Friday 22 November 2013

Jewellery, the urban milieu and emergence

Jewellery, the urban milieu and emergence
Jacqui Chan

Host A Brooch, making process, 2011.
Photography: Jacqui Chan craft+design enquiry Issue 5


Abstract: This paper traces a practice-led enquiry into the question of how jewellery — as a practice and an artefact — can engage the city in terms of emergence. While jewellery is often understood to have a decorative, symbolic or communicative function, this research explores jewellery’s immersion in and emergence from the urban context. Coming from a background in architecture, I am interested in approaching the city as an extended site for jewellery: both the lived situation within which jewellery is worn, and a rich material resource for its production; and, where jewellery is sited between mobile bodies and these urban surroundings.

This practice-led research adopts the analogy of the saprophyte — an organism that decomposes organic matter and recirculates nutrients through its ecosystem — as a logic for exploring how making and wearing can feed off and back into the material ecology of the city. This paper shares four projects that respond to specific urban situations — Melbourne, Ramallah (Palestine), Chinatown (Melbourne), and Christchurch — discussing what emerges within each situation, and what these projects offer for thinking about jewellery — as a practice and an artefact — and its relations with the city. Read complete paper


Abstract from, Jewellery, the urban milieu and emergence  
Full paper published in craft+design enquiry ; Issue 5 A World in Making: Craft Design 

Wednesday 23 October 2013

Void. Interstitial practices of doubt and reward

 Void. Interstitial practices of doubt and reward
By Marieluise Jonas and Heike Rahmann

Testing of Sakura tags, 2010. craft+design enquiry Issue 5


Abstract: As products of urban growth and decline, urban voids are spaces in transition from one stage of development to another. Their interstitial existence portrays a non-classifiable resistance and freedom to social and ecological conventions of the city.

This paper outlines our practice and approaches to working with the natures of urban vacant spaces in the context of growth and transformation in two cities with distinct socio-economic and cultural drivers that are mirrored in urban form and fabric: Tokyo and Melbourne.

Our practice in working with urban voids through mapping, design interventions, design strategies, virtual agency and writing are discussed alongside topics of appropriation, informality, design strategies and ecological processes. We argue that urban voids can serve as testing grounds for an idea of dynamic urbanism and a context-driven design practice in landscape architecture.
We also continue to negotiate our roles as landscape architects in relation to questions of program and the value of the role of design in the activation of these voids. Hence the positioning of our practice as an interstitial one where both doubt and reward are the outcomes. Read complete paper

Abstract of Void. Interstitial practices of doubt and reward

Full paper published in craft+design enquiry ; Issue 5 A World in Making: Craft Design

Friday 27 September 2013

A World In Making: Cities Craft Design


A World In Making: Cities Craft Design, edited by Suzie Attiwill
ISSN 2200-6931 (Print version) $25.00 (GST inclusive)
ISSN 1837-445X (Online)
Published September 2013Citation url: http://epress.anu.edu.au?p=255421

Cover image: Urban Metabolism Series, Melbourne, 2009, referenced in the paper ‘Jewellery, the urban milieu and emergence’, by Jacqui Chan.
Photograph: Jacqui Chan

Thursday 26 September 2013

A World in Making:Cities Craft Design Issue 5 coming soon

 
Tokyo Void,  A World in Making: Cities Craft Design craft design enquiry journal  No 5

The fifth issue of craft + design enquiry,  "Worlds In Making: Cities Craft Design" is edited by Suzie Attiwill.   This issue explores the intersect between craft and design and the urban environment. NOW LIVE and can be downloaded or printed on demand at:    ANU E Press

To subscribe to updates email jenny.deves [at] anu.edu.au  

Wednesday 28 August 2013

Clothing the postcolonial body: art, artifacts and action in south eastern Australia

Clothing the postcolonial body: art, artifacts and action in south eastern Australia

By Sylvia Kleinert



Sylvia Kleinert is Adjunct Associate Professor at the Australian National University and Charles Darwin University. Her research addresses questions related to Indigenous cultural production.


Aunty Matilda House and Lee Darroch, Possum Skin Cloak Workshop, Photo Elena Green. craft+design enquiry Issue 2


Abstract: In this paper I explore the significance of dress as an expressive and performative genre within contemporary art in south eastern Australia. My aim is to build on and expand recent studies in cross-cultural discourse to offer a broader, more inclusive framework for contemporary art practice in the south east grounded in dynamic Aboriginal cosmologies that demonstrate both continuity and innovation. Specifically I will examine two arenas of practice usually treated as separate domains: the revitalization of fibre seen in shell necklaces, baskets and possum skin cloaks – once worn or carried on the body - and the appropriation by artists of items of colonial and contemporary dress such as blankets, trousers, knitwear and T-shirts. My research reveals how art, as a form of action, contributes to social and cultural sustainability by engaging with an Aboriginal landscape and a postcolonial world to imagine ‘cultural futures.’


Full paper published in craft+design enquiry ; Issue 2 Cross Cultural exchanges in craft and design

Saturday 10 August 2013

Call for Papers Issue # 7 2015


NOW CLOSED

Call for papers for c+de#7 (2015) NOW OPEN

“Landscape, Place and Identity in Craft and Design”
Guest Edited by Kay Lawrence

            The Editorial Board of craft + design enquiry welcomes Kay Lawrence as Guest Editor of Issue 7. Kay has outlined a theme  for this issue of “Landscape, Place and Identity in Craft and Design” which appears below.  She invites contributors to submit abstracts responding to this theme or to submit abstracts for the Open Section exploring subjects on any aspect of craft and design.  

            craft + design enquiry issue 7 will be published in mid-2015.  The Call for Papers for this issue is now open and will close on 30 June 2014.

Steps to submitting a paper for c+de#7

This issue of craft + design enquiry will be published by ANU E Press in mid-2015. The call for papers closes on 30 June 2014. For both the Open Section and the Themed Section of issue #7, contributors are asked to follow these steps:

Step 1 Kay Lawrence (Guest Editor) asks contributors to submit an abstract (1 A4 page) from now until 30 April 2014. She will respond promptly to contributors. On the basis of these abstracts, contributors will be invited to submit full papers. Send your abstract to jenny.deves@anu.edu.au.

Step 2 — If invited to submit a full paper, contributors are required to complete and submit their final papers by 30 June 2013. Email to jenny.deves@anu.edu.au. Papers must be accompanied by a Lodgement Registration Form.

For further information A Lodgement Registration Form and Author Guidelines are available from jenny.deves@anu.edu.au or, view the c+de blog http://craftdesignenquiry.blogspot.com.au/

 

Open Section — call for papers

Kay Lawrence, Guest Editor issue 7, invites submissions to the Open Section exploring any aspect of contemporary craft and design.  All submissions to the Open Section are peer reviewed and selected for publication in accordance with established craft + design enquiry procedures. The submission process is outlined above.

Themed Section — call for papers

Landscape, Place and Identity in Craft and Design

Kay Lawrence, Guest Editor of issue 7, invites submissions in response to the theme of “Landscape, Place and Identity in Craft and Design”.

 The words used to describe the physical environment and our relationship to it, are always nuanced. The concept of 'place' refers to a particular portion of space that may or may not be occupied by people, while also encompassing the idea of dwelling, of living in a particular place. The word 'landscape', on the other hand, suggests a slightly different relationship of humankind to the environment. Derived from the 16th century Dutch word 'landschap',[i] signifying a unit of human occupation, that is, places shaped by human intervention and use, the contemporary meaning of landscape, 'natural or imaginary scenery as seen in a broad view', conceives this relationship in terms of human vision, of looking at a landscape rather than dwelling in a place. These words posit different relationships to the environment; landscapes encompassed by the gaze or places known through the intimacy of bodily sensation. Both words are culturally inflected. Our understanding of both landscapes and places is shaped by sensory experience as well as by memory and myth, and are thus bound up with complex questions about human identity.
 
If we accept that 'identity' is not a given, but constructed in response to an intricate array of social, cultural, economic and physical forces, then how we think of ourselves as individuals, communities or even nations, will be shaped in part by the places and landscapes where we live, and mediated through language. 'Language' here is interpreted broadly to refer to the codified systems of representation used in the practices of craft and design as well as written and oral language.
Craft and design practice, even when speculative, is engaged with the physical world, as practitioners work with its visual, material, spatial and temporal qualities to create objects and environments. Recently Glenn Adamson advocated the usefulness of considering craft as process as well as product. Craft is 'an approach, an attitude or an action … a way of doing things'.[ii] So craft and design in this context can also be considered as processes underpinned by particular ways of thinking and making.

This issue of craft + design enquiry invites papers that explore and reflect upon these ideas about landscape, place and identity in relation to both Indigenous and non-Indigenous craft and design practice in Australia and globally. Or, to put it another way, writers might wish to consider how craft and design practitioners have employed the visual, material, spatial and temporal processes of their disciplines to interrogate questions of identity in relation to concepts of place and landscape.

These questions are further elaborated below. 

 
The Western landscape tradition is predominantly graphic and, although craft can be pictorial (like woven tapestry), craft also affords meaning through the actual materials used. How does craft reflect or interrogate ideas of landscape (or place) through the use of its physical substance; plant, sand, clay, timber and rock? Representations of landscape can take on ideological ramifications in the formation of identity. In white Australia, for example, the land has been variously constructed in the popular imagination as beneficent or lacking, dangerous and hostile, sometimes with gendered connotations as a nurturing or devouring mother. The concept of 'wilderness' has also been used to construct an understanding of the natural environment as untouched by people, separating humankind from the natural world and effacing the long history of Australia as a peopled land cared for and shaped by its Indigenous inhabitants. Writers might wish to consider how such tropes of landscape or place have been employed in craft and design to formulate or question concepts of identity, whether individual, community or national.

In Australia, the term 'country', with its many associated meanings that pertain to territory, nationhood and the rural, has taken on additional meaning to signify 'traditional, Indigenous land and sea with its embedded cultural values relating to the dreamtime'.[iii] The anthropologist Deborah Bird Rose tells of Indigenous elder, Daly Pulkara from the Victoria River district in far north Australia, speaking sadly and heavily of 'wild' country; country that bears the devastation of misuse and neglect of the introduced pastoral industry. He compares 'wild' to 'quiet' country 'in which all the care of generations of people is evident to those who know how to see it'.[iv] While craft practices have historically been used to express human connection to place through use of traditional processes and local materials, writers might also wish to consider how the idea of human obligation to place, implicit in Indigenous use of the word 'country', is being addressed in contemporary craft and design. 

 
craft + design enquiry #7, invites papers reflecting upon these questions from practitioners, researchers and scholars across the broad field of contemporary craft and design practice and theory.

 
Kay Lawrence AM is a visual artist and writer and Adjunct Professor in the School of Art, Architecture and Design at the University of South Australia. She has an internationally recognised textiles practice with work held in many public collections including the National Gallery of Australia. Through her art-making she critically engages with matters of personal and community identity in relation to place, exploring ideas of loss and connection through a practice centred on hand-making and grounded in the materiality and meanings of textiles. She has completed a number of significant commissions for public spaces, and was made a member of the Order of Australia (AM) in 1989 for her work designing and coordinating the making of The Parliament House Embroidery. Her scholarly writing on contemporary textiles practice has been published by Berg Publishers, Cambridge Scholars Publishing and Melbourne University Press. 

Contributors to the Themed Section of c+de#7 should follow the Steps to submitting a paper for c+de#7 listed above. Submissions close on 30 June 2014.




[i] S. Schama, 1995, Landscape and Memory, New York: Alfred A Knopf, p. 10.
[ii] G. Adamson, 2007, Thinking Through Craft, Oxford: Berg, p. 4.
[iii] Bill Arthur & Frances Morphy (eds), 2005, Macquarie Atlas of Indigenous Australia, Macquarie University: Macquarie Library Ltd, p. 262.
[iv] D. Bird Rose, 2004, Reports from a Wild Country, Sydney: UNSW Press, p. 4.

Friday 19 July 2013

The relational origins of inter-media art in painting, interior design and picture framing: Pamela Gaunt’s Errant Abstractions

The relational origins of inter-media art in painting, interior design and picture framing: Pamela Gaunt’s Errant Abstractions. Richard Read 


Pamela Gaunt, Errant Florid Drawings, 2008, stencilled and painted industrially routed MDF, glue, etch primer and automotive paint, approx 2 x 1.5 m.


Abstract: This paper examines the conscious anachronism of traditional floral designs from Britain, Italy, India and Central Asia incorporated as basic modules in Pamela Gaunt’s installation Errant abstractions (2008). Starting with a phenomenological response to several kinds of fantasy that viewers might experience from interaction with the work, the essay goes on to establish a broad historical framework for the confluence of painting, interior design and frame-making in contemporary multimedia art and craft. This takes account of the developments that led to the inauguration of comfort and interior decoration as prerequisites of ordinary Western domestic life. In considering the varieties of social harmony that embellishment of privileged places afforded to owners, the essay takes two other factors into account. One is the role of art and decoration in increasing the immediacy of nature within buildings or abstracting it to a civilising distance from the world outside. The other is the role of anachronism (in Walter Benjamin’s sense) that modern hybrid works exploit when they re-enact the creative conflicts between painters, interior decorators and picture framers that once informed their necessary collaborations and now condition our variegated responses to the environments they created. Read complete paper here


Abstract from: The relational origins of inter-media art in painting, interior design and picture framing: Pamela Gaunt’s Errant Abstractions.

Full paper published in craft + design enquiry; Issue 4, 2012. Relational craft and design  

Friday 21 June 2013

Towards a post-consumer subjectivity: a future for the crafts in the twenty first century?

Towards a post-consumer subjectivity: a future for the crafts in the twenty first century?
By Peter Hughes


‘Craftivism’ in action: Marianne Joergensen’s Pink M.24 Chaffee is a collaborative project incorporating knitted squares from hundreds of contributors. craft+design enquiry journal issue 3, 2011

A shorter version of this paper was presented at the international conference Making Futures: the Crafts in the Context of Emerging Global Sustainability Agendas at the Plymouth College of Art and Design, UK, September 2009 and published on the conference website at http://makingfutures.plymouth.ac.uk/journalvol1/papers.php#critical-perspectives.

Peter Hughes has been Curator of Decorative Arts, Tasmanian Museum and Art Gallery since 1999. He received a Bachelor of Education (Art) from the City Art Institute (now COFA/UNSW) in 1986 and subsequently studied furniture design (Centre for the Arts, University of Tasmania). In 1995 he received a Master of Art (Research) in Art Theory from the Canberra School of Art, Australian National University for a thesis interpreting John Ruskin’s writing about design, society and the natural world from a unifying ecological perspective. Peter continues to be interested in links between ecological philosophy, our relationship with ‘objects’ generally and the crafts as a political and social as well as artistic field of practice.

Abstract: The crafts movement has a long history of engagement with both environmental and ethical issues. In recent years, several movements have emerged—in response to environmental issues and in opposition to the dominance of the monoculture produced by globalising capitalism— that have powerful resonances with some of the crafts movement’s early political and ethical heritage. As environmental issues move into the mainstream, a rising tide of concern presents an opportunity for the crafts movement to renew its engagement with social, political and philosophical issues and to contribute both to the debate and to the formation of a sustainable material and creative culture of the future. Read complete paper

Full paper published in craft + design enquiry; Issue 3, 2011 Sustainability in craft and design

Image caption: ‘Craftivism’ in action: Marianne Joergensen’s Pink M.24 Chaffee is a collaborative project incorporating knitted squares from hundreds of contributors. As a protest against the Danish (and the American and British) involvement in the war in Iraq, a World War II tank was covered from canon to caterpillar tracks with squares of knitted and crocheted pink yarn. The 15 x 15 cm squares were knitted by people from many European countries and the USA. The process of covering the tank was documented in a video shown at the Nikolaj, Copenhagen Contemporary Art Center, Denmark as part of the exhibition “TIME” from April 27 to June 4 2006.

Monday 17 June 2013

FORTHCOMING ISSUE - NO. 5 DUE OUT IN AUGUST

Tokyo Void,  A World in Making: Cities Craft Design craft design enquiry journal  No 5

The fifth issue of craft + design enquiry,  "Worlds In Making: Cities Craft Design" is edited by Suzie Attiwill.   This issue explores the intersect between craft and design and the urban environment. Due out in August 2013 and can be downloaded or printed on demand at:   
ANU E Press
 

Tuesday 11 June 2013

Listening when others ‘talk back’


Listening when others ‘talk back’
By Kay Lawrence
 
April 2001. Doug Nicholls with ring tree, Swan Hill Museum craft+design enquiry issue 1
 
 
Kay Lawrence is a visual artist working in textiles and former Head of the South Australian School of Art, University of South Australia. Her work in community tapestry and as designer of the Parliament House Embroidery, installed in the Great Hall of Parliament House in 1988, activated her interest in how communities express their relationship to place through story and art making. A continuing thread in her practice as an artist and writer on contemporary Australian textiles practice has been the ‘unsettling’ legacy of white settlement on Indigenous Australians and their land.

Abstract: This paper addresses the ethics of inter-cultural collaborative art practice from an Australian perspective, through examining aspects of the project, Weaving the Murray. Anthropologist Deborah Bird Rose in her recent book, Reports from a Wild Country; ethics for decolonisation (2005) notes the legacy of white settler society in Australia, claiming that ‘We cannot help knowing that we are here through dispossession and death’ (Rose 2005, p.6). This is a shocking proposition and an uncomfortable position for white Australians. Yet to ignore this reality is to concede to the continuation of a present violence against Indigenous Australians. This is perhaps not now enacted through dispossession and death, but through another type of violence that sets the past aside and ignores the ‘vulnerability of others.’ (Roth 1999, p.5) 
 
Abstract from Listening when other 'talk back' by Kay Lawrence
Full paper published in craft + design enquiry; Issue 1, 2009, Migratory Practices

Call for Papers closing soon: issue 6 2014

Current Calls for Papers for issue #6, 2014 
Closing June 30 2013. Now Closed 
Read more

About OPEN section for papers

From issue 6, 2014, craft + design enquiry will include  a new OPEN section. Submissions to the OPEN section for this issue close soon -  on 30 June 2013.

The OPEN section enables craft + design enquiry to publish research papers on any subject within the general subject area of contemporary craft and deisgn research. Submissions to the OPEN section are selected and peer-reviewed. Research authors are encouraged to use the journal as a publishing platform for papers in their own areas of research interest within this general subject area.  

Tuesday 4 June 2013

Outsourcing the hand: An analysis of craft-design collaborations across the global divide

Outsourcing the hand: An analysis of craft-design collaborations across the global divide
By Kevin Murray 

Sarah Thorn for WorldWeave, Acrobat Cushion, 2009, wool felt, hand
embroidered.
Photograph: James Widdowsen, craft+design enquiry journal



Abstract: This paper identifies a growing trend in contemporary craft practice which involves outsourcing handmade processes to artisans in poorer countries. To evaluate this process, it reviews three case studies: Sara Thorns Worldwide Weave in India, Polly&Me in Pakistan, and Martina Dempf in Rwanda. Each enables different levels of creative collaboration with traditional artisans. While a critical framework is able to be established, there is still a lack of information that comes directly from the artisans themselves. Read complete paper

Abstract from: An analysis of craft-design collaborations across the global divide
by Kevin Murray
Full paper published in craft + design enquiry; Issue 2, 2010, Cross cultural exchanges in craft and design 



Wednesday 22 May 2013

Theorising a transformative agenda for craft

Theorising a transformative agenda for craft
By Matthew Kiem

Abstract: This paper examines the potential of craft to facilitate cultures of quality and social transformation in the interests of sustainability. This approach is theoretically grounded in the work of Tony Fry. It draws particularly on his concepts of sustain-ability and Sustainment to construct an argument for what is both valuable about craft as a practice of material fabrication, and what broader social goals craft practitioners might set themselves in recognition of this value. The transformative potential of craft is explored through David Harvey’s dialectical theory of social transformation.

This exploration of the potential of craft is also coupled with a recognition of current constraints within contemporary craft practices. In particular, the role of craft within practices of symbolic production and exchange is critiqued through the work of Jean Baudrillard and Pierre Bourdieu. Through these thinkers we observe how crafted artifacts are denied their sustaining potential and how craft practitioners themselves may become absorbed in facilitating the negation of craft as Sustainment. By way of conclusion it is proposed that in order to realise both the sustaining and transformative potential of craft, practitioners must develop a capacity for ongoing critical reflection that informs vocational commitment to change through craft practice. In this capacity, it is a call for practitioners to both recognise and engage with the political agency of craft as a way of fabricating new, and more sustainable modes of (human)being. Read Complete Paper

Abstract from  Theorising a transformative agenda for craft by Matthew Kiem 

Full paper published in craft + design enquiry; Issue 3, 2011, Sustainability in craft and design Edited by Kevin Murray