Ariadne’s Thread installation


Kath Fries, Ariadne's thread, 2009

My installation for Le fil (the thread), group exhibition at Gaffa Gallery, Surry Hills, was created out of numerous meters of recycled fabric woven into a rope, which then leads the viewer around the nocks and crannies of the gallery space. Titled Ariadne’s Thread the work refers to the ancient Greek myth of the Cretan Labyrinth navigated using a spool of thread. 

Kath Fries, Ariadne's thread, 2009



I would like to thank Jodi Altona, Kate Clive, Chrissie Ianssen, Eleanor James, Anneke Jaspers, Olivia Kloosterman, Nina Marisol Prado, Anton Pulvirenti, Elsa Pulvirenti, Megan Robson and Elise Routledge for their weaving and braiding assistance with this project.
All the artists who responded enthusiastically to my concept and generously contributed  their works to this exhibition: Hannah Bertram, Kath Fries, Michelle Heldon, Chrissie Ianssen, Jade Pegler, Melinda Young, Sahar Hosseinabadi, Michele Morcos, Linden Braye, Megan Yeo, Shannon Johnson and Sophia Egarchos. And Jane Llewellyn for writing the accompanying exhibition text.

Le Fil (the thread) - exhibition text

At first glance one might assume that the artists in the exhibition, Le Fil (the thread), are exploring the techniques of craft. However, they are using traditional craft techniques and combining them with contemporary media like video, sound and installation aesthetics, sparking the age old debate about where, and if, craft ends and art begins. By using traditional techniques the artists give their works the authenticity of being hand made – something which is becoming increasingly valued in our society – and delivery through contemporary media makes the works and their meanings more accessible.

Blurring the boundaries between craft and art is paramount for the twelve artists in this exhibition: Hannah Bertram, Linden Braye, Sophia Egarchos, Kath Fries, Michelle Heldon, Sahar Hosseinabadi, Chrissie Ianssen, Shannon Johnson, Michele Morcos, Jade Pegler, Megan Yeo and Melinda Young. These artists work across a diverse range of media, dispelling the idea that craft and art exist as separate genres.

For a few of these artists (Linden Braye, Sophia Egarchos, Kath Fries, Chrissie Ianssen, Shannon Johnson, Michele Morcos and Megan Yeo) it isn’t the first time they have come together to explore the ideas of reinterpretation of craft and the reassembling of found objects. In 2008 they were part of the group exhibition through the eye of the needle in which (as Megan Robson says in her exhibition essay) the artists similarly aimed to “...investigate the methods, ideology and forms associated with mass manufactured textile and domestic goods. Utilising the tools, techniques and structure associated with textile and domestic objects...”

In Le Fil (the thread) several artists directly reference traditional craft practices, such as Shannon Johnson who has used embroidery to recreate a giant 5-cent piece and Michele Morcos who creates an artistic meditation in her works, the needle and thread reflecting how “life can be broken down to the simplest of acts”. Sophia Egarchos’s focus is on sewing techniques such as pleating and shirring. When applied to her paintings (she shirrs the canvas), Egarchos transforms flat two dimensional works into tactile three dimensional pieces. Chrissie Ianssen on the other hand composes her paintings using elements of traditional Norwegian knitting patterns. She uses them to striking effect, some may say harking back to a past that is no longer relevant in contemporary Norway. Megan Yeo uses the traditional British craft of embroidery as a quaint and pleasant façade to mask the internal terrorist threat that lurks under the surface of modern Britain.

While the exhibition title, Le Fil (the thread), might suggest that artworks in the exhibition hang together precariously – that the connection is flimsy and delicate – it is used as a metaphor to reflect the fragility of the connections we create in our society which can break or fade away at any moment. As our world continues to advance at a lightning pace, and communication becomes key we question how strong these bonds actually are.

Much more than just a thread holds together the work of these artists, as they deconstruct and rebuild ancient and modern materials and processes, exploring the thread both in its simplest form and the more complicated web it weaves. In Kath Fries’ artwork she creates a literal web using woven strips of recycled fabric forming a rope which is woven through the nooks and crannies of the gallery. Based on an ancient Greek myth, Fries takes us on a journey through the labyrinth which reflects the web of life.

Whether it is the video work of Iranian born Sahar Hosseinabadi, Hannah Bertram’s site-specific installation, or even the wearable jewellery pieces by Melinda Young, these artists are connected by a conceptual thread that runs through the works addressing ideas on how we value fabrics.


This concept is further explored through the notion that we are constantly consuming and discarding large quantities of textiles. It’s not surprising then that the artists explore the renewal and recycling of found objects. These objects are embedded with history which when brought to the new work adds immense value. The cycle of discard followed by renewal highlights the object’s continual value and links the past to the present.

Jade Pegler plays with this notion, creating a future history with her “curiosities” crafted from everyday materials. Linden Braye takes materials with little value from urban or natural environments and creates constructions which reference "the natural world through the built one". Michelle Heldon is also inspired by nature and works with found objects focusing on how the different materials feel and react with each other. The tactility of the surfaces are of particular interest as Heldon explores the relationship between form, colour, texture and shape.


Le Fil (the thread) presents a selection of artworks that are pushing the boundaries between art and craft, a debate which is intrinsically based on value. Is craft a skill and is art an inborn talent? As we are entering a technologically advanced world and visual artists are working across several different types of medium, quite often in the one artwork, such categorisations no longer seem valid.

Jane Llewellyn
Jane Llewellyn is a free-lance arts writer and arts consultant, currently based in Sydney, she has previously worked as the sub-editor for Australian Art Collector Magazine


Le Fil (the thread): 31 July - 7 August 2009
Artists: Hannah Bertram, Linden Braye, Sophia Egarchos, Kath Fries, Michelle Heldon, Sahar Hosseinabadi, Chrissie Ianssen, Shannon Johnson, Michele Morcos, Jade Pegler, Megan Yeo and Melinda Young.
Gaffa Gallery: 1/7 Randle St, Surry Hills NSW 2010

Le Fil (the thread) exhibition invitation



You are invited to attend opening night drinks with the artists, Thursday 30th July 2009, 6-8pm
Gaffa Gallery, 1/7 Randle St, Surry Hills, NSW 2010
The exhibition continues to Tuesday 11th August

Curated by Kath Fries

Featuring new work by Hannah Bertram, Kath Fries, Michelle Heldon, Chrissie Ianssen, Jade Pegler, Melinda Young, Sahar Hosseinabadi, Michele Morcos, Linden Braye, Megan Yeo, Shannon Johnson and Sophia Egarchos.

Le Fil (the thread) is a group exhibition, bringing together twelve artists who deconstruct and re-address materials, processes and designs relating to the textile industry. A connecting conceptual thread runs between the artists’ works linking how we value fabrics from the contemporary, to the traditional and ancient. Textiles can be warm and comforting; they can communicate glamour and wealth, they can also convey cultural, national or religious significance. Such an essential part of our contemporary daily lives, we consume and discard vast quantities of mass-produced textiles that ultimately end up as landfill waste. In this group exhibition, Le Fil (the thread), each artist broaches a different conceptual angle ranging from metaphors of fabric as interwoven memories, to cycles of decay and renewal, yearning escapism and the ongoing struggles against assumptions of traditional feminine domesticism.

At the exhibition opening, Thursday 30th July 6-8pm, Mick James will be improvising a live tapestry of ephemeral sound-scapes, aurally stitched together with electronic sampling, reworking and remixing. Mick James has worked with FBi 94.5FM and continues to create collages of intriguing sounds from his home studio in Sydney for his fans in Japan and all over the world.



Ariadne's Thread - work in progress for Le Fil (the thread) exhibition


Backyard weekend workshop for my Ariadne's Thread project http://www.lefil-exhibition.blogspot.com

Skid-marks






Kath Fries, Skid-marks, 2009, charcoal and floorboards, gold embroidery thread, canvas, glass, feathers and rose thorns.

Skid-marks was exhibited in the group show Queen and Country. This installation traced a sense of continuing frictions of British colonisation. Charcoal was rubbed into lacerated canvases and topography of the floor. Gold embroidery thread knotted and trailed around the installation. A blacked pane of glass lent against the wall, trapping and semi-obscuring a circle of thorny rose branches. A shredded piece of truck tire completed the arc. 


Queen and Country, 2 - 14 July 2009. Tanya Ljubic, Megan Yeo, Jessica Geron, Lexi Harper, Kate Churchyard, Kath Fries and Ally McKeller. Gaffa Gallery, 1/7 Randle St, Surry Hills NSW 2010

Chocolate Braille

Wouldn't it be nice if the world was... 2009, Braille created from chocolate drops melted onto the gallery wall, March 2009, part of the group exhibition lure allure illusion at Gaffa Gallery.

The Braille tells the story of a young African boy, Aly Diabate, falsely lured away from his home in Mali to work on an Ivory Coast cocoa plantation. Slaving from dawn til dusk he struggled to carry large heavy bags of cocoa beans, often collapsing from fatigue and he was beaten severely for working too slowly. Aly was drastically underfeed and locked up at night with the other children, in a small confined room so they wouldn’t escape.
West Africa collectively produces three quarters of the world's cocoa supplies, so almost all the chocolate sold around the world today contains a percentage of cocoa produced by child slave labour. Perhaps our blind, almost childlike responses to the allure of chocolate fuels our naive illusions, but in reality our consumption of chocolate is much more destructive than than we superficially like to believe.




Siren's Song

An installation of feathers, mirrors, nylon and acrylic, March 2009, part of the group exhibition lure allure illusion at Gaffa gallery. 
Sirens, in Greek mythology, were mystical, dangerous bird-women, whose singing lured passing sailors to their deaths. In this installation feathers are tantalizing, intimate and seductive, like the Siren's wings, however there is a subtle sinister undertone of doom and destruction.












Olga's Music Box, Sculpture in the Vineyards 2008



Last year, my elderly next door neighbor, Olga, was telling me about the place she where she grew up in Hungary. It was a wine growing region that produced wonderful sweet wines and was famous for its beautiful popular trees. Olga remembers the sounds of the poplar leaves rustling in the breeze and singing the local folk songs about the autumnal golden poplar trees. In Greek mythology the poplar tree is the Tree of Life, because of its distinctly bicolored leaves; dark green on the side that faces Heaven, pale green on the side that faces Earth, representing the male/female duality from which all was born. This artwork, titled Olga's Music Box, is about nostalgia and they way that sounds can trigger half forgotten memories on the other side of the world.



The installation:
About 2 meters above the ground, strung between two poplar trees are five parallel lines of black hessian webbing, representing a music stanza.
The music notes are represented by large black poplar leaf shapes. On one side of each is a piece of broken mirror.
The leaf-music-notes are attached to the parallel lines with a swivel allowing the leaf-music-notes to spin freely in the breeze and the mirrored side catches and reflects the sunlight, creating dancing patterns of light on the shadowy ground.



Set amongst the poplar trees at Stonehurst Cedar Creek Vineyard, Olga's Music Box entices viewers deep into the forest of trees, as they catch glimpses of the leaf-music-notes glinting in the distance, a stanza of spinning silent music.

Flat-lining, Sculpture in the Vineyards 2008



This installation is a development of the heartbeat work that I installed at Stonehurst Cedar Creek last year.
Flat-lining is a site-specific work for the length of the barbed wire fence leading up to the cellar door at Undercliff Vineyard, Wollombi, The Hunter Valley. Red knitting yarn is bound around lengths of barbed wire for the entire length of the fence, occasionally zig-zagging like a heartbeat. The brightly coloured, soft, fuzzy-edged materiality of the yarn contrasts the harsh aggressive material of the barbed wire.



Flat-lining explores the concept of boundaries. The use of the barbed-wire fence conveys multiple associations of defense, aggression, possession, containment and protection. The colour, softness and tactility of the continuous red line of bound yarn, combined with the title, Flat-lining, indicates an indeterminate moment on the boundary between life and death.

The term Flat-lining is mostly used in the medical industry when a person's pulse has stopped, indicating a flat line on the heart monitor. Even at this point - the boundary can be breached in either direction - there is still the possibility of resuscitation.

Slumbering, 2008






Slumbering, 2008
multimedia installation MVA Post-Grad exhibition at SCA
dvd projection, mirrors, bamboo, vines, aluminum wire mesh, nylon, feathers, acrylic and charcoal on walls
























































"Memories lie slumbering within us for months and years, quietly proliferating, until they are woken by some trifle and in some strange way bind us to life… what would we be without memory? We would not be capable of ordering even the simplest thoughts, the most sensitive heart would lose the ability to show affection, our existence would be a mere never-ending chain of meaningless moments, and there would not be the faintest trace of a past."
Winfried Georg Sebald and Michael Hulse, The Rings of Saturn (New York: New Directions, 1998), 255.

SCA Post-Grad Degree Show 08




SCA Postgraduate Degree Show 08
Opening Tuesday 9 December 6.00–8.00pm


My artwork will be in installation room one.

Exhibition continues to Wednesday 17 December. Opening hours: Monday to Saturday 11am–5pm







Sydney College of the Arts
The Visual Arts Faculty of the University of Sydney
Balmain Road, Rozelle, NSW Australia
(enter opposite Cecily Street)
+61 2 9351 1008
www.usyd.edu.au/sca

Quick-Unpick exhibition


Quick-Unpick - an exhibition of artwork influenced by sewing, textile patterns, knitting and embroidery by Kath Fries, Sophia Egarchos, Linden Braye, Virginia Mawer, Megan Yeo and Shannon Johnson.

Albion Street Gallery
105 Albion St Surry Hills
Opening drinks with the artists: Friday 10th Oct 6-9pm
Exhibition continues until 8 Nov 2008
Gallery Open: Tuesday to Saturday 11am - 5pm

Images left to right:
Queen crown - Megan Yeo, Detail - Virginia Mawer, Burning out i - Kath Fries, Do you know what I’m Thinking - Linden Braye, Fever - Sophia Egarchos, Path of no return - Shannon Johnson, Chopper - Megan Yeo,