Kath Fries Studio

Pulse

A site-specific installation for Castaways Sculpture Festival on Rockingham beach, Perth, Western Australia, May 2009. Recycled materials including second hand clothing, yarn, upholstery off-cuts, textiles and fabrics were bound into 20 meters of the existing fencing along the Rockingham boardwalk.







Pulse reflects on our rapid consumption of textile products driven by the fashion industry and the often ignored environmental impact of fabric production and post-production. The world's demand for synthetic fibers has nearly doubled in the last 15 years, causing the expansion of manufacturing energy-intensive processes that require large amounts of crude oil, producing harmful emissions and toxic waste. Driven by consumer demand for cheap, new, fast products the garment industry has a notorious reputation for sweat-shops, relying on low-paid laborers working in poor conditions. However, consumers appear to place little value on these products - dumping about two million tonnes of clothing in landfill every year.
Pulse suggests that human existence is bound to our environment even as we destroy it, how we can continue along this destructive tangent of blind consumption?






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About Me

Kath Fries
I'm an artist based in Sydney, on the lands of the Gadigal and Wangal people of the Eora Nation. My practice explores how our senses connect us to our surroundings, engaging with the immediacy of present time experience and the impermanence of existence. Working with tactile materials and embodied entanglements with place, my sculptural installations grow from a process of quiet observation to reflect on instability and fragility. By developing attentive focus and working with found, natural or everyday materials, I link sensate experiences of materiality and haptic thinking to evoke direct empathetic and palpable experiences of time, fluctuation and change. www.kathfries.com
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