Alichia van Rhijn & Madeleine Thornton-Smith

Composing Collage

5

May 2018

5

May

2018

24

May 2018

Gallery 1

Composing Collage

Alichia van Rhijn & Madeleine Thornton-Smith

5

May 2018

5

May

2018

24

May 2018

Gallery 1

Alichia van Rhijn and Madeleine Thornton-Smith are interested in experimenting with materiality, collage and the tension between the image and the object. Originating from the French coller, ‘to glue’, collage enables series of artistic languages, places and times to be read simultaneously. Collage can deconstruct traditional hierarchies of the medium – allowing a literal and figurative multiplicity of viewpoints to be considered. Greenbergian purism is deconstructed when a variety of mediums are brought together as assemblages. Working within multiple artistic traditions, van Rhijn and Thornton-Smith have created a series of works that encourage materials to be read in new ways through remediation, composition and collaboration – for instance, clay is treated like paper, folded and cut.‘Sprawling in Space’ text by Kieran Stevenson

Alichia van Rhijn and Madeleine Thornton-Smith are interested in experimenting with materiality, collage and the tension between the image and the object. Originating from the French coller, ‘to glue’, collage enables series of artistic languages, places and times to be read simultaneously. Collage can deconstruct traditional hierarchies of the medium – allowing a literal and figurative multiplicity of viewpoints to be considered. Greenbergian purism is deconstructed when a variety of mediums are brought together as assemblages. Working within multiple artistic traditions, van Rhijn and Thornton-Smith have created a series of works that encourage materials to be read in new ways through remediation, composition and collaboration – for instance, clay is treated like paper, folded and cut.‘Sprawling in Space’ text by Kieran Stevenson

No items found.

Alichia van Rhijn

Madeleine Thornton-Smith

Madeleine Thornton-Smith has training in painting and ceramics.

​Remediation is the act of re-forming an object in a material from which it wouldn’t usually be made. Thornton-Smith uses remediation as a method of investigating medium specificity—in particular the location where, and the manner in which, one distinct medium ends and another begins. Employing a slow process of accumulation and repetition, she uses slip-casting to bring together commonplace studio material surfaces—bubble wrap, acrylic paint, polystyrene, expanding foam, render and concrete—with archetypal forms from fine art and ceramics—vessels, plinths, frames, canvases and tiles. Recently the frame has been her focus. This mimetic process also interrogates material hierarchies: for example, a canvas or expanding form’s material currency is subverted through slip-casting – raising questions about the status and value of ceramics, art and craft. Through an accumulation of experience working in various mediums, Thornton-Smith tries to bring different ways of working to the practice of object-making. Collage and photomontage also form a big part of her practice: creating worlds that exist ‘between’.

​Thornton-Smith has obtained various qualifications including a Bachelor of Arts/Visual Arts (Monash, 2013), Honours of Fine Art (Monash, 2014), Diploma in Languages (Spanish, 2015), Diploma of Ceramics (Holmesglen, 2017), and First-Class Honours in Object-Based Practice (Ceramics) at RMIT. She was a finalist in the Craft Victoria Awards (2016), Craft ‘Fresh’! (2018), Blindside ARI’s ‘DEBUT XV’ (2018), the Manningham Victorian Ceramic Art Award (2019) and was awarded a three-month residency (2018) and solo exhibition (2019) through RMIT:ART:INTERSECT after completing Honours. In 2019, she attended a 10-week ceramics residency at Cotto Designs in Lima. In 2020, she is due to do a three-month residency at Northcote Pottery Supplies and solo exhibition at c3 art space with works made during her residency in Peru.