Bushcrafters Exhibition - Making / Making Do
Friday 4th October 2024 to Saturday 19th October 2024
Second Act Gallery, 29 Sunbury Workshops, Swanfield Street, London E2 7LF

Second Act Gallery presents northern and international makers celebrating the notion of bushcrafting, turning everyday things into singular items of use, practical or otherwise.

Bushcrafters : Making / Making do
Curated by Kellie Riggs
Private View: 3rd October 2024 (6-8pm)
Exhibition runs from 4th to 19th October 2024
Open 11am - 4pm Thursday to Saturday (or by appointment)
Venue: Second Act Gallery, 29 Sunbury Workshops, Swanfield Street, London E2 7LF
When exactly did we start destroying the world?
Throughout time, makers have garnered specialized, even niche skill sets in order to problem solve and carry out their creative desires. Beyond certain fundamentals within any given craft or trade, these cultivated dexterities become individualized, only making sense or being useful to that person’s particular needs.
In the world of art and object making, the components utilized in form-giving may seem arbitrary, superfluous, or even silly to the eye of the observer. Is everything at our disposal nowadays? This thought is compounded by the image economy, the erosion of natural materials, and the contemporary forever surplus of waste and destruction. In truth and even so, an object’s “necessity”- its right to exist - will forever be validated by the fact that it simply already does.
Borrowing the term from hobbyist survivalism, Bushcrafters celebrates the frenzied sets of hands interested in taking whatever it is around them and turning it into something singular (useful or otherwise) through discernible, sincere, and straightforward actions.
Just as those who take minimal supplies into the wilderness and forge what it is they need to get through their self-inflicted exile from modern society, this group of makers (based in Northern England and also international) has been gathered for their shared impulse to cope with the world as it is today through seemingly ad-hoc yet deliberate production: each slice, stack, layer or remix to create something inherently familiar but always new, maybe even needed beyond the shadow of contemporary dread.
The dividing line between their materials and forms of choice are split by the anthropocenic concept of locality - or what’s near; versus universality, what’s everywhere - raising questions around who has access to what, and whether creating is about living or merely about surviving.