There’s a matter that deserves your attention at Lawrence Wilson Art Gallery, says Jaimi Wright.
![L-R: Maxxi Minaxi May, Deconstructing beauty, 2003, plastic dolls, paint, foamcore and wood, 105 x 21 x 5.7 cm, Cruthers Collection of Women’s Art, The University of Western Australia. Copyright and courtesy of the artist. Glenys Hodgeman
Death is never out of style, 2000
cotton embroidery on paper burial shroud, 194 x 157 cm
© courtesy of the artist.
Lilla Lowe, Apples and apple blossoms, 1896, oil on cedar panel, 90 x 26.5 cm, Cruthers Collection of Women’s Art, The University of Western Australia. Three artworks appear alongside one another. On the far left is a shelving unit - each shelf contains plastic doll body parts, sorted by type. In the middle is A piece of white fabric with various human organs embroidered in red thread, as well as the words Le mort est jamais se demode. On the right is an oil painting of apples and blossoms on cedar wood. Getting to the heart of matter](https://www.seesawmag.com.au/wp-content/uploads/fly-images/35758/Untitled-design-18-410x273-c.jpg)
Western Australia’s arts playground
Western Australia’s arts playground
17 September 2021
There’s a matter that deserves your attention at Lawrence Wilson Art Gallery, says Jaimi Wright.