Abstract
Presented by UNSW Galleries, Local Colour: experiments in nature features artists and designers with an interest in sustainable practices, local ecologies and an appreciation for the world's natural resources. Participants in this project have a common interest in experimenting with locally sourced plant materials to extract unique colour for artworks created from naturally coloured materials. The exhibition highlights the resurgent international shift towards natural dyes, the increased interest in 'slow textiles', the handmade and holistic practice of textile making. Social, cultural and political issues ranging from climate change, land use, individual and environmental wellbeing are expressed in works coloured by plant dyes and pigments. The dye process requires diverse expertise ranging from growing, identifying, harvesting, collecting, processing, tending and caring for plants. By steeping, printing, dyeing and painting, locally grown or collected plants, barks, leaves, minerals, mud, sands, weeds and waste are used as a source of colour for cloth, fibre, pandanus or paper. Presenting contemporary work by Australian and international artists, designers and social enterprise groups, Local Colour illustrates the vitality, diversity, breadth and beauty of this practice thats now enjoying a renaissance across the world. Artists Aranya Natural, Adiv Pure Nature, Hildur Bjarnadóttir, Dorothy Caldwell, Margaret Djogiba, India Flint, Helen Ganalmirriwuy, Mandy Batjula Gaykamangu, Leanne Guymala, Judith Kentish, Abduljabbar Khatri, Rebecca Mayo, Gabrielle Mordy, Sarah Nadjalaburnburn, Emma Peters, Margaret Rarru, Rowland Ricketts, Julie Ryder, Lucy Simpson, Holly Story, and Elsje van Keppel
Original language | English |
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Place of Publication | Canberra |
Publisher | Rebecca Mayo |
Size | See notes |
Publication status | Published - 2018 |
Event | Local Colour: experiments in nature - 2015: Tomorrow never dies, Linden Arts Centre, Melbourne, Victoria 2018: Local Colour: experiments Duration: 8 May 2015 → … |