J Shed Art Studio

MyWikiBiz, Author Your Legacy — Thursday March 28, 2024
Revision as of 01:26, 26 October 2011 by Peter Z. (talk | contribs) (added txt)
Jump to navigationJump to search

J Shed Art Studio is an Artist Studio in Fremantle, Australia.[1][2] The studio specialises in ceramic murals and it is run by Jenny Dawson.

Jenny is a ceramic artist, public artist, designer, teacher, consultant, project co-ordinator and runs a thriving studio in the J shed harbour precinct in Fremantle Western Australia. Jenny established the J Shed Ceramic Art Studio in 1992 after completing residencies at the Hobart School of Art in Tasmania and at the Deruta Grazia Maiolica workshops in Italy.

Since 1993 she has worked as a team leader or part of an artist’s team on more than 49 major ceramic tiled artworks located in public spaces throughout Western Australia and Interstate.

Jenny has jointly won four awards for design excellence:

  • 1997 Subiaco Centenary Tiles project
  • 1998 Percent for Art Public art awards for Art works at Banksia Hill Detention Centre
  • 1999 Civic Design Award for Art in Public Places/Charrnock Woman Mosaic in East Perth
  • 2008 Landscape Architects of Australia award for art in Public Places for the Leighton Indigenous Paving Project

J Shed was established as working artists studios involved in semi industrial processes in 1992. Fremantle Council provided an upgrade and offered long leases to compensate for financial outlays and set up costs incurred by tenants. The studios are not lined and the eaves are not sealed from external weather.

Jenny Dawson and Greg James [3] are two of the founding artists of the J Shed (Arthur Kalamaris-Sculptor was the first at J Shed). They have provided stable and reliable tenancies at the J Shed paying full market value rents for their studios. Their arts businesses have been able to grow over time and infiltrate the fabric of Fremantle culture and society.

Yagan Memorial

The J Shed Ceramic Art Studio worked on the memorial for the reburial of Yagan.[4] The main artists were Sandra Hill and Jenny Dawson.[5] The works were installed into rammed earth walls at the Memorial created to commemorate the reburial of Yagan's Kaat. The site was opened early in July.

The Yagan Memorial[6] is an artwork created for the City of Swan to honour the memory of Yagan, the son of Midgigoroo and Moyran. The Memorial Park is situated at Lot 39 West Swan Road,[7] Swan Valley, Australia. Yagan was a very important representative of the Beeliar People[8] who was instrumental in trying to forge good working relations with the first white settlers of the Swan River Colony in Western Australia.

The imagery tells the story of Yagan and his family, their alienation from the white people, the taking and fencing off of their traditional land, the killings and the payback, and the treacherous ambush of Yagan, Heegan and his party by the Keates brothers at the site in 1833. Wall one will depict the story of Yagan and his people from colonisation to his untimely and tragic death.[9]

Yagan Memorial: Completed Walls photo by Peter Zuvela

The Cultural Development Working Group

The J Shed perspective on the report created by the "Cultural Development Working Group" of the City of Fremantle has resulted in a situation where we are faced with not being able to renew our leases on a professional 5 to 10 year basis. This could potentially close our operations and force us to move and potentially destroy the Arthur's Head precinct. Other issues concerning this please read below.

  • We have found from our perspective this whole process set in motion by the "Cultural Development Working Group" of Fremantle Council to have been lacking in transparency and might we add in our opinion an under researched document.
  • The Cultural committee never spoke to us during their research process. Some members of the Fremantle Council came through J Shed early this year, also never spoke to us about this.
  • Artsource, of whom we have been members for 20 years, never told us about the process and only spoke to us after we discovered by accident that they were actually writing the recommendations based on the cultural committees report that would be put to council for vote.

Further reading: J Shed perspective

Contact

  • Email: jennydawsonjshed@yahoo.com.au
  • Address: Unit 3, J Shed-Fleet Street/Fremantle, Western Australia 6160/AUSTRALIA
  • Phone: +61 (08) 9430 7900












Wellard Art Work

Wellard Art Work-Australia
Wellard (Detail)-Australia



















See also




References

  1. ^ Dawson J Shed Ceramic Art Studio Superlink
  2. ^ British Library Direct
  3. ^ Greg James-www.jahroc.com.au
    • "Greg James has established himself as a leading Western Australian figurative sculptor. His numerous public sculptures have become landmarks throughout Perth and Fremantle. These highly skilled works are made in a variety of materials including steel, plaster and bronze."
  4. ^ ABC News Aboriginal Warrior's Final Resting Place
  5. ^ Artsource Sandra Hill and Jenny Dawson Commission
  6. ^ ABC News Aboriginal Warrior's Final Resting Place
  7. ^ City of Swan
  8. ^ Caught in Time: Talking Australian History by Bill Bunbury. Page 40-41
  9. ^ Australian Dictionary of Biography, Online Edition


J Shed Rainbow-Fremantle (Australia)











External links


J Shed View-Australia










Share this page

<sharethis />


Jenny Dawson Fremantle, Western Australia, AustraliaCeramics J Shed Art Studio Jenny Dawson "[City" contains a listed "[" character as part of the property label and has therefore been classified as invalid. Perth Jenny Dawson Ceramic Art {[J Shed Ceramic Art Studio::Ceramics]] Western Australia