Cynden Adams
Cynden Adams聽has completed a聽聽at UNSW Art & Design.
Cynden Adams is a聽designer with a social conscience. Her ethical perspective permeates the type of work she produces. During her time at UNSW, Cynden developed a range of projects that remind consumers that they are part of a wider world 鈥 one plagued by environmental and social challenges. 聽聽
For the聽choice&impact聽project, Cynden developed a clothing line using fabrics that visually communicate information on the environmental fallout of rising ocean temperatures. Cynden鈥檚 responsive images were printed on the textiles using thermochromic pigments. This wearable textile collection featured pink motifs representing coral reefs before bleaching occurs. As the temperature of the sun warms each item of clothing, the colour of the printed coral patterns changes from dark to light pink and gradually fades to white. Cynden says a goal was to help remind consumers that the daily choices they make impact 鈥 for better or worse 鈥 on the natural world.
颁测苍诲别苍鈥檚听From Rags聽project pays homage to the tradition of Japanese textiles artists and designers who repurpose leftover yarn and fabric remnants in aesthetically considered ways. Cynden鈥檚 project is a scarf design made from 100% cotton fabric remnants, sourced from within her own household and from the scrap bins of fabric stores. Each newly created item has been shredded, plaited, knotted, and dyed in indigo. The results are a testament to the value of form, function, and sustainability.聽
For her graduating project, exhibited as part of the Annual 2016 exhibition, Cynden created an apparel collection that she calls聽Guardian: Made in Cambodia.聽The goal of the collection is to increase knowledge and awareness of a uniquely Cambodian guardian spirit 鈥 the Neak Ta 鈥 whose evoked presence enables an acceptable form of worker rebellion to occur. Cynden describes the overall collection as a 鈥渧isualization of the repetitive piecework of garment factory work and the disruption caused to it by the Neak Ta phenomenon. Open and closed seams, darts and hems have the repetitive qualities of piecework labour, disrupted by dark, ominous forms of natural dyeing techniques, reminiscent of fainting and possession.鈥