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  • About C2
    • About C2
    • About MCC
    • About MCML
    • Book Our Space
    • Connect 2 Craft
    • Accessibility Information
    • Gladys Chown Memorial Library
  • Shop
  • Calls For Submissions
  • What’s On
    • Events
    • Exhibitions
    • News
    • Workshops
    • MCC Awards
    • Make it at Home
  • Get Involved
    • Donate
    • Volunteer
    • Membership
  • Galleries
    • Member Gallery
    • Museum Collection
    • Gladys Chown Memorial Library
    • Explore Manitoba Craft History
    • MCML 360 Images
    • Indigenous Collections at MCML
    • Inuit Collection at MCML – On the Map

Melanie Barnett

  • Ceramics

My current work foreshadows humanity’s fate in the context of the climate crisis. Mosses, liverworts, and fungi – all ancient organisms that have lived far longer than we can imagine – consume human figures in grotesque, fantastical ways, reducing them to a state of detritus. The figures beg the question of our fate amidst a collapsing environment: perhaps an untimely death to humanity is closer to destiny than it is to destruction – maybe that is what it means to be human.

Beginning within the body, the spores of these ancient organisms take root in the host’s lungs, eventually spreading to other organs by way of the blood stream. Referencing the speed and severity at which the climate crisis affects our world, the moss, liverworts, and fungi erupt from the figures in a solemn beauty, releasing new spores which will go on to infect other hosts at an exponentially increasing rate.

I am interested in the permanence of ceramic. My works will continue to live for thousands of years after my death and are, compared to the average human life span, immortal. For too long, humanity has chosen to ignore the damage that we have caused the planet, and as a consequence to our own inaction, one day we shall pay the ultimate price.

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www.melaniebarnettceramics.com
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The C2 Centre for Craft  is located in what we now know as Manitoba, the ancestral lands of the Anishinaabeg, Ininiwak, Dene, Anishininewuk, Dakota Oyate, Inuit Peoples, and the national homeland of the Red River Métis. These lands include territory subject to Treaties 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 and 10.

Craft occupies a space that has the hand and the handmade at its centre. It rejoices in sharing knowledge and solving problems. It stems from, creates, and nurtures community. It allows us to build bridges through shared action, but also fosters courage, empathy, and connection.

We acknowledge the deep harm caused by settlement, and we look forward to using craft in our efforts towards reconciliation and positive change.

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