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Thursday, March 23, 2023

Australia Letter: The future of Australian art and design

Reviewing "Melbourne Now" and "Radical Utopia"
LETTER 299

Melbourne Art and Design, Past and Present

Author Headshot

By Natasha Frost

Writer, Briefings

Lee Darroch's installation of driftwood and jute at the "Melbourne Now" show at the N.G.V. Australia in Melbourne.NGV Australia
The Australia Letter is a weekly newsletter from our Australia bureau. This week's issue is written by Natasha Frost, a reporter in Melbourne.

As a design student in Melbourne in the 1960s, Mimmo Cozzolino, who in childhood had moved with his family to Australia from Italy, was struck by his lecturers' preoccupation with design movements taking place on the other side of the earth.

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"As eager 'New Australians,' we couldn't fathom why our lecturers were teaching us Swiss Design," he said of himself and Con Aslanis, a fellow student and a migrant of Greek descent. "We thought that we should be learning about Australian Design."

That belief would later suffuse the work of the advertising design studio, All Australian Graffiti, founded by Aslanis and Cozzolino. And it would also inform a longstanding commitment to answering an at-once naïve and hugely complicated question: What is Australian design?

"Radical Utopia: an archaeology of a creative city," an exhibition on at the R.M.I.T. Gallery in Melbourne until May 27, explores that question through the work of Australian designers of the 1980s, including Aslanis and Cozzolino, across Day-Glo protest posters, koala-patterned suits and spikily postmodern club furniture.

In these and other works, you can see the questions that preoccupied many of these artists and designers: What does Australian design mean, in a world where much manufacturing takes place offshore? Can Australian design take its cues from new migrants and Indigenous people, and eschew the catwalks of Paris or the museum halls of New York altogether? What political ideals ought Australian design aspire to?

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After 40 years of reflection and percolation, some of the answers to those questions are visible on the other side of town, at the sprawling blockbuster show "Melbourne Now," which opens today at the N.G.V. Australia in Melbourne.

The exhibition includes works from more than 200 artists and designers based in the state of Victoria. It is the continuation of a 2013 exhibition by the same name, and includes some of the same creators who were part of that show.

If "Radical Utopia" reflects a certain anxiety about what it means to be an Australian designer or artist, "Melbourne Now" is supremely self-assured.

Take the architecture and furniture design section, called "No House Style." Unlike in "Radical Utopia," where a throughline is clearly visible within sections and across the show as a whole, you might not immediately connect these works.

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A nearly 150-pound aluminum chair, from the studio Brud Studia, has few obvious parallels with a teetering plaster vase with an uncannily organic undercarriage, made by Jordan Fleming, for instance. Where one is Brutalist and inspired by the Communist-era war memorials known as spomenik, the other is deeply human, and might make you laugh or wince.

In an accompanying essay to the section, the curators Timothy Moore and Simone LeAmon make the case that Melbourne design is "independent, original, plural and expressive," and "a juxtaposition of creative possibilities, philosophies and aesthetic approaches to materials, forms and making."

That plural, expressive nature comes through both within the individual works and in their limited relationship to one another. And that holds for almost every part of the exhibition, which spreads over three floors and includes works involving artificial intelligence, augmented reality, large-scale crochet and, sometimes, simply paint on a canvas.

"Melbourne Now" makes the confident argument that all art and design made in Australia is Australian art and design. That holds whether the work acknowledges its Australianness overtly, like an installation of driftwood and jute from the Aboriginal artist Lee Darroch that makes reference to Australia's 38 Indigenous language groups, or whether it is simply a beautiful and functional object made with an Australian sensibility, like Kookaburra Sport's bright pink cricket ball.

Where "Radical Utopia" spells out a manifesto for an artistic Australia to come, "Melbourne Now" says something quite different: This is the future, and we're living in it.

Now for this week's stories.

A traditional Indigenous smoking ceremony to open a session of Parliament in Canberra, Australia, last year.Mick Tsikas/EPA, via Shutterstock

Around the Times

Believers attending the "thanksgiving" at Cross of Life Revival Ministry.Naila Ruechel for The New York Times

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Saturday, March 18, 2023

Race/Related: The start of a home design revolution

The profound and subtle impacts of Black designers and designers of color decorating homes.
Hamed Ouattara transforms metal gasoline drums into furniture at his studio in Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso.Sophie Garcia

The Changing Look of Design

For all of the ink — and its digital equivalent — spilled on articles about decorating trends, the fact is that things change very slowly in home design.

The midcentury-modern furniture revival? It's been going on since at least the 1990s. Beige appears to be the new gray when it comes to wall paint; we'll know for sure in the next few years. Kitchens will remain white for as long as homeowners are convinced that any other color will bring down their resale value.

But there is a revolution in design happening right now that is bringing real change to the domestic landscape. Page through home design magazines, walk the floors of contemporary housewares exhibitions, poke your head into furniture showrooms and you will see more of what used to be a rarity: the work of Black designers and designers of color.

Charles O. Job and his Assemblage chair in stained hardwood.Dominic Buettner

A recent special design report from The New York Times celebrates such efforts, highlighting creators of furniture, textiles, objects and buildings. It also asks: What is the effect of these voices on the look of contemporary homes?

No change this important happens overnight, and this special section was one way to follow up on our article in 2020 — in the wake of Black Lives Matter and social justice protests that summer — about the surge of interest in diversifying the design industries. One of the subjects of that story was an Ethiopian American furniture designer and data scientist named Jomo Tariku, who had counted the number of designers featured on the websites of international furniture companies and discovered that only 0.3 percent were Black.

From left, "Zulu Renaissance Writing Table for a Lady" by Cheryl Riley, and Mr. Ouattara's cabinet made from cut up and reassembled gasoline drums.From left: Cheryl Riley Design, Christian Tuempling

When we were planning this special section, our first goal was to ask Mr. Tariku who else he thought should have been on those websites. He put together a list of more than 80 of his peers throughout the world, which he winnowed down to nine for our cover story. The group included artists with work in museum collections, masters of material innovation, extraordinary craftspeople and next-generation wonders, and yet none of them could be called a household name. We wanted to change that.

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We also looked around and noticed that major textile and wallpaper companies were now collaborating with Black designers and designers of color, and that the results communicated both profound and subtle changes to the ornamental patterns that historically decorated homes.

A botanical print showcased the flowers that had grown on a Mississippi plantation where the young textile artist Hera Ford's grandmother had been raised. A toile alluded to the fashion designer Victor Glemaud's lush homeland in Haiti at the time of the revolution led by Toussaint Louverture. (Read about these and other examples in a feature about décor as a kind of Trojan Horse of enlightenment.)

Ms. Riley, a furniture designer based in New Jersey.via Cheryl Riley

We asked: Who is cultivating the tastes and shaping the experiences of people who appreciate works by Black artists and designers? Three answers: Tione Trice, an antiques dealer in New York; Jenna Fletcher, an influencer in London; and Ajiri Aki, a lifestyle maven in Paris.

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We explored how historians, archivists and writers are focusing on ideas of Black shelter in "The Interior Lives of Black Homes." We addressed how creative forces are influenced by geographical and cultural displacement in a conversation between Teresa Rivera, a Black Dominican American designer in London, and Jean Lee, a Korean American designer who divides her time between Seattle and Brooklyn.

Chris Cornelius, chairman of the school of architecture and planning at the University of New Mexico and founder of design firm studio: Indigenous.Adria Malcolm for The New York Times

Finally, we profiled two very different architects who have embedded their heritages into their projects and made them relevant to all: Chris Cornelius, a member of the Oneida Indian Nation, who designs buildings that are respectful of their environments; and Joshua Ashish Dawson, who was born in India and now lives in Los Angeles, who creates digital worlds that are cautionary tales of the future toll of climate change.

We hope you spend some time reading this package.

DESIGN: A SPECIAL SECTION

How the recent push for diversity in design is changing the way the world looks.

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Schumacher

When Pretty Walls Tell a Deeper Story

How contemporary designers are using patterns and historical motifs to reframe — and reclaim — cultural narratives in home décor.

By Aileen Kwun

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Jonathan Hokklo

There's No Muse Like Home

Two product designers discuss their own private diasporas.

By Whitney Mallett

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Adria Malcolm for The New York Times

How an Indigenous Architect Came Out of His Shell

Chris Cornelius imparts the lessons of his Oneida heritage in the classroom and other territories.

By Matt Shaw

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Chicago Sun-Times Media, Inc.

The Interior Lives of Black Homes

A new wave of books, exhibitions and archival projects work to tell a more complete story of spaces designed for and by Black homeowners.

By Alexandra Lange

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Joshua Dawson

Cautionary Climate Tales That Give People Pause When They Press Play

The India-born director Joshua Ashish Dawson builds digital worlds that ruminate on the future shock of environmental destruction in the real world.

By Stephen Wallis

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