Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Arts and Humanities Commons

Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Social and Behavioral Sciences

PDF

Diana Wood Conroy

Selected Works

2011

Exhibition catalogues

Articles 1 - 3 of 3

Full-Text Articles in Arts and Humanities

Fabrics Of Change : Trading Identities, Diana Wood Conroy, Emma Rutherford Oct 2011

Fabrics Of Change : Trading Identities, Diana Wood Conroy, Emma Rutherford

Diana Wood Conroy

Fabrics of Change : Trading Identities explores textiles and their intrinsic relationship to texts of law and literature across an historical and contemporary span of British colonisation.


Breathing Space, Liz Jeneid, Diana Wood Conroy, Stephen Ingham Oct 2011

Breathing Space, Liz Jeneid, Diana Wood Conroy, Stephen Ingham

Diana Wood Conroy

‘Breathing space’ is about marking time through breath. When breath stops, time stops for each individual chronology. Re-iteration, repeating with variation again and again, in and out, is the rhythm of craft, of skill in drawing and making. Reiteration mirrors the arduous patterns of ancient textiles, ceramics, or inscriptions, patterns derived from images of feathers, scales, or leaves.


"Ditto" - Images In Print, Mehmet Adil, Brogan Bunt, Gregor Cullen, Agnieszka Golda, Richard Hook, Gary Jones, Derek Kreckler, F. Krishnabhakdi-Vasilakis, J. Law, Jacky Redgate, Julius Van Den Berg, Diana Wood Conroy, Joanna Stirling Oct 2011

"Ditto" - Images In Print, Mehmet Adil, Brogan Bunt, Gregor Cullen, Agnieszka Golda, Richard Hook, Gary Jones, Derek Kreckler, F. Krishnabhakdi-Vasilakis, J. Law, Jacky Redgate, Julius Van Den Berg, Diana Wood Conroy, Joanna Stirling

Diana Wood Conroy

" Ditto " is an initiative of the School of Art and design's Centre for the Printed Image (CPI) which was formed to coordinate research activities in photographic, digital and autographic print processes. The exhibition exhibited demonstrated some of the relationships of printed image to individual research interests as well as the multiplicity of techniques and print media now available.