Plastic and Clay
Medical implants and an octopus crawling out of the toilet - we compare plastic on show in Dundee with the art of clay displayed at the Hayward Gallery.
It revolutionised domestic chores, signified modernity and has been made into packaging, textiles, electrical machinery but plastic has also contributed to our throw-away society. Clay is turned into bricks, cookware and used in industrial processes including paper making, cement production, and chemical filtering and increasingly contemporary artists are taking up the material. As exhibitions at the V&A Dundee and the Hayward Gallery in London display the different qualities and associations of these materials Lisa Mullen is joined by ceramic artist Lindsey Mendick, curators Cliff Lauson and Johanna Agerman Ross, and Kirsty Sinclair Dootson who studies materials in visual culture.
Plastic: Remaking Our World is at the V&A Dundee. It features product design, graphics, architecture and fashion from the collections of the V&A and Vitra Design Museum, and other collections. It is the first exhibition produced and curated by V&A Dundee, the Vitra Design Museum and maat, Lisbon, with curators from V&A South Kensington.
Strange Clay: Ceramics in Contemporary Art is at the Hayward Gallery in London until 8 January 2023 and features 23 international artists.
You can find a collection of programmes exploring Art, Architecture, Photography and Museums on the Free Thinking programme website /programmes/p026wnjl
Producer: Torquil MacLeod
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- Wed 9 Nov 2022 22:00Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ Radio 3
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