TEXTILE (INTER)ACTION
Helvi Apted, Britt Salt and Shannon Slee
26 Sept - 27 Oct 2024
Textile (Inter)action presents new artworks by Naarm/ Melbourne based artists Helvi Apted, Britt Salt, and Shannon Slee alongside a collaborative textile installation that invites the public to become part of the exhibition. These artists share an interest in the way textile techniques are passed down over time through generations, expand across cultures, and how the act of making together incites people to exchange stories and skills. In preparing for this exhibition, the artists challenged their distinct studio methodologies by working closely with one another. The result is a suite of new works that collapse the boundaries between the artists’ textile practices - stitches are repeated, forms replicated, and materials shared. The artists gathered material scraps made during this process and reassembled them as collaborative works, stretching them over repurposed timber frames that were found in the storeroom of the Handweavers and Spinners Guild and hard rubbish. Visitors are invited to join in this collective artmaking by utilising materials from the artists’ studios to create a textile collage in the centre of the gallery that will evolve throughout the exhibition. On the surrounding walls, a suite of artworks by each artist explores new techniques and territories of interest that continue to expand their individual practices.
Britt Salt, The Monochromes (Contingent 1 and 2) , 2024. Installation view.
The Monochromes were born out of the time Britt spent as artist in residence at White Story in 2024. She was drawn to the cutting tables at White Story’s studio, where off-cuts and scraps of fabric intermingled in baskets. Their soft skins traced the negative shapes of clothing patterns cut by the dressmaker. Britt found these shapes curious, they were beautiful representations of non existent bodies. She set about carefully collecting and ordering these fabrics by colour, shape, and size, attending to the unique qualities of each piece as a site of possibility. She turned them this way and that, flipped them, aligned them from different angles, and stitched each slowly by hand, considering them anew. The resulting works reconcile disparate parts as unified yet unique works that are contingent on their environment, the White Story studio. Their oddly tessellating and layered shapes conjure a 20th century Constructivist painting that occupy a space between obsoletion and utility, a space where transformation is possible.
Photo: Astrid Mulder.
Britt Salt, The Monochromes (Contingent 1) , 2024
Cutting table remnants, cotton, wool
192 x 120cm
Photo: Astrid Mulder
Britt Salt, The Monochromes (Contingent 1) (Detail) , 2024
Cutting table remnants, cotton, wool
192 x 120cm
Britt Salt, The Monochromes (Contingent 2), 2024
Cutting table remnants, cotton, velvet, wool, mixed
81 x 66 cm (framed)
Photo: Astrid Mulder
Britt Salt, The Monochromes (Contingent 2) (Detail), 2024
Cutting table remnants, cotton, velvet, wool, mixed
81 x 66 cm (framed)
Photo: Astrid Mulder
Noyes Vanderpoel Colour Analysis #1, 2024; Geranium Rag Painting, 2024; Gutter Geraniums, 2024. (left to right)
For Textile (Inter)action, Shannon Slee presents three textile works of piecing, embroidery and weaving specifically dedicated to the brightly coloured geranium plant. Geraniums, commonly seen in Melbourne gardens, is noted in the text Eve’s Herbs by John Riddle as one of the plants valued historically for their role in sustaining women’s reproductive health. Looking to replicate and understand the geraniums unrestrained colour, Shannon turned to textile habits which not only links materials but plays with geometries. This work is part of a broader project for Shannon which imagines a sustained connection between textile work, abstracted geometries and plants that hold historical and almost forgotten reproductive knowledge.
Photo: Astrid Mulder
Shannon Slee, Geranium Rag Painting, 2024
Spun wool, pigment, ‘femboss’ rags, linen warp, timber frame, 33 x 60 cm.
Photo: Astrid Mulder
Shannon Slee, Noyes Vanderpoel Colour Analysis #1, 2024
Wool, cotton, unknown fibre, dried geranium flowers on linen, timber frames, nails, 22 x 22cm.
Photo: Astrid Mulder
Alcove Series (installation view), 2024.
Quietly framing space, Helvi Apted has sewn together a series of felt sculptures in the shape of small alcoves. These recessed spaces are often used to display devotional objects or can be small spaces for retreat, away from a main area of activity. Helvi has reinterpreted the alcove in textiles to explore the potential of this form for contemplative practices in contemporary settings. The manufactured felt used to construct the Alcove seriesis made of visible threads and pulp from discarded garments that have been compressed into a uniform surface. This tapestry of remnant materials carries potential histories that speak to a common human experience, and the need for reconstitution and repair.
Photo: Astrid Mulder
Helvi Apted, Alcove (With yellow), 2024
Felt, thread, beads (plastic, glass, wood, ceramic, metal) polyester wadding, 22 x 18.5 x 4.4 cm.
Photo: Astrid Mulder
Helvi Apted, Alcove (Shutters), 2024
Felt, polyester and metallic thread, glass beads, bronze rings, polyester wadding, 37 x 21.5 x 3 cm.
Photo: Astrid Mulder
Helvi Apted, Britt Salt and Shannon Slee
Textile Interaction #2, 2024
Felt, basket from Shannon’s studio, plywood from Britt’s studio, Dimensions variable.
Photo: Astrid Mulder
Helvi Apted, Britt Salt and Shannon Slee
Textile Interaction #2 (Action view), 2024
Photo: Shelley Xue
Helvi Apted, Britt Salt and Shannon Slee
Textile Interaction #2 (Action view), 2024
Photo: Shelley Xue
Helvi Apted, Britt Salt and Shannon Slee
Textile Interaction #2 (Action view), 2024
Photo: Shelley Xue
Helvi Apted, Britt Salt and Shannon Slee
Textile Interaction #2 (Action view), 2024
Photo: Shelley Xue