Molly Stephenson, Sşş, Jesse Mahoney, John Elcatsha, Kathy Sarpi
Singing Praises
28
July 2022
28
Jul
2022
19
Aug 2022
Gallery 2
Singing Praises
Molly Stephenson, Sşş, Jesse Mahoney, John Elcatsha, Kathy Sarpi
28
July 2022
28
July
2022
19
August 2022
Gallery 2
To celebrate the first year in our new home, we have organised this exhibition devoted to some of the volunteers with art practices who supported SEVENTH from behind the scenes. ‘Singing Praises’ demonstrates how their work follows them everywhere. Our volunteers are at all stages of their career and we thank them profoundly.
To celebrate the first year in our new home, we have organised this exhibition devoted to some of the volunteers with art practices who supported SEVENTH from behind the scenes. ‘Singing Praises’ demonstrates how their work follows them everywhere. Our volunteers are at all stages of their career and we thank them profoundly.
Molly Stephenson
Molly is a contemporary, early-career research-based artist based in Naarm/Melbourne, Australia. Metaphysically motivated, Molly’s artistic practice is an intuitive one that exists in a constant state of flux, instability and disorientation. She explores displacements of human labour, performance and projection upon the non-human, non-being world primarily through sculpture, bricoloage and installation. She is particularly interested in how performative displacements can diffuse the existence between the certainty and permanence of an assumed reality and fantasy.
Kathy Sarpi
Kathy Sarpi is a multi-disciplinary visual artist, animator and educator based in Naarm. Since graduating from the Victorian College of the Arts in 2016 with a Bachelor of Fine Art in Animation Kathy has worked on cartoon shows for Disney Europe and Netflix whilst also expanding her visual art practice in painting, comics and collage. Approaching art in a vivid, playful style, Kathy like to explores the performative nature of the human experience and drawing attention to awkward and humorous gestures. Passionate about celebrating life’s abundance and the beauty in our icky, embarrassing and visceral human experiences.