Showing posts with label RMIT. Show all posts
Showing posts with label RMIT. Show all posts

Saturday, 8 December 2018

Bec Smith & Té Claire RMIT

RMIT School of Art Masters and Honours Graduate Exhibition

Bachelor of Arts (Fine Art) (Honours)  & (Masters)Building 2 (levels 2, 3 & 4) and Building 4 (levels 2, 3, 4 & 5), Bowen Street off La Trobe Street, Melbourne


Saturday 8 December to Saturday 15 December 2018


Featuring: Bec Smith (Honours) 










Featuring: Té Claire (Masters)



Saturday, 13 May 2017

Sun Room - Tessy King

A solo exhibition by Tessy King, curated by Jade Bitar

22 - 27 May 2017

Craft 33 Flinders Lane Melbourne 3000

Tessy King presents a range of her favoured vessel forms. Name them as you please; urn, vase, blossom jar or amphora. They remind us of almost every era & culture that utilised clay to make containers. The great benefits of this form is that it offers a 'blank canvas' for the maker.

Tessy's surface treatments are luscious, a fetishistic depiction of the creamy, viscous joy of plastic clay. The satin glaze exaggerated this sensation. Made from high fired clay, these forms are strong. Their robustness is undermined by a slight 'wonk' in structure and a form that is riddled with gaps and holes.  The delightful tension between opposites continues with  Tessy's witty penchant for adding tiny, 'poorly' made handles that could not possibly assist in the lifting of her vases. These formal decisions and a consistently 'de-skilled' hand, are now firmly and wonderfully part of Tessy's oeuvre of making.

Sun Room's curator Jade Bitar writes eloquently in the room brochure about the supplemental use of display material as such:
The conversation between support and vessel reflects the constant exchange between objects and its physical platform. The curation and supporting pedestals and stands that display the vessel are controlled and measured.

First appearing at Craft earlier this year as part of  Fresh! Victoria Graduates in Contemporary Craft and Design, Tessy King had just completed Honours in Ceramics at RMIT. For Sun Room, Tessy  has expanded into the L-shape of galleries 2 & 3.

To be admired is Tessy and Jade's addressing of context. The gallery is a place to be guided through,  where one notices the intention of the artist. In Sun Room the visitor is treated to a tour of works,  directed by swathes of fabric colour, reflective coloured perspex and cleverly placed mirrors that frame views as if they are still life paintings.

Sun Room beams sun shine onto a young maker who is willing to experiment in both her medium and installation.






And also...

See some of my favourite artists below for their treatment of a similar forms.
David Potter as part of the Margaret Lawrence Collection
Grayson Perry, Urban Butterflies from MCA 2016
Detail




Sunday, 27 November 2016

RMIT Ceramics Graduate Exhibition

Object Based Practice

RMIT Building 4 Basement (Ceramics Studio)

Wednesday 23 November 2016


Exciting EOY exhibition by RMIT ceramics students. Impressive range of conceptual interests and ways of working with clay displayed here.

See-Mum Soo I Seek for Sanctuary, 2016 stoneware, porcelain, cord


Lucy Mactier, Various Envies,  2016 stoneware


Lucy Mactier, The Landscape of Love,  2016 stoneware

Samantha O'Farrell Freak Show1, Humanoid,  2016 eathernware




Alexandra Casey Glory, 2016 Southern Ice Porcelain, gold & silver lustre


Rebecca Smith Spring 2016 porcelain, sugar, jasmine, rose petals, egg whites, paper, gouache, copper, enamel


Janice Ng Identity Revealed  2016 porcelain




Tao Delves Untitled 2016 stoneware


Te Claire Series 1-11 2016 earthenware, underglaze, human hair, gouache, wood, glass, latex


Te Claire Torso & Fly 2016 earthenware, glaze, human hair, fly, latex, wax, cotton

Eva Giannoulidis Wallflower 2016 stonewarwe



Also part of the RMIT graduate night is Masters student Lesley Walsh
Lesley Walsh From One State To Another: From Disorder to Renewal



Inside

Craft 16 November 2020 - 30 January 2021 (with a 'soft eye' on ceramics) Inside presents a maximalist celebration of contemporary c...