Sunday, July 10, 2011

Yvette King and Scott Mitchell - The Repair Workshops 'Pair of the Week'!

This week we introduce artist Yvette King and techie Scott Mitchell...
Yvette King and Scott Mitchell. Photo by Jo Duck
Yvette King is a Melbourne artist working currently in areas involving sculpture, installation and things that move. Her practice addresses familiar sources and their dislocation; in purpose, material and intent. This often has hilarious results. 
“I like low-fi adjustments on found objects, and material interventions. I like things that move and squeak. I like ordinary things that become interesting when you change them a bit, and I like how you find them again. Unexpected things; things that suddenly get to be a whole lot more than they were before; I like these things.”
King graduated with Honours in Sculpture from Monash University in 2006, in which she also received the Baldessin Foundation Travelling Fellowship. King has exhibited widely around Melbourne in group and curated exhibitions and is currently on the board of Kings Artist Run Initiative.



Scott Mitchell graduated with Honours in Sculpture from RMIT in 2000 and recently completed a PhD in Industrial Design. For the past 6 years Scott has investigated practices of hacking and modding within contemporary consumer culture. This research has led to projects such as the iPod Social Outreach Program which aim to enhance consumer agency and challenge the notion of passive consumption.
iPod Mash, Scott Mitchell 2007
Scott teaches within RMIT School of Architecture and Design and VCA Sculpture and Spatial Practice. He has exhibited widely as both an individual artist and as part of the collaborative group OSW (Open Spatial Workshop). Details of Scott's art, research and teaching practice can be found at www.openobject.org
parabolic lamp/microphone, Scott Mitchell 2005
Now you've read all about them, come and meet them in person at Donkey Wheel House.
Affectionately known as 'The Red Team', they'll be the ones working to the theme 'Hybridisation'. So register that broken iPod you've been meaning to fix, and look forward to Yvette and Scott giving it a new lease on life; perhaps as an MP3 player that toasts the perfect crumpet and curls your hair as well - all in the time it takes to listen to your favourite Beyonce song!?

Friday, July 1, 2011

Introducing one of the repair pairs - Dylan Martorell and Jason Bond

Jason Bond (top) and
Dylan Martorell

The artist...
Dylan is a multidisciplinary artist know for his amazing illustrations and more recently for his bicycle based performance soundsystems (Roda RodaSound System). He works across a myriad of different practises from paper, installation, performance, costume and instrument making, music scores, gardening and mycology... (yep and that’s just to name a few). If creating amazing artworks wasn’t enough he  also plays with the bands Snawklor, Hi God People and The Donkeys Tail and plays as DJ Trims Bagus as part of the Roda Roda Sound System.

Illustration by Dylan Martorell
Source: Lamington drive
The Technician...
Jason is a VJ and currently works full time at the Enviroshop in Northcote where he reapirs products and makes solar power systems (one of which he installed in Timor Leste as part of an ATA project). Beofre that, Jason was involved in manufacturing biomedical equipment and was even an electrical technician working on robotic planes that ended up flying in the Arctic, gathering data on confirmed the feedback effect on climate change. 


They kinda asked for each other... Dylan said he wanted someone who knew electronics and Jason said he wanted a musician... you will have to come along to the repair workshops to find out exactly what this duo will get up too...

Thursday, June 30, 2011

Introducing The Repair Workshop's expert artists and technicians!

Over the next few weeks we’re going to be introducing these talented young guns one-by-one, but today you get to see them in all their glory as a group!

Photo by Jo Duck
Are you excited yet? We certainly are!
 
This photo was taken Monday when we all got together with the very lovely and talented photographer Jo Duck.
We asked each of the collaborators to bring along their favourite tool or thing to fix, to be photographed with. In hindsight, 8am on a Monday morning was a bit of an ‘ask’ – but once the coffee kicked in we had a grand ol’ time.
The photo speaks for itself so I won’t blah on, but you can see by the energy and diversity of people shown here that this project is shaping up to be one very exciting event!

Wednesday, June 29, 2011

Register for a FREE Repair session at the Repair Workshops July 30 - 31


Spaces are filling fast for a free 20 minute repair session with our amazing repairers: 

Dylan Martorell, Jason Bond, Yvette King, Scott Mitchell, Will Campbell, Lizzy Sampson, Timothy Denshire-Key, and Gregory Crocetti

Go to our website here to register

Wednesday, June 15, 2011

The Repair Workshops at the 2011 State of Design Festival

The Repair Workshops is proud to announce that it will be part of the Sate of Design Festival 2011.

A bit about the festival:
“The State of Design Festival is the largest and most innovative design event in Australia and the heart of design thinking and design activity.State of Design Festival increases the awareness of the value of design and showcases how design generates innovation, promotes sustainability and adds value to business and society.By communicating to Victorian, Australian and international audiences, the Festival promotes a deeper understanding of design capability and value.”

The festival guide will be officially launched next Tuesday the 21st. Here’s a sneak-peek of our listing;

We know that 'if it ain't broke', you 'don't fix it'. But what if it is 'broke'? What role can designers and (over)consumers play in rethinking the value of repair? The Repair Workshops explore these questions through cross-disciplinary collaboration, an exhibition, and a series of public workshops where you are invited to bring along broken items for repair and re-creation.
A beautiful example of a repaired stool in Vietnam
This year’s theme is ‘Design That Moves’
“In 2011 the State of Design Festival explores design in, on and around projects that are transformative, mobile and networked. Workshops and forums examine the nomadic, the cyclical and the role of design systems. We are keen to understand how we can use design to create more active cities and we present events in transitional zones: platforms, revitalised spaces, foyers and stairs. These are 'spaces that take us places'. We also examine how design affects us mentally and physically. We ask, ‘how does design influence our experience of objects and environments, how does design influence how we feel’? For the 2011 Festival, motion and emotion are cause for renewed thinking around design.”

And there’s plenty of other amazing things to see and do at this festival.Here’s a couple of our favourites…

Presented by Regional Arts Victoria and the City of Melbourne, these workshops will introduce kids to the elements of sustainable design, emphasizing fun and functionality.
Eco-cubby workshop, photo: Tobias Titz.
Presented by Bus Projects, Critical Mobility explores the relations between art and globalised public space through sound, installation and design on a bus fitted-out as an interactive gallery and performance space. This exhibition features new work by Michael Fowler, Ros Bandt, PVI Collective, Sibling and The Repair Workshop’s Dylan Martorell.
Artwork by Dylan Martorell
All excerpts from the State of Design Festival guide 2011.

Monday, May 30, 2011

Charity dumping and landfill woes


The story is the same in suburbs across Australia, the weekend clean out has resulted in mountains of clothes, toys, books and other household items sitting (or often strewn) outside the local op-shop. 
The pile of dumped goods first thing in the morning

But what actually happens to all these unsolicited ‘donations’? Well from our experiences yesterday helping the lovely crew at the East Kew Vinnie’s shop – it’s a bit of a sad and frustrating story for all involved. 

Most of the items ‘donated’ over the weekend are actually dumped. Leaving items out the front of a store, exposed to the elements means that many of them get wet and damaged before they even get inside the store, rendering them un-sellable. 

Yesterday morning a few of the repairers, plus Emma and I, got up bright and early to see firsthand exactly what happens to dumped goods and to attempt to rescue a few items destined for landfill... all to be repaired as part of the Repair Workshops in July.
 
The staff at the East Kew Vinnies told us how the pile we were sorting through was about half the size it is usually. The rules for sorting out what goes in the tip truck and what gets kept for sale are pretty simple. If it’s wet or damaged in the slightest then it’s off to the tip and if it’s in an OK condition and dry then it goes in the maybe pile to be sorted later. 
 Old text books and damaged books get recycled

Whilst it hadn’t rained over the weekend, it was cold and frosty with a lot of the cloths and books soaking up the early morning dew rendering them obsolete. The reason that the wet cloths can’t be used is because items are sold ‘as is’. Meaning they go directly onto hangers or into bails to be sorted and shipped overseas. 

So you might want to wash your second hand items before donating next time!
 
Aside from the damage caused by the weather, many of the things ‘donated’ were clearly other people’s waste. Empty boxes, broken cups, single shoes and the countless handbags with broken straps resulted in more goods going in the skip than into the shop. 

Whilst the East Kew Vinnies has a small repair workshops staffed by keen volunteers with skills, the sheer volume of things dumped week after week makes it very difficult for shops like this to sort through and repair broken items for sale. 

We donate to charities to recycle and to assist them in financing their important social work. But with the landfill and skip costs being anywhere up to $400 a week, we really need to find ways of reducing the amount of waste getting dumped on charities. This comes down to higher quality products that break less and alternative recycling and repair facilities. According to some reports dumping costs charities a staggering 1 million dollars a year.
In a bid to kerb the weekend pile of waste outside shops, charities have even started to remove their donation bins (ref). 
Repairer Lizzy sorting through the pile

When asked why this happens, one of the crew said people are either lazy or don’t want to have to pay to take it to the tip. “
It costs about $17 to drop a mattress off at the tip, and we get heaps of them here that we can’t use so we have to pay for that.”
 
Charities are not ‘alternative’ waste collectors, so think about what you are donating next time and make sure that you drop off you items when the store is open so they can assess if they are useful.
 
There is a much larger question that needs to be addressed in this, that is the alleviation of guilt that we feel when we ‘donate’ and the excuses that having such services allow us to make about what we are consuming. It’s irresponsible to donate things that are not up to scratch and frustrating to now know just how much ends up in landfill – not through the fault of the charities who are trying their hardest to sort through everything – but through the laziness or us. Buying, breaking and ‘donating’ more and more things. 

Some of the items that had to go straight into the bin included:
 
-          Text books and encyclopaedias
-          Wet or damaged books
-          Crockery or glass where with the slightest chip in it (safety)
-          Baby items such as car seats (as they don’t know what the condition is)
-          Soiled or wet cloths (remember they go straight onto the hangers without being washed so they have to be in good order)
-          Board games with pieces missing or small parts that could be a choking hazard
-          Single shoes