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An unreliable guidebook to jewellery by Lisa Walker | Virtual Book Launch

An unreliable guidebook to jewellery by Lisa Walker

For the virtual launch of the expanded second edition of An unreliable guidebook to jewellery by Lisa Walker (Perimeter Editions 066), join Lisa Walker and curator Chloe Geoghegan in conversation at Te Uru Waitākere Contemporary Gallery. Providing a guided tour of both the publication and the current exhibition Lisa Walker: She wants to go to her bedroom but she can't be bothered, Walker and Geoghegan discuss the artist's early years of jewellery making, engagement with specific materials and contextual influences throughout her prolific career.

Available to watch below or on our YouTube channel, the tour premieres 7pm (AEST), Thursday July 8.

ABOUT THE BOOK
Edited by Kate Rhodes and Nella Themelios, this expanded second edition of An unreliable guidebook to jewellery by Lisa Walker further explores how the work of the internationally celebrated New Zealand jeweller can be framed by the career-long provocation ‘What is jewellery?’. Originally published to accompany the retrospective exhibition Lisa Walker: She wants to go to her bedroom but she can’t be bothered at RMIT Design Hub Gallery, Melbourne, in early 2019, the release of the book’s extended new edition – co-published by RMIT Design Hub Gallery and Perimeter Editions – coincides with the final iteration of the exhibition at Te Uru Waitākere Contemporary Gallery in Auckland in June 2021.


Foregrounding the act of asking questions and the pleasure and importance of the ‘as yet understood’, the book includes a proliferation of new works, texts, materials and documentation from the touring exhibition’s recent installations at CODA Museum (Apeldoorn, The Netherlands, 2019) and Villa Stuck (Munich, Germany, 2020). At once systematic and malleable in their structure, the narratives that emerge within this volume offer an open-ended reflection on Walker’s practice and output, moving across different time periods, veering off on tangents, but returning to the many concerns of the field in which she has so firmly embedded herself. Graphic Design by Ziga Testen and Kim Mumm Hansen.

600 pages, 13 x 19 cm, section-sewn lay-flat bind, softcover with flaps, Perimeter Editions x RMIT Design Hub Gallery (Melbourne).

PURCHASE HERE