An Unreliable Guidebook to Jewllery

Front Cover
RMIT Design Hub, 2019 - Art - 461 pages
This expanded second edition of "An unreliable guidebook to jewellery by Lisa Walker" further explores how the work of the internationally celebrated New Zealand jeweller can be framed by the career-long provocation 'What is jewellery?'. Originally published to accompany the retrospective exhibition Lisa Walker: She wants to go to her bedroom but she can't be bothered at RMIT Design Hub Gallery, Melbourne, in early 2019, the release of the book's extended new edition - co-published by RMIT Design Hub Gallery and Perimeter Editions - coincides with the final iteration of the exhibition at Te Uru Waitākere Contemporary Gallery in Auckland in June 2021. Foregrounding the act of asking questions and the pleasure and importance of the 'as yet understood', the book includes a proliferation of new works, texts, materials and documentation from the touring exhibition's recent installations at CODA Museum (Apeldoorn, The Netherlands, 2019) and Villa Stuck (Munich, Germany, 2020). At once systematic and malleable in their structure, the narratives that emerge within this volume offer an open-ended reflection on Walker's practice and output, moving across different time periods, veering off on tangents, but returning to the many concerns of the field in which she has so firmly embedded herself. Graphic Design by Ziga Testen and Kim Mumm Hansen. (Homepage Perimeter, 17.02.2022)

About the author (2019)

Lisa Walker was born in Wellington, New Zealand in 1967.She studied at Otago Polytechnic Art School in Dunedin,majoring in jewellery under Georg Beer. In 1995 she beganstudies under Otto Ku¿nzli at the Academy of Fine Arts inMunich, finishing with the head student award in 2002. Sheestablished her studio in Munich, exhibiting widely in Europe,USA, Australia, New Zealand, Japan, China. She has givenlectures and workshops internationally since 2001 and hasreceived numerous awards including Creative New Zealandarts board grants, the 2007 Munich Förderpreis, theFrancoise van den Bosch Award 2010, and the 2015 NewZealand Arts Foundation Laureate Award. She returned toWellington in 2010 and is currently residing there with herpartner jeweller Karl Fritsch and their two children.

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