
Emma-Kate Wilson
Articles
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Jan 14, 2025 |
habitusliving.com | Emma-Kate Wilson
Designed by ARLO, Quarry House is a shared vision between the architects and their creative clients in Melbourne’s village-like inner city suburb of Northcote. The brief for Quarry House by ARLO (previously known as Winwood Mckenzie Architecture) followed the concept of renovating the clients’ existing workers’ cottage in Northcote into a warm and comfortable three-bedroom family home with a depth of character. A home designed for living is a phrase used often.
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Jan 9, 2025 |
architectureau.com | Emma-Kate Wilson
Based in Naarm/Melbourne, designer Nicholas Aylward invites his rural upbringing from Bangerang country to his craft. The objects begin their process in the environment. Naturally surrendered to the landscape, Aylward sources fallen timber with his father in his hometown, Corowa. “They speak to the landscape; a lot of these trees have been dead for more than 30 years, and it’s just out of sheer luck that I come across them,” he comments.
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Dec 10, 2024 |
broadsheet.com.au | Che-Marie Trigg |Emma Joyce |Emma-Kate Wilson
Time to take a break from the beach? There’s a plethora of alluring exhibitions spread throughout the city (and the regions of NSW) this summer, spanning large-scale video installations interrogating the climate crisis, a survey of a leading contemporary Chinese artist, a major exhibition of one of Europe’s leading 20th-century surrealists, and more.
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Nov 24, 2024 |
concreteplayground.com | Emma-Kate Wilson
Bunjilaka Aboriginal Cultural Centre at Melbourne Museum invites visitors into the world of First Nations fashion and textile design. Piinpi: Contemporary Indigenous Fashion runs until January 19, 2025 and reveals the depth and diversity of cultures across Australia. The title of the exhibition, Piinpi, is an expression from the Kanichi Thampanyu people (East Coast Cape York Peninsula) that reflects 'seasonal changes' and regeneration of Country.
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Nov 21, 2024 |
architectureau.com | Alexander Lotersztain |Emma-Kate Wilson
Established by designer and creative Jacqueline Kaytar, a Croatian Australian living on Turrbal and Yuggera country, Studio Kaytar is the evolution of a twenty-year-long design and making career, one that has always been driven by “the act of making.” “It’s been an organic journey of refining my craft and discovering new ways to shape materials,” she reveals. “I began my formal design career as a textile designer,” Kaytar continues.
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