Australian street artist Rone returns to his hometown of Melbourne to complete a covert project in homage to the remnants of mid-century Australiana.
Within an abandoned 1900’s weatherboard cottage — one of the last remaining structures in an extensive residential building site in the city’s inner north area — the artist has created a ‘fantasy film set’, replete with haunting female portraits and domestic interior settings. The ephemeral ‘omega project’ — exhibited for only a few weeks — continues Rone’s longstanding interest in the ‘Concept of creating something beautiful within the context of decay and decline.’
Over the course of a few weeks, surrounded by destruction and construction in the area, Rone turned the home into a part art exhibition, part experiential installation. The artist’s signature portraits line the walls of the house, their beauty situated between brokenness and decay. Adding to the haunting, cinematic quality of the space is the recreation of typical mid-century Australian interiors — like chenille bedspreads, and wood-grained TV sets — conceived by interior stylist carly spooner. ‘These are things that I think a lot of us grew up with,’ Rone says. ‘It’s not what you think of as classic Australiana, but it feels instantly recognisable as Australian. There’s so much about the interiors that I think a lot of people will identify with.’
(Source: Designboom, Images Designboom).