Kerameikos. The Potters' Quarter
Access status:
Open Access
Type
OtherAuthor/s
Richards, CandaceAbstract
The Kerameikos project invited seven Australian ceramicists and mixed-media artists - Monica Rani Rudhar, Janet Fieldhouse, Idil Abdullahi, Vipoo Srivilasa, Juz Kitson, Kirsten Coelho, and Glenn Barkley - to explore the expansive historic collections of the Chau Chak Wing Museum ...
See moreThe Kerameikos project invited seven Australian ceramicists and mixed-media artists - Monica Rani Rudhar, Janet Fieldhouse, Idil Abdullahi, Vipoo Srivilasa, Juz Kitson, Kirsten Coelho, and Glenn Barkley - to explore the expansive historic collections of the Chau Chak Wing Museum and create new works from their experience. The provocation to reimagine collections became the framework for these contemporary artists to address institutional legacies, colonial collecting practices, and current social challenges, resulting in a unique exhibition that reconceptualises a collections-based exhibition. In Greek antiquity, the Kerameikos was the potters’ quarter, where craftspeople and artisans came together to produce some of the finest ceramics of the Mediterranean region and was a hub of innovation for the already ancient art form of ceramics. Key to the development of Kerameikos at the CCWM was a research-intensive week together at the Museum, creating a new hub of innovation, where the artists engaged with each other, our museum team and the collections. The installed exhibition offers a new way of seeing Australia's oldest university collections, challenging historical narratives and infusing the galleries with culturally diverse, and non-academic, perspectives, that reflect our contemporary museum communities.
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See moreThe Kerameikos project invited seven Australian ceramicists and mixed-media artists - Monica Rani Rudhar, Janet Fieldhouse, Idil Abdullahi, Vipoo Srivilasa, Juz Kitson, Kirsten Coelho, and Glenn Barkley - to explore the expansive historic collections of the Chau Chak Wing Museum and create new works from their experience. The provocation to reimagine collections became the framework for these contemporary artists to address institutional legacies, colonial collecting practices, and current social challenges, resulting in a unique exhibition that reconceptualises a collections-based exhibition. In Greek antiquity, the Kerameikos was the potters’ quarter, where craftspeople and artisans came together to produce some of the finest ceramics of the Mediterranean region and was a hub of innovation for the already ancient art form of ceramics. Key to the development of Kerameikos at the CCWM was a research-intensive week together at the Museum, creating a new hub of innovation, where the artists engaged with each other, our museum team and the collections. The installed exhibition offers a new way of seeing Australia's oldest university collections, challenging historical narratives and infusing the galleries with culturally diverse, and non-academic, perspectives, that reflect our contemporary museum communities.
See less
Date
2025-08-01Licence
Creative Commons Attribution 4.0Rights statement
Published in conjunction with the exhibition "Kerameikos. The Potters' Quarter" Chau Chak Wing Museum, 24 August 2024 – 2 February 2026.Faculty/School
University MuseumsDepartment, Discipline or Centre
Chau Chak Wing MuseumShare