier of Craft Victoria, a large selection of the Kris Coad porcelain tableware range is available to buy from our SHOP. These green glazed round dishes stand apart from the range and are available in 3 sizes. Click here to visit the SHOP!
To learn more about Kris and her work, visit her website.
Photography by Kim Brockett
Monday, 21 March 2011
View it online: Martha McDonald's 'Weeping Dress' performance
For all of you who missed the real thing, gallery 2 exhibitor Martha McDonald's performance The Weeping Dress is now viewable online!
Martha McDonald: The Weeping Dress from Craft Victoria on Vimeo.
For more about The Weeping Dress including a SYN FM interview with Martha, click here.
Saturday, 19 March 2011
Friday, 18 March 2011
Introducing... Sean Rafferty
If you've walked by Craft Victoria recently, you've probably noticed a riot of colour in our enCOUNTER The Arcadia Project window space. is an installation created by Sydney-based artist Sean Rafferty. Originally exhibited in Sydney, we're very excited to have Sean recreate this wonderful installation for us in conjunction with the Melbourne Food & Wine Festival
The Arcadia Project is on display until 2 April.
Using produce packaging for The Arcadia Project is so inspired! How long did it take you to gather the hundreds of boxes?
The collecting started about 12 months prior to the first showing of the installation in April 2010. Once a week I would cycle around to the shops of Harris Farm Markets (a family owned group of fruit shops all over Sydney) who helped me in various ways to collect the materials I needed. So once a week I would collect these boxes and go through and cut out the fruit, vegetables, or characters on the boxes with a scalpel.
On the subject of material, we imagine you must be quite the expert on Australian produce packaging. What were some of the more interesting boxes that you collected?
Yeah there are some pretty funny designs. I generally thought the more interesting ones were from further north - the closer you get to the equator the more troppo things get and fruit packaging is certainly no exception to this. "Grumpy Tomatoes" were one of my favourites (an angry looking tomato with a hugely furrowed brow), and "Western Mangoes", (a mango that looked remarkably like Malcolm Turnbull, wearing a ten-gallon hat and a gun holster - pictured below).

Is your interest with the Australian(?) landscape a recurring theme in your practice (or should it be more accurately described as your interest in the concept of ‘utopia’?), or is it something that has arisen recently? What first drew you to this subject?
The Landscape is definitely a recurring theme in my practice - mainly but not limited to the Australian Landscape. I'm interested in how we represent it, in the context of Painting, Film and Industry. The fruit and vegetable industry have a funny way of imaging and imagining the landscape on their packaging. I guess part of the desire to do this work was to bring a lot of these representations of fruit and vegetables together and to see if it could convey the irony of the 'wildness' of a 'cultivated' landscape. The colour is heavily saturated and the whole thing looks sugar-injected, or fructose injected, and perhaps this says something about these regions of agriculture, and something of the understanding of this landscape.

In 2006 you spent some time in Paris on a residency and for The Arcadia Project you cite Walter Benjamin’s ‘The Arcades Project’ as a reference. Though Benjamin’s text was written in the early 20th century, very nearly almost a century before your residency, how did both his text and your experience in Paris inform The Arcadia Project?
I was interested in notions of the 'Flaneur' as developed by Baudelaire, and I came about Benjamin's fragmentary approach to describing the city. It does fit nicely with the work's name, but the reference is more than just a title device. Benjamin's great unfinished work was about the experience of the city from the observer on foot in the Arcades - looking through shop windows, and using this retail environment as a prism through which to look at experiences of the city and modernity. I'm using the shop window as a way to look at the landscape. He assembles a collection fragments to assemble a whole (or at least that's what is thought - we'll never really know). I guess I'm trying to do something similar - it's just infinitely cruder and fruitier.
What’s the next exhibition/project that you’re working towards this year?
I'm part of a group show at Artspace in Sydney called Talking Pictures, curated by Melanie Oliver. It opens on the 22 April and runs to the 25 May. I'm doing a small cinematic construction with a 35mm projector. The work is about Road Films, and moving but not going anywhere.
What would your dream collaboration entail?
Hmm. Probably to to work with Tacita Dean on a film project.
And finally, are there any ‘easter eggs’ we should be looking for in The Arcadia Project?
Well, look for the Memento Mori on/in the landscape. It's very hard to find but a clue is that you'll get it if you are looking from more of a distance.

Images courtesy of Sean Rafferty
The Arcadia Project is on display until 2 April.
Using produce packaging for The Arcadia Project is so inspired! How long did it take you to gather the hundreds of boxes?The collecting started about 12 months prior to the first showing of the installation in April 2010. Once a week I would cycle around to the shops of Harris Farm Markets (a family owned group of fruit shops all over Sydney) who helped me in various ways to collect the materials I needed. So once a week I would collect these boxes and go through and cut out the fruit, vegetables, or characters on the boxes with a scalpel.
On the subject of material, we imagine you must be quite the expert on Australian produce packaging. What were some of the more interesting boxes that you collected?
Yeah there are some pretty funny designs. I generally thought the more interesting ones were from further north - the closer you get to the equator the more troppo things get and fruit packaging is certainly no exception to this. "Grumpy Tomatoes" were one of my favourites (an angry looking tomato with a hugely furrowed brow), and "Western Mangoes", (a mango that looked remarkably like Malcolm Turnbull, wearing a ten-gallon hat and a gun holster - pictured below).

Is your interest with the Australian(?) landscape a recurring theme in your practice (or should it be more accurately described as your interest in the concept of ‘utopia’?), or is it something that has arisen recently? What first drew you to this subject?
The Landscape is definitely a recurring theme in my practice - mainly but not limited to the Australian Landscape. I'm interested in how we represent it, in the context of Painting, Film and Industry. The fruit and vegetable industry have a funny way of imaging and imagining the landscape on their packaging. I guess part of the desire to do this work was to bring a lot of these representations of fruit and vegetables together and to see if it could convey the irony of the 'wildness' of a 'cultivated' landscape. The colour is heavily saturated and the whole thing looks sugar-injected, or fructose injected, and perhaps this says something about these regions of agriculture, and something of the understanding of this landscape.

In 2006 you spent some time in Paris on a residency and for The Arcadia Project you cite Walter Benjamin’s ‘The Arcades Project’ as a reference. Though Benjamin’s text was written in the early 20th century, very nearly almost a century before your residency, how did both his text and your experience in Paris inform The Arcadia Project?
I was interested in notions of the 'Flaneur' as developed by Baudelaire, and I came about Benjamin's fragmentary approach to describing the city. It does fit nicely with the work's name, but the reference is more than just a title device. Benjamin's great unfinished work was about the experience of the city from the observer on foot in the Arcades - looking through shop windows, and using this retail environment as a prism through which to look at experiences of the city and modernity. I'm using the shop window as a way to look at the landscape. He assembles a collection fragments to assemble a whole (or at least that's what is thought - we'll never really know). I guess I'm trying to do something similar - it's just infinitely cruder and fruitier.
What’s the next exhibition/project that you’re working towards this year?
I'm part of a group show at Artspace in Sydney called Talking Pictures, curated by Melanie Oliver. It opens on the 22 April and runs to the 25 May. I'm doing a small cinematic construction with a 35mm projector. The work is about Road Films, and moving but not going anywhere.
What would your dream collaboration entail?
Hmm. Probably to to work with Tacita Dean on a film project.
And finally, are there any ‘easter eggs’ we should be looking for in The Arcadia Project?
Well, look for the Memento Mori on/in the landscape. It's very hard to find but a clue is that you'll get it if you are looking from more of a distance.

Images courtesy of Sean Rafferty
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