This exhibition examines how fire shapes landscape and impacts on the psyche of people whose homelands are affected by fire. It draws together Tasmanian artists working across a range of mediums including interactive video, jewellery, architectural performance, sculpture and furniture.The artists envisage fire as a destructive force and ever-present threat, as well as a mechanism of renewal and a sculpting force across the island. Engagements include Gay Hawkes’ documentation of loss to fire, Philip Blacklow’s thermally modified furniture and Neil Haddon’s vibrant paintings
This paper examines the atmospheres generated by the elemental power of bushfires as embodiment, inv...
The Black Saturday 2009 Victorian bushfires have again made Australians think critically about their...
Fugitive History presents recent artworks about historic Tasmanian places and associated stories tha...
This exhibition examines how fire shapes landscape and impacts on the psyche of people whose homelan...
‘Between Fire and Flood’ was a solo commissioned project that responded to ideas of climate and atmo...
This paper documents my research into fire and its redemptive qualities. Through the initial lens on...
The video 'Living with Fire’ was one of three short videos in ‘Southern Resilience, collectively con...
This paper examines the atmospheres generated by the elemental power of bushfires as embodiment, inv...
Fugitive History presents recent artworks about historic Tasmanian places and associated stories tha...
Fire is the subject, matter is the object. This paper is written to accompany my MFA thesis exhibiti...
© 2021 Kate Elisabeth Whitley DouglasDue to climate change-induced intensifications in bushfire freq...
Disruption of historic fire regimes in Southeastern Michigan is associated with a host of negative ...
Fugitive History presents recent artworks about historic Tasmanian places and associated stories tha...
Fugitive History presents recent artworks about historic Tasmanian places and associated stories tha...
Fugitive History presents recent artworks about historic Tasmanian places and associated stories tha...
This paper examines the atmospheres generated by the elemental power of bushfires as embodiment, inv...
The Black Saturday 2009 Victorian bushfires have again made Australians think critically about their...
Fugitive History presents recent artworks about historic Tasmanian places and associated stories tha...
This exhibition examines how fire shapes landscape and impacts on the psyche of people whose homelan...
‘Between Fire and Flood’ was a solo commissioned project that responded to ideas of climate and atmo...
This paper documents my research into fire and its redemptive qualities. Through the initial lens on...
The video 'Living with Fire’ was one of three short videos in ‘Southern Resilience, collectively con...
This paper examines the atmospheres generated by the elemental power of bushfires as embodiment, inv...
Fugitive History presents recent artworks about historic Tasmanian places and associated stories tha...
Fire is the subject, matter is the object. This paper is written to accompany my MFA thesis exhibiti...
© 2021 Kate Elisabeth Whitley DouglasDue to climate change-induced intensifications in bushfire freq...
Disruption of historic fire regimes in Southeastern Michigan is associated with a host of negative ...
Fugitive History presents recent artworks about historic Tasmanian places and associated stories tha...
Fugitive History presents recent artworks about historic Tasmanian places and associated stories tha...
Fugitive History presents recent artworks about historic Tasmanian places and associated stories tha...
This paper examines the atmospheres generated by the elemental power of bushfires as embodiment, inv...
The Black Saturday 2009 Victorian bushfires have again made Australians think critically about their...
Fugitive History presents recent artworks about historic Tasmanian places and associated stories tha...