Objects in Process
Presented by Cameron Ross Design
DETAILS
Free, no booking required
Upper ground corridor of the Johnston St building, Collingwood Yards
4/35 Johnston Street, Collingwood VIC, Australia
DATES
Thu 14 May 1 – 6pm
Fri 15 May 7 – 10pm
Opening night
Sat 16 May 12 – 6pm
Sun 17 May 12 – 6pm
Mon 18 May 1 – 6pm
Tue 19 May 1 – 6pm
Wed 20 May 1 – 6pm
Thu 21 May 1 – 6pm
Fri 22 May 1 – 6pm
Sat 23 May 12 – 6pm
ACCESS
Objects in Process is an exhibition of contemporary furniture and object design that explores how material, structure and form intersect when you slow down and make things by hand.
At the centre is Five Pillars – a sculptural furniture piece composed of five ascending geometric forms cut through by a single diagonal plane. It investigates balance, rhythm and proportion, setting the conceptual tone for the surrounding work.
The exhibition includes a curated selection of tables, lighting and seating, each made from different materials using varied processes. The works comprise a mixture of one-off design builds and short-run productions. Together they represent an ongoing investigation: how can design remain experimental and expressive while still being functional and built to last?
This exhibition invites people to slow down, get close, and understand that the objects we live with carry stories of hands, tools, decisions and breakthroughs. It encourages a deeper appreciation for craft and a reconsideration of what “good design” means when you factor in origin, process and longevity.
Participants
Cameron Ross
Cameron Ross Design is a design and fabrication practice informed by Cameron’s thirty years of experience delivering large-scale exhibitions and installations for cultural institutions. The practice is built on a foundation of hands-on craftsmanship and technical precision, blending decades of industrial expertise with a refined approach to construction. Now focusing on the intimate scale of object design, the work emphasizes material honesty and structural clarity, resulting in pieces that are as technically grounded as they are considered.