Created and Sold by Forlano Design
Bloody Consumption II - Wall Hangings
Price $870
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Dimensions | Weight |
---|---|
30.12H x 3.15W x 3.15D in 76.5H x 8W x 8D cm | 0.91 kg 2 lb |
Penelope’s childhood was spent learning crafts and in the ‘flow’ of various needlecrafts such as crochet, knitting, and sewing, passed down intergenerationally through the maternal line in her family.
When Penelope was invited to participate in the exhibition ‘FLOW’ with 15 other artists as part of a satellite exhibition on woodcraft, as part of the Indian Ocean Craft Triennial. Penelope used this as an opportunity to reconnect to this past by learning a new women’s craft - beading - from her mother.
The timing of the creation of these works coincided with the devasting Wooroloo bushfires in Perth, Western Australia, and was less than a year after the largest ever catastrophic fires on the east coast of Australia.
Materials: Charred wood and reclaimed glass and lewellery beads.
With this destruction of forests in mind, the works combine charred wood found after the 2021 Wooroloo bushfire with beading remnants and discarded op-shop jewelry. The works reflect upon the Anthropocene. What materials we value, what we throw away mindlessly and what is destroyed due to climate change. Discarded jewelry was disassembled and reassembled to create a series of works in which the materials of excess consumption ooze from a burnt-out nature.
When Penelope was invited to participate in the exhibition ‘FLOW’ with 15 other artists as part of a satellite exhibition on woodcraft, as part of the Indian Ocean Craft Triennial. Penelope used this as an opportunity to reconnect to this past by learning a new women’s craft - beading - from her mother.
The timing of the creation of these works coincided with the devasting Wooroloo bushfires in Perth, Western Australia, and was less than a year after the largest ever catastrophic fires on the east coast of Australia.
Materials: Charred wood and reclaimed glass and lewellery beads.
With this destruction of forests in mind, the works combine charred wood found after the 2021 Wooroloo bushfire with beading remnants and discarded op-shop jewelry. The works reflect upon the Anthropocene. What materials we value, what we throw away mindlessly and what is destroyed due to climate change. Discarded jewelry was disassembled and reassembled to create a series of works in which the materials of excess consumption ooze from a burnt-out nature.
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