Preserving Ostranenie

Teah Fort Intangible Histories  (detail)  5 items 55cm x 67 cm, image: courtesy of the artist
Teah Fort Intangible Histories (detail) 5 items 55cm x 67 cm, image: courtesy of the artist

To be opened by Victoria Pearce, Director at Endangered Heritage.

 

The artists Karyn Fearnside and Teah Fort come together using the common object of a rockmelon to form the basis for a joint exhibition. Karyn responds to the rockmelon using ostranenie, (defamiliarisation or ostranenie is the artistic technique of presenting to audiences common things in an unfamiliar or strange way in order to enhance perception of the familiar.) She explored rockmelons with felting, crochet, painting, drawing, photography and more. Eventually she took all these results back to the computer for manipulation.
Meanwhile, Teah’s family experienced the death of the family dog, her 18 year old daughter wanted Basil stuffed and why not? Teah suddenly found her rockmelon work taking on real meaning for her, the act of preserving something, a memory, a moment in time, an actual object and began the process of experimenting with the rockmelon and preserving techniques. Teah also continued to work with natural/unnatural materials, recycled plastic and organic fibres.

 

Installation views of Preserving Ostranenie

Updated:  30 June 2016/Responsible Officer:  Head of School/Page Contact:  CASS Marketing & Communications