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After

27 August - 17 October 2020 Kasia Tons After by emerging Adelaide-based artist Kasia Tons is a solo exhibition of textiles and photography. Kasia uses textiles to create soft sculptures, 2D works, and wearables that explore personal narratives with universal themes such as home, identity, constructive chaos, and interpersonal relationships. She has been inspired by the little known E.M Forster novella The Machine Stops (1909) which describes a futuristic society where a machine which sustains daily life suddenly stops. This delightfully quirky exhibition explores a time after technology has thrived. After the technology dies, the hole that is left is filled with creative entertainment and expressions reminiscent of times gone past.

27 August - 17 October 2020

Kasia Tons

After by emerging Adelaide-based artist Kasia Tons is a solo exhibition of textiles and photography. Kasia uses textiles to create soft sculptures, 2D works, and wearables that explore personal narratives with universal themes such as home, identity, constructive chaos, and interpersonal relationships. She has been inspired by the little known E.M Forster novella The Machine Stops (1909) which describes a futuristic society where a machine which sustains daily life suddenly stops.

This delightfully quirky exhibition explores a time after technology has thrived. After the technology dies, the hole that is left is filled with creative entertainment and expressions reminiscent of times gone past.

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floriography 3 and William Morris 4 , who,<br />

could very well be the environmental<br />

soothsayer as Forster is for digital<br />

technology. I wanted environmental<br />

connection to be the central force<br />

in this post screen addicted society.<br />

Alongside mask and costume that can<br />

provide both comfort, decoration and<br />

psychological expression as the wearer<br />

eases themselves from a world where they<br />

are very much in control of how they are<br />

seen with the plethora of filters and digital<br />

adornments to a world where they may<br />

feel a sense of exposure and nakedness.<br />

The masks vary from obscuring the face<br />

entirely to being quite transparent and<br />

acting more as an adornment or real-life<br />

filter.<br />

and create is at the core of our nature and<br />

when we explore by choice or necessity<br />

these aspects of our self it can leads to a<br />

more satisfying experience.<br />

[1] The Machine Stops, E.M Forster, 1909<br />

[2] Utopia, the history of an idea, Gregory Claeys,<br />

2020<br />

[3] Daffodil: new beginnings and also the common<br />

name for the genus scientifically known as Narcissus.<br />

Nasturtium: Impetuous love. Chrysanthemum: Truth.<br />

Bougainvillea: Passion; The Language of flowers,<br />

Mandy Kirby 2011<br />

The role constructive chaos plays in<br />

transformation of society is a recurring<br />

theme I work with and is present here as<br />

well. We’ve seen this year how quickly life<br />

can change, the way we function, what<br />

we prioritize and what is meaningful. Both<br />

hiking in the mountains and living through<br />

a worldwide pandemic lockdown has<br />

shown that security in life is an illusion but<br />

our ability to problem solve, adapt<br />

Page 8-9: Kasia Tons, Untitled #4, 2020.<br />

Photo: Dave Laslett<br />

7

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