Show And Tell 2: Kat Campbell
8 May 2019
Kat Campbell presents the second iteration in series of public programs about personal objects and story telling. Show and Tell invites you to bring an object of significance to share in an intimate, vulnerable but safe group setting.
Please read before agreeing to attend.
Your show and tell object should be “an object you can’t part with, or seem to get rid of”.
Telling your personal stories could be funny or serious, heart-warming or heart breaking. It’s entirely up to you, how you choose to share and what your object means to you. In no particular order, everyone will talk about their possession during the event. At the beginning of the evening you will be given a number that will be called out at random when it is your time to speak. At the end of the event, each participant will be asked to have a portrait taken with their item. These photographs will be used later by the artist.
While the photo series is an important part of the documentation of the evening, it is not mandatory. If you are uncomfortable with having your picture taken, you do not have to participate in this portion of the event.
Kat’s practice is centralized by intimacy, and how mementos, corporeal actions and various installations extend and cultivate intimacy from artist to viewer, or participant to participant. Mementos act as a tangible marker of significant moments, and therefore also in personal narratives.
Spaces are limited, so if you would like to attend, please respond to this facebook invitation with an email to Kat at outerspace.publicprograms@gmail.com with your name and preferred contact information. Please specify if you would not like your photo taken in this email. Due to the personal and generous nature of this event, we ask that whoever attends shares their story, rather than just listen.
Join us on Wednesday 8th of May upstairs in the Outer Space artist studios for an evening of sharing and tenderness.
Kat Campbell is a recent Honours graduate from the Queensland University of Technology. She has developed a practice that focuses on creating and communicating intimacy through installations, performances, text works and video. Her works use theories of Affect to create works that centralize a moment in her personal narratives, usually through the use of mementos or corporeal performances. Campbell’s works are largely theory based, taking concepts from theories of Affect and psychoanalysis, such as D.W Winnicott’s theories of transitional space and objects. Campbell’s practice has been built around using small gestures and meaningful spaces and objects to retell personal narratives about intimacy, and through audience participation, extend intimacy towards viewers and their own narratives. Apart from Campbell’s creative practice, she is also a founder of the Artist Run Initiative KUNSTBUNKER. Kat has shown her work at institutions such as The Powerhouse and Metro Arts in recent years.