Schmetterlinge - a journey of work by Mia Straka

by Mia Straka


Solo exhibition at St Paul St G3, Auckland 5 - 9 December 2019 resulting from a month long art residency in Berlin with Das Institut für Alles Mögliche -The Department of Anything is Possible.

Image credits: Liz Clarkson Photography

Schmetterlinge: (pl) Butterflies.

Working with limited tools and equipment during a month long residency in April 2018, exploring the creative hub of Berlin, liberated me from the usual parameters in my jewellery making.

Mornings and afternoons were spent exploring and collecting. Cast off materials and flea market finds were deconstructed and reassembled over long Spring nights under the fluorescent lights. Working with materials I perceived as symbolic of the German vernacular, I was excited to create something new out of these now superfluous objects and parts. I let myself be led by the materials, intuitively responding to my environment. In this work I hope to give the materials fresh life and new potential.

While not wanting to eschew wearability entirely, the work is not overly concerned with standing up to everyday wear and tear or personal comfort, it was made quickly and held together with filler, glue, and wire sourced from local hardware and art supply stores.

Drawing impressions from wanderings around my work/live space at the Hauptstadtstudio in Friedrichshain, I gathered materials and visited sites that seemed emblematic of the city to me, often sites with a violent history that subsequently metamorphosed into vibrant community spaces. The Schmetterlinge works are responses to Berlin’s layers of history and transformation at the hands of what I perceived as communally empowered inhabitants.

The residency programme Das Institut für Alles Mögliche supported me by organising meet ups with other practitioners under their custodianship around the city and a group collaborative exhibition at the end of my residency period, as well as enabling all area access to the wonderful Teufelsberg. Relationships built up as a result connected me to an international network of creatives in practices ranging from painting/mixed media, experimental film and performance art, sculpture, installation and music.

Although only four weeks, the residency allowed me the time and space to rediscover the pure joy in making and gain focus for my practice with a lack of everyday distractions and duties. The result was over 20 experimental works produced during the month and has brought new energy, knowledge and direction to my work.

Since April I've continued to resolve some of the jewellery pieces and objects, alongside embarking on a second generation of work. Extending beyond the specifically Berlin context, these new works link the ideas and material knowledge gained with my existing practice. I’ve sourced waste materials and am using these to work in a sustainable manner, viable for both larger sculptural and smaller wearable works, exploring themes that reach throughout my practice and including more techniques such as knotting, weaving and wrapping.

This exhibition was a chance for me to show the new work in NZ in a beautiful space I hadn’t exhibited in before, seeing how it might be translated and received here. St Paul St Gallery 3 is spacious and light filled with windows to the street and entrance foyer. Having full control of the installation in a relatively large space with no fixed display systems was both exciting and nerve wracking. Each piece is hung on safety pins in cardboard box ‘frames’ customised with black packing tape and white paint, carrying through the sustainable use of materials and allowing easy interaction with the works. The informal and makeshift installation echoes concerns of transformation, transience, mobility and accessibility. Reactions from a diverse audience including AUT staff, jewellery and art industry associates, family members and friends, and a passing homeless gentleman, were positive and engaged.

Being on site to ‘man’ the space, I was able to facilitate try ons with enthusiastic participants and photograph them wearing the works around the space. Handmade journals were displayed below each work for visitors to write their response to specific works. Notations and questions written sporadically in the pages asked for imagined histories, current reactions, or perceived functions and rituals the works may have been a part of. On later inspection I was excited to find people’s reactions and creative responses to the works and these now form part of the exhibition.

For more on the residency period see:

http://mia-straka.squarespace.com/blog/2017/10/jewellery-shaped-pieces-of-berlin

https://www.goethe.de/ins/nz/en/kul/mag/21436850.html


The Talisman Project for Voveo: promise objects for everyday use

by Mia Straka in


An exhibition of promise objects, curated by Kevin Murray. Exhibited at City Library, Flinders Lane, Melbourne 25 August - 3 September 2017 during Radiant Pavilion

voveo invite.jpg

Ten jewellers from different countries have re-imagined the promise object. Voveo (means "I promise" in Latin) presents work by Raquel Bessudo (Mexico), Louiseann & Kristian King(Australia), Vicki Mason (Australia), Clare Poppi (Australia), Gina Ropiha (Australia), Mia Straka (New Zealand), This Means That (Thailand), Bic Tieu (Australia) Alice Whish (Australia) and Keri-Mei Zagrobelna (New Zealand). To connect these objects to everyday life, they are distributed throughout Melbourne City Library. Many of the artists will be in attendance to deliver promises.

You can see Voveo at Melbourne City Library, 253 Flinders Lane, 25 August - 3 September 2017. Hours are Mon-Thurs 8am-8pm, Fri 8am-6pm, Sat 10am-5pm, Sun 12-5pm. Opening Thursday 31 August, 2-4pm.

Listen to Mia explaining the project during it's Melbourne residency here:  https://soundcloud.com/kevin-murray-14/mia-straka

Reviews of the exhibition and Radiant Pavilion: Play and Possibility and Radiant Pavilion-Illuminations

Voveo pendants in the hand

During Radiant Pavilion I will be engaging with visitors in a dialogue addressing a number of values and human rights that may be considered universally applicable.

Willing participants will be asked to choose a certain right or value you see as particularly important and relevant to uphold within your own community.

If you decide to be a champion of this specific right/value by committing to a positive action, a Valere Talisman pendant will be written or stamped with a word(s) symbolising your promise and gifted to you from me, to be taken away and worn.

Fulfilment of the promise will be as decided by the participant, consisting of a simple action such as speaking up in the face of bigotry, or helping someone that may be disadvantaged.

The pendant will act as a reminder and visual signifier of the commitment, as well as identifying you as an ambassador for the project.

The Valere Talismans are a solo project leading on from the interactive Talisman Project collaboration. The Valere Talismans extend the wearer/maker discourse with face to face interactions every day during Radiant Pavilion and online engagement at #thetalismanproject.


Molly Morpeth Canaday 3D Award Exhibition at Te Kōputu a te whanga a Toi - Whakatāne Library and Exhibition Centre

by Mia Straka in


Presented by Whakatāne Museum and Arts, The Molly Morpeth Canaday 3D Award has been established to encourage and recognise the quality of creativity found in the area of three-dimensional applied arts, including sculpture.

These awards have been made possible through the generous support of the Molly Morpeth Canaday Trust, established by Frank Canaday in memory of his wife, Molly Morpeth Canaday. The trust has been a major supporter of the arts in Whakatāne for over 25 years, and Whakatāne Museum and Arts would like to extend our thanks for the trust’s continuing support.


Meltdown at Debrasic, Thames

by Mia Straka in


Meltdown, Debrasic's signature exhibition, brings together jewellery from independent contemporary artists who are pioneering bold new ideas with a focus on recycled materials. Now, we're sharing a peek at a few of the pieces in the exhibition. Meltdown is on display at Debrasic (754 Pollen Street in Thames) through 17 February 2016. 

https://debrasic-online.squarespace.com/

 


R.A.W. at Gallery One Oh Eight, Ironbank Building, Auckland

by Mia Straka in ,


Curated by Jo Mears, R.A.W (reactions after Wunderrûma) exhibits the work of 32 jewellers during a week long programme of events coinciding with the opening of Wunderrûma, an exhibition of contemporary jewellery and taonga curated by Warwick Freeman and Karl Fristch at Auckland Art Gallery. R.A.W presents raw and conceptual works in a range of materials, including pounamu, gold, silver, bunny poo, rubber, timber, soap, fur, plastic, leather, stone, masking tape, rubbish and found flotsam.

'I think that R.A.W. in a way is a reaction to Wunderrûma, but one of the main themes that permeates through the artists works seems to be more a reaction to Aotearoa New Zealand, to kiwiness and to our turangawaewae.'

Jo Mears, Curator.

http://rawexhibition.weebly.com/