Friday, July 18, 2025
Kuulumisia (Tidings, Ways of Belonging) exhibition in Lappeenranta, Finland
Saturday, September 4, 2021
Radiant Pavilion 2021: 'New Spring, Old Gods' – as part of 'IIb''
New Spring, Old Gods (2020-21)
This post will be updated daily during Radiant Pavilion 4-12 September '21.
DAY 1
Saturday 4 September 2021
Hello and thank you for coming in! Thank you Radiant Pavilion for having us, and so much gratitude to Chloë for making this happen, with her team, during such an unusual and challenging time. You are amazing.
This evolving presentation is an alternative (different, and curated to the online environment) to a physical exhibition of finished jewellery pieces. Updated daily with more material during the course of Radiant Pavilion, you'll discover here some background, development and a limited edition of finished pieces from my most recent series of necklaces, New Spring, Old Gods.
While you're here, there's also a lot more to explore in the blog, from my past jewellery and object work to photography, drawings and thoughts about life – a telling record of someone looking for their way and purpose during the last 12 years. Please feel at home, and leave a comment if you're so inclined. You can see further material via my IG account @ordinari_observer too.
This post is of course also a part of IIb, a project born and re-born from discussions with my friend, fellow artist and PhD candidate Michaela Pegum. Our physical installations originally titled II
had to be postponed due to covid-19 restrictions in Victoria, so we
each present something different online. You can find more about the
project background in the previous post here and see Michaela's work for IIb via her Instagram account @michaela_pegum.
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About 'New Spring, Old Gods'
For the first day, I'd like to share some thoughts on creating the work, and three of the first five necklaces made.

Below: Seven sacrifices of flowers, 2020, plastic price tags, 570 x 0 mm. This neckpiece consists of seven separate necklaces of different lengths and designs (see below).
Do you know what the circular symbol with a cross represents?

My 'Vaari' ('vaari' means grandfather) Toivo Timonen, my mother's father, was a man who lived for a century and farmed the same land for nearly 80 years. He kept daily notes of rains and temperatures; worked with the lunar cycles, and cultivated a deep knowledge of plants, flowers, different natural energies and the way of the forest. In this picture Vaari is wearing a traditonal summer wreath and a garland, made by my sisters and I, sitting on the old steps of the farmhouse on a summer's afternoon.
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More tomorrow, on Day 2 of Radiant Pavilion, Melbourne Contemporary Jewellery and Object Biennial 2021. Hope to see you then!
SUN-DAY 2
5 September '21
FieldDAY 3
Monday 6 September '21
Field, 2020 (one of the first works in the New Spring, Old Gods series)
Landscape photographs: Inari Kiuru + Laura Kiuru
DAY 4
Tuesday 7 September '21

DAY 5
Wednesday 8 September '21
DAY 6
Thursday 9 September '21
DAY 7
Friday 10 September '21
DAY 8
Saturday 9 September '21
The connetionDAY 9, final day of Radiant Pavilion
Saturday 9 September '21
Wednesday, September 1, 2021
COMING SATURDAY 4 SEPTEMBER '21: 'New Spring, Old Gods' as part of 'IIb' with Michaela Pegum – The Radiant Pavilion 2021 online edition
IIb (online, coming soon / 4-17 September 2021)
Michaela Pegum & Inari Kiuru
The idea to exhibit side by side, as two, grew from the artists’ shared interest in our relationships with the natural world. The physical exhibition ‘II’ now postponed, Michaela and Inari each present an individual selection of thoughts, research and work as ‘IIb’, curated for the online environment.
Michaela’s sculptural work is developed from her relationships with
natural, threshold landscapes. She explores the becoming between human
and non-human life forms, elements and atmospheres through the creation
of material languages that are liminal, suggestive and sensory. Michaela
will present the material explorations that led to her sculptural forms
via her IG account @michaela_pegum.
Inari’s New Spring, Old Gods necklaces honour the artist’s Finnish heritage, depicting trees, flowers and old, nature-centered rites. Composed during the pandemic, from limited ingredients, the series especially celebrates a strong kinship discovered working in isolation: a contemporary maker and her ancestors, together in spirit, weaving new life from whatever the season offers.
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IIb is presented as part of Radiant Pavilion, Melbourne Contemporary Jewellery and Object Biennial, 4-12 September 2021. See the full program at www.radiantpavilion.com.au
About the artists
Michaela Pegum has a background in contemporary dance and is undertaking a PhD in the school of art at RMIT through her practice led research project Subtle bodies: corporeal and material becoming in threshold landscapes. Her practice is an exploration of felt experience, garnered through the deeply embodied relationships we form with the natural world, it spans the realms of sculpture, wearable art and performance. She works in highly explorative ways to develop material languages that are liminal, suggestive and sensory, investigating the affective qualities, tones and temporalities that constitute the fabric of relations between the sensing being and their environment.
Inari Kiuru is a Finnish–born multidisciplinary artist and graphic designer, translating her native relationship with wilderness and changing seasons into objects, images and words inspired by light, clouds and atmospheres in urban environments. Known for her experimental use of non–precious, industrial materials such as concrete and steel, the core of Inari’s practice is revealing beauty within ordinary, everyday things. Inari is represented by Funaki, Melbourne.
Tuesday, May 4, 2021
Funaki guest posts on materiality 3: Concrete
And finally, here's my third offering in the guest post series for Funaki, last winter during the early days of the pandemic when the gallery was closed and we were looking for alternative ways to communicate and interact. I wrote about materials I use, know and love: enamel, steel and concrete. Here's concrete!
I was fortunate to discover this interesting character almost by accident. Some years ago, a bag from Bunnings was my leap of faith (yup, a panic solution) while planning a sculptural installation with no equipment to fabricate metal in a large scale. Concrete offered an alternative to work without heat or special tools, and allowed free experimentation without financial concerns. Soon, there was no return.
At first glance–feel–concrete is heavy and dense, cool to the touch. It carries associations of construction and the industrial; of urban structures and surfaces; of my immediate world and visual interests. It can be rough, or polished like smooth marble, and is a reliable protector of fragile materials, such as glass, embedded. - From an intimate distance, concrete also reveals its sensual and sensitive side. Toned with natural pigments, the shades resonate with things I keep returning to: The light at dusk and dawn; the changing skies, seasons and weather patterns … all somehow connected to our own human emotions in flux. This poetic nature of concrete keeps surprising and captivating me.
Finally, I think it’s great concrete is used by thousands of DIY enthusiasts, for all sorts of objects and ornaments. This gives it a democratic, joyous quality. Anyone can use concrete, giving such obvious satisfaction to those who may not otherwise be creatively engaged. It’s the material of inspiration and possibility!
Images (including the floor of Funaki on Crossley St): Inari Kiuru, 2015-2020

Funaki guest posts on materiality 2: Steel
Last winter during the early pandemic days of 2020, the physical gallery space closed, Funaki's artists were invited to create guest posts in Instagram, about anything we liked. Here's my second entry on materials I use and love (please also see the previous blog post about enamel).
Let’s talk about STEEL. I love steel. It’s a metal that’s been with me from the start, for practical and aesthetic reasons.
First, I love the applications of steel in our urban environment: The intricate metal structures and tall cranes at construction sites; huge diggers like strange animals; ships and sea containers, the battered back doors of trucks. I love the ordinariness of this material and the divinely beautiful way it surrenders to its environments, accepting scratches, stains, rust … the marks of time, never losing its integrity.
I can weld steel, making jewellery pieces and vessels structurally safe while subjected to high heat in the kiln for enamelling or colouring. Soldered seams will reflow and collapse in temperatures over 800 Celcius whereas welded connections (metal joined to itself with electricity) remain intact. Anyone who works with steel also knows it can be temperamental as it rusts (maddeningly!) easily and is harder to cut and clean than precious metals. Sometimes its sharp edges make you bleed. But all is forgiven for its amazing scale of expression: I love the deep blues of heated mild steel, the chemical, snowflake-like zinc patterns on galvanized surfaces and the elegant grays they turn into when heated (although this process is toxic.).
I love the shine. precision and strength of stainless steel, as well as the warm rusted tones and quiet stories told by old, abandoned pieces. I love the way stained steel sometimes looks like silk, sometimes like a landscape–but always still like steel.
Images: Inari Kiuru 2008-2020, Mild and galvanized steel
Funaki guest posts on materiality 1: Enamel
Last winter during the early pandemic days, Funaki's artists were invited to guest post in Instagram, about anything we liked. I prepared three entries, each about a different material I use and love. Here are those posts, each as their own, starting with ENAMEL.
I thank my location stars for learning this art, as I studied silversmithing here in Melbourne at RMIT University. They, uniquely, have a long history of enamelling with masters such as Helen Aitken-Kuhnen and Debbie Sheezel having taught there prior to my own brilliant teacher, Dr Kirsten Haydon.
As patience and fine motor skills are needed in the traditional techniques, my beginnings were naturally full of tears–and this was just the teacher ;) However, a 2010 workshop with Prof. Elizabeth Turrell introducing liquid enamel (also referred to as industrial enamel, see below) was a turning point. The application of a fluid mix and drawing onto it allowed a freedom I’d craved, and eventually gave me enough confidence to keep working with the ultimately very satisfying powdered enamel.
The traditional vitreous (Latin ‘vitreum’ means glass) enamelling dates back to the 13th century BC. Coloured glass powders are carefully applied onto a base, usually metal, and fused by heat into a strong luminous surface. From the 19th century, enamel began to be used industrially: A liquid glass mix is fired in huge kilns to form a durable coating for everyday domestic wares such as our familiar bathtubs and fridge doors. It’s worth noting too that enamel paint (“cold enamel”) and liquid enamel are two very different things.
The images (IK 2010-19) show you samples of enamel on steel and copper: Shifted (earrings, pendant); liquid (samples, brooch, vessels), and decals (images in enamel).
For beautiful pieces in different styles, please also see the work of the artists mentioned in this post.
