Program

Our Conference has now passed, but the full conference program is still available for download. See Conference page for link

SATURDAY 5 OCTOBER 2024

The WA Maritime Museum in Walyalup/Fremantle
Victoria Quay Road, Fremantle Western Australia, Australia

Please note: The program may be subject to change.

See Workshops & Associated Exhibitions & Events tabs for further details on other activities.

8:30 am

Conference Registration

Beverages, morning tea mingle, resource table for brochures, business cards and other information.

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9:45 am

Welcome to Country

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9:55 am

Introduction: Melissa Cameron

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10:00 am

Dr Aly De Groot + Dr Louise Hamby (Australia)

Aly and Louise are teaming up to present a paper exploring the introduction of contemporary methods to the traditional practices of the Indigenous makers of eastern Arnhem land, Gapuwiyak.

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11:00 am

Everett Hoffman (USA)

Everett's paper “Converging Objects of the Universe”, explores the intersection of jewellery and found objects in developing a queer narrative of becoming. He will also be running a workshop alongside the conference.

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12:00 pm

Lunch break

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12:00 pm

Pin Swap

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12:00 pm

Presenter Exhibition

A small exhibition on display of a number of presenters art work

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1:30 pm

Rudee Tancharoen (Thailand)

Rudee will be speaking about traditional PaAo casting, the jewellery and installations she has created with this process, and potentially a short demonstration.

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2:30 pm

Julia Heineccius (USA)

Julia will be presenting a paper discussing how artists and scholars are looking at the effect of process videos on our perception of our own skills and capacities, and our understanding of material behaviour. She will also be running a workshop based on the idea of constructing and deconstructing alongside the conference.

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3:30 pm

Afternoon tea break

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3:50 pm

Nicole Monks (Australia)

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4:10 pm

Michelle Broun | Panel discussion with Indigenous Makers

In 2023, Michelle Broun conducted a survey of Indigenous Jewellery and Body Adornment entitled ‘Linking Past and Present’ ahead of the 2024 JMGA National Conference. She will be facilitating a speaking panel with Indigenous artists on this subject.

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5:20 pm

Closing: Melissa Cameron

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6:30 pm

Exhibition Opening & Awards

reflect | refract exhibition opening and presentation of awards at Mossenson Galleries, 115 Hay Street, Subiaco

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WORKSHOPS

International artists Kaori Juzu, Everett Hoffman and Julia Heineccius are presenting workshops pre and post conference

1, 2 & 3 October 2024

Kaori Juzu - (Japan/Denmark)

3 Day Enamelling Workshop: NOW FULL (email for waitlist enquiries, specifying this workshop)

Details

1, 2 & 3 October 2024

Fremantle Arts Centre, Fremantle

$350

Maximum 10 particpants

Description

No prior enamelling experience necessary. Enamelling on copper, using forms made by participants.

Enquiries please email
* Note places are limited

3 & 4 October 2024

Julia Heineccius - (USA)

2 Day Workshop - Places still available!

Details

3 & 4 October 2024

Fremantle Arts Centre, Fremantle

Cost $230

Description

Deconstruction Site: Workshop participants will use simple and direct model-making and jewellery metalsmithing techniques to explore the construction, deconstruction, and prospective restoration of materials and objects.

Enquiries please email
* Note places are limited

Dates 6, 7 & 8 October

Everett Hoffman - (USA)

3 Day Workshop TBC - Almost full!

Details

Dates 6, 7 & 8 October

Contemporary Metal, Osborne Park

Cost $350

Description

Alternaltive materials exploration, trapping and setting. Workshop exploring, large-scale stone setting and trapping – rhinestones and alternaltive materials.

Enquiries please email
* Note places are limited

7, 8 & 9 October 2024

Kaori Juzu - (Japan/Denmark)

3 Day Enamelling Masterclass: NOW FULL (email for waitlist enquiries, specifying this workshop)

Details

7, 8 & 9 October 2024

Fremantle Arts Centre, Fremantle

$350

Maximum 10 particpants

Description

Enamelling on copper, using forms made by participants.

Enquiries please email
* Note places are limited

ASSOCIATED EXHIBITIONS & EVENTS

Surrounding the conference are a host of exhibitions and events

This page will be updated as further events and information becomes available, including artist gallery talks and studio tours

Graduate Metal XVI

Award presentation night at Gallery Central Thursday 3 October 6:00pm

16 September - 10 October 2024

Gallery Central, Aberdeen street

Award exhibition of final year works from recent graduates of TAFE, university and polytechnic Institutions in Australia and New Zealand 2017-2023.

reflect | refract

Awards Presentation: Saturday 5 October 6:30pm

3 - 13 October 2024

Mossenson Galleries, 115 Hay Street, Subiaco

In celebration of the achievements of the members of the Jewellers and Metalsmiths Group of Australia (JMGA), this Award exhibition will survey the current state of contemporary jewellery in Australia.

Banner and Badge

Opening Night: Friday 4 October 6:00pm

4 October – 11 October

PS Art Space, 22-26 Packenham Street, Fremantle

A solo exhibition by jeweller and public artist Melissa Cameron, presenting her take on the traditional forms of protest signage and adornment, banners and badges. It consists of impeccably crafted large hangings alongside works of fine jewellery, made from a raft of non-traditional materials. It showcases pieces not seen outside the USA, made during the 6.5 years she spent living in Seattle, and continues with works made since her return to Perth in 2018.

IOTA24 - Indian Ocean Craft Triennial

IOTA Events and Exhibtions run from 1 August - 31 October

1 August - 31 October 2024

Various venues throught the Perth Metro area and Regional Western Australia

Coinciding with the JMGA conference is IOTA:24, the Indian Ocean Craft Triennial. Its flagship exhibitions and festival program (over 50 exhibitions and events) will feature the best craft of the Indian Ocean region. Several of these events will be in partnership with JMGA exhibitions. For the full program and information, visit the IOTA24 Website

Syncopation

Opening Night: TBC

19 September - 6 October 2024

Gallows Gallery, 53 Glyde Street, Mosman Park

An exhibition of contemporary jewellery by five established Western Australian artists, Dorothy Erickson, Brenda Ridgewell, Bethamy Linton, Gillian Rainer and Christel van der Laan. Like music, visual language can be understood by design principles such as rhythm and repetition that work together to create harmonious relationships and unity between the compositional elements in an artwork. Syncopation refers to the introduction of something that unpredictable, that has the capacity to change our perceptions and shift expectations. Rather than detracting from the work, it enhances it, creating a dynamic tension that challenges and encourages the viewer to experience the artwork in a new ways. Collectively the artists share a passion for thoughtful and careful design, the innovative and democratic use of materials, technical excellence and the celebration of the hand-made jewellery object.

I can’t help but pull the earth around me to make my bed

Opening Night: TBC

21 September – 26 October 2024

Art Collective, 2/565 Hay Street, Perth

New works by visual artists Sarah Elson and Ric Spencer that draws strength from resilient native plant and insect species and the protection they give the earth's surface as detritus.

Identities in Metal

Opening Night: TBC

26th - 29th September 2024

Alister Yiap Gallery, Shop 6, 191-199 Bulwer Street, Perth

Identities in Metal is a group exhibition featuring a variety of works by contemporary jewellers Bic Tieu, Albert Tse and Alister Yiap. The transformative process of casting from solid to liquid to solid speaks about metallurgic change, design and production. This is reflected in the material culture of making in the contemporary jewellery field. The complexity in casting and material’s structure lends well as a metaphor to speaking about identity and migration. Casting is one of the greatest technologies achieved, it changed civilisations, economies, and production methods. Furthermore its boundless characteristics have found new interpretations and expressions in jewellery. This exhibition looks at how casting is applied in contemporary jewellery practices to speak about identity from makers of the Asian diaspora.

Sick AF

Opening Night: TBC

29 September – 20 October 2024

Nyisztor Studio, 17 Essex Street, Fremantle

Group exhibition curated by Amanda Alderson. Exploring the languages and personal stories of chronic illness and injuries, and the process of healing, through contemporary craft and the arts. The healing arts places craft firmly within their discipline for recovery, though medical language coldly straddles the tactility and expressive ability of craft and the act of making. The artists/crafts practitioners in this exhibition identify as having gone through a life changing illness or event. The language of their journey is intrinsically embedded through their work.

Momento Mori: Aesthetic Death

1st - 9th October TBC

Shopfront Gallery, 147-149 Beaufort St, Perth/Boorloo

Exploring the intricate relationships between cultural heritage & ritualistic practices surrounding death & mourning. Delving into how the fundamental Buddhist concepts of impermanence, suffering, & non-self manifest in material choices & contemporary adornment.

Corrosion

Floor Talk Sunday 6 October 10:00 am - 12:00pm

4-31 October 2024

Boola Bardip, WA Museum

Tineke Van der Eecken will present her corrosion cast marine life at Boola Bardip during October 2024. Corrosion casting is a lab-based procedure to create a cast in synthetic resin of an animal’s vasculature. There will be a public talk about the technique on Sunday 6 October.

Tributaries

Opening Night: TBC

6 Sept – 12 October 2024

Katanning Art Gallery

A solo exhibition by Tineke Van der Eecken, presented by ART ON THE MOVE. Tributaries explores the fibres of flora, fauna, and human systems. It includes jewellery, small fine metal sculptures, and objects formed by corrosion casting, a process by which resin is injected into animal organs and other biological systems to form moulds of internal spaces. These objects are placed in dialogue with photographic images and poetry that document the thrum of life and death in environmental arterial systems, connecting root, river, skeleton, and vein. Tributaries is both a contemporary memento mori and a reminder of the constantly changing states of all organic matter, including our own bodies – a testament to the interconnection of human, animal and environment.

Dr Aly de Groot

Details

Presentation

Saturday 5 October

WA Maritime Museum

Overview

Dr Aly de Groot will be teaming up with Dr Louise Hamby to present a paper exploring the introduction of contemporary methods to the traditional practices of the Indigenous makers of eastern Arnhem land, Gapuwiyak.

Dr Aly de Groot is an Australian contemporary fibre artist from Garramilla-Darwin. Inspired by her empathy for marine life and ecosystems, she has been dedicated to learning, using, and teaching contemporary basket-making processes for over two decades. Aly is a PhD graduate from the College of Indigenous Futures Arts & Society at Charles Darwin University, where she is currently the Lecturer in Indigenous Australian Art. Working alongside Indigenous elders and traditional makers, notable collaborative projects include 3 large scale public artworks with Larrakia Elder, Aunty Billawarra Lee, and an award winning fashion collection with Gapuwiyak Culture and Arts. The presentation will be done remotely from Darwin.

Dr Louise Hamby

Details

Presentation

Saturday 5 October

WA Maritime Museum

Overview

Dr Hamby will be teaming up with Aly de Groot to present a paper exploring the introduction of contemporary methods to the traditional practices of the Indigenous makers of eastern Arnhem land, Gapuwiyak.

Dr Louise Hamby is currently a Visiting Research Fellow in the School of Archaeology and Anthropology at the Australian National University with a focus on Indigenous fibre arts, the material culture of Arnhem Land, Indigenous collection-based research and digital repatriation and re-documentation of museum collections and archival material. An honorary associate of Museum Victoria since 2003, Dr Hamby has worked on a number of collaborative curatorial projects working with Indigenous Australians. Threaded objects continue to be an area of her research and collection.

Everett Hoffman

Details

Presentation Saturday 5 October

WA Maritime Museum

Workshop 6 -8 October Contemporary Metal Studio

Overview

Everett's paper “Converging Objects of the Universe”, explores the intersection of jewellery and found objects in developing a queer narrative of becoming. He will also be running a workshop alongside the conference.

Everett Hoffman is a cross disciplinary artist, curator, and writer, based in Philadelphia, PA. He has achieved his BFA and MFA, and completed many residencies across America, most recently completing a three-year residency at Penland School of Craft. His writings have been featured in multiple publications, and he has exhibited widely across America and also Greece. Everett is a finalist in Art Jewellery Forum’s 2024 YOUNG ARTIST AWARD.

Julia Heineccius

Details

Presentation Saturday 5 October

WA Maritime Museum

Workshop 3 & 4 October Fremantle Art Centre

Overview

Julia will be presenting a paper discussing how artists and scholars are looking at the effect of process videos on our perception of our own skills and capacities, and our understanding of material behaviour.

Julia Heineccius studied at the University of Washington, and earned her MFA in Metalsmithing from Cranbrook Academy of Art in 2012. She has completed a number of residencies, exhibited throughout America and Europe, and currently lectures in jewellery and metal at North Seattle College. Julia creates functional and sculptural objects, but pursues jewellery as a concept, a form of art, and a set of techniques. Julia is also conducting a workshop based on the idea of constructing and deconstructing prior to the conference day.

Kaori Juzu

Details

Workshop

Dates 1-3 October & 7-9 October

Fremantle Art Centre

Overview

Kaori will be running two enameling workshops at the 2024 JMGA National Conference in Perth.

Kaori Juzu is a contemporary jeweller originally from Fukuoka, Japan. After completing her apprenticeship under Per Suntum in 2008, she has established her own very successful practice, allowing her opportunities to work, exhibit and teach in various cities across the world. Her work focuses on enamelwork, pushing the boundaries, using simple materials while employing a sophisticated mix of techniques. Most recently, Kaori is a 2023 Loewe Foundation Craft prize finalist.

Michelle Broun

Details

Panel Moderator, Presentation & Discussion

Saturday 5 October

WA Maritime Museum

Overview

In 2023, Michelle Broun conducted a survey of Indigenous Jewellery and Body Adornment entitled ‘Linking Past and Present’ ahead of the 2024 JMGA National Conference, funded by the Department of Local Government, Sport & Cultural Industries. She will be facilitating a speaking panel with Indigenous artists on this subject.

Michelle Broun is a proud Yindjibarndi women residing on Whadjuk Nyungar Boodja. Michelle has worked in the arts and cultural sector for 30 years - as a textile designer, curator, cultural planner, and creative producer, in both the not-for-profit and government sectors. In 1995 she was co-curator of Women’s Work Land and Spirit which toured to Beijing at the Forbidden City during the UN Conference on Women- then nationally in Australia to 17 venues with support from Art On The Move and Visions Australia. She was lead Curator of Ngalang Koort Boodja Wirn, WA Museum, Boola Bardip where she collaborated with community to create a narrative of identity, diversity, spirituality, and the resilience of West Australian Aboriginal people and places. As Curator of Australian First Nations Art at John Curtin University she curated Tracing the Art of a Stolen Generation – the child artists of Carrolup. This exhibition honours the child artists of Carrolup Native Settlement, who between 1946-1951 produced hundreds of vibrant artworks, mainly landscapes under the tutelage of their teacher Mr. Noel White. It toured to Manchester and Glasgow in 2022 as part of the UK/Australian Season of Culture. It acknowledges the legacy of the Stolen Generations and prompts conversations about Australia’s true history, issues of empire and structural racism. Michelle is currently enrolled in a Masters of Cultural Heritage and Museum Studies at Deakin University. In 2024 she will undertake a 10,000 thesis in relation to a major collection held at the Museum of Victoria. She was recently appointed to the Indigenous Reference Group at the National Museum of Australia.

Nicole Monks

Details

Panel Discussion

Saturday 5 October

WA Maritime Museum

Overview

Nicole Monks is a multi-disciplinary creative of Yamaji Wajarri,Dutch and English heritage living and working on Worimi and Awabakal Country (Newcastle).

Monks’s practice is informed by her cross-cultural identity, using storytelling as a way to connect the past with the present and future. Her works take a conceptual approach that are embedded with narratives and aim to promote conversation and connection. An award-winning designer and artist, Monks crosses disciplines to work with furniture and objects, textiles, video, installation and performance. Across these varied forms of contemporary art and design, her work reflects Aboriginal philosophies of sustainability, innovation and collaboration.

Rudee Tancharoen

Details

Presentation

Saturday 5 October

WA Maritime Museum

Overview

Rudee will be speaking about traditional PaAo casting, the jewellery and installations she has created with this process, and potentially a short demonstration.

Rudee Tancharoen lives and works in Bangkok, Thailand. She is a contemporary jeweller and a director of Atelier Rudee, the first international academy of contemporary jewellery in Thailand. She has completed studies in Thailand and Italy, and her work has been published and exhibited in Europe, America, Australia, and Asia.

SATURDAY 5 OCTOBER 2024

The WA Maritime Museum in Walyalup/Fremantle

The live conference session at the Maritime Museum is now fully booked and at capacity! We would love you to join us for the day via ZOOM.
Tickets are $40 for the day
See below for payment details

JMGA 2024 National Conference

Virtual attendance via ZOOM
8.30am -5.30pm
Credit Card payments: https://square.link/u/mIV8PKPk
OR Transfer to
JMGA WA
BSB 806-015
Account 02115777
(If transferring, you must email your payment confirmation to treasurer@jmgawa.com.au AND secretary@jmgawa.com.au in order to receive your ZOOM link to attend)


Tickets will give you access to a Zoom link for the full day of presentations. The link will open at 8:30am (AWST) on the day to allow for everyone to get settled and to check the video and audio is working before the proceedings begin.

Acknowledgement

JMGA WA acknowledges the Traditional Owners of country throughout Australia and recognises their continuing connection to land, waters and community. We pay our respects to them and their cultures; and to elders both past and present.

Become a Member

As a member of the JMGA WA you are entitled to a range of benefits and opportunities. Find out more here

To become a member please complete our membership form

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