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austapestry

Australian Tapestry Workshop

World-renowned for contemporary tapestries handwoven in cross-disciplinary creative partnerships.
Est 1976.

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posts
2.5K
followers
23.5K
following

UPDATE | ‘Welcome to Country - now you see me: seeing the invisible’

Last week, we conducted a trial hang of ‘Welcome to Country – now you see me: seeing the invisible’ at the Melbourne Convention Centre, testing how Australia’s first ever 3D tapestry would hang. This long-anticipated moment did not disappoint. With expert support from ICS Conservation, the two panels were joined and hung in an ellipse, bringing to life the ambitious vision of artists Maree Clarke (Yorta Yorta/Wamba Wamba/Mutti Mutti/Boonwurrung) and Mitch Mahoney (Boonwurrung/Barkindji).

The result is breathtaking. We can’t wait to see it installed at the New Footscray Hospital in the coming months, where it will bring joy and calm to a space that can often feel overwhelming.

Created over 14 months by our team of 12 weavers and two dyeing specialists, this tapestry is the product of more than 10,000 hours of extraordinary collaboration and skilled craftsmanship.

The new Footscray Hospital tapestry is a collaboration between Plenary Health (@plenarygroup), the official arts partner for the new hospital, Footscray Community Arts (@footscrayarts), the Australian Tapestry Workshop, and the Tapestry Foundation of Australia, in collaboration with the Victorian Health Building Authority and Western Health (@westernhealthau). The tapestry commission is supported by the Premier’s Suite, a partnership between the Tapestry Foundation of Australia, the State Government of Victoria, and the Australian Hotels Association.

Maree Clarke (@ree_clarke) and Mitch Mahoney (@mitch_mahoney_art) are represented by Vivien Anderson Gallery (@vivienandersongallery).
@ics_conservation

Photo: @astridmulder.photography


1.2K
93
8 months ago


UPDATE | ‘Welcome to Country - now you see me: seeing the invisible’

Last week, we conducted a trial hang of ‘Welcome to Country – now you see me: seeing the invisible’ at the Melbourne Convention Centre, testing how Australia’s first ever 3D tapestry would hang. This long-anticipated moment did not disappoint. With expert support from ICS Conservation, the two panels were joined and hung in an ellipse, bringing to life the ambitious vision of artists Maree Clarke (Yorta Yorta/Wamba Wamba/Mutti Mutti/Boonwurrung) and Mitch Mahoney (Boonwurrung/Barkindji).

The result is breathtaking. We can’t wait to see it installed at the New Footscray Hospital in the coming months, where it will bring joy and calm to a space that can often feel overwhelming.

Created over 14 months by our team of 12 weavers and two dyeing specialists, this tapestry is the product of more than 10,000 hours of extraordinary collaboration and skilled craftsmanship.

The new Footscray Hospital tapestry is a collaboration between Plenary Health (@plenarygroup), the official arts partner for the new hospital, Footscray Community Arts (@footscrayarts), the Australian Tapestry Workshop, and the Tapestry Foundation of Australia, in collaboration with the Victorian Health Building Authority and Western Health (@westernhealthau). The tapestry commission is supported by the Premier’s Suite, a partnership between the Tapestry Foundation of Australia, the State Government of Victoria, and the Australian Hotels Association.

Maree Clarke (@ree_clarke) and Mitch Mahoney (@mitch_mahoney_art) are represented by Vivien Anderson Gallery (@vivienandersongallery).
@ics_conservation

Photo: @astridmulder.photography


1.2K
93
8 months ago

UPDATE | ‘Welcome to Country - now you see me: seeing the invisible’

Last week, we conducted a trial hang of ‘Welcome to Country – now you see me: seeing the invisible’ at the Melbourne Convention Centre, testing how Australia’s first ever 3D tapestry would hang. This long-anticipated moment did not disappoint. With expert support from ICS Conservation, the two panels were joined and hung in an ellipse, bringing to life the ambitious vision of artists Maree Clarke (Yorta Yorta/Wamba Wamba/Mutti Mutti/Boonwurrung) and Mitch Mahoney (Boonwurrung/Barkindji).

The result is breathtaking. We can’t wait to see it installed at the New Footscray Hospital in the coming months, where it will bring joy and calm to a space that can often feel overwhelming.

Created over 14 months by our team of 12 weavers and two dyeing specialists, this tapestry is the product of more than 10,000 hours of extraordinary collaboration and skilled craftsmanship.

The new Footscray Hospital tapestry is a collaboration between Plenary Health (@plenarygroup), the official arts partner for the new hospital, Footscray Community Arts (@footscrayarts), the Australian Tapestry Workshop, and the Tapestry Foundation of Australia, in collaboration with the Victorian Health Building Authority and Western Health (@westernhealthau). The tapestry commission is supported by the Premier’s Suite, a partnership between the Tapestry Foundation of Australia, the State Government of Victoria, and the Australian Hotels Association.

Maree Clarke (@ree_clarke) and Mitch Mahoney (@mitch_mahoney_art) are represented by Vivien Anderson Gallery (@vivienandersongallery).
@ics_conservation

Photo: @astridmulder.photography


1.2K
93
8 months ago

UPDATE | ‘Welcome to Country - now you see me: seeing the invisible’

Last week, we conducted a trial hang of ‘Welcome to Country – now you see me: seeing the invisible’ at the Melbourne Convention Centre, testing how Australia’s first ever 3D tapestry would hang. This long-anticipated moment did not disappoint. With expert support from ICS Conservation, the two panels were joined and hung in an ellipse, bringing to life the ambitious vision of artists Maree Clarke (Yorta Yorta/Wamba Wamba/Mutti Mutti/Boonwurrung) and Mitch Mahoney (Boonwurrung/Barkindji).

The result is breathtaking. We can’t wait to see it installed at the New Footscray Hospital in the coming months, where it will bring joy and calm to a space that can often feel overwhelming.

Created over 14 months by our team of 12 weavers and two dyeing specialists, this tapestry is the product of more than 10,000 hours of extraordinary collaboration and skilled craftsmanship.

The new Footscray Hospital tapestry is a collaboration between Plenary Health (@plenarygroup), the official arts partner for the new hospital, Footscray Community Arts (@footscrayarts), the Australian Tapestry Workshop, and the Tapestry Foundation of Australia, in collaboration with the Victorian Health Building Authority and Western Health (@westernhealthau). The tapestry commission is supported by the Premier’s Suite, a partnership between the Tapestry Foundation of Australia, the State Government of Victoria, and the Australian Hotels Association.

Maree Clarke (@ree_clarke) and Mitch Mahoney (@mitch_mahoney_art) are represented by Vivien Anderson Gallery (@vivienandersongallery).
@ics_conservation

Photo: @astridmulder.photography


1.2K
93
8 months ago

UPDATE | ‘Welcome to Country - now you see me: seeing the invisible’

Last week, we conducted a trial hang of ‘Welcome to Country – now you see me: seeing the invisible’ at the Melbourne Convention Centre, testing how Australia’s first ever 3D tapestry would hang. This long-anticipated moment did not disappoint. With expert support from ICS Conservation, the two panels were joined and hung in an ellipse, bringing to life the ambitious vision of artists Maree Clarke (Yorta Yorta/Wamba Wamba/Mutti Mutti/Boonwurrung) and Mitch Mahoney (Boonwurrung/Barkindji).

The result is breathtaking. We can’t wait to see it installed at the New Footscray Hospital in the coming months, where it will bring joy and calm to a space that can often feel overwhelming.

Created over 14 months by our team of 12 weavers and two dyeing specialists, this tapestry is the product of more than 10,000 hours of extraordinary collaboration and skilled craftsmanship.

The new Footscray Hospital tapestry is a collaboration between Plenary Health (@plenarygroup), the official arts partner for the new hospital, Footscray Community Arts (@footscrayarts), the Australian Tapestry Workshop, and the Tapestry Foundation of Australia, in collaboration with the Victorian Health Building Authority and Western Health (@westernhealthau). The tapestry commission is supported by the Premier’s Suite, a partnership between the Tapestry Foundation of Australia, the State Government of Victoria, and the Australian Hotels Association.

Maree Clarke (@ree_clarke) and Mitch Mahoney (@mitch_mahoney_art) are represented by Vivien Anderson Gallery (@vivienandersongallery).
@ics_conservation

Photo: @astridmulder.photography


1.2K
93
8 months ago

UPDATE | ‘Welcome to Country - now you see me: seeing the invisible’

Last week, we conducted a trial hang of ‘Welcome to Country – now you see me: seeing the invisible’ at the Melbourne Convention Centre, testing how Australia’s first ever 3D tapestry would hang. This long-anticipated moment did not disappoint. With expert support from ICS Conservation, the two panels were joined and hung in an ellipse, bringing to life the ambitious vision of artists Maree Clarke (Yorta Yorta/Wamba Wamba/Mutti Mutti/Boonwurrung) and Mitch Mahoney (Boonwurrung/Barkindji).

The result is breathtaking. We can’t wait to see it installed at the New Footscray Hospital in the coming months, where it will bring joy and calm to a space that can often feel overwhelming.

Created over 14 months by our team of 12 weavers and two dyeing specialists, this tapestry is the product of more than 10,000 hours of extraordinary collaboration and skilled craftsmanship.

The new Footscray Hospital tapestry is a collaboration between Plenary Health (@plenarygroup), the official arts partner for the new hospital, Footscray Community Arts (@footscrayarts), the Australian Tapestry Workshop, and the Tapestry Foundation of Australia, in collaboration with the Victorian Health Building Authority and Western Health (@westernhealthau). The tapestry commission is supported by the Premier’s Suite, a partnership between the Tapestry Foundation of Australia, the State Government of Victoria, and the Australian Hotels Association.

Maree Clarke (@ree_clarke) and Mitch Mahoney (@mitch_mahoney_art) are represented by Vivien Anderson Gallery (@vivienandersongallery).
@ics_conservation

Photo: @astridmulder.photography


1.2K
93
8 months ago

UPDATE | ‘Welcome to Country - now you see me: seeing the invisible’

Last week, we conducted a trial hang of ‘Welcome to Country – now you see me: seeing the invisible’ at the Melbourne Convention Centre, testing how Australia’s first ever 3D tapestry would hang. This long-anticipated moment did not disappoint. With expert support from ICS Conservation, the two panels were joined and hung in an ellipse, bringing to life the ambitious vision of artists Maree Clarke (Yorta Yorta/Wamba Wamba/Mutti Mutti/Boonwurrung) and Mitch Mahoney (Boonwurrung/Barkindji).

The result is breathtaking. We can’t wait to see it installed at the New Footscray Hospital in the coming months, where it will bring joy and calm to a space that can often feel overwhelming.

Created over 14 months by our team of 12 weavers and two dyeing specialists, this tapestry is the product of more than 10,000 hours of extraordinary collaboration and skilled craftsmanship.

The new Footscray Hospital tapestry is a collaboration between Plenary Health (@plenarygroup), the official arts partner for the new hospital, Footscray Community Arts (@footscrayarts), the Australian Tapestry Workshop, and the Tapestry Foundation of Australia, in collaboration with the Victorian Health Building Authority and Western Health (@westernhealthau). The tapestry commission is supported by the Premier’s Suite, a partnership between the Tapestry Foundation of Australia, the State Government of Victoria, and the Australian Hotels Association.

Maree Clarke (@ree_clarke) and Mitch Mahoney (@mitch_mahoney_art) are represented by Vivien Anderson Gallery (@vivienandersongallery).
@ics_conservation

Photo: @astridmulder.photography


1.2K
93
8 months ago

ANNOUNCEMENT | ‘Salt Creep with Fence No. 2’

We are thrilled to share that work has commenced on a major new tapestry for the permanent collection of @sam_shepparton. The piece is inspired by the late Philip Hunter’s 2008 painting ‘Salt Creep with Fence No. 2’ and is being developed under the guidance of artist Dr Vera Möller, Hunter’s partner.

Philip Hunter is widely recognised as one of Australia’s leading landscape painters, known for his restrained earth-toned palette and visually dense, large-scale works. Translating ‘Salt Creep with Fence No. 2’ to tapestry will be a welcome challenge for our weaving team, led by Emma Sulzer with Saffron Gordan, Pamela Joyce, Cheryl Thornton and Dr Caroline Tully.

We look forward to sharing progress in the months ahead.

-
Pictured: ‘Salt Creep with Fence No. 2’ Tapestry in progress, Photography by ATW. This project is generously supported by Metal Manufacturers Limited.


411
11
5 months ago


ANNOUNCEMENT | ‘Salt Creep with Fence No. 2’

We are thrilled to share that work has commenced on a major new tapestry for the permanent collection of @sam_shepparton. The piece is inspired by the late Philip Hunter’s 2008 painting ‘Salt Creep with Fence No. 2’ and is being developed under the guidance of artist Dr Vera Möller, Hunter’s partner.

Philip Hunter is widely recognised as one of Australia’s leading landscape painters, known for his restrained earth-toned palette and visually dense, large-scale works. Translating ‘Salt Creep with Fence No. 2’ to tapestry will be a welcome challenge for our weaving team, led by Emma Sulzer with Saffron Gordan, Pamela Joyce, Cheryl Thornton and Dr Caroline Tully.

We look forward to sharing progress in the months ahead.

-
Pictured: ‘Salt Creep with Fence No. 2’ Tapestry in progress, Photography by ATW. This project is generously supported by Metal Manufacturers Limited.


411
11
5 months ago

ANNOUNCEMENT | ‘Salt Creep with Fence No. 2’

We are thrilled to share that work has commenced on a major new tapestry for the permanent collection of @sam_shepparton. The piece is inspired by the late Philip Hunter’s 2008 painting ‘Salt Creep with Fence No. 2’ and is being developed under the guidance of artist Dr Vera Möller, Hunter’s partner.

Philip Hunter is widely recognised as one of Australia’s leading landscape painters, known for his restrained earth-toned palette and visually dense, large-scale works. Translating ‘Salt Creep with Fence No. 2’ to tapestry will be a welcome challenge for our weaving team, led by Emma Sulzer with Saffron Gordan, Pamela Joyce, Cheryl Thornton and Dr Caroline Tully.

We look forward to sharing progress in the months ahead.

-
Pictured: ‘Salt Creep with Fence No. 2’ Tapestry in progress, Photography by ATW. This project is generously supported by Metal Manufacturers Limited.


411
11
5 months ago

ANNOUNCEMENT | ‘Salt Creep with Fence No. 2’

We are thrilled to share that work has commenced on a major new tapestry for the permanent collection of @sam_shepparton. The piece is inspired by the late Philip Hunter’s 2008 painting ‘Salt Creep with Fence No. 2’ and is being developed under the guidance of artist Dr Vera Möller, Hunter’s partner.

Philip Hunter is widely recognised as one of Australia’s leading landscape painters, known for his restrained earth-toned palette and visually dense, large-scale works. Translating ‘Salt Creep with Fence No. 2’ to tapestry will be a welcome challenge for our weaving team, led by Emma Sulzer with Saffron Gordan, Pamela Joyce, Cheryl Thornton and Dr Caroline Tully.

We look forward to sharing progress in the months ahead.

-
Pictured: ‘Salt Creep with Fence No. 2’ Tapestry in progress, Photography by ATW. This project is generously supported by Metal Manufacturers Limited.


411
11
5 months ago

ANNOUNCEMENT | ‘Salt Creep with Fence No. 2’

We are thrilled to share that work has commenced on a major new tapestry for the permanent collection of @sam_shepparton. The piece is inspired by the late Philip Hunter’s 2008 painting ‘Salt Creep with Fence No. 2’ and is being developed under the guidance of artist Dr Vera Möller, Hunter’s partner.

Philip Hunter is widely recognised as one of Australia’s leading landscape painters, known for his restrained earth-toned palette and visually dense, large-scale works. Translating ‘Salt Creep with Fence No. 2’ to tapestry will be a welcome challenge for our weaving team, led by Emma Sulzer with Saffron Gordan, Pamela Joyce, Cheryl Thornton and Dr Caroline Tully.

We look forward to sharing progress in the months ahead.

-
Pictured: ‘Salt Creep with Fence No. 2’ Tapestry in progress, Photography by ATW. This project is generously supported by Metal Manufacturers Limited.


411
11
5 months ago

Congratulations, Ema Shin!

This week saw the opening of the 25th Biennale of Sydney.

'Hearts of Absent Women' was created over 18 months at ATW, with the assistance of ATW weaver Saffron Gordon. We are honoured to have played a part in supporting this work’s creation. We are deeply grateful to Ema for her vision and for pushing the medium of tapestry to new and extraordinary heights.

You can see ‘Hearts of Absent Women’ now at the Chau Chak Wing Museum as part of the 25th Biennale of Sydney: Rememory, on view until 14 June 2026.

-
Photography by Selina Ou

@biennalesydney @ccwm_sydney @ema.shin @gallerysmith_@saffronlilygordon @selinaou.photo


1.1K
47
2 months ago

Congratulations, Ema Shin!

This week saw the opening of the 25th Biennale of Sydney.

'Hearts of Absent Women' was created over 18 months at ATW, with the assistance of ATW weaver Saffron Gordon. We are honoured to have played a part in supporting this work’s creation. We are deeply grateful to Ema for her vision and for pushing the medium of tapestry to new and extraordinary heights.

You can see ‘Hearts of Absent Women’ now at the Chau Chak Wing Museum as part of the 25th Biennale of Sydney: Rememory, on view until 14 June 2026.

-
Photography by Selina Ou

@biennalesydney @ccwm_sydney @ema.shin @gallerysmith_@saffronlilygordon @selinaou.photo


1.1K
47
2 months ago

Congratulations, Ema Shin!

This week saw the opening of the 25th Biennale of Sydney.

'Hearts of Absent Women' was created over 18 months at ATW, with the assistance of ATW weaver Saffron Gordon. We are honoured to have played a part in supporting this work’s creation. We are deeply grateful to Ema for her vision and for pushing the medium of tapestry to new and extraordinary heights.

You can see ‘Hearts of Absent Women’ now at the Chau Chak Wing Museum as part of the 25th Biennale of Sydney: Rememory, on view until 14 June 2026.

-
Photography by Selina Ou

@biennalesydney @ccwm_sydney @ema.shin @gallerysmith_@saffronlilygordon @selinaou.photo


1.1K
47
2 months ago


Congratulations, Ema Shin!

This week saw the opening of the 25th Biennale of Sydney.

'Hearts of Absent Women' was created over 18 months at ATW, with the assistance of ATW weaver Saffron Gordon. We are honoured to have played a part in supporting this work’s creation. We are deeply grateful to Ema for her vision and for pushing the medium of tapestry to new and extraordinary heights.

You can see ‘Hearts of Absent Women’ now at the Chau Chak Wing Museum as part of the 25th Biennale of Sydney: Rememory, on view until 14 June 2026.

-
Photography by Selina Ou

@biennalesydney @ccwm_sydney @ema.shin @gallerysmith_@saffronlilygordon @selinaou.photo


1.1K
47
2 months ago

Congratulations, Ema Shin!

This week saw the opening of the 25th Biennale of Sydney.

'Hearts of Absent Women' was created over 18 months at ATW, with the assistance of ATW weaver Saffron Gordon. We are honoured to have played a part in supporting this work’s creation. We are deeply grateful to Ema for her vision and for pushing the medium of tapestry to new and extraordinary heights.

You can see ‘Hearts of Absent Women’ now at the Chau Chak Wing Museum as part of the 25th Biennale of Sydney: Rememory, on view until 14 June 2026.

-
Photography by Selina Ou

@biennalesydney @ccwm_sydney @ema.shin @gallerysmith_@saffronlilygordon @selinaou.photo


1.1K
47
2 months ago

POSTCODE COLOUR | observe / collect / dye / return

As part of Melbourne Design Week, visitors are invited to take part in Postcode Chroma, an interactive botanical dye project by Joanna Fowles, presented within the exhibition Floras Localis: Colour + Place.

Collect a postcard-sized swatch from the exhibition, dye it using plant materials gathered from your postcode, and return it to become part of an evolving collaborative wall of colour, mapping shades from across the nation.

Floras Localis: Colour + Place
🗓7 May - 11 July
📍 Australian Tapestry Workshop
🕚 Visit Thursday - Saturday, 10am - 5pm.

This exhibition brings together practitioners connected by a shared exploration of colour, materiality and place and includes works by Sally Evans + Heather Thomas, Joanna Fowles, Tammy Gilson (Waddawurrung), Siri Hayes, Amanda Ho, Spiraro, Georgia Stevenson and Melinda Young.

-
Pictured: 1 - 3: Joanna Fowles, Postcode Colour Community Project, 2026. Mordant printed and naturally dyed textile swatches collected from participants. 4 - 9: Installation details of Floras Localis: Colour + Place, works by Georgia Stevenson, Siri Hayes, Sally Evans + Heather Thomas, Joanna Fowles + Nina Smith, and Tammy Gilson. Photography by ATW.

Melbourne Design Week (14–24 May 2026), presented by @NGVMelbourne and @Creative_Vic #NGV #MelbourneDesignWeek #CreativeVic #CreativeState


781
37
3 days ago

POSTCODE COLOUR | observe / collect / dye / return

As part of Melbourne Design Week, visitors are invited to take part in Postcode Chroma, an interactive botanical dye project by Joanna Fowles, presented within the exhibition Floras Localis: Colour + Place.

Collect a postcard-sized swatch from the exhibition, dye it using plant materials gathered from your postcode, and return it to become part of an evolving collaborative wall of colour, mapping shades from across the nation.

Floras Localis: Colour + Place
🗓7 May - 11 July
📍 Australian Tapestry Workshop
🕚 Visit Thursday - Saturday, 10am - 5pm.

This exhibition brings together practitioners connected by a shared exploration of colour, materiality and place and includes works by Sally Evans + Heather Thomas, Joanna Fowles, Tammy Gilson (Waddawurrung), Siri Hayes, Amanda Ho, Spiraro, Georgia Stevenson and Melinda Young.

-
Pictured: 1 - 3: Joanna Fowles, Postcode Colour Community Project, 2026. Mordant printed and naturally dyed textile swatches collected from participants. 4 - 9: Installation details of Floras Localis: Colour + Place, works by Georgia Stevenson, Siri Hayes, Sally Evans + Heather Thomas, Joanna Fowles + Nina Smith, and Tammy Gilson. Photography by ATW.

Melbourne Design Week (14–24 May 2026), presented by @NGVMelbourne and @Creative_Vic #NGV #MelbourneDesignWeek #CreativeVic #CreativeState


781
37
3 days ago

POSTCODE COLOUR | observe / collect / dye / return

As part of Melbourne Design Week, visitors are invited to take part in Postcode Chroma, an interactive botanical dye project by Joanna Fowles, presented within the exhibition Floras Localis: Colour + Place.

Collect a postcard-sized swatch from the exhibition, dye it using plant materials gathered from your postcode, and return it to become part of an evolving collaborative wall of colour, mapping shades from across the nation.

Floras Localis: Colour + Place
🗓7 May - 11 July
📍 Australian Tapestry Workshop
🕚 Visit Thursday - Saturday, 10am - 5pm.

This exhibition brings together practitioners connected by a shared exploration of colour, materiality and place and includes works by Sally Evans + Heather Thomas, Joanna Fowles, Tammy Gilson (Waddawurrung), Siri Hayes, Amanda Ho, Spiraro, Georgia Stevenson and Melinda Young.

-
Pictured: 1 - 3: Joanna Fowles, Postcode Colour Community Project, 2026. Mordant printed and naturally dyed textile swatches collected from participants. 4 - 9: Installation details of Floras Localis: Colour + Place, works by Georgia Stevenson, Siri Hayes, Sally Evans + Heather Thomas, Joanna Fowles + Nina Smith, and Tammy Gilson. Photography by ATW.

Melbourne Design Week (14–24 May 2026), presented by @NGVMelbourne and @Creative_Vic #NGV #MelbourneDesignWeek #CreativeVic #CreativeState


781
37
3 days ago

POSTCODE COLOUR | observe / collect / dye / return

As part of Melbourne Design Week, visitors are invited to take part in Postcode Chroma, an interactive botanical dye project by Joanna Fowles, presented within the exhibition Floras Localis: Colour + Place.

Collect a postcard-sized swatch from the exhibition, dye it using plant materials gathered from your postcode, and return it to become part of an evolving collaborative wall of colour, mapping shades from across the nation.

Floras Localis: Colour + Place
🗓7 May - 11 July
📍 Australian Tapestry Workshop
🕚 Visit Thursday - Saturday, 10am - 5pm.

This exhibition brings together practitioners connected by a shared exploration of colour, materiality and place and includes works by Sally Evans + Heather Thomas, Joanna Fowles, Tammy Gilson (Waddawurrung), Siri Hayes, Amanda Ho, Spiraro, Georgia Stevenson and Melinda Young.

-
Pictured: 1 - 3: Joanna Fowles, Postcode Colour Community Project, 2026. Mordant printed and naturally dyed textile swatches collected from participants. 4 - 9: Installation details of Floras Localis: Colour + Place, works by Georgia Stevenson, Siri Hayes, Sally Evans + Heather Thomas, Joanna Fowles + Nina Smith, and Tammy Gilson. Photography by ATW.

Melbourne Design Week (14–24 May 2026), presented by @NGVMelbourne and @Creative_Vic #NGV #MelbourneDesignWeek #CreativeVic #CreativeState


781
37
3 days ago


POSTCODE COLOUR | observe / collect / dye / return

As part of Melbourne Design Week, visitors are invited to take part in Postcode Chroma, an interactive botanical dye project by Joanna Fowles, presented within the exhibition Floras Localis: Colour + Place.

Collect a postcard-sized swatch from the exhibition, dye it using plant materials gathered from your postcode, and return it to become part of an evolving collaborative wall of colour, mapping shades from across the nation.

Floras Localis: Colour + Place
🗓7 May - 11 July
📍 Australian Tapestry Workshop
🕚 Visit Thursday - Saturday, 10am - 5pm.

This exhibition brings together practitioners connected by a shared exploration of colour, materiality and place and includes works by Sally Evans + Heather Thomas, Joanna Fowles, Tammy Gilson (Waddawurrung), Siri Hayes, Amanda Ho, Spiraro, Georgia Stevenson and Melinda Young.

-
Pictured: 1 - 3: Joanna Fowles, Postcode Colour Community Project, 2026. Mordant printed and naturally dyed textile swatches collected from participants. 4 - 9: Installation details of Floras Localis: Colour + Place, works by Georgia Stevenson, Siri Hayes, Sally Evans + Heather Thomas, Joanna Fowles + Nina Smith, and Tammy Gilson. Photography by ATW.

Melbourne Design Week (14–24 May 2026), presented by @NGVMelbourne and @Creative_Vic #NGV #MelbourneDesignWeek #CreativeVic #CreativeState


781
37
3 days ago

POSTCODE COLOUR | observe / collect / dye / return

As part of Melbourne Design Week, visitors are invited to take part in Postcode Chroma, an interactive botanical dye project by Joanna Fowles, presented within the exhibition Floras Localis: Colour + Place.

Collect a postcard-sized swatch from the exhibition, dye it using plant materials gathered from your postcode, and return it to become part of an evolving collaborative wall of colour, mapping shades from across the nation.

Floras Localis: Colour + Place
🗓7 May - 11 July
📍 Australian Tapestry Workshop
🕚 Visit Thursday - Saturday, 10am - 5pm.

This exhibition brings together practitioners connected by a shared exploration of colour, materiality and place and includes works by Sally Evans + Heather Thomas, Joanna Fowles, Tammy Gilson (Waddawurrung), Siri Hayes, Amanda Ho, Spiraro, Georgia Stevenson and Melinda Young.

-
Pictured: 1 - 3: Joanna Fowles, Postcode Colour Community Project, 2026. Mordant printed and naturally dyed textile swatches collected from participants. 4 - 9: Installation details of Floras Localis: Colour + Place, works by Georgia Stevenson, Siri Hayes, Sally Evans + Heather Thomas, Joanna Fowles + Nina Smith, and Tammy Gilson. Photography by ATW.

Melbourne Design Week (14–24 May 2026), presented by @NGVMelbourne and @Creative_Vic #NGV #MelbourneDesignWeek #CreativeVic #CreativeState


781
37
3 days ago

POSTCODE COLOUR | observe / collect / dye / return

As part of Melbourne Design Week, visitors are invited to take part in Postcode Chroma, an interactive botanical dye project by Joanna Fowles, presented within the exhibition Floras Localis: Colour + Place.

Collect a postcard-sized swatch from the exhibition, dye it using plant materials gathered from your postcode, and return it to become part of an evolving collaborative wall of colour, mapping shades from across the nation.

Floras Localis: Colour + Place
🗓7 May - 11 July
📍 Australian Tapestry Workshop
🕚 Visit Thursday - Saturday, 10am - 5pm.

This exhibition brings together practitioners connected by a shared exploration of colour, materiality and place and includes works by Sally Evans + Heather Thomas, Joanna Fowles, Tammy Gilson (Waddawurrung), Siri Hayes, Amanda Ho, Spiraro, Georgia Stevenson and Melinda Young.

-
Pictured: 1 - 3: Joanna Fowles, Postcode Colour Community Project, 2026. Mordant printed and naturally dyed textile swatches collected from participants. 4 - 9: Installation details of Floras Localis: Colour + Place, works by Georgia Stevenson, Siri Hayes, Sally Evans + Heather Thomas, Joanna Fowles + Nina Smith, and Tammy Gilson. Photography by ATW.

Melbourne Design Week (14–24 May 2026), presented by @NGVMelbourne and @Creative_Vic #NGV #MelbourneDesignWeek #CreativeVic #CreativeState


781
37
3 days ago

POSTCODE COLOUR | observe / collect / dye / return

As part of Melbourne Design Week, visitors are invited to take part in Postcode Chroma, an interactive botanical dye project by Joanna Fowles, presented within the exhibition Floras Localis: Colour + Place.

Collect a postcard-sized swatch from the exhibition, dye it using plant materials gathered from your postcode, and return it to become part of an evolving collaborative wall of colour, mapping shades from across the nation.

Floras Localis: Colour + Place
🗓7 May - 11 July
📍 Australian Tapestry Workshop
🕚 Visit Thursday - Saturday, 10am - 5pm.

This exhibition brings together practitioners connected by a shared exploration of colour, materiality and place and includes works by Sally Evans + Heather Thomas, Joanna Fowles, Tammy Gilson (Waddawurrung), Siri Hayes, Amanda Ho, Spiraro, Georgia Stevenson and Melinda Young.

-
Pictured: 1 - 3: Joanna Fowles, Postcode Colour Community Project, 2026. Mordant printed and naturally dyed textile swatches collected from participants. 4 - 9: Installation details of Floras Localis: Colour + Place, works by Georgia Stevenson, Siri Hayes, Sally Evans + Heather Thomas, Joanna Fowles + Nina Smith, and Tammy Gilson. Photography by ATW.

Melbourne Design Week (14–24 May 2026), presented by @NGVMelbourne and @Creative_Vic #NGV #MelbourneDesignWeek #CreativeVic #CreativeState


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3 days ago

POSTCODE COLOUR | observe / collect / dye / return

As part of Melbourne Design Week, visitors are invited to take part in Postcode Chroma, an interactive botanical dye project by Joanna Fowles, presented within the exhibition Floras Localis: Colour + Place.

Collect a postcard-sized swatch from the exhibition, dye it using plant materials gathered from your postcode, and return it to become part of an evolving collaborative wall of colour, mapping shades from across the nation.

Floras Localis: Colour + Place
🗓7 May - 11 July
📍 Australian Tapestry Workshop
🕚 Visit Thursday - Saturday, 10am - 5pm.

This exhibition brings together practitioners connected by a shared exploration of colour, materiality and place and includes works by Sally Evans + Heather Thomas, Joanna Fowles, Tammy Gilson (Waddawurrung), Siri Hayes, Amanda Ho, Spiraro, Georgia Stevenson and Melinda Young.

-
Pictured: 1 - 3: Joanna Fowles, Postcode Colour Community Project, 2026. Mordant printed and naturally dyed textile swatches collected from participants. 4 - 9: Installation details of Floras Localis: Colour + Place, works by Georgia Stevenson, Siri Hayes, Sally Evans + Heather Thomas, Joanna Fowles + Nina Smith, and Tammy Gilson. Photography by ATW.

Melbourne Design Week (14–24 May 2026), presented by @NGVMelbourne and @Creative_Vic #NGV #MelbourneDesignWeek #CreativeVic #CreativeState


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37
3 days ago

We’re joining with peers across Australia’s craft and design community to support and share this collective response. Will you add your voice?

The Australian Government is developing a new National Cultural Policy. We're calling for proper recognition and investment in Australia's craft and design sector, skilled designers and makers working across this country who deserve a policy framework that matches their contribution.

If you’re passionate about craft and design, whether as a maker, educator, collector orsupporter, your perspective is invaluable. Join us and make a submission before 24 May.

#nationofmakers @ausgovarts @tony_burke_au


67
1
4 days ago

We’re joining with peers across Australia’s craft and design community to support and share this collective response. Will you add your voice?

The Australian Government is developing a new National Cultural Policy. We're calling for proper recognition and investment in Australia's craft and design sector, skilled designers and makers working across this country who deserve a policy framework that matches their contribution.

If you’re passionate about craft and design, whether as a maker, educator, collector orsupporter, your perspective is invaluable. Join us and make a submission before 24 May.

#nationofmakers @ausgovarts @tony_burke_au


67
1
4 days ago

We’re joining with peers across Australia’s craft and design community to support and share this collective response. Will you add your voice?

The Australian Government is developing a new National Cultural Policy. We're calling for proper recognition and investment in Australia's craft and design sector, skilled designers and makers working across this country who deserve a policy framework that matches their contribution.

If you’re passionate about craft and design, whether as a maker, educator, collector orsupporter, your perspective is invaluable. Join us and make a submission before 24 May.

#nationofmakers @ausgovarts @tony_burke_au


67
1
4 days ago

We’re joining with peers across Australia’s craft and design community to support and share this collective response. Will you add your voice?

The Australian Government is developing a new National Cultural Policy. We're calling for proper recognition and investment in Australia's craft and design sector, skilled designers and makers working across this country who deserve a policy framework that matches their contribution.

If you’re passionate about craft and design, whether as a maker, educator, collector orsupporter, your perspective is invaluable. Join us and make a submission before 24 May.

#nationofmakers @ausgovarts @tony_burke_au


67
1
4 days ago

We’re joining with peers across Australia’s craft and design community to support and share this collective response. Will you add your voice?

The Australian Government is developing a new National Cultural Policy. We're calling for proper recognition and investment in Australia's craft and design sector, skilled designers and makers working across this country who deserve a policy framework that matches their contribution.

If you’re passionate about craft and design, whether as a maker, educator, collector orsupporter, your perspective is invaluable. Join us and make a submission before 24 May.

#nationofmakers @ausgovarts @tony_burke_au


67
1
4 days ago

We’re joining with peers across Australia’s craft and design community to support and share this collective response. Will you add your voice?

The Australian Government is developing a new National Cultural Policy. We're calling for proper recognition and investment in Australia's craft and design sector, skilled designers and makers working across this country who deserve a policy framework that matches their contribution.

If you’re passionate about craft and design, whether as a maker, educator, collector orsupporter, your perspective is invaluable. Join us and make a submission before 24 May.

#nationofmakers @ausgovarts @tony_burke_au


67
1
4 days ago

Thank you to all of the incredible volunteers who help make ATW such a vibrant and welcoming place.

This National Volunteer Week, we’re celebrating everyone who generously gives their time, from our tour guides and workshop assistants to the busy bees working behind the scenes. Pictured here are three of our regular volunteers, Jo, Elizabeth and Indi, whose enthusiasm and support are deeply appreciated.

Thank you for being such an important part of our community. 💛

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Photography by ATW.


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6 days ago

Tammy Gilson is a proud Wadawurrung woman and award-winning weaver who uses her Cultural practice to revive the tradition of possum skin cloak making.

In Wadawurrung wurru (language of the Wadawurrung) walert is the word for brush-tail possum. Walert walert is a highly significant artefact and each one carries deep spiritual connection and appreciation to family and Culture. A baby was given a skin at birth, which would be added to as they grew and would also tell their story.

The walert walert denotes a continuum of cultural practice and identity. See the walert walert and learn more at Interwoven: Fibre Art and Fashion, on display until 12th July.


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6 days ago

WORKSHOP | Traditional Weaving with Native Grasses

Join Current Artist in Residence Emma Stenhouse for a hands-on weaving workshop inspired by the traditional coil weaving practices of Ngarrindjeri women.

Learn the fundamentals of coil weaving and create your own piece using Lomandra longifolia, harvested from Emma’s garden. Discover the process behind preparing native fibres, including harvesting, drying, and soaking techniques. No prior experience is required, and the program is recommended for ages 18 and over.

Traditional Weaving with Native Grasses
🗓️ Saturday 20 June
🕚 1 - 3 pm
🎟️ Adult $140 | ATW Friends / Concession $126
🔗 Spots are limited, book now via link in bio



Pictured: Emma Stenhouse, Traditional Weaving with Native Grasses, Photography courtesy of the artist. @emmastenhouseart


83
2
1 weeks ago

WORKSHOP | Traditional Weaving with Native Grasses

Join Current Artist in Residence Emma Stenhouse for a hands-on weaving workshop inspired by the traditional coil weaving practices of Ngarrindjeri women.

Learn the fundamentals of coil weaving and create your own piece using Lomandra longifolia, harvested from Emma’s garden. Discover the process behind preparing native fibres, including harvesting, drying, and soaking techniques. No prior experience is required, and the program is recommended for ages 18 and over.

Traditional Weaving with Native Grasses
🗓️ Saturday 20 June
🕚 1 - 3 pm
🎟️ Adult $140 | ATW Friends / Concession $126
🔗 Spots are limited, book now via link in bio



Pictured: Emma Stenhouse, Traditional Weaving with Native Grasses, Photography courtesy of the artist. @emmastenhouseart


83
2
1 weeks ago

WORKSHOP | Traditional Weaving with Native Grasses

Join Current Artist in Residence Emma Stenhouse for a hands-on weaving workshop inspired by the traditional coil weaving practices of Ngarrindjeri women.

Learn the fundamentals of coil weaving and create your own piece using Lomandra longifolia, harvested from Emma’s garden. Discover the process behind preparing native fibres, including harvesting, drying, and soaking techniques. No prior experience is required, and the program is recommended for ages 18 and over.

Traditional Weaving with Native Grasses
🗓️ Saturday 20 June
🕚 1 - 3 pm
🎟️ Adult $140 | ATW Friends / Concession $126
🔗 Spots are limited, book now via link in bio



Pictured: Emma Stenhouse, Traditional Weaving with Native Grasses, Photography courtesy of the artist. @emmastenhouseart


83
2
1 weeks ago

Artist Tammy Kannat recently spent a week in mini-residency at ATW, exploring natural dyeing processes and deepening her connection to material and place.

“A recent residency at the Australian Tapestry Workshop brought that truth into sharp focus. Gathering eucalyptus, pinecones and wildflowers from around Lake Eildon and dyeing my own wool from the land felt like the most natural extension of everything I believe about this practice. When colour comes from the earth itself, the work carries something beyond technique. It carries place, memory and feeling.”

We’re grateful to have shared this time and process with Tammy in the studio.

-
Photography by ATW

@tammykanat @gallerysallydancuthbert


273
2
1 weeks ago

Artist Tammy Kannat recently spent a week in mini-residency at ATW, exploring natural dyeing processes and deepening her connection to material and place.

“A recent residency at the Australian Tapestry Workshop brought that truth into sharp focus. Gathering eucalyptus, pinecones and wildflowers from around Lake Eildon and dyeing my own wool from the land felt like the most natural extension of everything I believe about this practice. When colour comes from the earth itself, the work carries something beyond technique. It carries place, memory and feeling.”

We’re grateful to have shared this time and process with Tammy in the studio.

-
Photography by ATW

@tammykanat @gallerysallydancuthbert


273
2
1 weeks ago

Artist Tammy Kannat recently spent a week in mini-residency at ATW, exploring natural dyeing processes and deepening her connection to material and place.

“A recent residency at the Australian Tapestry Workshop brought that truth into sharp focus. Gathering eucalyptus, pinecones and wildflowers from around Lake Eildon and dyeing my own wool from the land felt like the most natural extension of everything I believe about this practice. When colour comes from the earth itself, the work carries something beyond technique. It carries place, memory and feeling.”

We’re grateful to have shared this time and process with Tammy in the studio.

-
Photography by ATW

@tammykanat @gallerysallydancuthbert


273
2
1 weeks ago

Artist Tammy Kannat recently spent a week in mini-residency at ATW, exploring natural dyeing processes and deepening her connection to material and place.

“A recent residency at the Australian Tapestry Workshop brought that truth into sharp focus. Gathering eucalyptus, pinecones and wildflowers from around Lake Eildon and dyeing my own wool from the land felt like the most natural extension of everything I believe about this practice. When colour comes from the earth itself, the work carries something beyond technique. It carries place, memory and feeling.”

We’re grateful to have shared this time and process with Tammy in the studio.

-
Photography by ATW

@tammykanat @gallerysallydancuthbert


273
2
1 weeks ago

Artist Tammy Kannat recently spent a week in mini-residency at ATW, exploring natural dyeing processes and deepening her connection to material and place.

“A recent residency at the Australian Tapestry Workshop brought that truth into sharp focus. Gathering eucalyptus, pinecones and wildflowers from around Lake Eildon and dyeing my own wool from the land felt like the most natural extension of everything I believe about this practice. When colour comes from the earth itself, the work carries something beyond technique. It carries place, memory and feeling.”

We’re grateful to have shared this time and process with Tammy in the studio.

-
Photography by ATW

@tammykanat @gallerysallydancuthbert


273
2
1 weeks ago

Artist Tammy Kannat recently spent a week in mini-residency at ATW, exploring natural dyeing processes and deepening her connection to material and place.

“A recent residency at the Australian Tapestry Workshop brought that truth into sharp focus. Gathering eucalyptus, pinecones and wildflowers from around Lake Eildon and dyeing my own wool from the land felt like the most natural extension of everything I believe about this practice. When colour comes from the earth itself, the work carries something beyond technique. It carries place, memory and feeling.”

We’re grateful to have shared this time and process with Tammy in the studio.

-
Photography by ATW

@tammykanat @gallerysallydancuthbert


273
2
1 weeks ago

Artist Tammy Kannat recently spent a week in mini-residency at ATW, exploring natural dyeing processes and deepening her connection to material and place.

“A recent residency at the Australian Tapestry Workshop brought that truth into sharp focus. Gathering eucalyptus, pinecones and wildflowers from around Lake Eildon and dyeing my own wool from the land felt like the most natural extension of everything I believe about this practice. When colour comes from the earth itself, the work carries something beyond technique. It carries place, memory and feeling.”

We’re grateful to have shared this time and process with Tammy in the studio.

-
Photography by ATW

@tammykanat @gallerysallydancuthbert


273
2
1 weeks ago

Artist Tammy Kannat recently spent a week in mini-residency at ATW, exploring natural dyeing processes and deepening her connection to material and place.

“A recent residency at the Australian Tapestry Workshop brought that truth into sharp focus. Gathering eucalyptus, pinecones and wildflowers from around Lake Eildon and dyeing my own wool from the land felt like the most natural extension of everything I believe about this practice. When colour comes from the earth itself, the work carries something beyond technique. It carries place, memory and feeling.”

We’re grateful to have shared this time and process with Tammy in the studio.

-
Photography by ATW

@tammykanat @gallerysallydancuthbert


273
2
1 weeks ago

Artist Tammy Kannat recently spent a week in mini-residency at ATW, exploring natural dyeing processes and deepening her connection to material and place.

“A recent residency at the Australian Tapestry Workshop brought that truth into sharp focus. Gathering eucalyptus, pinecones and wildflowers from around Lake Eildon and dyeing my own wool from the land felt like the most natural extension of everything I believe about this practice. When colour comes from the earth itself, the work carries something beyond technique. It carries place, memory and feeling.”

We’re grateful to have shared this time and process with Tammy in the studio.

-
Photography by ATW

@tammykanat @gallerysallydancuthbert


273
2
1 weeks ago

Artist Tammy Kannat recently spent a week in mini-residency at ATW, exploring natural dyeing processes and deepening her connection to material and place.

“A recent residency at the Australian Tapestry Workshop brought that truth into sharp focus. Gathering eucalyptus, pinecones and wildflowers from around Lake Eildon and dyeing my own wool from the land felt like the most natural extension of everything I believe about this practice. When colour comes from the earth itself, the work carries something beyond technique. It carries place, memory and feeling.”

We’re grateful to have shared this time and process with Tammy in the studio.

-
Photography by ATW

@tammykanat @gallerysallydancuthbert


273
2
1 weeks ago

Hello Fiber Art Now lovers, my name is Ema Shin @ema.shin . I am taking over Fiber Art Now’s Instagram over the weekend! I will share my recent creative journey with you.

Firstly, I’d like to introduce myself. I am a Japanese-Korean artist based in Narrm/Melbourne, Australia, working mainly on textiles. My work celebrates women’s identities, femininity, and sexuality to recognise women’s values and voices. Through my work, I’d like to give opportunities to audiences to see how femininity and womanhood are built in physical, emotional, and social ways. The techniques I use, that used to be called women’s work, like embroidery and weaving, along with the warm and bright colors, are closely connected to my life and culture.

Recently, I created a large-scale tapestry sculpture commissioned by the 25th Biennial of Sydney, supported by the amazing Australian Tapestry Workshop. The artwork is titled “Hearts of Absent Women (Tree of Family),” which is part of my ongoing project since 2019. This body of practice is inspired by my Korean family tree book, which only records sons’ names and mothers who delivered sons for 32 generations. I dedicate my work to women ancestors and all hidden women throughout history.

I will see you soon in the next post :)

Photography by Selina Ou @selinaou.photo

#heartsofabsentwomen #womenswork #emashin


1.4K
61
1 weeks ago

Hello Fiber Art Now lovers, my name is Ema Shin @ema.shin . I am taking over Fiber Art Now’s Instagram over the weekend! I will share my recent creative journey with you.

Firstly, I’d like to introduce myself. I am a Japanese-Korean artist based in Narrm/Melbourne, Australia, working mainly on textiles. My work celebrates women’s identities, femininity, and sexuality to recognise women’s values and voices. Through my work, I’d like to give opportunities to audiences to see how femininity and womanhood are built in physical, emotional, and social ways. The techniques I use, that used to be called women’s work, like embroidery and weaving, along with the warm and bright colors, are closely connected to my life and culture.

Recently, I created a large-scale tapestry sculpture commissioned by the 25th Biennial of Sydney, supported by the amazing Australian Tapestry Workshop. The artwork is titled “Hearts of Absent Women (Tree of Family),” which is part of my ongoing project since 2019. This body of practice is inspired by my Korean family tree book, which only records sons’ names and mothers who delivered sons for 32 generations. I dedicate my work to women ancestors and all hidden women throughout history.

I will see you soon in the next post :)

Photography by Selina Ou @selinaou.photo

#heartsofabsentwomen #womenswork #emashin


1.4K
61
1 weeks ago

Hello Fiber Art Now lovers, my name is Ema Shin @ema.shin . I am taking over Fiber Art Now’s Instagram over the weekend! I will share my recent creative journey with you.

Firstly, I’d like to introduce myself. I am a Japanese-Korean artist based in Narrm/Melbourne, Australia, working mainly on textiles. My work celebrates women’s identities, femininity, and sexuality to recognise women’s values and voices. Through my work, I’d like to give opportunities to audiences to see how femininity and womanhood are built in physical, emotional, and social ways. The techniques I use, that used to be called women’s work, like embroidery and weaving, along with the warm and bright colors, are closely connected to my life and culture.

Recently, I created a large-scale tapestry sculpture commissioned by the 25th Biennial of Sydney, supported by the amazing Australian Tapestry Workshop. The artwork is titled “Hearts of Absent Women (Tree of Family),” which is part of my ongoing project since 2019. This body of practice is inspired by my Korean family tree book, which only records sons’ names and mothers who delivered sons for 32 generations. I dedicate my work to women ancestors and all hidden women throughout history.

I will see you soon in the next post :)

Photography by Selina Ou @selinaou.photo

#heartsofabsentwomen #womenswork #emashin


1.4K
61
1 weeks ago

Hello Fiber Art Now lovers, my name is Ema Shin @ema.shin . I am taking over Fiber Art Now’s Instagram over the weekend! I will share my recent creative journey with you.

Firstly, I’d like to introduce myself. I am a Japanese-Korean artist based in Narrm/Melbourne, Australia, working mainly on textiles. My work celebrates women’s identities, femininity, and sexuality to recognise women’s values and voices. Through my work, I’d like to give opportunities to audiences to see how femininity and womanhood are built in physical, emotional, and social ways. The techniques I use, that used to be called women’s work, like embroidery and weaving, along with the warm and bright colors, are closely connected to my life and culture.

Recently, I created a large-scale tapestry sculpture commissioned by the 25th Biennial of Sydney, supported by the amazing Australian Tapestry Workshop. The artwork is titled “Hearts of Absent Women (Tree of Family),” which is part of my ongoing project since 2019. This body of practice is inspired by my Korean family tree book, which only records sons’ names and mothers who delivered sons for 32 generations. I dedicate my work to women ancestors and all hidden women throughout history.

I will see you soon in the next post :)

Photography by Selina Ou @selinaou.photo

#heartsofabsentwomen #womenswork #emashin


1.4K
61
1 weeks ago

Hello Fiber Art Now lovers, my name is Ema Shin @ema.shin . I am taking over Fiber Art Now’s Instagram over the weekend! I will share my recent creative journey with you.

Firstly, I’d like to introduce myself. I am a Japanese-Korean artist based in Narrm/Melbourne, Australia, working mainly on textiles. My work celebrates women’s identities, femininity, and sexuality to recognise women’s values and voices. Through my work, I’d like to give opportunities to audiences to see how femininity and womanhood are built in physical, emotional, and social ways. The techniques I use, that used to be called women’s work, like embroidery and weaving, along with the warm and bright colors, are closely connected to my life and culture.

Recently, I created a large-scale tapestry sculpture commissioned by the 25th Biennial of Sydney, supported by the amazing Australian Tapestry Workshop. The artwork is titled “Hearts of Absent Women (Tree of Family),” which is part of my ongoing project since 2019. This body of practice is inspired by my Korean family tree book, which only records sons’ names and mothers who delivered sons for 32 generations. I dedicate my work to women ancestors and all hidden women throughout history.

I will see you soon in the next post :)

Photography by Selina Ou @selinaou.photo

#heartsofabsentwomen #womenswork #emashin


1.4K
61
1 weeks ago

Hello Fiber Art Now lovers, my name is Ema Shin @ema.shin . I am taking over Fiber Art Now’s Instagram over the weekend! I will share my recent creative journey with you.

Firstly, I’d like to introduce myself. I am a Japanese-Korean artist based in Narrm/Melbourne, Australia, working mainly on textiles. My work celebrates women’s identities, femininity, and sexuality to recognise women’s values and voices. Through my work, I’d like to give opportunities to audiences to see how femininity and womanhood are built in physical, emotional, and social ways. The techniques I use, that used to be called women’s work, like embroidery and weaving, along with the warm and bright colors, are closely connected to my life and culture.

Recently, I created a large-scale tapestry sculpture commissioned by the 25th Biennial of Sydney, supported by the amazing Australian Tapestry Workshop. The artwork is titled “Hearts of Absent Women (Tree of Family),” which is part of my ongoing project since 2019. This body of practice is inspired by my Korean family tree book, which only records sons’ names and mothers who delivered sons for 32 generations. I dedicate my work to women ancestors and all hidden women throughout history.

I will see you soon in the next post :)

Photography by Selina Ou @selinaou.photo

#heartsofabsentwomen #womenswork #emashin


1.4K
61
1 weeks ago

Hello Fiber Art Now lovers, my name is Ema Shin @ema.shin . I am taking over Fiber Art Now’s Instagram over the weekend! I will share my recent creative journey with you.

Firstly, I’d like to introduce myself. I am a Japanese-Korean artist based in Narrm/Melbourne, Australia, working mainly on textiles. My work celebrates women’s identities, femininity, and sexuality to recognise women’s values and voices. Through my work, I’d like to give opportunities to audiences to see how femininity and womanhood are built in physical, emotional, and social ways. The techniques I use, that used to be called women’s work, like embroidery and weaving, along with the warm and bright colors, are closely connected to my life and culture.

Recently, I created a large-scale tapestry sculpture commissioned by the 25th Biennial of Sydney, supported by the amazing Australian Tapestry Workshop. The artwork is titled “Hearts of Absent Women (Tree of Family),” which is part of my ongoing project since 2019. This body of practice is inspired by my Korean family tree book, which only records sons’ names and mothers who delivered sons for 32 generations. I dedicate my work to women ancestors and all hidden women throughout history.

I will see you soon in the next post :)

Photography by Selina Ou @selinaou.photo

#heartsofabsentwomen #womenswork #emashin


1.4K
61
1 weeks ago

Hello Fiber Art Now lovers, my name is Ema Shin @ema.shin . I am taking over Fiber Art Now’s Instagram over the weekend! I will share my recent creative journey with you.

Firstly, I’d like to introduce myself. I am a Japanese-Korean artist based in Narrm/Melbourne, Australia, working mainly on textiles. My work celebrates women’s identities, femininity, and sexuality to recognise women’s values and voices. Through my work, I’d like to give opportunities to audiences to see how femininity and womanhood are built in physical, emotional, and social ways. The techniques I use, that used to be called women’s work, like embroidery and weaving, along with the warm and bright colors, are closely connected to my life and culture.

Recently, I created a large-scale tapestry sculpture commissioned by the 25th Biennial of Sydney, supported by the amazing Australian Tapestry Workshop. The artwork is titled “Hearts of Absent Women (Tree of Family),” which is part of my ongoing project since 2019. This body of practice is inspired by my Korean family tree book, which only records sons’ names and mothers who delivered sons for 32 generations. I dedicate my work to women ancestors and all hidden women throughout history.

I will see you soon in the next post :)

Photography by Selina Ou @selinaou.photo

#heartsofabsentwomen #womenswork #emashin


1.4K
61
1 weeks ago

Hello Fiber Art Now lovers, my name is Ema Shin @ema.shin . I am taking over Fiber Art Now’s Instagram over the weekend! I will share my recent creative journey with you.

Firstly, I’d like to introduce myself. I am a Japanese-Korean artist based in Narrm/Melbourne, Australia, working mainly on textiles. My work celebrates women’s identities, femininity, and sexuality to recognise women’s values and voices. Through my work, I’d like to give opportunities to audiences to see how femininity and womanhood are built in physical, emotional, and social ways. The techniques I use, that used to be called women’s work, like embroidery and weaving, along with the warm and bright colors, are closely connected to my life and culture.

Recently, I created a large-scale tapestry sculpture commissioned by the 25th Biennial of Sydney, supported by the amazing Australian Tapestry Workshop. The artwork is titled “Hearts of Absent Women (Tree of Family),” which is part of my ongoing project since 2019. This body of practice is inspired by my Korean family tree book, which only records sons’ names and mothers who delivered sons for 32 generations. I dedicate my work to women ancestors and all hidden women throughout history.

I will see you soon in the next post :)

Photography by Selina Ou @selinaou.photo

#heartsofabsentwomen #womenswork #emashin


1.4K
61
1 weeks ago

Hello Fiber Art Now lovers, my name is Ema Shin @ema.shin . I am taking over Fiber Art Now’s Instagram over the weekend! I will share my recent creative journey with you.

Firstly, I’d like to introduce myself. I am a Japanese-Korean artist based in Narrm/Melbourne, Australia, working mainly on textiles. My work celebrates women’s identities, femininity, and sexuality to recognise women’s values and voices. Through my work, I’d like to give opportunities to audiences to see how femininity and womanhood are built in physical, emotional, and social ways. The techniques I use, that used to be called women’s work, like embroidery and weaving, along with the warm and bright colors, are closely connected to my life and culture.

Recently, I created a large-scale tapestry sculpture commissioned by the 25th Biennial of Sydney, supported by the amazing Australian Tapestry Workshop. The artwork is titled “Hearts of Absent Women (Tree of Family),” which is part of my ongoing project since 2019. This body of practice is inspired by my Korean family tree book, which only records sons’ names and mothers who delivered sons for 32 generations. I dedicate my work to women ancestors and all hidden women throughout history.

I will see you soon in the next post :)

Photography by Selina Ou @selinaou.photo

#heartsofabsentwomen #womenswork #emashin


1.4K
61
1 weeks ago

Hello Fiber Art Now lovers, my name is Ema Shin @ema.shin . I am taking over Fiber Art Now’s Instagram over the weekend! I will share my recent creative journey with you.

Firstly, I’d like to introduce myself. I am a Japanese-Korean artist based in Narrm/Melbourne, Australia, working mainly on textiles. My work celebrates women’s identities, femininity, and sexuality to recognise women’s values and voices. Through my work, I’d like to give opportunities to audiences to see how femininity and womanhood are built in physical, emotional, and social ways. The techniques I use, that used to be called women’s work, like embroidery and weaving, along with the warm and bright colors, are closely connected to my life and culture.

Recently, I created a large-scale tapestry sculpture commissioned by the 25th Biennial of Sydney, supported by the amazing Australian Tapestry Workshop. The artwork is titled “Hearts of Absent Women (Tree of Family),” which is part of my ongoing project since 2019. This body of practice is inspired by my Korean family tree book, which only records sons’ names and mothers who delivered sons for 32 generations. I dedicate my work to women ancestors and all hidden women throughout history.

I will see you soon in the next post :)

Photography by Selina Ou @selinaou.photo

#heartsofabsentwomen #womenswork #emashin


1.4K
61
1 weeks ago

Hello Fiber Art Now lovers, my name is Ema Shin @ema.shin . I am taking over Fiber Art Now’s Instagram over the weekend! I will share my recent creative journey with you.

Firstly, I’d like to introduce myself. I am a Japanese-Korean artist based in Narrm/Melbourne, Australia, working mainly on textiles. My work celebrates women’s identities, femininity, and sexuality to recognise women’s values and voices. Through my work, I’d like to give opportunities to audiences to see how femininity and womanhood are built in physical, emotional, and social ways. The techniques I use, that used to be called women’s work, like embroidery and weaving, along with the warm and bright colors, are closely connected to my life and culture.

Recently, I created a large-scale tapestry sculpture commissioned by the 25th Biennial of Sydney, supported by the amazing Australian Tapestry Workshop. The artwork is titled “Hearts of Absent Women (Tree of Family),” which is part of my ongoing project since 2019. This body of practice is inspired by my Korean family tree book, which only records sons’ names and mothers who delivered sons for 32 generations. I dedicate my work to women ancestors and all hidden women throughout history.

I will see you soon in the next post :)

Photography by Selina Ou @selinaou.photo

#heartsofabsentwomen #womenswork #emashin


1.4K
61
1 weeks ago

Hello Fiber Art Now lovers, my name is Ema Shin @ema.shin . I am taking over Fiber Art Now’s Instagram over the weekend! I will share my recent creative journey with you.

Firstly, I’d like to introduce myself. I am a Japanese-Korean artist based in Narrm/Melbourne, Australia, working mainly on textiles. My work celebrates women’s identities, femininity, and sexuality to recognise women’s values and voices. Through my work, I’d like to give opportunities to audiences to see how femininity and womanhood are built in physical, emotional, and social ways. The techniques I use, that used to be called women’s work, like embroidery and weaving, along with the warm and bright colors, are closely connected to my life and culture.

Recently, I created a large-scale tapestry sculpture commissioned by the 25th Biennial of Sydney, supported by the amazing Australian Tapestry Workshop. The artwork is titled “Hearts of Absent Women (Tree of Family),” which is part of my ongoing project since 2019. This body of practice is inspired by my Korean family tree book, which only records sons’ names and mothers who delivered sons for 32 generations. I dedicate my work to women ancestors and all hidden women throughout history.

I will see you soon in the next post :)

Photography by Selina Ou @selinaou.photo

#heartsofabsentwomen #womenswork #emashin


1.4K
61
1 weeks ago

Hello Fiber Art Now lovers, my name is Ema Shin @ema.shin . I am taking over Fiber Art Now’s Instagram over the weekend! I will share my recent creative journey with you.

Firstly, I’d like to introduce myself. I am a Japanese-Korean artist based in Narrm/Melbourne, Australia, working mainly on textiles. My work celebrates women’s identities, femininity, and sexuality to recognise women’s values and voices. Through my work, I’d like to give opportunities to audiences to see how femininity and womanhood are built in physical, emotional, and social ways. The techniques I use, that used to be called women’s work, like embroidery and weaving, along with the warm and bright colors, are closely connected to my life and culture.

Recently, I created a large-scale tapestry sculpture commissioned by the 25th Biennial of Sydney, supported by the amazing Australian Tapestry Workshop. The artwork is titled “Hearts of Absent Women (Tree of Family),” which is part of my ongoing project since 2019. This body of practice is inspired by my Korean family tree book, which only records sons’ names and mothers who delivered sons for 32 generations. I dedicate my work to women ancestors and all hidden women throughout history.

I will see you soon in the next post :)

Photography by Selina Ou @selinaou.photo

#heartsofabsentwomen #womenswork #emashin


1.4K
61
1 weeks ago

Hello Fiber Art Now lovers, my name is Ema Shin @ema.shin . I am taking over Fiber Art Now’s Instagram over the weekend! I will share my recent creative journey with you.

Firstly, I’d like to introduce myself. I am a Japanese-Korean artist based in Narrm/Melbourne, Australia, working mainly on textiles. My work celebrates women’s identities, femininity, and sexuality to recognise women’s values and voices. Through my work, I’d like to give opportunities to audiences to see how femininity and womanhood are built in physical, emotional, and social ways. The techniques I use, that used to be called women’s work, like embroidery and weaving, along with the warm and bright colors, are closely connected to my life and culture.

Recently, I created a large-scale tapestry sculpture commissioned by the 25th Biennial of Sydney, supported by the amazing Australian Tapestry Workshop. The artwork is titled “Hearts of Absent Women (Tree of Family),” which is part of my ongoing project since 2019. This body of practice is inspired by my Korean family tree book, which only records sons’ names and mothers who delivered sons for 32 generations. I dedicate my work to women ancestors and all hidden women throughout history.

I will see you soon in the next post :)

Photography by Selina Ou @selinaou.photo

#heartsofabsentwomen #womenswork #emashin


1.4K
61
1 weeks ago

Hello Fiber Art Now lovers, my name is Ema Shin @ema.shin . I am taking over Fiber Art Now’s Instagram over the weekend! I will share my recent creative journey with you.

Firstly, I’d like to introduce myself. I am a Japanese-Korean artist based in Narrm/Melbourne, Australia, working mainly on textiles. My work celebrates women’s identities, femininity, and sexuality to recognise women’s values and voices. Through my work, I’d like to give opportunities to audiences to see how femininity and womanhood are built in physical, emotional, and social ways. The techniques I use, that used to be called women’s work, like embroidery and weaving, along with the warm and bright colors, are closely connected to my life and culture.

Recently, I created a large-scale tapestry sculpture commissioned by the 25th Biennial of Sydney, supported by the amazing Australian Tapestry Workshop. The artwork is titled “Hearts of Absent Women (Tree of Family),” which is part of my ongoing project since 2019. This body of practice is inspired by my Korean family tree book, which only records sons’ names and mothers who delivered sons for 32 generations. I dedicate my work to women ancestors and all hidden women throughout history.

I will see you soon in the next post :)

Photography by Selina Ou @selinaou.photo

#heartsofabsentwomen #womenswork #emashin


1.4K
61
1 weeks ago

Hello Fiber Art Now lovers, my name is Ema Shin @ema.shin . I am taking over Fiber Art Now’s Instagram over the weekend! I will share my recent creative journey with you.

Firstly, I’d like to introduce myself. I am a Japanese-Korean artist based in Narrm/Melbourne, Australia, working mainly on textiles. My work celebrates women’s identities, femininity, and sexuality to recognise women’s values and voices. Through my work, I’d like to give opportunities to audiences to see how femininity and womanhood are built in physical, emotional, and social ways. The techniques I use, that used to be called women’s work, like embroidery and weaving, along with the warm and bright colors, are closely connected to my life and culture.

Recently, I created a large-scale tapestry sculpture commissioned by the 25th Biennial of Sydney, supported by the amazing Australian Tapestry Workshop. The artwork is titled “Hearts of Absent Women (Tree of Family),” which is part of my ongoing project since 2019. This body of practice is inspired by my Korean family tree book, which only records sons’ names and mothers who delivered sons for 32 generations. I dedicate my work to women ancestors and all hidden women throughout history.

I will see you soon in the next post :)

Photography by Selina Ou @selinaou.photo

#heartsofabsentwomen #womenswork #emashin


1.4K
61
1 weeks ago

Hello Fiber Art Now lovers, my name is Ema Shin @ema.shin . I am taking over Fiber Art Now’s Instagram over the weekend! I will share my recent creative journey with you.

Firstly, I’d like to introduce myself. I am a Japanese-Korean artist based in Narrm/Melbourne, Australia, working mainly on textiles. My work celebrates women’s identities, femininity, and sexuality to recognise women’s values and voices. Through my work, I’d like to give opportunities to audiences to see how femininity and womanhood are built in physical, emotional, and social ways. The techniques I use, that used to be called women’s work, like embroidery and weaving, along with the warm and bright colors, are closely connected to my life and culture.

Recently, I created a large-scale tapestry sculpture commissioned by the 25th Biennial of Sydney, supported by the amazing Australian Tapestry Workshop. The artwork is titled “Hearts of Absent Women (Tree of Family),” which is part of my ongoing project since 2019. This body of practice is inspired by my Korean family tree book, which only records sons’ names and mothers who delivered sons for 32 generations. I dedicate my work to women ancestors and all hidden women throughout history.

I will see you soon in the next post :)

Photography by Selina Ou @selinaou.photo

#heartsofabsentwomen #womenswork #emashin


1.4K
61
1 weeks ago

Hello Fiber Art Now lovers, my name is Ema Shin @ema.shin . I am taking over Fiber Art Now’s Instagram over the weekend! I will share my recent creative journey with you.

Firstly, I’d like to introduce myself. I am a Japanese-Korean artist based in Narrm/Melbourne, Australia, working mainly on textiles. My work celebrates women’s identities, femininity, and sexuality to recognise women’s values and voices. Through my work, I’d like to give opportunities to audiences to see how femininity and womanhood are built in physical, emotional, and social ways. The techniques I use, that used to be called women’s work, like embroidery and weaving, along with the warm and bright colors, are closely connected to my life and culture.

Recently, I created a large-scale tapestry sculpture commissioned by the 25th Biennial of Sydney, supported by the amazing Australian Tapestry Workshop. The artwork is titled “Hearts of Absent Women (Tree of Family),” which is part of my ongoing project since 2019. This body of practice is inspired by my Korean family tree book, which only records sons’ names and mothers who delivered sons for 32 generations. I dedicate my work to women ancestors and all hidden women throughout history.

I will see you soon in the next post :)

Photography by Selina Ou @selinaou.photo

#heartsofabsentwomen #womenswork #emashin


1.4K
61
1 weeks ago

Hello Fiber Art Now lovers, my name is Ema Shin @ema.shin . I am taking over Fiber Art Now’s Instagram over the weekend! I will share my recent creative journey with you.

Firstly, I’d like to introduce myself. I am a Japanese-Korean artist based in Narrm/Melbourne, Australia, working mainly on textiles. My work celebrates women’s identities, femininity, and sexuality to recognise women’s values and voices. Through my work, I’d like to give opportunities to audiences to see how femininity and womanhood are built in physical, emotional, and social ways. The techniques I use, that used to be called women’s work, like embroidery and weaving, along with the warm and bright colors, are closely connected to my life and culture.

Recently, I created a large-scale tapestry sculpture commissioned by the 25th Biennial of Sydney, supported by the amazing Australian Tapestry Workshop. The artwork is titled “Hearts of Absent Women (Tree of Family),” which is part of my ongoing project since 2019. This body of practice is inspired by my Korean family tree book, which only records sons’ names and mothers who delivered sons for 32 generations. I dedicate my work to women ancestors and all hidden women throughout history.

I will see you soon in the next post :)

Photography by Selina Ou @selinaou.photo

#heartsofabsentwomen #womenswork #emashin


1.4K
61
1 weeks ago

WORKSHOP | Sculptural Weaving with Claudia Bloxsome

Discover a fresh approach to textile making in this hands-on workshop that pushes the boundaries of weaving. Using yarn, wire, and locally foraged fibres, you’ll learn how to create dynamic, three-dimensional sculptural forms.

Claudia Bloxsome is a contemporary fibre artist whose practice explores the transformation of woven textiles into sculptural forms, drawing on themes of time, care, and materiality. Claudia will show you how to build self-supporting, hollow, and layered structures and you’ll explore new ways of thinking about fibre, form, and structure. Open to beginners and experienced makers alike, this workshop is designed to inspire new ways of thinking and making through hands-on exploration.

Sculptural Weaving with Claudia Bloxsome
🗓️ Saturday 13 June
🕚 1 - 4 pm
🎟️ Adult $165 | ATW Friends / Concession $150
❗️NOW BOOKED OUT - Join the wait list on our website


Pictured: 1. Claudia Bloxsome, ‘Mother Love’, 2026, courtesy of the artist. 2. Portrait of Claudia Bloxsome by @dylan.guy | 3. Studio Detail, courtesy of the artist. @cloudmaystudio


166
6
1 weeks ago

WORKSHOP | Sculptural Weaving with Claudia Bloxsome

Discover a fresh approach to textile making in this hands-on workshop that pushes the boundaries of weaving. Using yarn, wire, and locally foraged fibres, you’ll learn how to create dynamic, three-dimensional sculptural forms.

Claudia Bloxsome is a contemporary fibre artist whose practice explores the transformation of woven textiles into sculptural forms, drawing on themes of time, care, and materiality. Claudia will show you how to build self-supporting, hollow, and layered structures and you’ll explore new ways of thinking about fibre, form, and structure. Open to beginners and experienced makers alike, this workshop is designed to inspire new ways of thinking and making through hands-on exploration.

Sculptural Weaving with Claudia Bloxsome
🗓️ Saturday 13 June
🕚 1 - 4 pm
🎟️ Adult $165 | ATW Friends / Concession $150
❗️NOW BOOKED OUT - Join the wait list on our website


Pictured: 1. Claudia Bloxsome, ‘Mother Love’, 2026, courtesy of the artist. 2. Portrait of Claudia Bloxsome by @dylan.guy | 3. Studio Detail, courtesy of the artist. @cloudmaystudio


166
6
1 weeks ago

WORKSHOP | Sculptural Weaving with Claudia Bloxsome

Discover a fresh approach to textile making in this hands-on workshop that pushes the boundaries of weaving. Using yarn, wire, and locally foraged fibres, you’ll learn how to create dynamic, three-dimensional sculptural forms.

Claudia Bloxsome is a contemporary fibre artist whose practice explores the transformation of woven textiles into sculptural forms, drawing on themes of time, care, and materiality. Claudia will show you how to build self-supporting, hollow, and layered structures and you’ll explore new ways of thinking about fibre, form, and structure. Open to beginners and experienced makers alike, this workshop is designed to inspire new ways of thinking and making through hands-on exploration.

Sculptural Weaving with Claudia Bloxsome
🗓️ Saturday 13 June
🕚 1 - 4 pm
🎟️ Adult $165 | ATW Friends / Concession $150
❗️NOW BOOKED OUT - Join the wait list on our website


Pictured: 1. Claudia Bloxsome, ‘Mother Love’, 2026, courtesy of the artist. 2. Portrait of Claudia Bloxsome by @dylan.guy | 3. Studio Detail, courtesy of the artist. @cloudmaystudio


166
6
1 weeks ago

INTRODUCING | Emma Stenhouse

Our 2026 Regional Artist in Residence, Emma Stenhouse, a proud Ngarrindjeri woman and contemporary artist, has arrived at ATW!

During her ATW residency, Emma will investigate material traditions linked to ritual and cultural knowledge, experiment with tapestry weaving techniques and explore botanical dyes.

Emma’s practice centres on “storyworks,” shaped by a deep relationship to land and guided by strong female role models in her community. Growing up in Broken Hill, NSW, she draws on the practices of caring for Country, and the knowledge held within her family to ensure these traditions continue for future generations.

Visit ATW to view Emma’s exhibition or join her workshop:

▪ Traditional Weaving with Native Grasses
🗓️ Saturday 20 June
🕚 1 - 3 pm
🎟️ Adult $140 | ATW Friends / Concession $126
🔗 Book via link in bio

▪ Exhibition
🗓️ 14 May - 27 June


Pictured: 1. Portrait of Emma Stenhouse by Artist Lane | 2. Emma Stenhouse ‘Woven lomandra sections’, 2025, Photography by Colour Factory. @emmastenhouseart

The Regional Residency is generously supported by Alayne Davies through the Irene Davies Residency Scholarship and ADFAS Yarra.


99
1 weeks ago

INTRODUCING | Emma Stenhouse

Our 2026 Regional Artist in Residence, Emma Stenhouse, a proud Ngarrindjeri woman and contemporary artist, has arrived at ATW!

During her ATW residency, Emma will investigate material traditions linked to ritual and cultural knowledge, experiment with tapestry weaving techniques and explore botanical dyes.

Emma’s practice centres on “storyworks,” shaped by a deep relationship to land and guided by strong female role models in her community. Growing up in Broken Hill, NSW, she draws on the practices of caring for Country, and the knowledge held within her family to ensure these traditions continue for future generations.

Visit ATW to view Emma’s exhibition or join her workshop:

▪ Traditional Weaving with Native Grasses
🗓️ Saturday 20 June
🕚 1 - 3 pm
🎟️ Adult $140 | ATW Friends / Concession $126
🔗 Book via link in bio

▪ Exhibition
🗓️ 14 May - 27 June


Pictured: 1. Portrait of Emma Stenhouse by Artist Lane | 2. Emma Stenhouse ‘Woven lomandra sections’, 2025, Photography by Colour Factory. @emmastenhouseart

The Regional Residency is generously supported by Alayne Davies through the Irene Davies Residency Scholarship and ADFAS Yarra.


99
1 weeks ago


Guarda le Storie di Instagram in Segreto

Il Visualizzatore Storie Instagram è uno strumento facile da usare che ti permette di guardare e salvare le storie, video, foto o IGTV di Instagram in modo segreto. Con questo servizio puoi scaricare contenuti e goderteli offline ogni volta che vuoi. Se trovi qualcosa di interessante su Instagram che vorresti rivedere più tardi o vuoi vedere le storie restando anonimo, il nostro Visualizzatore è perfetto per te. Anonstories offre una soluzione eccellente per mantenere la tua identità nascosta. Instagram ha lanciato per la prima volta la funzionalità Storie nell'agosto 2023, che è stata rapidamente adottata da altre piattaforme per il suo formato coinvolgente e tempestivo. Le storie permettono agli utenti di condividere aggiornamenti rapidi, che siano foto, video o selfie, arricchiti con testo, emoji o filtri, e sono visibili per solo 24 ore. Questo limite di tempo crea un forte coinvolgimento rispetto ai post normali. Oggi, le storie sono uno dei modi più popolari per connettersi e comunicare sui social media. Tuttavia, quando guardi una storia, il creatore può vedere il tuo nome nella loro lista di visualizzatori, il che potrebbe essere un problema per la privacy. E se desiderassi navigare tra le storie senza essere notato? Ecco dove Anonstories diventa utile. Ti consente di guardare contenuti pubblici su Instagram senza rivelare la tua identità. Basta inserire il nome utente del profilo che ti interessa e lo strumento mostrerà le sue ultime storie. Funzionalità del Visualizzatore Anonstories: - Navigazione Anonima: Guarda le storie senza apparire nella lista di visualizzazione. - Nessun Account Necessario: Visualizza contenuti pubblici senza registrarti su Instagram. - Download dei Contenuti: Salva qualsiasi contenuto delle storie direttamente sul tuo dispositivo per un uso offline. - Guarda i Punti Salienti: Accedi ai punti salienti di Instagram, anche oltre la finestra di 24 ore. - Monitoraggio dei Repost: Tieni traccia dei repost o dei livelli di interazione nelle storie per i profili personali. Limitazioni: - Questo strumento funziona solo con account pubblici; gli account privati restano inaccessibili. Vantaggi: - Privacy: Guarda qualsiasi contenuto su Instagram senza essere notato. - Semplice e Facile: Nessuna installazione di app o registrazione richiesta. - Strumenti Esclusivi: Scarica e gestisci contenuti in modi che Instagram non offre.

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Visualizzatore Privato di Instagram

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Visualizzatore di Storie Gratuito

Questo strumento gratuito ti permette di visualizzare le storie di Instagram in modo anonimo, garantendo che la tua attività rimanga nascosta dall'utente che carica la storia.

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Anonstories consente agli utenti di guardare le storie di Instagram senza avvisare il creatore.

 
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Funziona senza problemi su iOS, Android, Windows, macOS e browser moderni come Chrome e Safari.

 
Sicurezza e Privacy

Garantisce una navigazione sicura e anonima senza richiedere credenziali di accesso.

 
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Gli utenti possono visualizzare storie pubbliche semplicemente inserendo un nome utente—nessun account richiesto.

 
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Il contenuto degli account privati è accessibile solo ai follower.

 
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I file sono destinati solo a uso personale o educativo e devono rispettare le normative sul copyright.

 
Come Funziona

Inserisci un nome utente pubblico per visualizzare o scaricare storie. Il servizio genera link diretti per salvare i contenuti localmente.