News
Come and support the Tributary Projects Fire Relief (Fun)draiser! The Auction will raise money for the Yuin community in Mogo following the recent loss of their Aboriginal Land Council building in this horrific fire season.
Opening and live auction Friday 17 Jan 6pm at Tributary Projects in Fyshwick ACT!
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I have a work in the exhibition:
Looks Like Music, Sounds Like Painting
Gallery of Small Things
Sunday 29 Sept - 20 Oct
27 Wade Street, Watson, Canberra
Gallery of Small Things has its third annual show, "Looks like music, sounds like painting", which features works by 23 artists who have created artworks using CDs. The show is created by GOST owner Anne Masters with Ruth Waller.
https://www.galleryofsmallthings.com/exhibition
https://citynews.com.au/2019/around-the-galleries-16/
https://garlandmag.com/article/gost/
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Article: Curating Colourful Memories from the Wonderful World of Kitsch by Jill Robotham, 17 July 2-19
The Australian recently interviewed me about my PhD research: click here for the link
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GEO: Art of the Collection
ANU School of Art Foyer Gallery
Wednesday August 7 to Friday August 31
Opening night August 7, 6pm
http://soad.cass.anu.edu.au/events/geo-art-collection
A collaboration between Geoscience Australia and the ANU School of Art & Design, the exhibition is a response to Geoscience Australia's vast and marvellous collection of rocks, minerals, crystals and fossils.
Featuring: Pie Bolton, Cassandra Brooker, Julie Brooke, Susan Chancellor, Tiffany Cole, Liz Coats, Michelle Grimston, Patsy Hely, Jan Mackay, Rowan McGinness, Lindy McSwan, Cat Mueller, Alison Munro, Thomas O’Hara, Cathy Paver, Harijs Piekalns, Anna Madeleine, John Reid, Gilbert Riedelbauch, Annika Romeyn, Dioni Salas, Erica Seccombe, Kristina Sinadinovska, Charles Tambiah, Linda Tawagi, Ruth Waller, Ella Whateley, Cierra Wilson, Wei-Rong Wu, Naomi Zouwer
In October 2018 around fifty artists accepted Geoscience Australia’s invitation to spend a day amongst their massive and spectacular display of rocks, minerals, crystals and fossils and exploring ways in which they might respond to the collection, each in their own way, via their chosen medium. Geoscience Staff and volunteers greeted the artists, offering expert knowledge and guidance.
Most of the artists had never visited their Symonston headquarters before. Here, open to the public, a series of glass display cases feature a fabulous sampling of the thousands of treasures they hold. The artists were thrilled by this wild and wonderful array of geological specimens and fascinated by the extraordinary range of intricate structures, planar and globular, crystalline and granular, forms micro and macro, soft and hard, the intense colour, patterns and optical effects.
The Geoscience team were excited by the artists evident enthusiasm and curiosity about the geological world and it was agreed this could well be the beginning of a beautiful and productive relationship. During the months that followed small groups of artists made follow up visits, and the Geoscience team generously facilitated access to particular specimens and related information on request.
This exhibition, featuring the work of thirty artists, is the first outcome of this initiative and developing creative relationship between Geoscience Australia and the ANU School of Art & Design.
Opening and live auction Friday 17 Jan 6pm at Tributary Projects in Fyshwick ACT!
-
I have a work in the exhibition:
Looks Like Music, Sounds Like Painting
Gallery of Small Things
Sunday 29 Sept - 20 Oct
27 Wade Street, Watson, Canberra
Gallery of Small Things has its third annual show, "Looks like music, sounds like painting", which features works by 23 artists who have created artworks using CDs. The show is created by GOST owner Anne Masters with Ruth Waller.
https://www.galleryofsmallthings.com/exhibition
https://citynews.com.au/2019/around-the-galleries-16/
https://garlandmag.com/article/gost/
-
Article: Curating Colourful Memories from the Wonderful World of Kitsch by Jill Robotham, 17 July 2-19
The Australian recently interviewed me about my PhD research: click here for the link
-
GEO: Art of the Collection
ANU School of Art Foyer Gallery
Wednesday August 7 to Friday August 31
Opening night August 7, 6pm
http://soad.cass.anu.edu.au/events/geo-art-collection
A collaboration between Geoscience Australia and the ANU School of Art & Design, the exhibition is a response to Geoscience Australia's vast and marvellous collection of rocks, minerals, crystals and fossils.
Featuring: Pie Bolton, Cassandra Brooker, Julie Brooke, Susan Chancellor, Tiffany Cole, Liz Coats, Michelle Grimston, Patsy Hely, Jan Mackay, Rowan McGinness, Lindy McSwan, Cat Mueller, Alison Munro, Thomas O’Hara, Cathy Paver, Harijs Piekalns, Anna Madeleine, John Reid, Gilbert Riedelbauch, Annika Romeyn, Dioni Salas, Erica Seccombe, Kristina Sinadinovska, Charles Tambiah, Linda Tawagi, Ruth Waller, Ella Whateley, Cierra Wilson, Wei-Rong Wu, Naomi Zouwer
In October 2018 around fifty artists accepted Geoscience Australia’s invitation to spend a day amongst their massive and spectacular display of rocks, minerals, crystals and fossils and exploring ways in which they might respond to the collection, each in their own way, via their chosen medium. Geoscience Staff and volunteers greeted the artists, offering expert knowledge and guidance.
Most of the artists had never visited their Symonston headquarters before. Here, open to the public, a series of glass display cases feature a fabulous sampling of the thousands of treasures they hold. The artists were thrilled by this wild and wonderful array of geological specimens and fascinated by the extraordinary range of intricate structures, planar and globular, crystalline and granular, forms micro and macro, soft and hard, the intense colour, patterns and optical effects.
The Geoscience team were excited by the artists evident enthusiasm and curiosity about the geological world and it was agreed this could well be the beginning of a beautiful and productive relationship. During the months that followed small groups of artists made follow up visits, and the Geoscience team generously facilitated access to particular specimens and related information on request.
This exhibition, featuring the work of thirty artists, is the first outcome of this initiative and developing creative relationship between Geoscience Australia and the ANU School of Art & Design.