AS PER FEDERAL GOVERNMENT REGULATION
GALLERY LANE COVE + CREATIVE STUDIOS
IS SUSPENDING ALL OPERATIONS UNTIL FURTHER NOTICE.
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ART PACKS
UPCOMING EXHIBITION
Bone Drift: Wax, Bone and Thread
12 March – 5 April
Opening Event 19 March 6pm - 8pm
Bone Drift: Wax, Bone and Thread is an exhibition that explores ‘non-normative’ bones and (dis)ability identities over time. Through a series of workshops, artist and researcher Helen Pynor and creative producer Lizzie Crouch have guided participants to get hands-on with the materiality of bone, and the processes involved in making bone china clay. Through rituals of making, the personal objects created in the workshops reflect participants’ own bodies and experiences, representing a collective exploration of what it means to live within an evolving (dis)abled identity – now, in the past or into the future.
Lizzie Crouch is a Creative Producer who specialises in bringing together people with diverse expertise, backgrounds and lived experiences to create innovative, inclusive spaces. She specialises in working at the intersection of arts, science and technology. Lizzie’s current research focuses on advancing creative production and socially inclusive processes for art-science programs. She is also exploring the role of creative producing in fostering inclusive experiences as a PhD candidate at UNSW, Sydney. Lizzie has held numerous roles, including Senior Coordinator of Engagement for SensiLab, Monash University, and produced major art-science seasons for the Science Gallery network. Her work has been recognized by the World Health Organization and featured in publications like New Scientist.
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Image Credit: Masimba Sasa
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Lizzie Crouch. Image Credit: Lizzie Crouch
Helen Pynor is an interdisciplinary artist and researcher whose practice explores philosophical and experiential questions such as the life-death boundary, organ transplantation, and prosthetics. She works with living and ‘semi-living’ materials, including cells, organs, and biomolecules such as DNA, and has used her own surgically excised bone in recent projects. Pynor’s work spans installation, sculpture, photography, video, and performance. She frequently collaborates with scientists, undertaking residencies in institutions like The Max Planck Institute, Germany. Her works have been exhibited globally, including at ZKM, Science Gallery Dublin, and ISEA. Pynor has earned an Honorary Mention at Prix Ars Electronica and national awards in Australia.
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Helen Pynor. Image credit: Sam Oster
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