Vertebrae - about us
Graham Chalcroft who has an MA in Public Art and Design for Chelsea UK, specialising in Public artworks and ephemeral installations to map and interpret
unique sites of social, cultural, and ecological resonance.
Contact: 02 9568 4208
Email: gchalcroft@vertebrae.com.au
Picture Entry in Sculpture by the Sea annual Sydney event at Tamarama Beach.
Past projects include:
2006
October 16, 2006. A stunning new sculpture memorial commemorating the former ... by artist Graham Chalcroft represents the flight of the wedge-tailed eagle, ...
2005
- SECRETS OF THE CITY ..GUMBRAMORRA SWAMP THING!
Secrets of the City...Gumbramorra Swamp Thing! was a series of four free
community workshops where participants will create innovative site
specific public artworks and ephemeral installations that will map and
interpret unique sites of social, cultural, and ecological resonance
within the footprint of the former Gumbramorra Swamp that extended
across the suburbs of Marrickville, Sydenham, Tempe, St.
Peters, and Newtown. The project will celebrate and respond to this
convergence between land and water, ecology and settlement.
2004
- A hands on approach to art and disability
In
the lead up to International Day of People with a Disability (or
DisAbility Day for short), Liverpool City Library hosted a
special, one-of-a-kind event called Art in Motion in
November. Talented sculptor Grahame Chalcroft of Vertebrae worked with students from Mainsbridge School on a special artwork that
will be on display in the library’s new youth area, the.space, from 3
December through to the end of January.
2002
From Reportage Home
By Amber Forrest-Bisley April
2002
AN INNER-city artist is playing his part in fast-tracking
the use of solar energy to purify our water.
Placebo artist Graham Chalcroft is teaching the principles
of both solar still water purification and the design of
solar still sculpture in his ongoing workshops. In an ecological
fusion of art and science, the Solar Stills Sculpture Project
(SSSP) is creating highly original designs.
Assisted by South Sydney Council and funded by the Australian
Council for the Arts Community Cultural Development Fund,
the workshops use locally available recycled and reused
material. Charlcroft said the principles of solar distillation
have been around for centuries and stills remain one of
the oldest devices to provide drinking water.
"Solar stills are simple maintenance free devices
that purify water using the suns radiation,'' he said. "They
operate on the same principal as the Earth's hydrological
cycle of water evaporation and rainfall. As impure water
is fed into the solar still, and only pure distilled water
evaporates, it forms a condensate which can then be harnessed.''
Based on the principles of sustainable development, solar
stills use a 'free' and renewable energy, require minimum
maintenance, are environmentally friendly, and produce high
quality water. He adds: "The Project aims to develop
community interest and awareness in solar still water purification
through sculptural workshops, to produce designs and possibly
completed stills in areas where they can be used in an ongoing
manner."
Through workshops at Darlington and Waterloo Public Schools
and St Mary's Catholic School, Erskineville, students have
designed water collector sculpture fabricated from natural
resources like leaves, branches and twigs, as well as PET
bottles, straws, reflective silver card, irrigation pipes
and wire. "Even corks were used to make insect water
striders float on water," Chalcroft said. Other classes
fashioned PET bottles into flowers, and the collected water
was fed into office water dispenser bottles.
Chalcroft and his team have also been conducting SSSP workshops
at other proposed sites, including Sydney Park, The Addison
Road Centre, The Woolloomooloo Community Gardens, and the
Permaculture Community Garden, at the Ecoliving Center UNSW.
Criteria evolved for solar still concepts at potential sites,
where function and productivity verse aesthetic, art and
education priorities could be reflected in ‘still’
sculptural designs. Functional aspects such as user needs
for shade, drinking water and seating as well as place marking
influenced designs. Designs were also encouraged to utilise
sensory properties particularly the relaxing sight and sound
of pure water, alongside the ability to utilize available
water sources, such as rainwater and run-off.
The reclaimed dumpsite, now transformed into Sydney Park,
provides a perfect location for the aesthetic contribution
of solar stills, with its dehydrated landscape, and adolescent
plant life. The relatively new park has invoked a diverse
variety of individual concepts, including an elephant design
solar still that pays homage to the truth, or urban myth
of the circus elephant supposedly buried in the Park, and
Lotus flower based designs, utilizing the still as the central
component, with petal surrounds. Circular glass spiral designs
were also suggested, allowing distilled water to run through
clear pipes and audiences to view the process, adding educational
purpose to the experience.
A solar still workshop for the Woolloomooloo Community Gardens
site will be held with young people from the local youth
centre drop-in, as part of the Youth Week activities on
April 7. On Wednesday April 10 or Friday April 12 a free
public workshop will be held at the Permaculture Community
Garden, in Randwick.
The possibility of solar distillation however is not limited
to the urban environment. "The overall low-cost and
simplicity of solar stills make them attractive to small
remote communities too," Charlcroft said.
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