Showing posts with label Kim Brockett. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kim Brockett. Show all posts

Friday, 4 February 2011

Last weekend of High Tea at Bundoora Homestead!

If you haven't managed to do so already, we highly encourage you to head over to Bundoora Homestead Art Centre to check out High Tea, a Craft Victoria exhibition curated by our very own Kim Brockett!

Feauturing Tara Badcock, Penelope Benton, James Carey, Paul Compton, Benja Harney, Sharon Margaret, Danielle Maugeri, Amanda McKenzie, James Oates, Jeremy Pryles and Malte Wagenfeld, this group exhibition is a contemporary interpretation of the timeless tradition of high tea.

To whet your appetite, here are a few details from the exhibition.







Photographs by Penelope Benton, installation by Benja Harney




L-R: James Carey, Jeremy Pryles and Amanda McKenzie



Smell installation by Malte Wagenfeld



James Oates



Paul Compton


High Tea is on until this Sunday at Bundoora Homestead Art Centre, 7-27 Snake Gully Drive. Opening hours are 12-5pm, admission is free, and click here for directions!


Photography: Kim Brockett


Friday, 3 December 2010

High Tea on the 86 tram!

Oooh what's this?



Why it's an ad for High Tea!





Now available for viewing on all 86 trams.


Surreptitious photography by Kim Brockett

Wednesday, 27 October 2010

Clearing the table


Table Manners at Pan Gallery came to a close yesterday - we hope you managed to catch it before it was over!

Either way, here's a peek at the exhibition. More images can be viewed here.


Vanessa Lucas


Robyn Hosking


From front to back: Jane Walton, Naoko Coghlan, Zoe Baker


2010 winner Nutz Luk Mei Fei's work


Zoe Baker


Jo Quirk


Thank you to Ray, Paul and Sophie at Pan for allowing us this opportunity!


Photography: Kim Brockett

Wednesday, 13 October 2010

Opening night: Table Manners



Last Wednesday evening was the opening of the second annual Pan Gallery Ceramic Art Award, the title of which was 'Table Manners'. Guest judge and speaker Kris Coad also announced this year's winner who is none other than Nutz Luk Mei Fei! Yay congratulations Nutz!





Nutz's winning work


Here are some images from the opening night:







Thanks to all who came and also to Sophie, Paul and Ray at Pan Gallery/Northcote Pottery Supplies for involving in this show.



Table Manners is on from now till 27 October.

Monday, 4 October 2010

Opening this Wednesday >>> Pan Gallery Ceramic Art Award: Table Manners



Nutz Luk Mei Fei


The Pan Gallery Ceramic Art Award is upon us again and opens this Wednesday at 6pm! Table Manners features 15 works by a range of emerging and established ceramic artists including quite a few COUNTER stockists!

As the title suggests, this year's award called on artists to locate the relevance of etiquette in today's world through the form of cup and saucer. Here's a sneak peek at some of the contributions from our COUNTER folk:




Zoe Baker


Keiko Matsui



Tara Shackell



Sandra Bowkett

Table Manners is presented in association with Craft Victoria and is co-curated by Kim Brockett and Anita Cummins (Craft Victoria). The exhibition opens this Wednesday from 6-8pm, where guest judge Kris Coad will be announcing the winner of the $1,500 prize.

Pan Gallery is located at Northcote Pottery Supplies, 142-144 Weston Street, Brunswick East. To get there catch the 1 or 8 tram towards Brunswick East, alighting at the Weston Street stop which is after Brunswick Road.

Tuesday, 31 August 2010

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


Wednesday, 25 August 2010

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.

Tuesday, 17 August 2010

Playing Field seminar + Craft on Foot podcast

A couple of Sundays ago we held a Playing Field seminar at the NGV: Ian Potter Centre at Federation Square. Presenting speakers were Michael Doolan, Craft Victoria's Super Maker and Playing Field exhibitor, Soumitri Varadarajan, Associate Professor of Industrial Design, RMIT, and chaired by Harriet Edquist, Director, RMIT Design Archives and Professor of Architectural History.










Speaking of speaking about craft and design, have you checked out our Craft on Foot podcast as recorded by the awesome Kate Rhodes? It's a series of conversations with Craft Victoria supporters, artists, staff including Anna Davern, Suzie Attiwill, Kim Brockett, Tim Fleming, Robyn Healy, Kevin Murray and Joe Pascoe.

You can download the podcast and listen to it by clicking here. Or better yet, you can put it on your iPod and listen to it on the go!


Photography: Lily Feng