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Read the latest issue Issue#36 November 2008
The November issue of 716 craft·design highlights the extraordinary career and talents of Australian craft practitioners. With a particular focus on Liz Williamson: Textiles, the fourth exhibition in the Living Treasures series.
Each year, through the combination of a national touring exhibition and a major monograph publication, the series celebrates the achievements of Australia's iconic and influential crafts practitioners. Liz Williamsons fine handwoven textiles display her characteristic interest in the construction of cloth, with a unique surface appearance created through the interlacing of threads of different fibre content. In the late nineties Williamson was introduced to a computerised Jacquard loom and her resulting designs explore the restorative practice of times past and in particular, the art of darning. Craft Australia is a key partner in the Living Treasures program and actively promotes the program through the Craft Australia website.Living Treasures series Index
Craft Australia Craft and Design Research CentreCall for PapersCross cultural exchanges in craft and designThe Craft Australia Craft and Design Research Centre has developed an online refereed journal. The e-journal will be published on the Craft Australia website and will promote the pursuit of academically rigorous craft·design research. The inaugural call for papers is now open and the Craft Australia Craft and Design Research Centre is seeking contributions for 2009 on the theme Cross cultural exchanges in craft and design. We invite papers that interrogate cross-cultural practices, communicate the breadth of activity across cultural exchanges, and establish a dialogue between practice and policy for a rich and sustainable culture. We particularly welcome articles from authors who are involved in inter or trans-disciplinary research, as it relates to the broad fields of contemporary craft and design practice. Areas for consideration in this theme include:
Deadline for submissions: 30 June 2009.
Guidelines for Authors download
Selling Yarns 2: Innovation for sustainability is a conference that addresses contemporary Indigenous craft and design practice. It draws on the outcomes of the first Selling Yarns conference held in Darwin in 2006 that looked specifically at contemporary Indigenous textile practice. Selling Yarns 2: Innovation for sustainability website A selection of conference papers from the 2006 Darwin conference have been published through the Craft Australia Research Centre.
The National Craft Mapping Project: Service provision for professional craft artists and designer/makers report in hard copy is a free publication and is available from Craft Australia. A $5.00 fee is being charged to cover postage and handling for a hard-copy.
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Craft Australia gratefully acknowledges the financial assistance it receives from the Australia Council for the Arts, the Australian government's arts funding and advisory body. |