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My work explores care, repair, and belonging through the transformation of electronic waste into mosaic art. Using discarded circuit boards, wires, keyboards, and broken devices, I reassemble what has been thrown away into images that speak to place, community, and responsibility. E-waste is both a material and a metaphor in my practice: it carries the story of rapid consumption, technological dependence, and environmental neglect, but also the potential for renewal.
Working with e-waste is slow and physical. Each piece must be dismantled, sorted, cut, and placed by hand. This labour-intensive process mirrors the kind of care our systems often lack — for the environment, for communities, and for the people most affected by waste and dispossession. I am interested in what happens when damaged or obsolete materials are given time, attention, and value again.
Community is central to my work. Many of my projects are made collaboratively or in community settings, particularly with children and families. I am less interested in perfect surfaces than in shared making, curiosity, and participation. These works hold fingerprints, uneven edges, and moments of learning — traces of human presence that resist the slick anonymity of mass production.
As a white Australian working on unceded land, my practice is also shaped by an awareness of inherited systems of extraction and displacement. E-waste, like land, is often treated as something to be used up and forgotten once its value has been taken. By reworking discarded technologies into images of local flora, memory, and care, I aim to slow this cycle and invite reflection on how we live with — and take responsibility for — what we leave behind.
Winning the People’s Choice Award affirms the importance of this connection. It tells me that these materials and stories resonate beyond the studio, and that there is a shared desire for art that is accessible, ethical, and rooted in lived experience. My work asks a simple question: what might change if we treated waste — and each other — as something worth tending to?
Many thanks for a wonderful Art Show. My wife and I attended on Saturday afternoon and were most impressed.
Not only were the entries outstanding, the layout and the lighting indicated that much thought had been put into the presentation.
No doubt much work had been done behind the scenes to make it such a success.
Date: Mon 27 Apr 2026
Have been with gallery247 for 6 years, both free and now paid. Wonderful on line platform for artists which has made my work easy to find and i don't need to worry about setting up my own website; they even forwarded a message from a community college i volunteered for a few years ago, for an art tutor.
Date: Mon 27 Nov 2023