NEWS FLASH
It’s official, Penthouse Mouse is back for 2012!
This year we bring together a fresh bunch of artists and designers and live music for a thrilling program of events. In a soon to be confirmed location, Penthouse Mouse will showcase AW ranges from a selection of local fashion and accessory designers as well as a diverse cache of jewellers. Many of these items will be available for purchase throughout the event at False Economy, our onsite store.
The brief has been written for the artists response and their outcomes will be exhibited throughout the space. We are also proud to announce that Penthouse Mouse will by popular demand present Mid Mouse; our final night where we host 2 runway shows featuring participating labels and styled by Connel Chiang. Labels to be announced and tickets on sale soon.
NOW! Diarise and highlight these dates: Friday March 2 is the launch of Penthouse Mouse. The shop is open 12 - 4 daily during the week and don't miss our Mid Mouse runway shows and party on the closing night Friday March 9.
Purchase tickets to the Mid Mouse runway shows through Moshtix
Show 1 - 7:30pm
Leonard Street, Autonomy, The Social Studio, Kings of Carnaby, Bento, Upper Left Arm.
Show 2 - 9:30pm
Alistair Trung, Di$count, Trimapee, Where Lovers Lie, Raggatt, Neo Dia, above.
More events to be announced so sign up to the mailing list to receive updates and invitations. You must not miss this.
Subscribe to our mailing list or email info@penthousemouse.com for more information.
James Carey's practice focuses on the blurring of architecture, design and art. He works between the interior and exterior, art and design, the familiar and the unfamiliar, the concepts we create and the glitches that surprise us. Interested in addressing vernacular forms and spaces, acknowledging the ordinary and everyday, then creating a disquieting slippage between the norm and the veiled.
Whilst working on and within an urban scale, Carey investigates the Wishing to highlight the underside of our surroundings, the hidden face of visible things. Through this practice, he is not so interested in inscribing my view, or one reading, upon the work, but in allowing for multiplicities. A rich and ambiguous complication of meaning is set in specific tension, and relation, to an apparently simple gesture.
Carey is interested in utilizing resources, materials and sites that actually exist. They must be present within society’s framework, to stimulate an audience to question the meaning of a particular space, to turn this framework against itself.
The work must reveal something, but allow for multiple readings to remain inexplicable. It is imperative that the practice reads, analyses and understands situations, contexts and histories of a particular site.
This is a practice that explores and demonstrates the complexity of the relationship between body, site, intervention and discourse.