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APR25 RITUALISING LEISURE Monash University
Quality presents Rituals of Leisure by Monash Architecture students from the Bachelor Design Studio of the same name led by Bella Singal.
Ritualising Leisure explores rituals within material cultures of stone, timber, and metal. This exhibition questions leisure as a necessary and intentional practice—one that is deeply political, personal, and communal. Through various sensory installations, Ritualising Leisure invites visitors to reflect on how rituals of care and play engage with the past and present of Abbotsford. Situated between the pre and post industrialised cultures of materiality, the exhibition draws from diverse cultural traditions around rituals surrounding the lifecycles of materials. Ritualising Leisure asks: What does it mean to step on stolen land? Who gets to access leisure, and who is excluded? How can rituals connect us to a specific place and knowledge? In tracing these questions, the exhibition becomes not just a site of display but a living space for materials.
Rituals of Leisure is an exhibition by Monash Architecture students from the Bachelors Vertical Design Studio: Ritualising Leisure, led by Bella Singal.
1. Systouiqial by Chloe Burridge and Elisa Venturini
A system that leads and ends with liquid.
2. Serene New Dawn by Serena Zhang and Taining Guo
Enduring spirits of struggle, transformed into belonging.
3. Restruction by Georgia McKerral and Kayla Salter
Re-destroying previously repaired.
4. Comporture by Kira Birkett
Repetition of the banal, mundane, everyday.
5. Perstelling by Olivia Goro and Linton Lawn
Blocks breathe stories into form.
6. Recontimberise: Reclaimed Memory by Arwen Espanola and Nemuel Soliven
Reverse form, repositions memories of construction.
7. Salt, Pepper, Mustard, Vinegar by Jennifer Kuncheria and Julia Sweeney
Jump on stone, see what happens.
8. Sensoring by Vanessa Ngo and Nadia Nazari
Granular textural journey of hands and feet.
9. Momentrick by Irfan Baset and Nafeesa Maksud
Motion of a moving body through brick.
APR25 RITUALISING LEISURE Monash University
Quality presents Rituals of Leisure by Monash Architecture students from the Bachelor Design Studio of the same name led by Bella Singal.
Ritualising Leisure explores rituals within material cultures of stone, timber, and metal. This exhibition questions leisure as a necessary and intentional practice—one that is deeply political, personal, and communal. Through various sensory installations, Ritualising Leisure invites visitors to reflect on how rituals of care and play engage with the past and present of Abbotsford. Situated between the pre and post industrialised cultures of materiality, the exhibition draws from diverse cultural traditions around rituals surrounding the lifecycles of materials. Ritualising Leisure asks: What does it mean to step on stolen land? Who gets to access leisure, and who is excluded? How can rituals connect us to a specific place and knowledge? In tracing these questions, the exhibition becomes not just a site of display but a living space for materials.
Rituals of Leisure is an exhibition by Monash Architecture students from the Bachelors Vertical Design Studio: Ritualising Leisure, led by Bella Singal.
1. Systouiqial by Chloe Burridge and Elisa Venturini
A system that leads and ends with liquid.
2. Serene New Dawn by Serena Zhang and Taining Guo
Enduring spirits of struggle, transformed into belonging.
3. Restruction by Georgia McKerral and Kayla Salter
Re-destroying previously repaired.
4. Comporture by Kira Birkett
Repetition of the banal, mundane, everyday.
5. Perstelling by Olivia Goro and Linton Lawn
Blocks breathe stories into form.
6. Recontimberise: Reclaimed Memory by Arwen Espanola and Nemuel Soliven
Reverse form, repositions memories of construction.
7. Salt, Pepper, Mustard, Vinegar by Jennifer Kuncheria and Julia Sweeney
Jump on stone, see what happens.
8. Sensoring by Vanessa Ngo and Nadia Nazari
Granular textural journey of hands and feet.
9. Momentrick by Irfan Baset and Nafeesa Maksud
Motion of a moving body through brick.