Tales From The Studio & Table Stories

Tales From The Studio & Table Stories


Tales from the Studio explores the ways in which artists Xiaohui Yang from Shandong, China and Elizabeth Shaw from Brisbane convey narratives about their respective societies and cultures through jewellery and small objects.

An artist’s ideas and ambitions for a work become secondary to the life the work gains once published/released publicly. This is particularly so for small objects and jewellery as they interact in people’s lives. As items that are worn or held they take on a life of their own, gaining new meanings and purpose from their relationship with people. As objects of material culture they reflect the society in which they emerge and the society in which they reside. The tradition of cabinet of curiosities saw natural history items drawn together in collections that preceded scientific taxonomies. Instead relationships were perceived and objects were arranged based on aesthetic judgements.

Xiaohui Yang (Shandong, China) and Elizabeth Shaw (Brisbane) work from different inspiration, but there is a similarity in the resultant aesthetic.

Yang’s works are inspired by her observations of Western Eastern cultural collision, specifically between traditional Chinese and Western customs. Yang aligns her work as being concerned with story as opposed to beauty.

Shaw’s works investigate the relationship between the symbolic function of objects and their more practical uses. She draws on the aesthetic of repair and honesty in mechanics that was valued in earlier mechanical tools, apparatus and implements, but is all but lost in modern technology. Shaw collects broken and discarded items, reimagining their potential, revaluing them from waste and reinventing them through adaptions and additions. The exhibition will bring together new works from both Yang and Shaw.

Quench – Table Stories

The Quench design collective has pursued an exciting design research project in conjunction with a Queensland macadamia producer. They have revealed the potential value of discarded macadamia timber by creating a series of beautiful design artefacts, each with its own story, which highlight the unique grain of this native Australian hardwood.

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