End of Affair: it's time to break up with plastic

Wagga Wagga Art Gallery's new exhibition Plastic: Unwrapping the world, invites you to rethink your relationship with plastic.

The exhibition explores our relationship with plastic, from its first public presentation in 1862, through the boom years of the 1950s 'throwaway convenience' lifestyle, to our growing realisation of its long-term impacts on the environment.

Art Gallery Director Dr Lee-Anne Hall said visiting the exhibition will help audiences understand how our society was lured by mass advertising campaigns into thinking plastic was clean and modern, and consider the complex role it now plays.

A large quilt made from plastic bags hangs in a gallery space
PLASTIC NOT-SO-FANTASTIC: From colourful artworks crafted from objects found on a beach, to beautiful sculptures created from discarded materials, Plastic: Unwrapping the world will change the way you view this ubiquitous material.

"People feel so much guilt when we start talking about plastic and how much we use it in our daily lives," Dr Hall said.

"Artists in this exhibition show the different relationships we have with plastic, and invite us to move past the guilt and consider what we can do to change our consumption."

Using artworks from Cath Barcan, Sarah Goffman, Rox De Luca and Blake Griffiths, the exhibition explores plastic's complex material and political provocations, challenging audiences to unwrap plastic from our world.

A still life photo of a pumpkin wedge, parcel of green vegetables and two plastic trays of minced meat, all encased in plastic
ENCASED: Cath Barcan, Still life with meat and vegetables 2016, archival inkjet pigment print, 61 x 88cm.

On 25 March, the Art Gallery will host a panel of design thinkers, artists and eco-academics for a conversation about the problems of single-use plastic and workshop possible solutions.

"It will be interesting to unpack the different questions, such as 'how did we live before glad wrap?'" Dr Hall said.

"There's a world of plastic-free options out there; we're looking forward to discovering them together."

Green 2023 - Environmental Exhibitions & Programs
  • Archibald Prize 2022 Regional Tour
  • Mel O'Callaghan: Centre of the Centre
  • Going Feral
  • Young Archie
  • Blake Griffiths: Glass Beach
  • Plastic: Unwrapping the World

Plastic: Unwrapping the world is a collaboration between Wagga Wagga Art Gallery and Research Professor Gay Hawkins, Institute of Culture and Society, Western Sydney University, as part of the ARC Discovery Grant: 'Investigating Innovative Waste Economies: Redrawing the Circular Economy'.

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