Waste 2 Art Workshop: Rag Doll Plush
Waste 2 Art 2025 Year of the TOYS.
Join local artists to learn skills to turn waste into art.
Rag, Doll, Plush Workshop: Saturday 1st March 11-2pm at the Art Exchange, 313 Argent Street.
Whatever one imagines, one can create. This workshop explores the creation of soft sculptural toys through reclaimed materials. Harking back to folk art dolls, participants are invited to create a rag doll or plush of their own imagination using found materials.
Participants may bring: Anything they may want to use (manmade waste products) but a few suggestions may be: fabric, needle & thread, stuffing, string, textas, buttons & old soft toys (just to name a few) - Some material will also be provided.
Free for Registered Entrants Waste 2 Art
Limited Numbers - Workshop Registration Essential
Children with adult supervision
Krystle Evans is an Aboriginal Artist with familial ties to the Far Western Region where she lives and works. Krystle's work operates across disciplines and explores self and the human experience through a feminine and cultural lens. Evans' work is imbued with diaristic text fragments, reimagined creation stories and female representation. Playful, emotive and sometimes contentious the artists latest works have shifted into a soft sculptural representation of culture and womanhood.
Waste 2 Art 2025 Year of the TOYS.
Join local artists to learn skills to turn waste into art.
Rag, Doll, Plush Workshop: Saturday 1st March 11-2pm at the Art Exchange, 313 Argent Street.
Whatever one imagines, one can create. This workshop explores the creation of soft sculptural toys through reclaimed materials. Harking back to folk art dolls, participants are invited to create a rag doll or plush of their own imagination using found materials.
Participants may bring: Anything they may want to use (manmade waste products) but a few suggestions may be: fabric, needle & thread, stuffing, string, textas, buttons & old soft toys (just to name a few) - Some material will also be provided.
Free for Registered Entrants Waste 2 Art
Limited Numbers - Workshop Registration Essential
Children with adult supervision
Krystle Evans is an Aboriginal Artist with familial ties to the Far Western Region where she lives and works. Krystle's work operates across disciplines and explores self and the human experience through a feminine and cultural lens. Evans' work is imbued with diaristic text fragments, reimagined creation stories and female representation. Playful, emotive and sometimes contentious the artists latest works have shifted into a soft sculptural representation of culture and womanhood.