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Tin Pot Womens Collective Jacinta Maude - Mothers Milk - 12
IMAGE_Jacinta Maude-Mothers Milk -12.jpeg Image 1 of
IMAGE_Jacinta Maude-Mothers Milk -12.jpeg
IMAGE_Jacinta Maude-Mothers Milk -12.jpeg

Jacinta Maude - Mothers Milk - 12

A$57.00
sold out

Porcelain, clay, found objects (plastic figurine, plastic spoon) and gesso, 8.5cm x 20cm x 2.5cm, 2025

Jacinta is a Naarm/Melbourne-based artist living and working on Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung country. Her practice explores materiality, ecology, and non-human agency. Working primarily in installation and sculpture, she repurposes found and discarded objects to examine care, relationality, and identity in a commodity-driven culture. Drawing from domestic spaces, she integrates salvaged materials with plaster or ceramics, using rudimentary casting and bricolage to transform everyday remnants beyond their utilitarian origins.

She holds a Master of Contemporary Art from the University of Melbourne (VCA). Her graduate project, Field Work—awarded the Fiona Myer Prize—explored domestic labour and caregiving through works incorporating plaster and salvaged household objects. She has exhibited in group shows, including in the Netherlands, and works casually with ACCA’s visitor experience team. In 2024, she completed an artist residency in Morocco’s Sahara Desert and is a co-founder of the Tin Pot Women Artist collective.

For Counter Encounter, her work Mother’s Milk explores the tension between caregiving as an intimate, essential act and its societal undervaluation. It examines the psychological threshold of caregiving’s mental load, where routine tasks shift between monotony and deep significance. By transforming discarded objects, her assemblages engage with material liminality—blurring waste and renewal, utility and poetic resonance.

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Porcelain, clay, found objects (plastic figurine, plastic spoon) and gesso, 8.5cm x 20cm x 2.5cm, 2025

Jacinta is a Naarm/Melbourne-based artist living and working on Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung country. Her practice explores materiality, ecology, and non-human agency. Working primarily in installation and sculpture, she repurposes found and discarded objects to examine care, relationality, and identity in a commodity-driven culture. Drawing from domestic spaces, she integrates salvaged materials with plaster or ceramics, using rudimentary casting and bricolage to transform everyday remnants beyond their utilitarian origins.

She holds a Master of Contemporary Art from the University of Melbourne (VCA). Her graduate project, Field Work—awarded the Fiona Myer Prize—explored domestic labour and caregiving through works incorporating plaster and salvaged household objects. She has exhibited in group shows, including in the Netherlands, and works casually with ACCA’s visitor experience team. In 2024, she completed an artist residency in Morocco’s Sahara Desert and is a co-founder of the Tin Pot Women Artist collective.

For Counter Encounter, her work Mother’s Milk explores the tension between caregiving as an intimate, essential act and its societal undervaluation. It examines the psychological threshold of caregiving’s mental load, where routine tasks shift between monotony and deep significance. By transforming discarded objects, her assemblages engage with material liminality—blurring waste and renewal, utility and poetic resonance.

Porcelain, clay, found objects (plastic figurine, plastic spoon) and gesso, 8.5cm x 20cm x 2.5cm, 2025

Jacinta is a Naarm/Melbourne-based artist living and working on Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung country. Her practice explores materiality, ecology, and non-human agency. Working primarily in installation and sculpture, she repurposes found and discarded objects to examine care, relationality, and identity in a commodity-driven culture. Drawing from domestic spaces, she integrates salvaged materials with plaster or ceramics, using rudimentary casting and bricolage to transform everyday remnants beyond their utilitarian origins.

She holds a Master of Contemporary Art from the University of Melbourne (VCA). Her graduate project, Field Work—awarded the Fiona Myer Prize—explored domestic labour and caregiving through works incorporating plaster and salvaged household objects. She has exhibited in group shows, including in the Netherlands, and works casually with ACCA’s visitor experience team. In 2024, she completed an artist residency in Morocco’s Sahara Desert and is a co-founder of the Tin Pot Women Artist collective.

For Counter Encounter, her work Mother’s Milk explores the tension between caregiving as an intimate, essential act and its societal undervaluation. It examines the psychological threshold of caregiving’s mental load, where routine tasks shift between monotony and deep significance. By transforming discarded objects, her assemblages engage with material liminality—blurring waste and renewal, utility and poetic resonance.

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No Vacancy respectfully acknowledges the Traditional Owners of the land, the Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung and Bunurong Boon Wurrung peoples of the Eastern Kulin and pays respect to their Elders past and present.


34-40 Jane Bell Lane
Melbourne, Australia
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