03.09.2020 Views

Marmalade Issue 5, 2017

Create successful ePaper yourself

Turn your PDF publications into a flip-book with our unique Google optimized e-Paper software.

ISSUE NO 05<br />

CRAFT + DESIGN


CONTENTS<br />

Features<br />

12 / Adelaide Aesthetic<br />

An exploration of the changing face of Adelaide’s<br />

furniture design landscape.<br />

20 / JamFactory Icon: Catherine Truman<br />

JamFactory’s annual Icon series celebrates the achievements of<br />

South Australia’s most influential artists working in crafts media.<br />

24 / Collisions: Identity, Meaning and Politics in<br />

Contemporary Aboriginal Art and Design<br />

Dynamic and meaningful<br />

14<br />

engagement with Aboriginal<br />

and Torres Strait Islander design.<br />

30 / Studio Pottery<br />

The history of studio pottery in Australia and its current<br />

wave of popularity.<br />

38 / Past, Present and Future Tense<br />

A conversation between Jon Goulder, Lou Weis and John Warwicker.<br />

44 / ‘The job you didn’t know you always wanted’:<br />

the 2016 Australian Tapestry Workshop trainee program<br />

A new generation of tapestry weavers celebrate the Australian<br />

Tapestry workshop’s 40 year history.<br />

Regulars<br />

6 / Highlights<br />

22<br />

48 / Q&A: Rose-Ann and Michael Russell<br />

51 / Profile: Courtney Jackson<br />

26<br />

48<br />

ISSUE 05 / 1


<strong>Marmalade</strong><br />

Editorial Team<br />

Margaret Hancock Davis<br />

Brian Parkes<br />

Design<br />

Sophie Guiney with<br />

template by Canvas Group<br />

Copy Editor<br />

Joan-Maree Hargreaves<br />

Feature Writers<br />

and Contributors<br />

Leanne Amodeo<br />

Timmah Ball<br />

Caitlin Eyre<br />

Margaret Hancock Davis<br />

Prof. Kay Lawrence<br />

Lara Merrington<br />

Damon Moon<br />

Peta Mount<br />

Margot Osborne<br />

Brian Parkes<br />

Lou Weis<br />

Photographers<br />

Iain Bond<br />

Scottie Cameron<br />

Andre Castellucci<br />

Andrew Cohen<br />

Michael Corridore<br />

Anna Fenech Harris<br />

Rory Gardiner<br />

Josh Geelen<br />

Patrick Gingham-Hall<br />

Rhett Hammerton<br />

Grant Hancock<br />

Alex Harrison<br />

Sven Kovac<br />

Johnis Lyons-Reid<br />

Lara Merrington<br />

Boaz Nothman<br />

Zen Pang<br />

Nat Rogers<br />

Tom Roschi<br />

Stephen Soeffky<br />

Mim Stirling<br />

Fiona Susanto<br />

Michelle Taylor<br />

Daniel To<br />

Jonathan van der Knaap<br />

Diego Vides Borrell<br />

Bo Wong<br />

All photography as indicated.<br />

Measurements throughout<br />

have been given in millimeters,<br />

height x width x depth.<br />

Printing<br />

Printed in Adelaide by<br />

Express Colour.<br />

Distribution Enquiries<br />

Emma Aiston<br />

emma.aiston@jamfactory.com.au<br />

Publisher<br />

JamFactory<br />

19 Morphett Street<br />

Adelaide SA 5000<br />

Office: (08) 8410 0727<br />

Email: contact@jamfactory.com.au<br />

Website: jamfactory.com.au<br />

Board of Directors<br />

Peter Vaughan (Chair)<br />

Jim Carreker<br />

Noelene Buddle<br />

Shane Flowers<br />

Prof. Kay Lawrence AM<br />

Dr. Jane Lomax-Smith AM<br />

Anne Moroney<br />

Elizabeth Raupach OAM<br />

Chief Executive Officer<br />

and Artistic Director<br />

Brian Parkes<br />

Administration<br />

General Manager<br />

Kate Cenko<br />

Finance Manager<br />

Carolyn Seelig<br />

Executive Assistant<br />

Claudine Fernandez<br />

Accounts Officer<br />

Tracy Peck<br />

Administration/Accounts Assistant<br />

Anna Fenech Harris<br />

Development Manager<br />

Nikki Hamdorf<br />

Marketing and Graphic Design<br />

Manager<br />

Sophie Guiney<br />

Marketing and Communications<br />

Coordinator<br />

Vanessa Heath<br />

Sales<br />

Creative Directors -<br />

Retail and Product<br />

Emma Aiston and Daniel To<br />

Retail and Gallery Manager<br />

Lucy Potter<br />

Retail Supervisor - Morphett Street<br />

Ali Carpenter<br />

Retail and Gallery Supervisor -<br />

Seppeltsfield<br />

Kristy Pyror<br />

Retail Sales Staff<br />

Connie Augoustinos<br />

Catherine Buddle<br />

Zoe Grigoris<br />

Juno Holbert<br />

Margot Holbert<br />

Bettina Smith<br />

Zarah Witzmann<br />

Exhibitions<br />

Senior Curator<br />

Margaret Hancock Davis<br />

Assistant Curators<br />

Caitlin Eyre<br />

Lara Merrington<br />

Exhibition Installation<br />

Peter Carroll<br />

Rhys Cooper<br />

Brenden Scott French<br />

Matt Pearson<br />

Dean Toepfer<br />

Daniel Tucker<br />

Ceramics Studio<br />

Creative Director<br />

Damon Moon<br />

Production Manager<br />

David Pedler<br />

Associates<br />

Connie Augoustinos<br />

Jordan Gower<br />

Ebony Heidenreich<br />

Ashlee Hopkins<br />

Kerryn Levy<br />

Madeline McDade<br />

Glass Studio<br />

Creative Director<br />

Karen Cunningham<br />

Program Manager<br />

Kristel Britcher<br />

Production Manager<br />

Liam Fleming<br />

Commissions Assistant<br />

Llewelyn Ash<br />

Technician<br />

Tim Edwards<br />

Assistant Technician<br />

Madeline Prowd<br />

Associates<br />

Aubrey Barnett<br />

Billy Crellin<br />

Cole Johnson<br />

Thomas Pearson<br />

Renato Perez<br />

Bastien Thomas<br />

Emma Young<br />

Furniture Studio<br />

Creative Director<br />

Jon Goulder<br />

Production Manager<br />

Nicholas Fuller<br />

Associates<br />

Andrew Carvolth<br />

James Howe<br />

Matt Potter<br />

Jake Rollins<br />

Pantea Roostaee<br />

Dean Toepfer<br />

Metal Design Studio<br />

Creative Director<br />

Christian Hall<br />

Production Manager<br />

Alice Potter<br />

Associates<br />

Danielle Barrie<br />

Antonia Field<br />

Danielle Lo<br />

Studio Tenants<br />

Zoe Grigoris<br />

Alan Tilsley<br />

Studio Tenants - Adelaide<br />

Studio 1<br />

Llewelyn Ash<br />

Tegan Empson<br />

Studio 2<br />

Lewis Batchelar<br />

Alice Mahoney<br />

Madeline Prowd<br />

Drew Spangenberg<br />

Studio 3<br />

Lilly Buttrose<br />

Matt Pearson<br />

Studio 4<br />

Snøhetta<br />

Studio 5<br />

Rhys Cooper<br />

Daniel Tucker<br />

Studio 6<br />

Nicholas Fuller<br />

Stephen Roy<br />

Studio 7<br />

Emma Field<br />

Courtney Jackson<br />

Sylvia Nevistic<br />

Kate Sutherland<br />

Studio 8<br />

Gus Clutterbuck<br />

Bruce Nuske<br />

Sophia Nuske<br />

Studio Tenants - Barossa<br />

Julie Fleming<br />

Brenden Scott French<br />

Barry Gardner<br />

Sue Garrard<br />

Sonya Moyle<br />

Rose-Anne and Michael Russell<br />

Angela Walford<br />

Development Committee<br />

Denise George<br />

Diana Jaquillard<br />

Helen Nash<br />

Patricia Roche Greville<br />

Barbara Tanner<br />

Cover<br />

Margaret Dhorrpuy with<br />

Yuta Badayala ‘Lighting Pendant’,<br />

2016, pandanus, bush string,<br />

powder-coated steel.<br />

Photographer: Rhett Hammerton.<br />

Left: Ceramics Studio.<br />

Photographer: Andre Castellucci.<br />

JamFactory supports and promotes outstanding craft and design through its widely acclaimed studios, galleries and shops. A unique not-for-profit organisation<br />

located in the Adelaide city centre and at Seppeltsfield in the Barossa, JamFactory is supported by the South Australian Government and recognised both nationally<br />

and internationally as a centre for excellence. JamFactory acknowledges the support and assistance of Arts South Australia and is assisted by The Visual Arts and<br />

Crafts Strategy, an initiative of the Australian, State and Territory Governments. JamFactory Exhibitions Program is assisted by the Australian Government through the<br />

Australia Council, its arts funding and advisory body.<br />

ISSUE 05 / 3


Editorial<br />

WELCOME TO THE<br />

<strong>2017</strong> ISSUE OF<br />

MARMALADE!<br />

As always, we hope you’ll enjoy reading<br />

MARMALADE, our annual hard-copy compilation<br />

of news and stories that provide insight into the<br />

people, projects, places and products that are<br />

inspiring us and informing our current activities.<br />

Over the past year JamFactory has continued to<br />

grow in reach and scale and I’m pleased that this<br />

growth has contributed to increased income for<br />

artists and designers through direct employment,<br />

artists fees, private commissions, sales of work,<br />

royalty payments and access to space and<br />

facilities that enable the production of great<br />

work. I firmly believe that creative vibrancy relies<br />

on the on-going viability of creative practice.<br />

Supporting much of this growth has been the<br />

increased public interest in crafts-based<br />

production, the hand-made and the bespoke.<br />

This reaction to globalised homogeneity is<br />

providing new (and rebooted) opportunities<br />

for local designers and makers. Architects are<br />

looking for locally designed and made furniture<br />

for commercial and residential projects, chefs<br />

are working with local potters to develop<br />

signature bespoke tableware and tourism<br />

operators are seeking authentic mementos made<br />

by local artisans to extend the narrative of place.<br />

There also seems to be a softening of the<br />

significant hierarchical divide (commercially and<br />

institutionally) between contemporary visual arts<br />

and what has traditionally been referred to as the<br />

decorative arts, evidenced by the increasing<br />

visibility of ceramic sculpture and collectable<br />

design in several leading commercial<br />

contemporary art galleries.<br />

In this issue of MARMALADE we have sought<br />

to highlight some of these emerging threads.<br />

Leanne Amodeo reveals key issues underpinning<br />

a buoyant and thriving furniture design scene in<br />

Adelaide (page 12) while Damon Moon reflects<br />

on how the national appetite for studio pottery<br />

has grown so rapidly in recent years (page 30).<br />

JamFactory and Stylecraft recently presented<br />

the second biennial Australian Furniture Design<br />

Award (AFDA). The $20,000 prize was won by<br />

Alice Springs-based designer Elliat Rich. Her<br />

award-winning piece featured on page 18 was<br />

fabricated by skilled Sydney-based maker Oscar<br />

Prieckaerts and has entered the collection of the<br />

Art Gallery of South Australia. It is a great example<br />

of the kind of collectable design that has built a<br />

significant following in Europe and North America<br />

over the past decade and is now emerging<br />

strongly in Australia. Elliat has a forthcoming<br />

solo exhibition at the prestigious Sophie Gannon<br />

Gallery in Melbourne and I expect there will be<br />

a positive critical and commercial response.<br />

The Creative Director of Broached Commissions,<br />

Lou Weis, has been one of the key protagonists<br />

for collectable design in the Australian context<br />

and we were pleased to have Lou run an intensive<br />

three-day workshop with JamFactory’s<br />

Associates in July this year. For MARMALADE<br />

Lou has given us an insight into how he<br />

approaches the field and his latest collaboration<br />

with Jon Goulder who heads up our own Furniture<br />

Studio. Ever keen to challenge convention, Lou<br />

proposed engaging internationally acclaimed<br />

graphic designer John Warwicker to lay out the<br />

pages of his article and I’m grateful to Lou and<br />

John for their thoughtful disruption (pages 38<br />

to 43).<br />

I’m enormously proud of what JamFactory<br />

achieves through its exhibition program and two<br />

of the feature articles in this issue celebrate key<br />

projects. Timmah Ball gets to the heart of what<br />

we’re trying to do in promoting Indigenous<br />

design as part of the TARNANTHI Festival of<br />

Contemporary Aboriginal and Torres Strait<br />

Islander Art (page 24) and Margaret Hancock<br />

Davis interviews our <strong>2017</strong> JamFactory Icon<br />

exhibitor Catherine Truman (page 20).<br />

If you do enjoy the content of MARMALADE,<br />

I encourage you to subscribe to our electronic<br />

newsletter or follow us on Instagram, Facebook<br />

or Twitter. With hundreds of artists and designers<br />

exhibiting in our galleries, working in our studios<br />

and represented in our shops, there are great new<br />

stories every single day.<br />

Enjoy!<br />

Brian Parkes<br />

CEO and Artistic Director<br />

JamFactory<br />

Left: JamFactory at Seppeltsfield.<br />

Photographer: Andre Castellucci.<br />

ISSUE 05 / 5


Highlights<br />

illumini X Aristologist<br />

The creative duo from illumini Glass, Mandi King and Creative<br />

Director of JamFactory’s Glass Studio, Karen Cunningham,<br />

were at the helm of a beautifully executed commission of<br />

glassware for The Summertown Aristologist, a restaurant and<br />

natural wine bar in the Adelaide Hills that opened its doors in<br />

early <strong>2017</strong>. Illumini designed and made custom organic wine<br />

and crackle beer glasses, while King crafted the light shades<br />

from repurposed demijohns. The Aristologist’s motivation lies<br />

in supporting local community to recreate a conscious<br />

connection to our food, drink and surroundings.<br />

Photographer: Nat Rogers.<br />

Jon Goulder at<br />

Milan Design Week<br />

Furniture Studio Creative Director Jon Goulder was one of<br />

11 established Australian designers to showcase their work<br />

as part of LOCAL MILAN, a unique platform celebrating<br />

Australian design, at this year’s Salone del Mobile. Curated by<br />

Sydney-based designer, stylist and creative director Emma<br />

Elizabeth, the impressive showcase featured Goulder’s iconic<br />

Settlers Chair, 2016 and Congruent Series Side Tables, <strong>2017</strong>,<br />

a collaboration with JamFactory-based glass artist Liam<br />

Fleming. Goulder’s designs were in good company alongside<br />

a selection of notable Australian designers including<br />

Adam Goodrum, Charles Wilson and Tom Fereday.<br />

Photographer: Fiona Susanto.<br />

Christian Hall at<br />

Design Shanghai<br />

Creative Director of JamFactory’s Jewellery and Metal Studio,<br />

Christian Hall, represented by San W Gallery, presented his<br />

work at Design Shanghai in March. The trip to Shanghai was<br />

a return for Hall, after he established a relationship with San<br />

W Gallery and was commissioned to design and set up their<br />

Jewellery Studio. Hall’s signature shelving, pendant lights<br />

and room dividers were exhibited alongside renowned South<br />

Australian jeweller and metal object maker Frank Bauer,<br />

Sydney-based object designer and maker, Kenny Son, South<br />

Australian contemporary jeweller, Jess Dare, and glass artist,<br />

Wendy Fairclough.<br />

Photographer: Tom Roschi.<br />

6 / ISSUE 05


Boisbuchet Scholarship<br />

This year JamFactory introduced a new scholarship in<br />

partnership with Domaine de Boisbuchet, Europe’s prime<br />

destination for workshops in design, architecture and art, to<br />

provide an outstanding opportunity for one of JamFactory’s<br />

second-year Furniture Studio Associates annually from <strong>2017</strong>.<br />

This year’s inaugural recipient Jake Rollins had the career<br />

defining opportunity to experience an all-expenses paid,<br />

two-week intensive, to take part in Boisbuchet’s renowned<br />

summer workshops program, located in Lessac, France.<br />

Rollins participated in the ‘Raw and Refined’ workshop with<br />

Detroit-based designer Christopher Schanck and ‘Electro<br />

Nature’ with the Netherland-based design duo, Drift. The<br />

annual JamFactory-Boisbuchet Scholarship is kindly<br />

supported by William J.S. Boyle through JamFactory’s<br />

Medici Collective donor program.<br />

Photographer: Alex Harrison.<br />

Corning Museum of<br />

Glass Scholarship<br />

JamFactory first-year Glass Studio Associate, Bastien<br />

Thomas, received the highly sought after annual scholarship<br />

to attend New York’s Corning Museum of Glass. Thomas<br />

participated in the advanced-level glass blowing class<br />

‘Form + Color’ with internationally acclaimed US artists<br />

Boyd Sugiki and Lisa Zerkowitz, and took great advantage<br />

of Corning’s Rakow Research Library, the world’s foremost<br />

library on the art and history of glass and glassmaking.<br />

Photo courtesy of the artist.<br />

AGNSW X John Olsen: A<br />

JamFactory Collaboration<br />

In early <strong>2017</strong>, JamFactory was approached by the Art Gallery<br />

of New South Wales to commission a series of hand thrown<br />

plates and platters as part of the merchandise for Australian<br />

artist John Olsen’s solo exhibition, John Olsen: The You Beaut<br />

Country. The plates, available in four different sizes, were<br />

individually wheel thrown and glazed in JamFactory’s<br />

Ceramics Studio and feature original illustrations by Olsen.<br />

The commission which was carried out over a period of six<br />

months, saw the studio make over 1,000 pieces. The project<br />

was managed by JamFactory’s Ceramics Studio Production<br />

Manager, David Pedler, and provided skills training for the<br />

studio’s Associates.<br />

Photographer: Mim Stirling.<br />

ISSUE 05 / 7


Highlights<br />

From JamFactory to<br />

Lime Factory<br />

JamFactory Glass Studio Technician, Tim Edwards travelled<br />

to Oaxaca, Mexico to assist JamFactory alumnus Diego Vides<br />

Borrell in setting up his own glass blowing studio. While<br />

there, Edwards worked on building and installing a glory<br />

hole and two annealers in the studio, established within the<br />

chimney space of an old lime factory. The old factory called<br />

La Calera now operates as a gallery and arts hub, as well as<br />

an Airbnb and function centre. The studio is a space for<br />

Vides Borrell to work on his own practice, which ranges<br />

from designing and making lighting and glass vessels to<br />

fulfilling restaurant commissions.<br />

Photo courtesy of Diego Vides Borrell.<br />

Australian Glass<br />

Represented In Berlin<br />

This July, JamFactory, alongside Canberra Glassworks,<br />

partnered with Berlin Glas to represent Australian glass<br />

art at Berlin’s Benhadj&Djilali Galerie fur Design, with an<br />

exhibition titled Made in Australia: Emerging Design from<br />

Canberra & Adelaide. The exhibition was presented<br />

within the framework of the Australia now Germany <strong>2017</strong><br />

initiative and supported by The Department of Foreign<br />

Affairs to showcase Australian culture in Germany through<br />

a multifaceted year long program. Associates and alumni<br />

that showcased their work included Emma Young, Renato<br />

Perez, Kristel Britcher, Liam Fleming (work pictured right)<br />

and Billy Crellin.<br />

Photographer: Anna Fenech Harris.<br />

Waringarri Aboriginal Arts<br />

Earlier in the year, JamFactory had the pleasure of hosting<br />

mother and daughter Peggy and Jan Griffiths, two artistsin-residence<br />

from Waringarri Aboriginal Arts, located in the<br />

Kimberley region of far northern Western Australia. The pair<br />

spent two weeks in JamFactory’s Ceramics Studio learning<br />

new sculpting practices and working on decorating large-form<br />

platters with techniques such as sgraffito. Both artists spent<br />

time working on their own sculptural pieces whilst experimenting<br />

with various clay types. Each piece was glazed and fired with<br />

several selected for exhibition in JamFactory’s Collect space<br />

during the TARNANTHI Festival of Contemporary Aboriginal and<br />

Torres Strait Islander Art.<br />

Photo courtesy of JamFactory.<br />

8 / ISSUE 05


JamFactory Front and<br />

Centre at Denfair <strong>2017</strong><br />

At the annual Denfair event in Melbourne this year,<br />

six Furniture Studio Associates and two recent<br />

alumni represented JamFactory as part of the<br />

inaugural Front/Centre initiative. The initiative, a new<br />

inclusion to Denfair’s program, provided an<br />

opportunity to promote emerging designers from<br />

Craft ACT, Artisan, QLD, Designed Objects Tasmania<br />

and Workshopped in association with Australian Design<br />

Centre, Sydney. JamFactory alumnus and Furniture<br />

Studio Production Manager, Nicholas Fuller won the<br />

Front/Centre Best Emerging Designer Award for<br />

his Cantilever, 2016 side tables (pictured left).<br />

Photographer: Johanis Lyons-Reid.<br />

Truly Honoured<br />

Longtime volunteer and supporter of JamFactory,<br />

Truus Daalder and her husband Joost, both passionate<br />

contemporary jewellery collectors, have generously gifted<br />

over 150 pieces of their extensive private contemporary<br />

jewellery collection to the Art Gallery of South Australia. The<br />

Daalder collection is the largest and most significant private<br />

collection of contemporary jewellery in Australia and features<br />

a vast array of prominent international and Australian artists<br />

from the early 20th century to now. Particular attention is<br />

shown to artists from New Zealand and South Australia<br />

including Adelaide-based artists Sarah Rothe, Julie Blyfield<br />

and Catherine Truman. The gift is a remarkable acquisition for<br />

the Art Gallery of South Australia and one that will see the<br />

Gallery’s holdings of contemporary jewellery increased to<br />

one of the largest and most significant in the country.<br />

Photo courtesy of the Art Gallery of South Australia.<br />

Ceramics at Ernabella<br />

First-year Ceramics Associate, Ashlee Hopkins, returned<br />

to Ernabella Arts in the Northern Territory this April thanks<br />

to Arts South Australia funding for the Pukatja Cuppatea<br />

Cup Carnival, a community outreach ceramics skill<br />

development project working with young people.<br />

Hopkins’s first visit in April 2016 was to undertake a<br />

month-long ceramics technician position. Returning a year<br />

later, the funding allowed Hopkins to spend two weeks<br />

holding a wheel throwing workshop for young female<br />

artists from Ernabella. The workshop focused specifically<br />

on teaching the women to throw cups which were then<br />

decorated by young men in the community as part of a<br />

weekly watiku (men’s) ‘Pots and Pizza’ night. The project<br />

was documented and turned in to a number of short<br />

bi-lingual educational films which will be shown at a<br />

community exhibition night and used to teach future<br />

Ernabella artists.<br />

Photo courtesy of Ernabella.<br />

ISSUE 05 / 9


Highlights<br />

Julie Blyfield Mentorship<br />

JamFactory’s Medici Program supported a 5-month<br />

mentorship for JamFactory’s Jewellery and Metal Studio<br />

Associates with renowned South Australian Jeweller,<br />

Julie Blyfield. The workshops held once a month allowed<br />

each Associate the ability to expand their creative practice<br />

through drawing and mixed media model making activities<br />

using materials other than metal, before finally looking at<br />

how these works can be interpreted by the body. Blyfield<br />

provided an indispensable wealth of knowledge and creative<br />

feedback, as well as professional development advice for<br />

grant writing and residency submissions.<br />

Photo courtesy of JamFactory.<br />

Myriam Mechita Residency<br />

Internationally acclaimed French contemporary artist<br />

Myriam Mechita undertook a residence in JamFactory’s<br />

Ceramics and Glass Studios to develop new work.<br />

Mechita lives and works in Berlin and Paris and works<br />

across painting, drawing, sculpture, ceramics and<br />

embroidery. Her exhibition, Roses don’t have hearts,<br />

but my eyes will find yours was shown at GAG Projects,<br />

Adelaide in September. Miriam’s residency was<br />

supported through the French Embassy in Australia.<br />

Photo courtesy of the artist.<br />

Think Like A Creative<br />

Director With Lou Weis<br />

JamFactory’s Associates were fortunate to spend 3 days in the<br />

company of Lou Weis, the creative force behind design studio,<br />

Broached Commissions. Lou conducted a comprehensive hands<br />

on workshop that pushed each Associate to think like a creative<br />

director, with a focus on building a business, articulating and<br />

defining a brand identity and how to affectively project and<br />

market their craft. This was a highly impactful workshop for<br />

the Associates that will see valuable outcomes for them in<br />

the years to come.<br />

Photo courtesy of Lou Weis.<br />

10 / ISSUE 05


Matt Potter<br />

Wins Vivid Award<br />

First year Furniture Studio Associate Matt Potter was the<br />

recent winner of the <strong>2017</strong> VIVID Design Colour Award<br />

with his ceramic pendant, Habere Light. Habere draws<br />

inspiration in equal parts from both organic form and<br />

the digitally engineered. Matt started with the<br />

exploration of a conceptual theme and employed<br />

process-driven research to create Habere.<br />

Photographer: Zen Pang.<br />

JamFactory Lifetime<br />

Honouree Dick Richards<br />

At an exclusive Members’ preview event of JamFactory<br />

Icon <strong>2017</strong> Catherine Truman: no surface holds, Dick<br />

Richards was recognised as JamFactory’s first ever<br />

Lifetime Honouree. Dick was instrumental in JamFactory’s<br />

early years undertaking a fact-finding mission, initiated by<br />

Don Dunstan, across Europe to build the case for its<br />

establishment. He then served on JamFactory’s Board for<br />

the first decade. Dick was also an avid advocator for the<br />

arts in South Australia with an outstanding 35-year career<br />

at the Art Gallery of South Australia, until his retirement<br />

in 2000.<br />

Photo courtesy of JamFactory.<br />

Festival Fit<br />

It’s been all hands on deck after a substantial grant was<br />

received from Arts South Australia for JamFactory’s<br />

Furniture Studio to design and produce the furniture for<br />

the foyer of the Adelaide Festival Centre redevelopment.<br />

Under the artistic leadership of the Creative Director of<br />

JamFactory’s Furniture Studio Jon Goulder, JamFactory’s<br />

Associates have been commissioned to produce 33 bench<br />

seats, 10 bespoke armchairs (designed by Jon Goulder,<br />

pictured left), and a series of bar, side and coffee tables<br />

amongst other pieces. JamFactory is working with Hassell<br />

Architects on the project which is due for completion by<br />

December <strong>2017</strong>.<br />

Photographer: Bo Wong.<br />

ISSUE 05 / 11


Feature<br />

Adelaide<br />

Aesthetic<br />

Words by Leanne Amodeo<br />

Leanne is a content director,<br />

media consultant and educator.


There’s no denying Melbourne and Sydney are two of the<br />

country’s largest creative hubs, although that’s not to say<br />

they’re the only ones. The number of practitioners based<br />

outside Melbourne and Sydney has surged exponentially<br />

in the last few years and in places like Adelaide, a new<br />

crop of talent joins the industry’s more established players<br />

in reinvigorating the national design landscape. In the<br />

meantime, the suggestion furniture designers are producing<br />

good work despite hailing from the City of Churches has<br />

officially become an outdated narrative.<br />

As one of the country’s finest and most highly regarded,<br />

Khai Liew lives and works in Adelaide, after relocating<br />

from Malaysia when he was 18 years old. Geography<br />

certainly wasn’t a consideration when White Rabbit<br />

Gallery owner, Sydney-based art collector Judith Neilson<br />

recently commissioned him to fit out her new home, the<br />

award-winning Indigo Slam, in the inner-Sydney suburb<br />

of Chippendale (touted as the city’s answer to New York’s<br />

Chelsea district). Liew, who began his career as a furniture<br />

conservator and has no formal design training, was<br />

simply the only designer she trusted to furnish her entire<br />

Chippendale abode (designed by Smart Design Studio),<br />

and it took him and a team of skilled craftspeople two years<br />

to complete the arguably unprecedented, ambitious project.<br />

The result is a bespoke collection of exquisitely detailed<br />

furniture, lighting and rugs that perfectly complements<br />

the building’s impressive architecture.<br />

Adelaide has long had a reputation for producing wellcrafted<br />

furniture and JamFactory has in a large part been<br />

responsible for nurturing this tradition. Since the formal<br />

opening of a Furniture Studio within its Morphett Street<br />

facility in 1992, the organisation has trained over 50 furniture<br />

designers as part of its Associate Program. Under the<br />

tutelage of current Creative Director Jon Goulder, the studio<br />

has increased private commissions, regularly manufactures<br />

for JamFactory’s popular product range and has graduated<br />

a number of highly successful Associates, amongst them<br />

Rhys Cooper and Nicholas Fuller.<br />

Both of these designers have achieved much since<br />

completing their Associateship in 2015, including Cooper’s<br />

launch of three new products at Melbourne’s trade event<br />

Denfair <strong>2017</strong>, where Fuller was also named Best Emerging<br />

Designer. Their highly refined pieces have that signature<br />

elegant form and overall clean, minimalist appearance<br />

characteristic of the ‘Adelaide Aesthetic’.<br />

Left: Franco Crea, custom tables for Antica Pizzeria e Cucina.<br />

Photographer: Iain Bond.<br />

ISSUE 05 / 13


Top: Lex Stobie, Omega Tall Boy. Photographer: Jonathan van der Knaap.<br />

Far right: Daniel Emma, Soft Chair. Photographer: Daniel To.<br />

It’s a timeless vernacular boasting crisp lines, confident<br />

curves and a pared-back yet sophisticated material palette,<br />

which eschews trendy gimmicks for a conceptual robustness<br />

informed by what’s gone before, as well as an awareness of<br />

its contemporaries. This is as evident in the work of the latest<br />

JamFactory Associates as it is in Liew’s Indigo Slam pieces,<br />

so it’s an expression borne of having something else in<br />

common other than the same schooling. More than likely<br />

it has something to do with being embedded in a city that<br />

has a rich manufacturing history, where designers like Cooper<br />

have worked closely with industry to produce meticulously<br />

finished works. Or, like Fuller, they fall into the designermaker<br />

category, highlighting the breadth of local<br />

artisanal craftsmanship.<br />

The idea of ‘Adelaide as an incubator of skilled craftspeople’<br />

further strengthens its profile as a dynamic creative hub. ‘A<br />

healthy amount of isolation has allowed local practitioners to<br />

evolve a uniquely recognisable character,’ says Lex Stobie,<br />

the New Zealand born designer-maker, who shares his innerwest<br />

Adelaide studio with five other artisans. ‘In the past, our<br />

location and inability to access resources and services meant<br />

we might not have been as quick off the mark. But we’ve<br />

created our own solutions to address what was previously<br />

viewed as a disadvantage.’<br />

Stobie’s own portfolio, including the stylish Omega Boy,<br />

2015 storage unit is an outstanding study of high-end timber<br />

furniture, with each handcrafted piece more work of art than<br />

product. His approach is decidedly hands-on and he values<br />

‘slow design’, taking his time to research and develop ideas<br />

and realising each concept as a maquette before crafting<br />

the real thing.<br />

14 / ISSUE 05


‘People are sick of<br />

throwaway items:<br />

they want to invest<br />

in a product they<br />

can be proud to<br />

have in their<br />

home or office.’<br />

In mid-<strong>2017</strong> Stobie travelled to Scandinavia to learn more<br />

about the region that consistently inspires his work. Visiting<br />

manufacturers such as JL Møller in Denmark benefitted his<br />

practice from both a creative and business angle. But what<br />

Stobie’s investment in research also reveals is the importance<br />

of knowledge-sharing. Forming connections and cultivating<br />

community at both a micro and macro level are especially<br />

crucial in a small, albeit bustling, creative hub like Adelaide.<br />

It’s a style of networking that promotes a culture of<br />

generosity, something Daniel To and Emma Aiston have<br />

engaged with since launching Daniel Emma in 2008.<br />

The design duo recently moved into a new studio space<br />

in JamFactory’s Morphett Street facility surrounded by<br />

likeminded creatives, including architects from Sweden’s<br />

Snøhetta, whose first Australian studio is also located<br />

at the premises.<br />

To and Aiston’s collaborations are many and varied and<br />

their strong visibility within an international marketplace<br />

has undoubtedly helped fuel a healthy interest in Adelaide<br />

as a design hub. Their new furniture collections, featuring<br />

Soft Chair, 2016, and the Pick n Mix Table, 2014, also serve to<br />

emphasise Adelaide’s diversity of practice. While the couple’s<br />

keen attention to detail is shared amongst their fellow peers<br />

working predominantly in timber, the boldly-coloured,<br />

Memphis-flavoured aesthetic of Daniel Emma’s pieces<br />

stands in stark contrast. Interestingly, To and Aiston have<br />

only recently expanded their practice to include furniture,<br />

which suggests the demand for Australian designed and<br />

manufactured product is on the rise.<br />

It’s a positive shift that designer Franco Crea has noticed<br />

too. As he explains, ‘People are sick of throwaway items:<br />

they want to invest in a product they can be proud to have in<br />

their home or office.’ The furniture designer had been solely<br />

operating out of his Adelaide CBD studio for three years,<br />

when in early <strong>2017</strong> he opened a second studio in Melbourne<br />

(where he’s now based) to meet growing demand.<br />

Crea acknowledges the disconnectedness between the<br />

design hubs of Adelaide and the eastern states is gradually<br />

diminishing and his joint studio operation is testament to<br />

this. However, there’s still more work to be done if design as<br />

an industry is to continue thriving in this country. ‘Education<br />

for the public is more important than ever in order to build<br />

awareness and spread the message of investing in local<br />

design, which needs to happen to increase opportunities for<br />

designers,’ he says. ‘And in turn, emerging designers need<br />

to be educated about what support networks and schemes<br />

are available to them, whether via government or an<br />

independent body.’<br />

ISSUE 05 / 15


Tweny years ago, the mass exodus of young creatives<br />

from Adelaide to basically anywhere else in Australia<br />

was seemingly epidemic. But these days, there are many<br />

more opportunities and reasons to stay put. Adelaide’s<br />

design landscape has changed as a result of growth and<br />

development, and clients are now realising, especially in the<br />

commercial sector, that investing in good design adds value<br />

to their business. As a result, interior designers and architects<br />

such as Genesin Studio, Studio Gram and Sans-Arc Studio,<br />

are redefining the face of hospitality and retail in Adelaide.<br />

And these practices are specifying local furniture designs<br />

or collaborating with their clients to commission bespoke<br />

product from local designers.<br />

Genesin Studio’s fit-out for Antica’s new Morphett Street<br />

restaurant for example, features custom tables designed by<br />

Crea and manufactured locally. The client wanted a premium,<br />

quality product and the tables’ detailing and finish perfectly<br />

accent the interior’s precise, high-end material application.<br />

Like Crea, Sam Agostino and Gareth Brown have also<br />

found their Agostino & Brown products, which they design<br />

and manufacture in their workshop north of Adelaide,<br />

increasingly being specified for commercial fit-outs. ‘We<br />

believe it’s due to a spirit of optimism and to growth,<br />

especially in the CBD where projects like the Adelaide Oval<br />

Redevelopment and the new Royal Adelaide Hospital have<br />

energised business confidence,’ says Agostino. Both she<br />

and Brown are looking forward to future progress and the<br />

opportunities this brings – with the Adelaide Central Market<br />

upgrade and Riverbank Festival Theatre project just two of a<br />

number of new developments recently confirmed.<br />

While they’re currently producing furniture for workplaces<br />

in Sydney, Perth, ACT and Adelaide, the couple are also<br />

listening to consumer demand when it comes to adding new<br />

pieces to their portfolio. ‘Sam and I recently introduced the<br />

Major tool, 2016 to our collection after observing that local<br />

clients wanted a cost-effective stool made in Adelaide,’<br />

Brown explains. ‘So we developed a product that could be<br />

easily assembled and maintained yet still features the core<br />

elements that make up our style – comfort, versatility<br />

and simplicity.’<br />

The current breadth of furniture practice in Adelaide is<br />

helping to change national narratives on design. Discussions<br />

pitting Melbourne against Sydney and vice versa are old: it’s<br />

simply not about who can do what best anymore. Rather,<br />

who’s doing what well, what can we learn from them and<br />

how can we potentially work together for greater outcomes.<br />

Designers can thank social media for bringing the industry<br />

that much closer together, but it’s ultimately their individual<br />

quest for development and improvement that will see the<br />

design progress even more within this country. It’s exciting to<br />

see the contribution a creative hub like Adelaide continues to<br />

make, especially in these times of renewed conceptual rigour<br />

and aesthetic potency.<br />

16 / ISSUE 05


Top: Rhys Cooper, Spoke Pendant Light, Flute Side Table, Carve Dining Chair. Photographer: Andre Castellucci.<br />

Top left: Agostino and Brown Showroom. Photo courtesy of Agostino and Brown.<br />

Left: Agostino and Brown, Major Stool featured within the Pix Residence by Sans-Arc. Photographer: Jonathan van der Knaap.<br />

ISSUE 05 / 17


<strong>2017</strong> Australian<br />

Furniture Design Award<br />

JamFactory and Stylecraft presented the second biennial<br />

Australian Furniture Design Award (AFDA) in July <strong>2017</strong>.<br />

The $20,000 prize was won by Alice Springs-based<br />

designer Elliat Rich.<br />

Elliat Rich completed a Bachelor of Design with first class<br />

honours at the College of Fine Arts, University of New South<br />

Wales in Sydney in 2006. She works across a broad range<br />

of design projects for a diverse client base including<br />

cross-cultural resources, exhibition design and public art.<br />

Her portfolio includes furniture and product development for<br />

one-off exhibition or limited run. In 2014 Elliat and her partner<br />

James Young launched Elbowrkshp, a studio, retail space and<br />

workshop they share with other creative professionals.<br />

Elliat was chosen from the six finalists including Adam<br />

Markowitz, Damien Wright and Bonhula Yunupingu,<br />

Mitchell Eaton, Trent Jansen and James Howe, who were<br />

shortlisted from over 100 entrants. The finalists were flown<br />

to Adelaide to present their prototypes to the judging panel<br />

consisting of Jon Goulder, Creative Director of Furniture<br />

Studio, JamFactory; Tony Russell, Brand Director, Stylecraft;<br />

Rebecca Evans, Curator of Decorative Arts, Art Gallery of<br />

South Australia; Stephen Todd, Design Editor, Australian<br />

Financial Review Magazine and Susan Standring, Practice<br />

Director, Carr Design Group. Through the intensive process<br />

the judges were specifically looking for originality, innovation<br />

and evidence of the designer’s professional capability.<br />

Elliat’s winning work titled Place, could be described as a<br />

sculptural vanity – a kind of old-fashioned object evoking<br />

feminine ritual. The unit, which was fabricated for her by<br />

Oscar Prieckaerts in Sydney has a neatly concealed draw<br />

constructed from stacked and coloured dowel, a removable<br />

storage container and a velvet-covered pivoting mirror - all<br />

of which perch atop fine timber legs. The colours, textures<br />

and sense of foreground, middle ground and background<br />

in the piece have all been informed by her many journeys<br />

driving across the Central Australian landscape.<br />

As the winner of this important biennial award, Elliat<br />

receives $20,000 in cash and the opportunity to undertake<br />

a residency in JamFactory’s Furniture Studio to develop<br />

new work to a specific breif for commercial production and<br />

distribution through Stylecraft showrooms across Australia<br />

and Singapore. Rich will receive royalty income from the<br />

work developed for as long as it remains in production.<br />

In addition, Rich’s winning prototype Place, will be<br />

acquired by the Art Gallery of South Australia for its<br />

permanent collection.<br />

www.afda.com.au<br />

18 / ISSUE 05


Left: Elliat Rich, Place, <strong>2017</strong>, Tasmanian oak, glass, velvet<br />

300L x 440W x 2520H mm. Photo courtesy of the artist.<br />

Clockwise from top left: James Howe, Rushcutters Bench, 2016<br />

Danish cord, powder coated steel, brass, 1800L x 400W x 450H mm.<br />

Photo courtesy of the artist.<br />

Damien Wright and Bonhula Yunupingu, Bala Ga Lili (Two Ways Learning), 2016<br />

Gadayka (Darwin stringy bark) copper wire, epoxy, ancient red gum, glass<br />

2200L x 2200W x 2200H mm. Photo courtesy of the artist.<br />

Mitchell Eaton, Brut Shelf, <strong>2017</strong>, plywood, two-pack paint<br />

1500L x 400W x 1300H mm. Photo courtesy of the artist.<br />

Trent Jansen, Pankalangu Arm Chair, <strong>2017</strong>, Tasmanian wallaby pelt, copper,<br />

SC plywood, stainless steel, French bovine leather, PVC, polyurethane foam<br />

800L x 770W x 730H mm. Photo courtesy of the artist.<br />

Adam Markowitz, Assegai Pendant, 2016, walnut, brass, polycarbonate<br />

diffuser, high output dimmable LEDs (Tridonic), black woven<br />

flex cable, 1150L x 400W x 500H mm. Photo courtesy of the artist.<br />

ISSUE 05 / 19


Feature<br />

JAMFACTORY ICON<br />

CATHERINE TRUMAN<br />

Words by Margaret Hancock Davis<br />

Margaret is Senior Curator at JamFactory and curator of<br />

JamFactory Icon <strong>2017</strong> Catherine Truman: no surface holds.


Launched in 2013, JamFactory’s<br />

annual icon series celebrates the<br />

achievements of South Australia’s<br />

most outstanding and influential<br />

artists working in crafts media.<br />

South Australia’s leading contemporary jeweller and artist<br />

Catherine Truman was selected as JamFactory’s <strong>2017</strong><br />

Icon. Her exhibition no surface holds presents an in-depth<br />

survey of the works produced over the last two decades,<br />

at the nexus of art and science. Through multiple sciencebased<br />

residencies, Truman has cultured many special and<br />

enduring relationships with anatomists, and histologists,<br />

neuroscientists and natural scientists, microscopists and<br />

ophthalmologists. These bonds of trust are at the heart of<br />

many of the works found in the exhibition.<br />

JamFactory’s Senior Curator, Margaret Hancock Davis,<br />

recently caught up with Truman at Gray Street Workshop<br />

to uncover some of the research and thinking behind the<br />

works in this exhibition.<br />

Catherine, your first foray into the science-based residencies<br />

was a broad-based interaction with the scientists and<br />

collection managers at the Museum and Art Gallery of the<br />

Northern Territory in 1997. How did this residency come<br />

about and what did you hope you would experience there?<br />

This was such an important residency and it was a complete<br />

surprise of the best kind. In 1995 Judy Kean, a curator from<br />

the Museum and Art Gallery of the Northern Territory offered<br />

a two-month residency where I was to have free reign,<br />

working with the resources of the museum, including the<br />

staff. When I arrived I remember feeling overwhelmed, not<br />

really having a clue where to begin. It was a complete tabula<br />

rasa – totally new territory, wonderful and awe-inspiring.<br />

I decided the best way in was to meet with as many people<br />

there as I could, and just simply observe, listen and learn.<br />

I do remember asking lots of questions.<br />

I found the scientists to be the most curious of beings, and<br />

spent two months gradually unravelling the amazing parallels<br />

between us. I felt completely at home in their laboratories<br />

learning the rigors of scientific rule. But actually it was the<br />

very human side, the nuanced self-expression I noticed<br />

seeping through the science that got me hooked.<br />

I have read that you are intrigued by the role of intuition,<br />

interpretation and practical human skill plays in the<br />

communication and expression of subject matter in both the<br />

artist studio and scientific research laboratory environments.<br />

Through your residencies you note that the processes of<br />

science and art are not so dissimilar, in what ways is this<br />

the case?<br />

To describe the colour of a shell as a flush of blush pink is<br />

quite evocative, yes? That’s the line I remember reading in a<br />

scientific publication written by one of the scientists I worked<br />

with in Darwin describing one of his favourite molluscs. It led<br />

me to question that if two scientists were describing the very<br />

same species and following all the rules of taxonomy, would<br />

those descriptions be exactly the same? Highly unlikely…<br />

We are all different.<br />

We each have a slightly different slant on the world and we<br />

bring a unique perspective and a unique library of skills to<br />

the ways we attempt to interpret life. I find that concept<br />

both logical and confronting, especially when it comes to<br />

how knowledge is generated about the human body – our<br />

anatomy. Ian Gibbins, neuroscientist, anatomist, poet and<br />

filmmaker, my collaborator of many years says:<br />

Somehow both scientists and artists have a level of self-belief<br />

that drives them to produce new work that they feel the rest<br />

of the world needs to know about. Yet, (good) scientists<br />

and artists alike are driven by self-doubt, uncertainty of<br />

the validity of their directions, having far too many ideas<br />

to effectively pursue at any point in time. In the end, what<br />

keeps both scientists and artists going is the excitement and<br />

challenge of being totally immersed in uncertainty, with just<br />

enough confidence that there is a way out to keep going…<br />

As part of your arts practice you spend time writing. One<br />

of your beautiful pieces of poetry is A Morning’s Anatomy.<br />

Written during the first anatomy class you attended in 2008<br />

with second-year medical anatomy students, the poem is<br />

in many ways a meditation on how you felt or how others<br />

around you may have been responding to your presence in<br />

the room.<br />

I do write a lot. The writing is a grounding strategy, no doubt.<br />

In this instance it was a way of absorbing the fine detail of<br />

the experience – writing this way, without filters is so direct.<br />

I often use this strategy as a way of drawing out an<br />

immediate response to something that seems unfathomable<br />

at first glance. Almost like bypassing the analysis so I can<br />

get to the crux of how I really feel. It’s incredibly personal<br />

and revealing.<br />

This piece of writing in particular helped me deal with the<br />

profound nature of the subject matter in that room that day.<br />

It also acted as a bridge between Ian and myself. I read it<br />

to him later and he said it was the first time he had had his<br />

teaching reflected in such a way. We based a lot of our future<br />

work on the seeds sown that day.<br />

I have been very interested by your observation that<br />

anatomical representations are not a passive representation<br />

of a subject rather they are imbued with the makers or artist<br />

hand, they are individualistic.<br />

I have been fascinated with the history of the representation<br />

of human anatomy for many years. Every representation of<br />

the human body by another human being, an image, a<br />

model, is filtered somehow by someone else’s experience.<br />

The images we carry of the body, of our bodies, are hand<br />

made by others. That thought alone will keep me amused<br />

for a very long time, especially as the technology for imaging<br />

the body develops into the future. We still only glimpse<br />

human anatomy and physiology. The subject is immense and<br />

no one person can claim conclusive knowledge of it, ever.<br />

In recent years you have collaborated with a number of<br />

artists on projects, in particular, the microscopy project<br />

presented at Flinders University Art Museum in 2014. Has<br />

working in a shared space i.e. Gray Street Workshop helped<br />

prepare you for such projects?<br />

ISSUE 05 / 21


Beginnings are especially important when working with<br />

others. How you unfold your stories to each other can<br />

underpin the collaboration. Gray Street has opened me up<br />

to being both a mentor and a mentee on a daily basis. But<br />

the workshop is home territory and a certain amount of<br />

comfort and ease comes with that. I do know that travelling<br />

out of my comfort zone is critical for my practice, my brain<br />

and my body.<br />

Working in scientific and medical environments can<br />

sometimes feel alienating and I’ve found it’s always the<br />

human connections that melt these barriers. Over time I’ve<br />

learned to step back a little and slow down the judgement<br />

that can get in the way of learning something new.<br />

You have collaborated with Ian Gibbins for many years<br />

now. What do you feel he has brought to your practice<br />

and can you comment on what you have possibly brought<br />

to his understanding of the body and seeing through<br />

your artworks?<br />

My practice has been enriched through working with Ian<br />

and his colleagues over the course of a decade. Ian has<br />

commented that he became more aware of his teaching<br />

methods because of our discussions. As a result he would<br />

utilise his own body as a primary living resource in his<br />

teaching and encourage his students to do the same. He<br />

asked them to consider the generic nature of the body<br />

they were learning in medical school: ‘Whose body are<br />

you learning about? Is it yours?’<br />

Generally there’s never enough time during the courses<br />

to ask such philosophical questions like this about the<br />

subject matter. But these questions are crucial. So, yes,<br />

we have both been affected in really positive ways by<br />

working together.<br />

The title of the exhibition is no surface holds, expresses a<br />

slippage, an inability to create a solid, firm or definitive view<br />

or idea. Why is this expression so essential to your work?<br />

No surface holds is a line by the French feminist Luce<br />

Irigaray, from her book This Sex Which Is Not One written<br />

in 1977. Melinda Rackham used it as a chapter heading in<br />

her book on my practice. It’s a potent piece of writing to be<br />

sure. It’s about the dissolving of boundaries between two<br />

people. I’ve chosen it as an exhibition title and the title of an<br />

installation in the show.<br />

I think I’m illusionist at best and when I make an image or<br />

an object, the catalyst is usually a very transient impression,<br />

something fleeting, perhaps just a sensation. I become<br />

deliciously absorbed in the quest to make something<br />

tangible of that sensation and yet I know its actually<br />

impossible. I work with the notion that all knowledge is<br />

fluid and can be altered by something as simple as the<br />

shifting light.<br />

You are currently a visiting scholar at the Flinders Centre<br />

for Ophthalmology, Eye and Vision Research, School of<br />

Medicine, Flinders University, undertaking a project titled<br />

The nexus between vision, the eye and perception. The<br />

works of art you have produced in response to this include<br />

ocular plants, <strong>2017</strong> and ocular trees, <strong>2017</strong>. What are the<br />

similarities you are expressing between plants and the way<br />

the eye works or looks?<br />

When I started this latest residency I had no idea how broad<br />

the subject of eyes, perception and vision could be and<br />

the diversity of disciplines involved. Over the past year I’ve<br />

watched many eye surgeries, pretended to be a patient in<br />

the waiting rooms, had my eyes imaged with every machine<br />

available at the clinic, and visited the research labs and there<br />

is still so much to investigate.<br />

This residency is proving to be a little different from my<br />

previous experiences at Flinders. I often describe my role<br />

in these environments as being a kind of thinking two-way<br />

mirror and that’s the way I’ve worked with Ian in the past.<br />

I observe broadly to begin with and ask questions, share<br />

my observations and over time we may generate questions<br />

together and that’s a really wonderful experience.<br />

The work that has evolved so far reflects a quite personal<br />

response to the structure of the eye and an inquiry into the<br />

sensation of sight. I’m beginning to understand that eyes<br />

are small miracles.<br />

I’m intrigued by the intricate networks, which connect<br />

the eye to the whole body. Also how we process light<br />

into thought; it seems light is a key ingredient for vision<br />

and perception.<br />

The collections called Ocular Plants and Ocular Trees in<br />

the exhibition have evolved organically from serendipitous<br />

connections. Recently I asked Angela Chappell, the<br />

ophthalmic photographer to take images of my retinas and<br />

we spent some time studying them on screen together. It<br />

was like gazing through a science fiction-like portal into what<br />

looked like a glowing planet covered with an arterial lattice<br />

of rivers and streams.<br />

Seeing is a great way for us to finish, as the works of art in<br />

this exhibition definitely reward those that take the time<br />

to engage. What would you hope people take away from<br />

this exhibition?<br />

I hope that people sense something of the engagement I<br />

experience when I research and reflect and make. There<br />

are some tricks of the eye and a smattering of humour in<br />

the work. I hope they become absorbed in wonder, feel a<br />

little puzzled occasionally and even have a good laugh or<br />

two along the way. Andy Warhol once said, ‘I don’t know<br />

where the real starts and the artificial stops’. Sometimes,<br />

uncertainty is delicious.<br />

JamFactory Icon <strong>2017</strong>, Catherine Truman: no surface holds,<br />

opened in Adelaide as part of the South Australian Living<br />

Artists (SALA) Festival before touring to eight venues<br />

nationally. The exhibition tour has been assisted by the<br />

Australian Government’s Contemporary Touring Initiative,<br />

a program of the Australia Council for the Arts.<br />

Previous page: Ongoing Being (detail), 2010 - ongoing<br />

multi media, dimensions variable. Photographer: Grant Hancock.<br />

Top right: In Preparation for Seeing: SEM Glove, Installation – objects, 2015<br />

black cotton glove encrusted with black glass spheres, microscope slides, steel<br />

forceps, petri dishes, light pad, dimensions variable. Photographer: Grant Hancock.<br />

Right: no surface holds: Crab Claw Installation, 2015 - 17, found crab claws encrusted<br />

with glass spheres. Dimensions variable. Photographer: Grant Hancock.<br />

22 / ISSUE 05


ISSUE 05 / 23


Feature


COLLISIONS: IDENTITY,<br />

MEANING AND POLITICS IN<br />

CONTEMPORARY ABORIGINAL<br />

ART AND DESIGN<br />

Words by Timmah Ball<br />

Timmah Ball is an emerging writer, urban researcher<br />

and cultural producer of Ballardong Noongar descent.<br />

The rising popularity of Aboriginal art, culture and design has<br />

occasionally aroused suspicion. As Richard Bell stated in his<br />

dry sardonic way, ‘Aboriginal art—it’s a white thing ’1 . In 2015,<br />

I was working in urban design for a local council who were<br />

developing an Aboriginal community centre in a suburb with<br />

a growing Indigenous population. An Indigenous steering<br />

committee was established to ensure the centre became a<br />

culturally vibrant place for the local community. But the lead<br />

white architect oozed an almost caricatured hipness in his<br />

black velvet blazer, a ‘starchitect’ in the making.<br />

At the first community co-design workshop, a stifling sense<br />

of power permeated the room as he confidently flicked the<br />

switch on the projector, animating the wall with technical<br />

design sketches and bush imagery. His presentation ended<br />

on an image of a black hand holding a white hand, as if<br />

a twee photo could erase the ongoing racism Aboriginal<br />

people endure. An Aboriginal community centre was vital<br />

but as people gently started to share their ideas, the loudest<br />

voices were white. The impact of colonisation was ignored,<br />

but a white council worker self-assuredly explained to<br />

community why the design should reference the river. White<br />

voices drowned out Aboriginal people who sat silently by<br />

the end. The architect left smugly, muttering how he likes to<br />

explore Australia’s deep cultural dimension, another project<br />

to boast about bringing cultural ‘cred’ and status to his<br />

illustrious career.<br />

Nayuka Gorrie recently wrote that ‘there is material gain<br />

made from our culture that does not flow to us.’ 2 I felt this<br />

as the architect casually left, knowing he would have a new<br />

building to boast about generating more work, while no one<br />

could guarantee whether free services would be provided<br />

for those in need. But on reflection, one the most challenging<br />

aspects of the exchange were the clichéd ways white staff<br />

and project designers expected us to express our culture.<br />

A strong connection to the river was assumed but what<br />

about other influences? A particularly vocal staff member<br />

repetitively talked about ways to incorporate the Stolen<br />

Generation as if this was something we could ever forget or<br />

even want to be reminded of through architectural design.<br />

Given the restrictive way we are often viewed, how do we<br />

express ourselves through art and design that engages with<br />

our lived realities, culture, ancestors and global connectivity?<br />

ISSUE 05 / 25


Previous page: Yolngu Weaver of Elcho Island Arts Verity Burarrwanga.<br />

Photographer: Rhett Hammerton.<br />

Top: Nicole Monks, nyinajimanha (sitting together), 2016<br />

blackwood, gold plated steel.<br />

stool: 45cm x 40cm x 44cm table: 94cm x 94cm x 34cm,<br />

Nicole Monks, thalanara (rug) 2016, pelt kangaroo skin blanket<br />

Photographer: Boaz Nothman.<br />

Yorta Yorta curator Kimberley Moulton writes of the<br />

unsettling pull between identities and the demand to<br />

represent an ‘authentic’ Aboriginal self. Like the architecture<br />

and design sector, the arts industry also attempts to classify<br />

us from a set of presumed values. Moulton writes:<br />

“The concept of authenticity which has its roots deeply<br />

embedded in theories of racial purity seem to still dictate<br />

and be at the forefront of discussion and representation<br />

of Indigenous art and cultural material in museums and<br />

galleries. This expectation of authentic identity comes from<br />

many directions, that of the institution from the expectation<br />

of the viewer and from the Indigenous artists deconstructing<br />

and representing this concept themselves. There is still<br />

a game of tug of war between western anthropological<br />

museum practice and the contemporary curator of what is<br />

authentic enough to be Bla(c)k today in a museum.” 3<br />

Given these obstacles, how does the mixed race,<br />

light-skinned, city dwelling blackfella begin to express their<br />

layered identities and complex influences within the white<br />

curatorial gaze? These issues are impossible to separate<br />

when approaching Indigenous artwork but Aboriginal artists<br />

are increasingly finding ways to push through these barriers,<br />

creating dynamic work and unique partnerships which defy<br />

stereotypes. JamFactory’s exhibition Confluence as part of<br />

TARNANTHI Festival of Contemporary Aboriginal and Torres<br />

Strait Islander Art exemplifies this featuring two significant<br />

collections by Nicole Monks and Elcho Island Weavers in<br />

collaboration with Koskela.<br />

26 / ISSUE 05


‘The challenge to white<br />

Australia is to address<br />

a question. How does<br />

the nation move from<br />

a state of colonial<br />

anxiety that refuses<br />

genuine recognition and<br />

engagement to a concept<br />

of locating ‘Indigenous<br />

theories, methodologies,<br />

and methods at the centre,<br />

not the periphery’ of<br />

our society?’<br />

The work of Monks, a Sydney-based Wajarri Yamatji woman<br />

with Indigenous, English and Dutch ancestry draws from her<br />

diverse heritage. Her furniture range creates a meeting point<br />

where Indigenous philosophies of sustainability, innovation<br />

and collaboration merge with contemporary art and design<br />

principles. The series marlu (kangaroo) from 2016 features<br />

wabarn-wabarn (bounce) chair with undardu (kangaroo<br />

skin blankets), walarnu (boomerang) chair and nyinajimanha<br />

(sitting together) stools and table and thalanara (rug). The<br />

powerful pieces use the recognizable language of furniture<br />

design yet seamlessly weave cultural narratives, which<br />

beguile and intrigue. Two worlds are colliding but nothing<br />

clashes or contradicts, instead unity is found and celebrated.<br />

In nyinajimanha (sitting together) a round table and chairs<br />

create a striking balance in polished blackwood echoing the<br />

sleek minimal furniture popular in industrial style cafes. But<br />

these choices are not just functional or aesthetic they are<br />

created to tell the story of people connecting and sharing<br />

knowledge. The chairs are positioned close to the ground<br />

to connect us to the Earth. At the centre of the table, a<br />

woven basket with both knitting needles and traditional<br />

weavings are in mid-flow, connecting both cultures through<br />

their similarities and craft. Monks is showing the viewer, or<br />

user, that Australia is a complex environment where wildly<br />

different lifestyles and races exist (not always in harmony)<br />

but it is possible to find connection and meaning in our<br />

plurality, which brings us closer together.<br />

For Monks, living in a city like Sydney is an opportunity to<br />

connect with her culture and respect the land of the Gadigal<br />

people in a multicultural landscape of many influences.<br />

The search for the ‘real Aboriginal’ is replaced by genuine<br />

meaning and understanding of history and our future. In<br />

her own acknowledgement to country she states:<br />

“We are all connected to this place as we live, work and<br />

play on Aboriginal Land. Today 228 years after the invasion<br />

I stand here as part of the design industry where we talk<br />

about sustainability and eco footprints influencing our<br />

design. But for the custodians of this land the philosophies<br />

of interconnectedness and respecting the Earth is a way of<br />

life, of being. As the designers, the creatives and the future<br />

makers, you have the ability to drive change. We are creating<br />

the history of now with the objects and spaces we create and<br />

the future we want to live in, for me this responsibility means<br />

taking lead from the custodians of this land and I thank them<br />

for imparting me with this knowledge.” 4<br />

Earlier this year I attended the Place, Politics and Privilege<br />

Conference at Victoria University. The keynote lecture<br />

by Professor Tony Birch talked about Aboriginal and<br />

white Australia’s differences but also stressed the need<br />

for collaboration if we are to resolve significant issues<br />

like climate change. His words soothed some of my own<br />

cynicism, recognising the power of working together and<br />

fusing knowledge which Monks’s furniture so beautifully<br />

illustrates. But as I have also witnessed in my own career<br />

these collaborations often eschew the Aboriginal voice. In an<br />

article Climate Change, Recognition and Social Place-Making<br />

Birch writes:<br />

“The challenge to white Australia is to address a question.<br />

How does the nation move from a state of colonial anxiety<br />

that refuses genuine recognition and engagement to a<br />

ISSUE 05 / 27


concept of locating ‘Indigenous theories, methodologies,<br />

and methods at the centre, not the periphery’ of our society?<br />

While such a shift could ultimately produce ‘an ecological<br />

philosophy of mutual benefit’, getting there will be a<br />

serious challenge.” 5<br />

Without doubt this is a challenge but already we are making<br />

small steps, evident in a range of new connections forming<br />

between Indigenous and non-Indigenous artists and<br />

designers. The weavers of Elcho Island Arts in collaboration<br />

with Koskela is an exciting example of cross-cultural<br />

relationship-building. Shelter, 2015 is a dynamic fusion where<br />

furniture collides with the intricate weavings of the Yolngu<br />

women. The project and partnership has evolved over time<br />

with the Sydney-based design company Koskela making<br />

regular trips to Echo Island to learn from and work with<br />

the women. The powerful work sees cultural techniques<br />

and natural materials traditionally used for ceremonies and<br />

carrying food, reinterpreted into furniture items such as<br />

lampshades and tables.<br />

For the Yolnugu women this is a vital opportunity to show<br />

the rest of Australia what can be done with local materials,<br />

flipping our capitalist hunger for the latest trend from New<br />

York or Paris. The collaboration and use of native materials<br />

also addresses the major crisis of our time – climate change.<br />

The collaboration platforms new levels of resilience and<br />

resourcefulness by switching from cheap mass-produced<br />

plastics and metals to what we have in our own back yard.<br />

When Sasha Titchkosky and Russel Koskela of Koskela first<br />

visited Elcho Island, Mavis Warrngilna Ganambarr, a senior<br />

weaver insisted on taking them shopping straightaway.<br />

Prompting curious looks and the question where are the<br />

shops? Their ignorance made the women laugh because<br />

for them the bush, the shrubs, the trees, the plants and<br />

the natural landscape were the shops. They get what they<br />

need from the land, it surrounds them and it’s free. These<br />

practices and ways of thinking not only generate incredible<br />

art and design but start to show Australia that there is<br />

a new way to progress which works in unison with the<br />

environment rather than contributing to its decline. As Birch<br />

states ‘a shift in mindset is required to produce meaningful<br />

and valuable interactions between Indigenous and non-<br />

Indigenous people.’ 6 Designs created by the Yolungu women<br />

in partnership Koskela highlights this.<br />

TARNANTHI Festival of Contemporary Aboriginal and Torres<br />

Strait Islander Art reflects a movement that is beginning to<br />

emerge across a range of disciplines – from climate change<br />

action to landscape design. Architects, designers, artists and<br />

urban planners are finding dynamic and meaningful ways<br />

to work alongside Aboriginal people and our culture,<br />

creating new ways of being in cities and our own homes.<br />

The festival comes at a time where we must rethink how we<br />

live alongside our environment – a theme which ties in with<br />

other collaborative practices in the design sector.<br />

landscape by reinserting our identity. In 2016 in partnership<br />

with SA Water, he created the Noarlunga Downs Wetland<br />

Sculptures, a series of steel and concrete sculptures in the<br />

stylised form of traditional bark canoes with fishing spears<br />

that were traditionally used as punting poles. A government<br />

water authority collides with the cultural practices of the<br />

Kaurna and Ramindjeri peoples and rigid government land<br />

management practices are stripped back. Aboriginal water<br />

management is honoured, transforming the area from a<br />

treated wastewater storage unit into a thriving wetland<br />

sanctuary marked by Herzich’s striking sculptures.<br />

These Indigenous design interventions can be seen in cities<br />

across the country, revitalising the cold uniformity we are<br />

often accustomed to in the built environment. In Perth, Edith<br />

Cowan University’s Ngoolark building embedded Noongar<br />

knowledge into the architectural design process, creating a<br />

physical experience which links the visitor to Noongar culture,<br />

reminding us it is still here and thriving. A range of projects<br />

have arisen across Melbourne – from Brook Andrews and<br />

Trent Walter’s arresting commemoration to the last Aboriginal<br />

men hung in Melbourne in Standing by Tunnerminnerwait and<br />

Maulboyheenner, 2016 to Megan Cope’s You Are, Here Now,<br />

2015 which combines Woiwrurung language with colonial<br />

maps on the façade of the Australian Catholic University.<br />

More and more Indigenous and non-Indigenous Australians<br />

are creating innovative ways to bring our cultures together,<br />

ensuring that we no longer dilute, erase or tokenise the<br />

traditional custodians of this land.<br />

Nayuka Gorrie has a right to be concerned when she speaks<br />

of economic capital not always flowing onto us and I have<br />

certainly felt Richard Bell’s cynicism. But I also believe we<br />

have learnt and are continuing to create collaborations based<br />

on equity and grounded in the need to enrich who we are<br />

though cross-cultural exchange and solidarity. TARNANTHI<br />

Festival is another way to showcase our growth where artist/<br />

designers like Nicole Monks and Elcho Island Arts weavers<br />

in collaboration with Koskela are creating new ways of being<br />

and a future, which resolves the pain of the past.<br />

Confluence: Contemporary Aboriginal Design exhibits at<br />

JamFactory from 29 September - 26 November as part<br />

of TARNANTHI Festival of Contemporary Aboriginal and<br />

Torres Strait Islander Art.<br />

1. http://www.kooriweb.org/foley/great/art/bell.html<br />

2. Gorrie, N. Cultural Appropriation and Power, The Saturday Paper, 27 May, <strong>2017</strong>.<br />

https://www.thesaturdaypaper.com.au/opinion/topic/<strong>2017</strong>/05/27/culturalappropriation-and-power/14958072004699.<br />

3. Moulton, K. Collecting My Thoughts-Authenticity, The Museum and<br />

Representation, Centre for Indigenous Stories, 2015.<br />

5. http://indigenousstory.com.au/works/128/collecting-my-thoughtsauthenticity-the-museum-and-representation/<br />

4. Recorded in an interview with Sophie Monks.<br />

5. Birch, T. Climate Change, Recognition and Social Place-Making’, The Sydney<br />

Review of Books, 3 March, <strong>2017</strong>. http://sydneyreviewofbooks.com/climatechange-recognition-and-caring-for-country/4<br />

ibid<br />

In Adelaide, Ngarrindjeri/Kaurna/German artist Paul Herzich<br />

works across landscape architecture and public art to create<br />

evocative cultural monuments that soothe the colonial


Top: Mavis Warrngilna Ganambarr with Elcho Island Arts Weavers. Photo courtesy of Koskela.<br />

ISSUE 05 / 29


Feature<br />

Studio Pottery<br />

Words by Damon Moon<br />

Damon Moon is Creative Director of the Ceramics Studio<br />

at JamFactory.<br />

Throughout most of history, pottery has<br />

been a collective affair that has availed<br />

itself of the level of industry, scale of<br />

production and techniques of manufacture<br />

appropriate to a particular time and place.<br />

The objects that resulted from these endeavours may have<br />

been rudely functional or highly decorative, with their<br />

workplace origins ranging from small rural concerns to<br />

industries encompassing entire cities, as in the group of<br />

six towns that comprised the district of Stoke-on-Trent in<br />

England or the city of Jingdezhen in China, which had a<br />

continuous history of porcelain manufacture and export for<br />

over a thousand years.<br />

In fact, it was only really in the late 19th century, as a<br />

result of the changing nature of art and the influence of<br />

philosophies towards handcrafts espoused by the Arts and<br />

Crafts movement, that a new approach to making came into<br />

being and a new practitioner appeared – the artist or ‘studio<br />

potter’, so named because their workplace resembled an<br />

artist’s studio and the results of their labour edged closer<br />

to the world of art whilst retreating from the practicalities<br />

of industry.<br />

Just when the term ‘studio pottery’ first appeared is unclear,<br />

but what it described went beyond a style of work to<br />

encompass an approach to making and a lifestyle that for<br />

many was – and still is – more vocation than occupation.<br />

That there was a certain element of nostalgia underpinning<br />

this trend is undeniable, however in every era, it seems that<br />

periods of social upheaval and a rapid growth of industry<br />

and technological advancement is augmented by a growth<br />

of interest in making on a small scale, or what may now be<br />

called ‘slow’ making or the ‘makers’ movement’. For every<br />

action there is a reaction.<br />

30 / ISSUE 05


In Australia, it was in the aftermath of the Second World<br />

War that all the components of what we think of as the<br />

modern Crafts Movement appeared and ceramics was at<br />

the forefront of this new approach to a very old craft. Small<br />

workshops flourished, courses began to appear and ceramics<br />

began to be seen in mainstream art galleries, often as the<br />

accompaniment to an exhibition of paintings but sometimes<br />

as the major feature, as in the ground-breaking work made<br />

by David and Hermia Boyd who had sell-out shows and<br />

achieved great notoriety through the exhibitions of their<br />

ceramics in the 1950s.<br />

This pattern increased throughout the 1960s (which<br />

interestingly was also a period of social change) and by the<br />

early seventies ceramics, and the Crafts in general, played a<br />

prominent part in Australian cultural life.<br />

Governments became increasingly involved in arts funding,<br />

with a dedicated federal crafts-funding body and state-based<br />

boards, and ceramics was a significant beneficiary of this<br />

largesse. Ceramics courses proliferated within art schools,<br />

TAFE and other adult education courses, ceramics was<br />

taught in schools and numerous practitioners established<br />

successful careers built on the back of a wide public interest<br />

in the field. This was the climate which allowed for the birth of<br />

JamFactory, a visionary organisation which can truly claim to<br />

be ‘innovative’ and is a model which has yet to be reproduced<br />

in this country, let alone bettered.<br />

Nonetheless, it’s true to say that throughout the eighties<br />

and nineties, away from nurturing environments such as<br />

that provided by JamFactory, something happened, and the<br />

interest in ceramics waned. Perhaps it was the extraordinary<br />

growth of digital technologies and a strong bias towards<br />

conceptualism in the art world (and particularly in art<br />

education) that made the manipulation of mud, no matter<br />

how skilful, seem somehow redundant, too ‘old school’.<br />

Institutions like JamFactory with its long commitment to<br />

ceramics, persisted, but there was a diminishment of teaching<br />

within the tertiary sector and Australia-wide the penetration<br />

of hand-crafted ceramics in the broader public sphere<br />

was lessened.<br />

It’s always hard to judge these things accurately, but in the<br />

late nineties and into the 2000s ceramics began to gather<br />

strength again: the impetus was coming from somewhere,<br />

but the question was where?<br />

My observation is that the trend towards ceramics’ newfound<br />

popularity had several points of reference and that<br />

these were fortuitously coincidental.<br />

One explanation was the unprecedented rise to fame of<br />

the Australian ceramic artist (I’m sure she would have been<br />

happier being called a potter), Gwyn Hanssen Pigott in the<br />

1980s. After a long career in both England and Australia as<br />

a maker of lovely, but rather underappreciated domestic<br />

wares, Hanssen Pigott created what amounted to a new way<br />

of looking at ceramics – a ‘still life’. At once the objects and<br />

their depiction, packaged in an exquisite, seemingly simple<br />

moment – they took the art world by storm. Hanssen Pigott<br />

became properly famous and her elevation of the humble,<br />

well-crafted, beautifully-realised pot provided a muchneeded<br />

shot in the arm for ceramics, proof that success was<br />

32 / ISSUE 05


attainable at a level that was previously the province of other,<br />

more mainstream visual arts practices.<br />

Once it became obvious that one person could do it, others<br />

followed, with many (some rather too closely) emulating her<br />

approach and others finding new ways to interpret age-old<br />

traditions, with the corollary being that ceramics once again<br />

began to gain much-needed traction.<br />

Other international artists found wide audiences through<br />

the medium of clay, with two, very different, English artists,<br />

Grayson Perry and Edmund de Waal, doing much to raise the<br />

profile of ceramics around the turn of the new century.<br />

However, the final ingredient (and I use that term very<br />

deliberately) was to be found in a place that was both<br />

unexpected and yet blindingly obvious: it was in food and the<br />

connection between the table and the plate, what the great<br />

Mexican writer Octavio Paz refers to when he wrote:<br />

In its perpetual movement back and forth between beauty<br />

and utility, pleasure and service, the work of craftsmanship<br />

teaches us lessons in sociability.<br />

My first contact with this phenomenon came about in 2002<br />

when the chef and writer Gay Bilson approached me to work<br />

on a culinary project for the Adelaide Festival of Arts. There<br />

were two components: one entailed making some plates<br />

for a conference of gastronomy, the other a few hundred<br />

small bowls which would be used to serve meals she had<br />

prepared to patients in a hospital, thus upending a long and<br />

proud health-care tradition of inedible food served up on<br />

unappealing crockery.<br />

Jacob’s Creek restaurant with tableware – and the demand<br />

just seems to increase each year.<br />

Away from JamFactory, many talented makers – Colin<br />

Hopkins and Illona Topolcsanyi from Cone11 pottery<br />

in Melbourne, Ben Richardson in Hobart and Malcolm<br />

Greenwood in New South Wales to name just a few – supply<br />

some of the best restaurants in the country, and the ‘trickle<br />

down’ effect has been profound.<br />

Finally, one cannot ignore the advent of online retailing,<br />

with its global reach and its ability to facilitate makers who<br />

are able to work at a scale and pace which they themselves<br />

control, with the inherent saving over more traditional ‘bricks<br />

and mortar’ outlets.<br />

What is fascinating is that none of these components seem<br />

to be at odds with each other: the greater the interest in the<br />

field the more makers seem to respond, and more makers<br />

means a greater public awareness of hand-made ceramics –<br />

and so it goes.<br />

In fact, ‘making’ in all its permutations is, as the current<br />

expression would have it, ‘a thing’. Ceramics, that age-old<br />

tradition, has reinvented itself, and it is a pleasure and an<br />

honour to observe this phenomenon close-up, and to be part<br />

of an organisation that has, since its very inception, helped<br />

lead the change.<br />

Previous page: Ilona Topolcsanyi at Cone 11 Pottery Studio.<br />

Photo courtesy of Cone 11.<br />

Left: Cone 11 Pottery Studio. Photo courtesy of Cone 11.<br />

Around the country, other chefs of equal standing had also<br />

begun to explore the aesthetic and functional possibilities<br />

of ‘bespoke’, hand-made crockery, and it’s true to say that<br />

the impetus for the infiltration of hand-made ceramics into<br />

restaurants has been almost entirely ‘top-down’, and now the<br />

list of restaurants using such work reads like a compendium<br />

from an antipodean equivalent of the<br />

Michelin guide.<br />

One of my very first calls when I began as Creative Director<br />

of the Ceramics Studio at JamFactory was to arrange<br />

a visit to Penfolds’s Magill Estate Restaurant, where the<br />

executive chefs, Scott Huggins and Emma McCaskill,<br />

commissioned a full setting for their degustation menu.<br />

Such is the relationship we built with Huggins and McCaskill<br />

that JamFactory Ceramics Studio Associates Jordan Gower,<br />

Ashlee Hopkins and Ebony Heidenreich now supply work to<br />

both Huggins at Magill Estate and McCaskill in her new role as<br />

head chef at The Pot restaurant.<br />

Another recent project undertaken by JamFactory Ceramics<br />

Associate Ashlee Hopkins was a commission to make<br />

tableware for Barossa Valley restaurant, Hentley Farm, for<br />

their Gourmet Traveller Top 50 event and the JamFactory<br />

studio has also supplied both Fino at Seppleltsfield and<br />

ISSUE 05 / 33


PILCHUCK GLASS SCHOOL


In <strong>2017</strong> JamFactory celebrates the<br />

15th year of its Pilchuck Glass School<br />

Partner Scholarship. Brokered by<br />

the Glass Department’s past Head<br />

of Studio and Mentor Nick Mount,<br />

and supported by JamFactory and<br />

Arts South Australia, the scholarship<br />

provides the opportunity for a first<br />

year Associate to attend one of the<br />

school’s summer sessions.<br />

This year Billy Crellin, a graduate of the Sydney College of<br />

the Arts, was awarded the opportunity and attended the<br />

school in July.<br />

‘I am proud to be this year’s recipient and grateful to benefit<br />

from the ongoing relationship between the JamFactory and<br />

Pilchuck. The scholarship offers a unique opportunity to learn<br />

from highly accomplished artists and I expect to prosper<br />

from the experience,’ says Crellin.<br />

Pilchuck boasts a reputation as the world’s most<br />

comprehensive centre for glass education. Located 80<br />

kilometres from Seattle in Stanwood, Washington, the school<br />

offers intensive residential instruction taught by worldrenowned<br />

artists, as well as residencies for both emerging<br />

and established practitioners in all media. The program<br />

comprises a series of sessions that run primarily from May<br />

through to September during which five concurrent courses<br />

are taught in a variety of glassworking processes for artists<br />

of all skill levels.<br />

Founded in 1971 by glass artist Daly Chihuly and patrons<br />

Anne Gould Hauberg and John H. Hauberg, the school began<br />

as an experimental summer workshop. Camping on site using<br />

makeshift equipment, the artists and students of the early<br />

years embraced experimentation and exploration. Today<br />

the campus has grown to include facilities for glassblowing,<br />

casting, coldworking, flameworking, fusing, neon, glass<br />

painting, stained glass and printmaking, as well as wood and<br />

metal studios. Yet, the school’s original core values endure: to<br />

inspire creativity, transform individuals and build community.<br />

The school’s unique setting, on a former tree farm in the<br />

foothills of the Cascade Mountains, supports this vision.<br />

Mount, who has been a member of the faculty both as a<br />

teaching assistant and instructor multiple times since 1985<br />

and in 2000 was appointed to the school’s International<br />

Council which he now co-chairs, describes it as a<br />

wonderland. Both staff and students live on campus for the<br />

duration of sessions, working long days, sharing meals in the<br />

communal kitchen/dining facilities and sleeping in log cabins.<br />

‘It’s a super-heated learning environment in which the energy<br />

and expectations are high, and everyone is fully invested in<br />

glass and the experience,’ says Mount.<br />

With a focus on fostering and educating a worldwide<br />

community, Pilchuck maintains partner scholarships with<br />

schools and universities around the world. These relationships<br />

extend Pilchuck’s outreach and ensure they engage an<br />

ever-expanding international community of artists. In turn,<br />

the students awarded these scholarships receive a unique<br />

learning experience and opportunity to connect with glass<br />

artists from around the world while acting as ambassadors<br />

for their home institution.<br />

Over its 15-year history, JamFactory’s scholarship has had<br />

long-term impacts on the Associates who receive them.<br />

Madeline Prowd, the Glass Studio’s Assistant Technician<br />

and recipient of the scholarship in 2010, remembers it as an<br />

incredible experience, which has been a catalyst for ongoing<br />

opportunities upon her return. In 2013 she assisted Ben<br />

Edols, the following year she assisted Brian Corr and received<br />

the School’s Saxe Award to attend a class in 2015, and this<br />

year she has been invited to return as a Craftsperson-in-<br />

Residence. Also known as a Gaffer, Pilchuck invites two<br />

accomplished artists with expertise in hot glassworking<br />

to execute the creative visions of the School’s Artists-In-<br />

Residence and instructors for each session. It is a significant<br />

opportunity and reflects Prowd’s technical skill and expertise.<br />

The scholarship’s value extends beyond the benefits it<br />

offers the Associates. Returning with new knowledge and<br />

international networks, the Associates share their experiences<br />

with the wider glass community. Karen Cunningham, the<br />

current Creative Director of JamFactory’s Glass Studio<br />

and recipient of the scholarship in 2006, describes being<br />

profoundly impacted by her experience attending a class<br />

taught by Seattle-based American glass artist, Boyd Sugiki.<br />

On her return she lobbied to get him and his wife, artist<br />

Lisa Zerkowitz, to Adelaide and in 2011 they taught a<br />

workshop at the JamFactory, sharing teaching notes that<br />

are still referred to today.<br />

Glass working is inherently collaborative and Pilchuck’s ability<br />

to grow from the idealism and imagination with which it<br />

began reflects the passion and good-will of those who work<br />

with the medium. Subsequently, the school’s commitment<br />

to supporting the community and fostering teamwork has<br />

almost certainly contributed to the culture of generosity and<br />

collaboration found within glass studios around the world.<br />

Words by Peta Mount<br />

Peta is a program manager and arts writer based in<br />

Adelaide, South Australia. She currently manages the<br />

studio of contemporary Australian artist Jason Sims and<br />

works in the role of Artist Services Manager at Guildhouse.<br />

Left: Glass Studio. Photographer: Andre Castellucci.<br />

ISSUE 05 / 35


STAYING CURIOUS. ALWAYS.


Star-gazing nets, stairways to heaven,<br />

a transformation of Times Square<br />

and a mission to solve some of the<br />

world’s biggest energy problems,<br />

re-imagination moguls’ Snøhetta<br />

are a Norwegian multi-disciplinary<br />

design firm shifting, not just the<br />

spaces in which we exist, but how<br />

we think about them..and they’re<br />

doing it right here, in Adelaide.<br />

Since their beginnings as a collaborative architectural<br />

and landscape workshop some 30 years ago, Snøhetta<br />

have grown to become an internationally renowned<br />

practice incorporating interior architecture and brand<br />

design. Their trans-disciplinary way of thinking has been<br />

applied to approximately 100 projects globally and seen<br />

them strategically place studios in Oslo, New York City,<br />

San Francisco, Innsbruck, Singapore and Adelaide. 1<br />

‘Although our firm is worldwide, we are not big,’ says<br />

Australasian Managing Director, Kaare Krokene. ‘We are<br />

nimble and open-minded with our growth strategies.’<br />

Slowly growing, the relatively small team in South Australia<br />

is also supported by a pool of Australasia-dedicated staff in<br />

Norway. Based at JamFactory this chapter evolved off the<br />

back of a major project. Yet Krokene says setting up shop in<br />

seemingly obscure locations has become common and is in<br />

alignment with Snøhetta’s practice.<br />

Snøhetta’s first Australian project, the University of South<br />

Australia’s Pridham Hall (in partnership with Adelaide-based<br />

JPE Design Studio and JamFactory), paired with a bold<br />

mid-life career decision for Krokene, was how JamFactory<br />

eventually became home. After over 10 great years working<br />

in director roles for JPE, Krokene ‘felt the need to get back to<br />

his roots with the models and principles of Nordic design.’<br />

Establishing Snøhetta at JamFactory was a considered<br />

decision. When the Founding Director of Snøhetta, Kjetil<br />

Thorsen, was led on a tour of JamFactory, he was blown<br />

away. A lot of what was happening at JamFactory aligned<br />

with what Snøhetta would like to do in terms of industrial<br />

design and tangible making. Krokene agrees: ‘You can<br />

smell the materials and see stuff actually happening<br />

around you here.’<br />

One of Snøhetta’s main goals is to holistically integrate<br />

artwork in their architecture: ‘Preferring to allow for an<br />

open dialogue between artists, artisans and professionals<br />

with various approaches to important building elements.’ 2<br />

The roof of their Opera House in Oslo was officially registered<br />

as a piece of art – meaning certain safety measures did not<br />

need to be complied to so rigidly. ‘Those sloping surfaces<br />

into the water, they wanted to put handrails everywhere.<br />

But we won, and the building was able to maintain its artistic<br />

merit of natural and sculptural qualities,’ says Krokene.<br />

The Pridham Hall project could only have come together<br />

with the project consultation and collaboration of<br />

JamFactory’s CEO, Brian Parkes and Jon Goulder, Creative<br />

Director of JamFactory’s Furniture Studio. ‘They did a hell<br />

of a good job,’ says Krokene. Working especially in the<br />

integration of donor branding, Goulder, Parkes and the<br />

Snøhetta team worked through conceptual approaches and<br />

design-thinking workshops to look at not the most dominant,<br />

but most appropriate placement and detailed integration of<br />

donor names in the building. The skills of JamFactory makers<br />

and designers were utilised to create physical models and<br />

to make the visual planning process tangible. As a result,<br />

integral to the building is a cascading chandelier-style roof<br />

in the lobby space, engraved granite pool surrounds and<br />

detailing to the underside of the amphitheatre towards the<br />

Jeffery Smart building.<br />

Snøhetta stand strong on their missions globally. ‘People,<br />

Process, Project - and always in that order’ 3 is their mantra.<br />

They focus heavily on connectivity and embracing the theory<br />

that good design wins, not names or company status. Portal,<br />

<strong>2017</strong>, a seemingly never ending ladder, was a collaboration<br />

between Snøhetta, Brooklyn design studio Everything<br />

Elevated and Danish upholsterer Erik Jørgensen Møbelfabrik,<br />

which formed part of Wallpaper magazine’s Holy Handmade<br />

exhibition earlier this year. It is a great example of the<br />

imaginative and creative work Snøhetta get to do as a result<br />

of their approach to collaboration, which honours specialist<br />

knowledge in each area.<br />

One of Krokene’s biggest qualms with the design industry in<br />

Australia however is the way in which creative opportunities<br />

are procured. He describes that it is virtually impossible for<br />

someone to start up a design practice and gain opportunities<br />

for larger projects without relevant experience. ‘Those<br />

opportunities just don’t exist,’ he says. ‘There are a number<br />

of architects speaking especially to state government about<br />

how their procurement process is not offering enough<br />

creative opportunities.’<br />

Accustomed to design competitions in Norway, Krokene<br />

says even at invited competitions, there is anonymity and<br />

a wild-card entry, which leads to a real democratisation of<br />

process. ‘Snøhetta started as a wild-card entry in the 1980s,<br />

winning the Alexandrina Library competition in Egypt. Then,<br />

there were no glossy tech programs, just sketches, it was a<br />

more even playing field.’ Luckily, that ground is being levelled<br />

again, with presentation programs becoming much more<br />

affordable and readily available to the much smaller studios.<br />

‘It’s not about being individual stars, but rather a<br />

constellation,’ says Krokene: ‘We are Snøhetta. We create<br />

architecture, landscapes, interiors and brand design’.<br />

Words by Lara Merrington<br />

Lara is Assistant Curator at JamFactory<br />

Left: Norwegian National Opera and Ballet, Oslo.<br />

Photo courtesy of Snøhetta.<br />

1. http://www.snohetta.com accessed June, <strong>2017</strong><br />

2. http://www.archdaily.com/440/oslo-opera-house-Snøhetta.<br />

Accessed 10 June <strong>2017</strong><br />

3. http://www.snohetta.com accessed June, <strong>2017</strong><br />

4. http://www.snohetta.com accessed June, <strong>2017</strong><br />

ISSUE 05 / 37


In<br />

space<br />

–<br />

2000<br />

–<br />

and<br />

,<br />

creating<br />

provide<br />

it<br />

work<br />

that<br />

was<br />

that<br />

digital<br />

already<br />

disrupted<br />

engagement<br />

clear<br />

the<br />

that<br />

that<br />

‘<br />

people<br />

digital<br />

smooth<br />

are<br />

technologies<br />

experience<br />

so<br />

would<br />

’<br />

addicted<br />

explode<br />

of<br />

to<br />

media<br />

the<br />

–<br />

into<br />

urban<br />

but<br />

every<br />

environment<br />

really<br />

Beginnings<br />

part<br />

of<br />

daily<br />

life<br />

.<br />

Although<br />

I<br />

had<br />

been<br />

trained<br />

as<br />

a<br />

script<br />

reader<br />

and<br />

film<br />

producer<br />

everything<br />

in<br />

my<br />

creative<br />

life<br />

was<br />

pointing<br />

towards<br />

Past, present & future tense – a conversation between Jon Goulder, Lou Weis and John Warwicker.<br />

that<br />

digital<br />

technologies<br />

now<br />

claim<br />

to<br />

offer<br />

.<br />

Now<br />

the<br />

value<br />

of<br />

the<br />

designed<br />

object<br />

is<br />

when<br />

it<br />

is<br />

tactile<br />

and<br />

intimate<br />

.<br />

That<br />

interventions<br />

in<br />

physical<br />

space<br />

.<br />

the<br />

object<br />

’<br />

s<br />

greatest<br />

strength<br />

is<br />

in<br />

motivating<br />

a<br />

desire<br />

to<br />

touch<br />

it<br />

,<br />

in<br />

being<br />

corporeal<br />

.<br />

you<br />

can’t<br />

sit<br />

in<br />

a<br />

jpg<br />

.<br />

design<br />

it<br />

work<br />

may<br />

in<br />

photograph<br />

public<br />

well


Creative<br />

direction<br />

of<br />

applied<br />

arts<br />

objects<br />

and<br />

furniture<br />

requires<br />

the<br />

careful<br />

marrying<br />

of<br />

designers<br />

,<br />

artisans<br />

and<br />

a<br />

sense<br />

of<br />

what<br />

the<br />

market<br />

is<br />

interested<br />

in<br />

.<br />

This<br />

all<br />

needs<br />

to<br />

be<br />

bundled<br />

up<br />

into<br />

one<br />

larger<br />

narrative<br />

of<br />

a<br />

collection<br />

with<br />

a<br />

higher<br />

purpose<br />

,<br />

one<br />

that<br />

comes<br />

from<br />

the<br />

heart<br />

of<br />

my<br />

daily<br />

preoccupations<br />

.<br />

The<br />

purpose<br />

of<br />

collaboration<br />

is<br />

to<br />

secrete<br />

new<br />

knowledge<br />

into<br />

an<br />

entity<br />

requiring<br />

inspiration<br />

.<br />

Collaboration<br />

–<br />

by<br />

a<br />

civilian<br />

with<br />

a<br />

rebel<br />

force<br />

or<br />

between<br />

two<br />

creatives<br />

–<br />

usually<br />

serves<br />

one<br />

entity<br />

more<br />

than<br />

another<br />

,<br />

someone<br />

usually<br />

comes<br />

away<br />

the<br />

clear<br />

winner<br />

Mid-career<br />

Collaboration<br />

if<br />

the<br />

work<br />

is<br />

interesting<br />

and<br />

stimulates<br />

interest<br />

it<br />

creates<br />

it<br />

‘s<br />

own<br />

market<br />

.<br />

1<br />

+<br />

1<br />

=<br />

3<br />

.<br />

the<br />

resonance<br />

of<br />

the<br />

collective<br />

.<br />

more<br />

than<br />

the<br />

sum<br />

of<br />

it<br />

‘<br />

s<br />

parts<br />

.<br />

and<br />

generating<br />

....<br />

between<br />

the<br />

designer<br />

and<br />

the<br />

someone<br />

else<br />

.<br />

Creative<br />

direction<br />

of<br />

applied<br />

arts<br />

objects<br />

and<br />

furniture<br />

requires<br />

the<br />

careful<br />

marrying<br />

of<br />

designers<br />

,<br />

artisans<br />

and<br />

a<br />

sense<br />

of<br />

what<br />

the<br />

market<br />

is<br />

interested<br />

in<br />

.<br />

This<br />

all<br />

needs<br />

to<br />

be<br />

bundled<br />

up<br />

into<br />

one<br />

larger<br />

narrative<br />

of<br />

a<br />

collection<br />

with<br />

a<br />

higher<br />

purpose<br />

,<br />

one<br />

that<br />

comes<br />

from<br />

the<br />

heart<br />

of<br />

my<br />

daily<br />

preoccupations<br />

.<br />

The<br />

purpose<br />

of<br />

collaboration<br />

is<br />

to<br />

secrete<br />

new<br />

knowledge<br />

into<br />

an<br />

entity<br />

requiring<br />

inspiration<br />

.<br />

Collaboration<br />

–<br />

by<br />

a<br />

civilian<br />

with<br />

a<br />

rebel<br />

force<br />

or<br />

between<br />

two<br />

creatives<br />

–<br />

usually<br />

serves<br />

one<br />

entity<br />

more<br />

than<br />

another<br />

,<br />

someone<br />

usually<br />

comes<br />

away<br />

the<br />

clear<br />

winner<br />

Mid-career<br />

Collaboration<br />

if<br />

the<br />

work<br />

is<br />

interesting<br />

and<br />

stimulates<br />

interest<br />

it<br />

creates<br />

it<br />

‘s<br />

own<br />

market<br />

.<br />

1<br />

+<br />

1<br />

=<br />

3<br />

.<br />

the<br />

resonance<br />

of<br />

the<br />

collective<br />

.<br />

more<br />

than<br />

the<br />

sum<br />

of<br />

it<br />

‘<br />

s<br />

parts<br />

.<br />

and<br />

generating<br />

....<br />

between<br />

the<br />

designer<br />

and<br />

the<br />

someone<br />

else<br />

.


from<br />

successful<br />

collaboration<br />

.<br />

I<br />

see<br />

everything<br />

through<br />

the<br />

prism<br />

of<br />

filmmaking<br />

,<br />

which<br />

like<br />

furniture<br />

or<br />

property<br />

development<br />

,<br />

is<br />

an<br />

industrial<br />

process<br />

that<br />

requires<br />

a<br />

great<br />

many<br />

skilled<br />

creatives<br />

and<br />

technicians<br />

to<br />

realise<br />

the<br />

overall<br />

product<br />

.<br />

Collaboration<br />

is<br />

a<br />

popular<br />

word<br />

for<br />

an<br />

industrial<br />

process<br />

that<br />

requires<br />

a<br />

fluid<br />

dialogue<br />

to<br />

exist<br />

for<br />

work<br />

to<br />

be<br />

done<br />

efficiently<br />

.<br />

Ultimately<br />

,<br />

as<br />

creative<br />

director<br />

the<br />

collaboration<br />

ends<br />

when<br />

I<br />

determine<br />

if<br />

the<br />

project<br />

is<br />

proceeding<br />

or<br />

not<br />

.<br />

But<br />

once<br />

Broached<br />

say<br />

yes<br />

,<br />

it<br />

is<br />

extremely<br />

rare<br />

that<br />

the<br />

collaborative<br />

process<br />

is<br />

halted<br />

–<br />

we<br />

roll<br />

the<br />

dice<br />

and<br />

see<br />

what<br />

the<br />

outcome<br />

is<br />

.<br />

1<br />

+<br />

1<br />

=<br />

3<br />

(<br />

again<br />

)<br />

every<br />

thing<br />

exists<br />

in<br />

time<br />

.<br />

or<br />

the<br />

work<br />

itself<br />

...<br />

.<br />

from<br />

successful<br />

collaboration<br />

.<br />

I<br />

see<br />

everything<br />

through<br />

the<br />

prism<br />

of<br />

filmmaking<br />

,<br />

which<br />

like<br />

furniture<br />

or<br />

property<br />

development<br />

,<br />

is<br />

an<br />

industrial<br />

process<br />

that<br />

requires<br />

a<br />

great<br />

many<br />

skilled<br />

creatives<br />

and<br />

technicians<br />

to<br />

realise<br />

the<br />

overall<br />

product<br />

.<br />

Collaboration<br />

is<br />

a<br />

popular<br />

word<br />

for<br />

an<br />

industrial<br />

process<br />

that<br />

requires<br />

a<br />

fluid<br />

dialogue<br />

to<br />

exist<br />

for<br />

work<br />

to<br />

be<br />

done<br />

efficiently<br />

.<br />

Ultimately<br />

,<br />

as<br />

creative<br />

director<br />

the<br />

collaboration<br />

ends<br />

when<br />

I<br />

determine<br />

if<br />

the<br />

project<br />

is<br />

proceeding<br />

or<br />

not<br />

.<br />

But<br />

once<br />

Broached<br />

say<br />

yes<br />

,<br />

it<br />

is<br />

extremely<br />

rare<br />

that<br />

the<br />

collaborative<br />

process<br />

is<br />

halted<br />

–<br />

we<br />

roll<br />

the<br />

dice<br />

and<br />

see<br />

what<br />

the<br />

outcome<br />

is<br />

.<br />

1<br />

+<br />

1<br />

=<br />

3<br />

(<br />

again<br />

)<br />

every<br />

thing<br />

exists<br />

in<br />

time<br />

.<br />

or<br />

the<br />

work<br />

itself<br />

...<br />

.


e Goulder family were<br />

making furniture in the 1920 s , selling to lea<br />

ding department ores of the day. e move<br />

to Bowral, regional NSW, probably mirror<br />

ed the marginalisation of the indury our ci<br />

ty centres over the course of the second half<br />

century<br />

of the 20th . is move seems to mirror ho<br />

w few Auralian furniture companies have<br />

managed to achieve intergenerational succ<br />

ess from the perspeive of being at the cu<br />

tting edge of trends. Goulder has talked<br />

about his hatred of all the decorative yles<br />

that poured through the Goulder worksho<br />

p. His university degree in furniture design<br />

enshrined a new direion that kept him at<br />

tuned to trends of the contemporary intern<br />

ational marketplace for design. But, that is<br />

exaly what the Viorian designs were of<br />

their<br />

Australian design<br />

examples of an international yle being p<br />

ushed by the British Empire, which had the<br />

bigge trade routes in the world. Auralian<br />

design is always a refleion of the changin<br />

g nature of globalised trade. We do not init<br />

iate those changes but we inherit & adopt o<br />

ur own way of living to them. e Broached<br />

Goulder colleion will, in part, be a refle<br />

ion upon these sometimes quite personal &<br />

traumatic divorces between one period of<br />

design & another. In the end, it is individ<br />

uals who create design, & in the inance of<br />

Goulder it was the mo talented maker of<br />

the family deciding to take his talents into<br />

a new era of globalised design. Broached<br />

Goulder is about leaving home & going hom<br />

e again, as a mid-career praitioner, through<br />

the work.<br />

time;


Broached Colonial, Dream Lantern, designed by Chen Lu. Photograph by Scottie Cameron<br />

Broached MONSTERS, Pankalangu Side Table designed by Trent Jansen. Photograph by Michael Corridore<br />

John Goulder. Settlers Chair . Image Grant Hancock - Collected National Gallery of Victoria 2016<br />

John Goulder. Amore Mio Chair . Image Michelle Taylor - Collected National Gallery of Australia 2009


Only<br />

a<br />

few<br />

people<br />

consider<br />

themselves<br />

independent<br />

design<br />

curators<br />

or<br />

creative<br />

directors<br />

in<br />

Australia<br />

.<br />

That<br />

means<br />

often<br />

those<br />

people<br />

getting<br />

jobs<br />

results<br />

in<br />

a<br />

feeling<br />

of<br />

‘<br />

your<br />

success<br />

is<br />

my<br />

loss<br />

’<br />

.<br />

Generally<br />

,<br />

I<br />

am<br />

more<br />

generous<br />

and<br />

see<br />

the<br />

success<br />

of<br />

others<br />

in<br />

my<br />

field<br />

as<br />

ultimately<br />

broadening<br />

the<br />

market<br />

for<br />

everyone<br />

.<br />

My<br />

most<br />

creative<br />

state<br />

does<br />

not<br />

manifest<br />

in<br />

a<br />

creative<br />

context<br />

.<br />

My<br />

creativity<br />

piques<br />

when<br />

I<br />

am<br />

emotionally<br />

neutral<br />

and<br />

intellectually<br />

open<br />

–<br />

curiosity<br />

is<br />

fed<br />

by<br />

calm<br />

research<br />

.<br />

The<br />

creative<br />

response<br />

is<br />

best<br />

when<br />

it<br />

has<br />

shrugged<br />

off<br />

any<br />

fear<br />

of<br />

judgment<br />

.<br />

Competiveness<br />

hinders<br />

all<br />

of<br />

that.<br />

Friendly competition<br />

or<br />

emotionally<br />

open<br />

and<br />

intellectually<br />

neutral<br />

.<br />

Only<br />

a<br />

few<br />

people<br />

consider<br />

themselves<br />

independent<br />

design<br />

curators<br />

or<br />

creative<br />

directors<br />

in<br />

Australia<br />

.<br />

That<br />

means<br />

often<br />

those<br />

people<br />

getting<br />

jobs<br />

results<br />

in<br />

a<br />

feeling<br />

of<br />

‘<br />

your<br />

success<br />

is<br />

my<br />

loss<br />

’<br />

.<br />

Generally<br />

,<br />

I<br />

am<br />

more<br />

generous<br />

and<br />

see<br />

the<br />

success<br />

of<br />

others<br />

in<br />

my<br />

field<br />

as<br />

ultimately<br />

broadening<br />

the<br />

market<br />

for<br />

everyone<br />

.<br />

My<br />

most<br />

creative<br />

state<br />

does<br />

not<br />

manifest<br />

in<br />

a<br />

creative<br />

context<br />

.<br />

My<br />

creativity<br />

piques<br />

when<br />

I<br />

am<br />

emotionally<br />

neutral<br />

and<br />

intellectually<br />

open<br />

–<br />

curiosity<br />

is<br />

fed<br />

by<br />

calm<br />

research<br />

.<br />

The<br />

creative<br />

response<br />

is<br />

best<br />

when<br />

it<br />

has<br />

shrugged<br />

off<br />

any<br />

fear<br />

of<br />

judgment<br />

.<br />

Competiveness<br />

hinders<br />

all<br />

of<br />

that.<br />

Friendly competition<br />

or<br />

emotionally<br />

open<br />

and<br />

intellectually<br />

neutral<br />

.


Feature


‘The job you didn’t know<br />

you always wanted’: the<br />

2016 Australian tapestry<br />

workshop trainee program<br />

Words by Emeritus Professor Kay Lawrence<br />

Kay is the Head of the South Australian School of Art,<br />

University of South Australia.<br />

The 1970s in Australia was a buoyant decade for the visual<br />

arts, craft and design. South Australia and Victoria (at the<br />

time led by visionary premiers Don Dunstan and Rupert<br />

Hamer respectively) saw cultural development, especially the<br />

creation of craft and design based organisations, as bringing<br />

a distinctive character to each state as well as offering<br />

training and employment in the arts. They saw their role<br />

as being key to the development of an economically viable<br />

cultural sector. In South Australia this vision was realised with<br />

the establishment of the South Australian Craft Authority<br />

(later JamFactory) in 1973. The organisation was set up to<br />

provide professional training for crafts people, establish sales<br />

outlets for high-quality craft and design, and to promote<br />

the development of design-led mass-production in South<br />

Australia. Aware that Australian artists were increasingly<br />

commissioning European workshops to translate their<br />

paintings into woven tapestry, the Victorian government<br />

grasped the opportunity to create an Australian-based<br />

workshop to interpret the work of Australian artists into<br />

tapestry for public commission. To this end, in 1976 they<br />

established the Victorian Tapestry Workshop now the<br />

Australian Tapestry Workshop (ATW).<br />

The ancient practice of tapestry weaving was little known<br />

in Australia in the 1970s, although post-war migration in the<br />

1950s and 1960s had attracted a number of skilled weavers<br />

from Europe to set up professional practice in New South<br />

Wales. But the impetus for the blossoming of woven tapestry<br />

in Australia came from Archie Brennan, Director of the<br />

Edinburgh Tapestry Company (also known as the Dovecot),<br />

and Belinda Ramson who worked with Brennan at the<br />

Dovecot in the late 1960s. Brennan and Ramson conducted<br />

a series of tapestry workshops in Victoria, New South Wales<br />

and South Australia in the mid-1970s and in 1974 Brennan was<br />

appointed as advisor to the committee convened to establish<br />

the ATW. He suggested that an evolutionary philosophy<br />

be taken to the development of the workshop in order to<br />

develop a distinctly Australian outlook to the translation of<br />

artworks into tapestry. He recommended working with the<br />

most interesting and challenging contemporary artists and<br />

taking a collaborative approach to both interpretation and<br />

weaving. By recruiting a small group of trainees with art<br />

school qualifications, and offering them training in tapestry<br />

technique and time to develop their own tapestry language<br />

before undertaking commissions, the workshop would be<br />

able to develop its own ethos and ways of working. Belinda<br />

Ramson was employed for four intensive weekend workshops<br />

to pass on her own meticulous skills to a group of 13 art<br />

school graduates selected from 150 applicants from across<br />

Australia. Five of these participants became the foundation<br />

weavers of the ATW: Cresside Collette, Marie Cook, Merrill<br />

Dumbrell, Sara Lindsay and Liz Nettleton, joined six months<br />

later by Cheryl Thornton and apprentice Sue Batten (nee<br />

Hick) recruited straight from school.<br />

Forty years later 76 weavers have been trained and have<br />

worked at the ATW, many staying for 20 years or more while<br />

others developed their own professional practices in the<br />

medium. Their accumulated expertise can be recognised in<br />

the distinctive approach to tapestry weaving developed at<br />

the workshop. ATW tapestries are noted for their superlative<br />

technique, mastery of colour and tone, and an approach<br />

to interpretation that employs the particular characteristics<br />

of weaving to bring out the unique qualities of the<br />

original artwork.<br />

ISSUE 05 / 45


To mark the 40th Anniversary of the ATW in 2016 and<br />

enable this expertise to be passed on to a new generation of<br />

tapestry weavers, the organisation initiated a trainee weaver<br />

program that incorporated key elements of the original,<br />

refined through reference to the Associate Training Program<br />

developed by JamFactory. While tapestry weaving is the<br />

sole focus of the ATW and JamFactory offers training in<br />

four disciplines – ceramics, glass, furniture and metal design<br />

– the organisations have many similarities. Both provide<br />

opportunities for advanced skills development, mentorship<br />

by expert and experienced practitioners, and access to<br />

specialised knowledge and skills through collaborative work.<br />

Noting the benefits of JamFactory’s two-year Associate<br />

program and the opportunities for peer learning enabled<br />

by recruiting small groups rather than single trainees, the<br />

ATW decided to offer a two-year traineeship program to<br />

three trainee weavers. Funding was generously provided by<br />

donors contributing to the ATW Annual Appeal through the<br />

Tapestry Foundation of Australia and the Pratt Foundation.<br />

These funds were used to support a comprehensive<br />

program focused on developing each trainee’s technical and<br />

interpretive skills as well as their personal visual and woven<br />

language, together with their capacity to work collaboratively<br />

and learn the allied professional skills necessary to work as a<br />

production tapestry weaver.<br />

As opportunities to learn tapestry weaving in Australia are<br />

limited, especially with the contraction of specialist textile<br />

courses in higher education, applicants otherwise eminently<br />

suited for the trainee program could not be expected to<br />

have tapestry weaving skills. So a two-stage recruitment<br />

process was devised where the first stage focused on<br />

recruiting ‘highly motivated, enthusiastic visual arts or design<br />

graduates, with a ‘can-do’ attitude who wish to make a<br />

career in tapestry weaving’. Shortlisted applicants were then<br />

offered a five-day intensive workshop in tapestry weaving<br />

with Joy Smith, an experienced workshop weaver with her<br />

own professional practice, in order to gauge their enthusiasm<br />

and aptitude for the process. The workshop took place in the<br />

ATW premises in South Melbourne so participants could see<br />

the studio at work, engage in discussion with the weaving<br />

team and get a ‘feel’ for working collaboratively in such a<br />

specialised environment.<br />

The ATW was gratified and not a little surprised at the<br />

number and quality of applicants for the trainee positions.<br />

Eighty-one applications were received from Australasia and<br />

12 from applicants based in Europe, America and Asia. They<br />

came from a wide ranges of disciplines in the visual arts and<br />

design, most with a particular interest in textiles. Quite a few<br />

had postgraduate as well as undergraduate qualifications, an<br />

indication perhaps of the lack of employment opportunities<br />

for visual arts graduates, as well as the attraction of working<br />

in an organisation focused on making artworks like the<br />

ATW. Due to the generally high quality of the applications it<br />

was not easy to select 13 to attend the workshop and from<br />

these candidates, five for the final interview, but finally three<br />

trainees were selected to begin their traineeships in late 2016.<br />

Karlie Hawking, Leith Maguire and Sophie Moorhouse Morris<br />

took up their trainee positions with an already impressive<br />

range of creative making and drawing skills, experience as<br />

artists and museum professionals, and a passion for working<br />

with communities. Each brought with them huge enthusiasm<br />

for the medium of tapestry and collaborative work. They<br />

are (at the time of publication) 11 months into their two-year<br />

training program which provides technical and interpretive<br />

tapestry skill development and the experience of working<br />

collaboratively, as well as learning the skills required to<br />

conserve tapestries and cost tapestry production. They<br />

also participate in the daily life of the workshop; engage<br />

with artists in residence, attend specialist weaving classes,<br />

give presentations and visit art exhibitions. To give them<br />

an international perspective on the running of a tapestry<br />

workshop and to enhance their historical knowledge, in<br />

late <strong>2017</strong> the trainees will participate in a weaver exchange<br />

program with the Dovecot in Scotland and join Cresside<br />

Collette’s tour of historical tapestries in France.<br />

A key aspect of their education is provided by opportunities<br />

to observe the weaving team engaging with artists as they<br />

develop the interpretation of an artwork, to see how they<br />

set the parameters for each commission through weaving<br />

samples, deciding on the warp sett and approach, and how<br />

they monitor the progress of each tapestry to bring out<br />

artist’s vision, and finish on time and within budget. While<br />

the basic skills of tapestry weaving can be taught within a<br />

week, it can take years to develop the seemingly effortless<br />

fluency that characterises ATW tapestries and even longer to<br />

become a proficient production weaver able to create work<br />

of the highest quality within the constraints of time<br />

and money.<br />

When asked to nominate the most rewarding part of the<br />

training program to date the trainees unanimously identified<br />

the opportunity to learn from deeply experienced weavers<br />

and artists and to work collaboratively, especially with one<br />

another. As Hawking observed, ‘to be able to chat with<br />

Sophie and Leith and share so many ideas… we’re better<br />

as a team than as individuals’. Being able to spend every<br />

day exploring the creative possibilities of the medium has<br />

fast-tracked their weaving expertise. Moorhouse Morris<br />

noted with some surprise that ‘it’s amazing to be weaving all<br />

day, every day, it’s why we’ve progressed so quickly, being<br />

completely immersed in the process’. When reflecting on<br />

their first experience of sitting at the large loom weaving the<br />

hem of a commissioned work, Maguire commented, ‘It’s a<br />

different kind of experience to sit in a line weaving together,<br />

talking about what we’re doing. The physical and mental<br />

stimulus is something I’ve never experienced in the same way<br />

in my own practice… here we’re all working towards the same<br />

goal’. It’s this passion and sense of shared purpose that has<br />

underpinned the longevity of the ATW and the quality of the<br />

tapestries produced in its 40-year history. This new group<br />

of trainees is well positioned to take this ethos and expertise<br />

into the future.<br />

Previous page: Trainees in the workshop.<br />

Top right: Australian Tapestry Workshop, Melbourne.<br />

Right: Weave sample by Sophie Morris.<br />

All photos courtesy of the Australian Tapestry Workshop.<br />

46 / ISSUE 05


ISSUE 05 / 47


Q&A<br />

ROSE-ANN AND MICHAEL RUSSELL


After 35 years of<br />

collaboration,<br />

Rose-Anne ‘Rosie’<br />

Russell and husband<br />

Mick Russell still love<br />

going to work. Lara<br />

Merrington chats to<br />

this creative couple<br />

about their co-working<br />

space at JamFactory at<br />

Seppeltsfield and how<br />

they fashioned their<br />

perfect fit.<br />

Words by Lara Merrington<br />

Lara is Assistant Curator at JamFactory.<br />

LM: Rosie, from studying Custom-Made Footwear at TAFE in 2003/4 to setting up<br />

a shoemaker’s co-operative, you then expanded and eventually re-located to a retail<br />

space and workshop in the eastern suburbs of Adelaide. Tell us a bit about your<br />

trajectory from then to your current position at JamFactory Seppeltsfield.<br />

RR: I have really grown and developed my practice as a maker since study. From<br />

a focus on custom-made shoes, I have expanded into handbags and accessories.<br />

Our hills relocation really took place as part of our dream to retire to the country.<br />

We came across a gorgeous restored carpenters workshop from the 1880s in the<br />

Barossa, at Springton. We started off there running a home studio, and that’s when<br />

Mick and I started working together too. It was pretty understated with a small<br />

A-frame sign out the front, but we found there was definitely demand here. In 2013<br />

I was approached by JamFactory to become an Artist-In-Residence at their new<br />

location in Seppeltsfield, so I delightedly accepted, with Mick sharing the space too.<br />

LM: Mick, you were obviously inspired by Rosie to some degree, but your practice is<br />

perhaps more classic in style. How would you describe your part in the business?<br />

MR: Rosie is definitely the team leader. I’m the team schmuck! I worked in real estate<br />

and sales for years but when we moved up here I was semi-retired and needed a<br />

challenge. Everyone wanted belts from Rosie – so I came on board to help out and<br />

took on another full-time job really! On the side, I guess there was a bit of mucking<br />

around in leather before then though. I love doing up old cars, like my old FJ Holden,<br />

which I reupholstered. I also did a two-year motor trimming course, so there are<br />

some applicable skills to what we do here – like pattern-making. I have a lot of fun<br />

making different requests for people. For example I recently did up a 1926 Douglas<br />

motorbike toolbox for a client – so I guess you could say my work is a little more<br />

traditional than Rosie’s style which is so colourful and diverse.<br />

LM: Between you there is such an array of wares lining your retail space.<br />

From handbags, cushions, purses, earrings and shoes, is there anything you<br />

can’t do in leather? Tell us a bit about your materials and ideas?<br />

MR: We love repurposing: I find a lot of old belt buckles at vintage shops, markets<br />

and op-shops (as well as ideas for new belts). Buckles are works of art, and I just love<br />

old things too. For instance, this here [Mick shows an old leather pouch in perfect<br />

condition: his grandfather’s compass case from 1916], the quality, 101 years old. How<br />

cool is that? How many things do you see that people still use in 100 years time?<br />

RR: The beauty of working with leather is its diversity. I’ve incorporated weaving,<br />

painting, stitching, appliqué and recently even some sculpture in the small vessels I’m<br />

making. My practice is almost compulsive. I’m not stuck to one style – I’ll do all sorts.<br />

LM: Has being at Seppeltsfield changed your direction or provided you with a<br />

different client base?<br />

RR: There has been a lot more corporate gigs. The culture is rich in wine and food up<br />

here so I make quite a few high-end menu covers for restaurants like the ones I did<br />

for Fermentasian Restaurant in Tanunda.<br />

MR: I loved doing a recent piece with furniture designer Andrew Bartlett, for which<br />

we made the leather straps for a bespoke timber collectors wine case. I really enjoy<br />

working with other artists and learning about their materials and design process.<br />

LM: What does the future look like for you both?<br />

RR: I really get a buzz out of doing exhibition work. I know Mick would love to do<br />

more carving, plaiting, that kind of thing. He was recently really inspired by an ABC<br />

program he saw on a guy who was making hand-plaited whips for example.<br />

Left: Rosie and Mick’s studio.<br />

Photographer: Lara Merrington.<br />

MR: The future? Rosie could easily keep going until she’s 75. In leather, you are only<br />

limited by your imagination, and we haven’t even scratched the surface. I’m already<br />

looking forward to coming in tomorrow.<br />

ISSUE 05 / 49


Profile<br />

COURTNEY JACKSON


Contemporary Adelaidebased<br />

jeweller Courtney<br />

Jackson creates intricate<br />

and complex jewellery<br />

that reflects the dramatic<br />

collision between natural<br />

and architectural forms.<br />

The artist completed<br />

JamFactory’s Metal<br />

Design Studio Associate<br />

program in 2014 and<br />

continues to develop her<br />

craft as a studio tenant.<br />

Words by Caitlin Eyre<br />

Caitlin is Assistant Curator at JamFactory.<br />

Working primarily with fine sterling silver wire, Jackson utilises her practice to<br />

transform precious metals into graceful wearable forms that hover tantalisingly<br />

between the familiar and the alien. Her collection includes a delightful array of<br />

brooches, stickpins, earrings, pendants and rings that each embody a curious<br />

fusion of industrial and natural elements that Jackson describes as ‘organic<br />

geometry’. The pieces variously bring to mind the neatly folded lines of origami<br />

and paper fans, segmented petals and dissected insect wings, point quartz<br />

prisms and the wire framework of architectural structures. While many of her<br />

compositions seem to reflect the influence of such forms, Jackson is playful in<br />

her explorations and reluctant to define the shapes in such rigid and specific<br />

terms. Instead, the artist prefers to embrace the ambiguity that each piece<br />

embodies and the subjective interpretations that are evoked in the viewer.<br />

Science fiction is a prominent source of inspiration and intrigue for Jackson,<br />

who draws on the idea of parallel universes and alternate realities in the creation<br />

and conceptualisation of her otherworldly alien blooms. ‘They could have just<br />

sprouted in an abandoned post-apocalyptic theme park or an alien landscape,’<br />

Jackson suggests. Indeed, it is not difficult to imagine the sharp-edged metallic<br />

structures blooming in a ravaged dystopian landscape or a strange and<br />

paradoxical rendering of Earth.<br />

In her practice, Jackson laboriously layers and repeats a series of simple selfdeveloped<br />

techniques to create delicate and complex wire-based jewellery<br />

pieces. Instead of crafting specific components for each new piece, Jackson<br />

works solidly to create an extensive master stockpile of components that can<br />

be assembled in various ways. While there is always a general concept behind<br />

the creation of her works, the process of compiling the pieces themselves is<br />

largely spontaneous for Jackson. The end result is therefore often something<br />

of a surprise, even to the artist herself.<br />

The process for creating each individual component involves coiling wires,<br />

soldering them together with a micro torch and cutting the pieces with a<br />

jewellery-saw before sanding, filing and polishing the finished pieces. Fine<br />

details such as Jackson’s signature chevron patterns are usually added during<br />

this process, the artist occasionally utilising gold plate to provide contrast to<br />

the sterling silver and emphasise the patterned surfaces. When experimenting<br />

with different configurations, Jackson arranges the components with Blu-Tack,<br />

examining the piece from all angles and tweaking the designs accordingly. The<br />

configuration is then soldered together into its finished form. The wintery, frosty<br />

finish that Jackson applies to many of her pieces is the result of depletion gilding,<br />

a process whereby sterling silver is heated and placed in a pickle solution to<br />

bring the fine silver to the surface.<br />

Left: Courtney Jackson in the studio.<br />

Photographer: Stephen Soeffky.<br />

The inspiration for Jackson’s jewellery pieces can largely be traced to her<br />

interest in architectural forms, the artist replicating the clean lines, sharp<br />

corners and fine details of structural formations, throughout her practice.<br />

The three television towers that overlook Jackson’s childhood home near<br />

Mount Dandenong in Victoria continue to be a significant source of aesthetic<br />

inspiration for Jackson, who is drawn to the skeletal framework of the forms.<br />

The artist’s affinity for crafting complex hollow structures from wire can also be<br />

attributed to her obsession with abandoned theme parks and other neglected<br />

spaces. ‘I could look at pictures of abandoned roller coasters for days,’ laughs<br />

Jackson. The decaying skeletons of theme park rides such as ferris wheels and<br />

roller coasters provide ample aesthetic inspiration for the artist, who fondly<br />

recalls her memories of covert visits to such sites to satisfy her curiosity. For<br />

Jackson, the lure of such spaces is the inevitable way in which nature envelopes<br />

and overtakes architectural forms, the unchecked forces of nature hungrily<br />

reclaiming mankind’s creations. In this way, Jackson’s jewellery pieces are much<br />

like the bare bones left behind by decaying plant life and architectural structures,<br />

their bodies picked clean and returned to nature to begin a new life. about how<br />

their procurement process is not offering enough creative opportunities.<br />

ISSUE 05 / 51


EXHIBITIONS ON TOUR<br />

GLASS ART DESIGN ARCHITECTURE<br />

Design Tasmania Centre, Launceston, TAS<br />

29 September - 6 November <strong>2017</strong><br />

Mornington Penisula Regional Gallery, Mornington, VIC<br />

13 November <strong>2017</strong> - 19 January 2018<br />

GLASS: art design architecture is supported by Visions of Australia, an<br />

Australian Government program supporting touring exhibitions by providing<br />

funding assistance for the development and touring of Australian cultural<br />

material across Australia.<br />

JAMFACTORY ICON<br />

CATHERINE TRUMAN: NO SURFACE HOLDS<br />

JamFactory at Seppeltsfield, Seppeltsfield, SA<br />

16 December <strong>2017</strong> - 11 February 2018<br />

Riddoch Art Gallery, Mount Gambier, SA<br />

11 May - 13 July 2018<br />

Murray Bridge Regional Gallery, Murray Bridge, SA<br />

27 July - 9 September 2018<br />

Tamworth Regional Gallery, Tamworth, NSW<br />

22 March - 17 May 2019<br />

Shoalhaven Regional Gallery, Nowra, NSW<br />

31 May - 9 August 2019<br />

Cowra Regional Art Gallery, Cowra NSW<br />

23 August - 25 October 2019<br />

Latrobe Regional Gallery, Morwell, VIC<br />

9 November 2019 - 19 January 2020<br />

JamFactory Icon Catherine Truman: no surface holds has been<br />

assisted by the South Australian Government through Arts<br />

South Australia and the Australian Government through the<br />

Australia Council for the Arts, Contemporary Touring Initiative.<br />

Clockwise from left: Catherine Truman,<br />

Ways to see inside, Eye falls, 2016-17. Photographer: Grant Hancock<br />

Charles Wright Architects, Cairns Botanic Gardens Visitors Centre, 2012.<br />

Photographer: Patrick Gingham-Hall.<br />

Gerry Wedd, Strange Fruit Bowl, 2016. Photographer: Andrew Cohen.<br />

Tony Hobba, Third Wave Kiosk, 2012. Photographer: Rory Gardiner.<br />

52 / ISSUE 05


STEEL : ART DESIGN ARCHITECTURE<br />

Cairns Art Gallery, Cairns, QLD<br />

22 September – 19 November <strong>2017</strong><br />

Hervey Bay Regional Art Gallery, Piabla, QLD<br />

8 December – 4 February 2018<br />

QUT Art Museum, Brisbane, QLD<br />

11 March – 28 May 2018<br />

Bathurst Regional Art Gallery, Bathurst NSW<br />

8 June - 5 August 2018<br />

Lake Macquarie City Art Gallery, Booragu, NSW<br />

7 September – 21 October 2018<br />

Hawkesbury Regional Gallery, Windsor, NSW<br />

2 November 2018 - 20 January 2019<br />

JAMFACTORY ICON<br />

GERRY WEDD: KITSCHEN MAN<br />

Murray Bridge Regional Gallery, Murray Bridge, SA<br />

20 October - 26 November <strong>2017</strong><br />

Civic Centre Walkway Gallery, Bordertown, SA<br />

16 December <strong>2017</strong> - 18 February 2018<br />

Manly Art Gallery and Museum, Manly, NSW<br />

6 April - 20 May 2018<br />

Tamworth Regional Gallery, Tamworth, NSW<br />

15 June - 18 August 2018<br />

Cowra Regional Art Gallery, Cowra, NSW<br />

13 October - 18 November 2018<br />

Artspace Mackay, Mackay, QLD<br />

30 November 2018 - 17 February 2019<br />

Coffs Harbour Regional Gallery, Coffs Harbour<br />

8 March - 12 April 2019<br />

JamFactory Icon Gerry Wedd: Kitschen Man is supported by<br />

the Australian Government through the Australia Council for<br />

the Arts, Contemporary Touring Initiative<br />

Australian Design Centre, Darlinghurst, NSW<br />

1 February – 31 March 2019<br />

Wagga Wagga Art Gallery, Wagga Wagga, NSW<br />

13 April – 9 June 2019<br />

Western Plain Cultural Centre, Dubbo, NSW<br />

21 June – 21 July 2019<br />

Mornington Peninsula Regional Art Gallery,<br />

Mornington, VIC<br />

2 August – 6 October 2019<br />

Bunbury Regional Art Galleries, Bunbury, WA<br />

29 November 2019 – 1 February 2020<br />

Murray Bridge Regional Gallery, Murray Bridge, SA<br />

6 March – 26 April 2020<br />

Signal Point Gallery, Goolwa, SA<br />

15 May – 19 July 2020<br />

STEEL: art design architecture is supported by Visions of<br />

Australia funding through Australian Government Department of<br />

Communications and Arts and the South Australian Government<br />

through Arts South Australia.<br />

ISSUE 05 / 53


54 / ISSUE 05


JAMFACTORY<br />

PRODUCT<br />

FURNITURE<br />

JamFactory’s collection of furniture and lighting is informed<br />

by the process of making, the beauty of materials and the<br />

craftsperson’s attention to detail. It is produced in Australia<br />

through a network of local manufacturers and highly<br />

skilled artisans.<br />

This range of products is designed by Daniel Emma,<br />

Adam Goodrum, Jon Goulder, Henry Wilson, Karen Cunningham,<br />

Rhys Cooper, and Daniel Tucker.<br />

All products are available through JamFactory’s online shop<br />

jamfactory.com.au<br />

Photographer: Sven Kovac.


JAMFACTORY<br />

PRODUCT<br />

HOMEWARES<br />

JamFactory studio production focusses on the design<br />

of useful, well made products. These objects highlight<br />

the craft methods behind their production and the<br />

specific characteristics of the materials used.<br />

JamFactory products are designed in-house by creative<br />

staff or through collaboration with independent designers.<br />

Each piece is manufactured or hand finished within one<br />

or more of JamFactory’s four Adelaide based studios<br />

in ceramics, glass, furniture, and metal design.<br />

This range of products is designed by Kristel Britcher,<br />

Daniel Emma, Liam Fleming, Jon Goulder, Christian Hall,<br />

Deb Jones, Tom Mirams, Damon Moon, Brian Parkes,<br />

Alice Potter and Daniel Tucker.<br />

All products are available through JamFactory’s online shop.<br />

jamfactory.com.au<br />

Photographer: Sven Kovac.


ISSUE 05 / 57


MEDICI<br />

COLLECTIVE<br />

The dynamic program enabling visionary patrons to<br />

collectively invest in and directly engage with the<br />

talented emerging artists and designers undertaking<br />

JamFactory’s acclaimed Associate training program.<br />

THANK YOU TO OUR<br />

MEDICI COLLECTIVE<br />

Medici Collective Patrons<br />

William Boyle<br />

David & Dulcie Henshall Foundation<br />

Medici Collective Donors<br />

Paul and Janelle Amos<br />

Noelene Buddle and David Shannon<br />

Jim and Helen Carreker<br />

John Chambers and Dawn Taylor<br />

Annette Coleman<br />

Geoff Day OAM and Anne Day<br />

Shane and Kate Flowers<br />

Denise George<br />

Paul and Angela Gillett<br />

Colin and Marie Goodall<br />

Patricia Roche Greville and<br />

Dr HughGreville<br />

Steve Grieve and Dr Christine Putland<br />

Deborah and Craig Hosking<br />

Philippe and Diana Jaquillard<br />

John Kirkwood and Wendy Alstergren<br />

Professor Kay Lawrence AM<br />

Nicholas Linke<br />

Paul and Fatima McHugh<br />

David McKee AO and Pam McKee<br />

David and Sue Minns<br />

Anne Moroney<br />

Elizabeth Raupach OAM and<br />

Mark Lloyd OAM<br />

Roger and Helen Salkeld<br />

David and Allison Smallacombe<br />

Peter Vaughan and Anne Barker<br />

Alan Young AM and Sue Young<br />

Association of Australian<br />

Decorative & Fine Arts Societies<br />

JPE Design<br />

In its first three years the Medici Collective has contributed more than $200,000<br />

towards supporting the Associate training program. The passionate influencers<br />

who make up the Medici Collective have the opportunity to see the results of their<br />

investment and involvement as they witness the development of individual artists and<br />

designers.<br />

We sincerely thank the <strong>2017</strong> Medici Collective and warmly welcome interest in the<br />

program for 2018. For further information please contact JamFactory’s Development<br />

Manager Nikki Hamdorf on (08) 8410 0727 or nikki.hamdorf@jamfactory.com.au<br />

Right: <strong>2017</strong> Medici Dinner. Photographer: Josh Geelen.


ISSUE 05 / 59


MEMBERSHIP<br />

Enjoy more…<br />

Join as a member from just $50 a year<br />

• A year of exclusive offers, previews, events<br />

and behind the scenes access<br />

• Opportunities to meet artists, designers and<br />

like-minded contemporaries<br />

• Delivery of <strong>Marmalade</strong> magazine and event<br />

programs<br />

• Discount at select Australia Craft & Design<br />

Centres nationally<br />

INDIVIDUAL MEMBERSHIP<br />

Cost: $50 Student/Senior: $25<br />

10% discount on purchases in JamFactory shops, galleries and online,<br />

including workshops and gift memberships.<br />

CORPORATE MEMBERSHIP<br />

Cost: $130<br />

20% discount off corporate purchases in JamFactory shops, team<br />

building sessions and venue hire.<br />

10% discount off gallery and personal purchases.<br />

MEMBERS’ EVENTS<br />

Enjoy a calendar of exclusive, tailored events and celebrate contemporary<br />

craft and design with curious like-minded people. Be involved with<br />

designers, makers and influencers associated with JamFactory.<br />

GIFT MEMBERSHIP<br />

Share the love of design with a gift membership, and support<br />

something good…<br />

SUPPORTING JAMFACTORY<br />

Every membership supports the promotion of good design<br />

and fine craftsmanship, and the professional development of<br />

creative entrepreneurs in Australia.<br />

Left: <strong>2017</strong> Australian Furniture Design Award showcase and official announcement.<br />

Photographer: Andre Castellucci.<br />

ISSUE 05 / 61


MAJOR<br />

PARTNERS<br />

GOVERNMENT<br />

PARTNERS<br />

JamFactory is a unique, iconic<br />

and important South Australian<br />

organisation, and ANZ is proud<br />

to be a sponsor again in <strong>2017</strong>.<br />

With a priceless legacy dating back<br />

to 1851, Seppeltsfield is one of<br />

Australia’s finest wine estates and<br />

JamFactory’s exclusive wine<br />

partner. Their partnership with<br />

JamFactory brings together two<br />

significant South Australian icons –<br />

both with a commitment to<br />

premium quality and bespoke<br />

production, providing a unique hub<br />

for craft and design in the Barossa.<br />

The University of South Australia<br />

is a progressive international<br />

university, and through the School<br />

of Art, Architecture and Design has<br />

a long history of leading the way in<br />

arts education and contributing to<br />

the vitality of the creative economy.<br />

The University of South Australia is<br />

pleased to be working closely with<br />

JamFactory to further enhance<br />

opportunity and viability for<br />

creative entrepreneurs.<br />

Established in 2003, Canvas Group<br />

is a multi-award-winning creative<br />

agency based in Sydney. With over<br />

9,000 projects for clients around<br />

Australia, Europe, Asia and the<br />

Americas, they are proud partners<br />

in the JamFactory brand, website<br />

design and <strong>Marmalade</strong>.<br />

A leader in the design industry,<br />

Stylecraft has been providing<br />

furniture of original contemporary<br />

design for over 60 years. Now<br />

together with JamFactory, they are<br />

proudly presenting the Australian<br />

Furniture Design Award, Australia’s<br />

richest and most prestigious award<br />

for furniture design that encourages<br />

innovation in furniture design and<br />

will foster new opportunities for<br />

furniture manufacturing in Australia.<br />

62 / ISSUE 05


SUPPORTING<br />

AND PRESENTING<br />

PARTNERS<br />

CORPORATE<br />

COMMISSION<br />

CLIENTS<br />

Adelaide Airport<br />

Adelaide Central School of Art<br />

Adelaide Flower House<br />

Antipodes<br />

Art After Dark<br />

Art Gallery of South Australia<br />

Australian Design Centre<br />

Blanco Food & Wine<br />

Botanic Gardens Restaurant<br />

Canvas Group<br />

Design Institute of Australia<br />

Ernabella Arts<br />

Erub Arts<br />

Fisher Jeffries<br />

Fran Fest<br />

Girringun Aboriginal Art Centre<br />

Grieve Gillett Andersen<br />

Hermannsburg Potters<br />

Jaquillard Minns<br />

Martyn Cook Antiques<br />

Mayfair Hotel<br />

Mornington Island Art<br />

Mossgreen<br />

Pitcher Partners<br />

Pol Roger<br />

Project Two<br />

Sabbia Gallery<br />

South Australian Living Artists<br />

Festival (SALA)<br />

South Australian Tourism<br />

Commission (SATC)<br />

Seppeltsfield Wines<br />

Stylecraft<br />

TARNANTHI: Festival of<br />

Contemporary Aboriginal<br />

& Torres Strait Islander Art<br />

The Adelaide Review/Hot 100<br />

Wines<br />

The David Roche Foundation<br />

The Louise & Appellation<br />

Tiwi Designs<br />

University of South Australia<br />

Vale Ale<br />

Visualcom<br />

Workshopped<br />

Adelaide Airport<br />

Adelaide Cabaret Festival<br />

Adelaide City Council<br />

Adelaide Festival Centre<br />

Adelaide Oval<br />

Adelaide Wine Research institute<br />

Adelaide Wine Show<br />

ANZ<br />

ANZAC Centenary<br />

Art Gallery of New South Wales<br />

Articolo<br />

Arts South Australia<br />

Australia Council<br />

Australian Medical Assocation<br />

Barossa Trust Mark<br />

Belle Laide Events<br />

Bird in Hand Wines<br />

Botanic Gardens Restaurant<br />

Brand South Australia<br />

Callum Campbell<br />

Cara<br />

Caren Elliss Design<br />

Climate Council<br />

Coco Contemporary<br />

Department of State Development<br />

Design Institute of Australia<br />

Economic Development Board<br />

FINO Seppeltsfield<br />

Food South Australia<br />

Genesin Studio<br />

Hassell<br />

Hill of Grace Restaurant<br />

History Trust of South Australia<br />

Jacobs Creek Wines<br />

JPE Design<br />

Justin Hermes Design<br />

Le Cordon Bleu<br />

Meals on Wheels<br />

Media Resource Centre<br />

Mercato<br />

Monash University<br />

Museums & Galleries of NSW<br />

National Pharmacies<br />

NAWIC<br />

Penfolds Magill Estate<br />

Public Health Association of Australia<br />

RESA<br />

Robinson Institute<br />

Ross Gardam Design<br />

SA Health<br />

SA Media Awards<br />

SACE<br />

Santos Tour Down Under<br />

Simulation Australia<br />

Snøhetta<br />

South Australian Museum<br />

South Australian Tourism Commissin<br />

Tennis Australia<br />

The Adelaide Festival Centre<br />

University of Adelaide<br />

University of South Australia<br />

Voice Design<br />

Volunteers SA<br />

Walford Angilcan Girls School<br />

Warrangari Aboriginal Arts<br />

Wolfhorde Studios<br />

ISSUE 05 / 63


JamFactory is a not for profit organisation promoting good craft and design. All donations to<br />

JamFactory directly support our education, training and exhibition activities. JamFactory<br />

in turn provides support for a number of organisations through our Give Back initiative.<br />

Below are the donors JamFactory would like to acknowledge and sincerely thank along with<br />

those organisations we are proud to support:<br />

MEDICI COLLECTIVE<br />

PATRONS<br />

William Boyle<br />

David & Dulcie Henshall Foundation<br />

MEDICI COLLECTIVE<br />

DONORS<br />

Paul and Janelle Amos<br />

Noelene Buddle and David Shannon<br />

Jim and Helen Carreker<br />

John Chambers and Dawn Taylor<br />

Annette Coleman<br />

Geoff Day OAM and Anne Day<br />

Shane and Kate Flowers<br />

Denise George<br />

Paul and Angela Gillett<br />

Colin and Marie Goodall<br />

Patricia Roche Greville and<br />

Dr Hugh Greville<br />

Steve Grieve and Dr Christine Putland<br />

Deborah and Craig Hosking<br />

Philippe and Diana Jaquillard<br />

John Kirkwood and Wendy Alstergren<br />

Professor Kay Lawrence AM<br />

Nicholas Linke<br />

Paul and Fatima McHugh<br />

David McKee AO and Pam McKee<br />

David and Sue Minns<br />

Anne Moroney<br />

Elizabeth Raupach OAM and<br />

Mark Lloyd OAM<br />

Roger and Helen Salkeld<br />

David and Allison Smallacombe<br />

Peter Vaughan and Anne Barker<br />

Alan Young AM and Sue Young<br />

Association of Australian<br />

Decorative & Fine Arts Societies<br />

JPE Design<br />

FUSE GLASS PRIZE<br />

DONORS<br />

Sandy Benjamin OAM<br />

Jim and Helen Carreker<br />

Philippe and Diana Jaquillard<br />

Diana Laidlaw AM<br />

The Thomas Foundation<br />

Alan Young AM and Sue Young<br />

DONORS<br />

Ganesh Balakrishnan<br />

Lewis Batchelar<br />

Susanna Bilardo and Judd Crush<br />

Catherine Buddle<br />

Alexandrea Cannon<br />

John and Rose Caporaso<br />

Kirsten Coelho<br />

Rhys Cooper<br />

John and Penny Diekman<br />

Caren Ellis<br />

Robert Farnan<br />

Catherine and Eugene Fleming<br />

Shane and Kate Flowers<br />

Susan Frost<br />

Helen Fuller<br />

Donald and Rhonda Gilmour<br />

Jon Goulder<br />

Stephanie Grose<br />

Sanghamitra Guha<br />

Helen Hagen<br />

Mary Anne Healy<br />

Victoria Jennings<br />

Deb Jones<br />

Peta Kruger<br />

Margaret Lehmann<br />

Jane Lomax Smith<br />

Leslie Matthews<br />

Penny McAuley<br />

Tom Moore<br />

Anne Moroney<br />

Sylvia Nevistic<br />

Bruce Nuske<br />

Richard Ryan AO<br />

Patricia Stretton<br />

Barbara and Ray Tanner<br />

Caroline Treloar<br />

Ulrica Trulsson<br />

Catherine Truman<br />

Gerry Wedd<br />

Robina Weir<br />

Jane Yuile<br />

Sidney Myer Fund<br />

GIVE BACK<br />

10x10 Philanthropy<br />

Adelaide Symphony Orchestra<br />

Adelaide Victory Football Club<br />

Amnesty International Australia<br />

Australian Medical Association (SA)<br />

Australian Refugee Foundation<br />

Bellevue Philanthropy<br />

Campbelltown Squash Club<br />

Canteen<br />

Catherine House<br />

Cora Barclay Centre<br />

Ethiopian Maternal Health<br />

Flinders Foundation<br />

Hang it up for Poverty<br />

Happy Haven OSHC<br />

Heart Foundation<br />

HYPA<br />

JusticeNet SA<br />

Lifeline / Uniting Communities<br />

Marie Clark Musical Theatre<br />

National Breast Cancer Foundation<br />

Nature Foundation<br />

Nuriootpa High School<br />

Red Faces <strong>2017</strong><br />

Ronald McDonald House<br />

SA Nursing & Midwifery<br />

SA Olympic Council<br />

Starlight Children’s Foundation<br />

State Theatre Company of South Australia<br />

Sunrise Cambodia<br />

The Adelaide University Art History Club<br />

The Hospital Research Foundation<br />

The Law Society of South Australia<br />

Trees For Life<br />

University of Adelaide<br />

University of South Australia<br />

Unley High School<br />

64 / ISSUE 05


Ursula Halpin, Bachelor of Visual Arts (Honours)<br />

An lub ar lár (the dropped stitch) 2016,<br />

pâte de verre, kiln formed bullseye glass,<br />

40x40cm, photo by Grant Hancock.<br />

Recipient of the Graduate in Residence Canberra Glassworks (ACT)<br />

Creative Enterprise<br />

8098911_CRICOS PROVIDER No 00121B<br />

The University of South Australia’s School of Art, Architecture and Design continues to lead<br />

the way in contemporary art and design.<br />

Ranked in the World Top 100*, and supported through cutting-edge teaching facilities, our<br />

award-winning students and staff are some of Australia’s leading professional artists. Building<br />

a legacy and culture of enterprise, innovation and creativity through our teaching and research,<br />

we encourage our students to express themselves and excel in their creative practice.<br />

aad.unisa.edu.au<br />

*World Top 100 for Art and Design, <strong>2017</strong> QS Subject rankings.


JamFactory thanks<br />

our major sponsors.<br />

Proudly investing in<br />

Tomorrow. Talent.<br />

Furniture Associate Jake Rollins. Photographer: Sven Kovac

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!