2019 Australian Ceramics Triennial
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30.04.2019 — 03.05.2019
Hobart

2019 Australian Ceramics Triennial

Yasmin Smith created Lower Pieman on residency in Tasmania for the 2019 Australian Ceramics Triennale. It centres on the flooded forests of the Lake Pieman Hydroelectric Scheme on Tasmania’s West Coast. Flooded in the 1980s, ancient forests of celery top pine (Phyllocladus aspleniifolius), Huon pine (Lagarostrobos franklinii), Tasmanian oak (E. obliqua), myrtle (Nothofagus cunninghamii), blackwood (Acacia melanoxylon) and sassafras (Atherosperma moschatum) remain beneath the surface of the lake as a radically-altered ecosystem. The combination of extremely low water temperature, low light levels due to the black tannin rich waters and the replacement of the trees’ sap with water, has preserved...
Yasmin Smith, Twin Stumps, 2019 - Hydrowood Tasmanian Oak detail
Yasmin Smith, Twin Stumps, 2019 - Hydrowood Celery Top Pine detail
Yasmin Smith, Hydromugs, 2019 - detail
Yasmin Smith, Hydromugs, 2019 - detail
Yasmin Smith, Lower Pieman, 2019 - installation view Australian Ceramics Triennial, 2019

Artworks

Yasmin Smith, Twin Stumps, 2019
Yasmin Smith,  A brief record of the building of the Pieman River Power Development (1980-2018), 2019
Yasmin Smith, Hydromugs, 2019
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