Toolbox 02

Abstract sculpture of overlapping, weathered wooden planks in green and brown, forming a geometric shape against a white background. Minimalist and rustic.
Three abstract artworks with distressed teal wood pieces form geometric shapes on a white wall. Each piece has numbered elements, conveying a rustic, artistic tone.
Distressed blue-green wooden sculptures hang on a white wall. The foreground art resembles abstract paddles, creating a rustic, serene atmosphere.
A close-up of a distressed wooden surface shaped like two overlapping arrows pointing downwards. The wood is painted mint green with visible worn patches.
Art gallery with modern abstract wooden sculptures on white walls, featuring geometric shapes in pastel and bright hues. Minimalist and calm ambiance.
Abstract sculpture of overlapping, weathered wooden planks in green and brown, forming a geometric shape against a white background. Minimalist and rustic.
Three abstract artworks with distressed teal wood pieces form geometric shapes on a white wall. Each piece has numbered elements, conveying a rustic, artistic tone.
Distressed blue-green wooden sculptures hang on a white wall. The foreground art resembles abstract paddles, creating a rustic, serene atmosphere.
A close-up of a distressed wooden surface shaped like two overlapping arrows pointing downwards. The wood is painted mint green with visible worn patches.
Art gallery with modern abstract wooden sculptures on white walls, featuring geometric shapes in pastel and bright hues. Minimalist and calm ambiance.

Toolbox 02

A$1,200.00

timber, acrylic paint

69 x 39 cm

The Toolbox series reimagines old timber toolboxes—once practical, everyday objects—through a lens of memory and material transformation. Each piece has been carefully deconstructed and rebuilt, preserving traces of their original function while becoming quiet meditations on family, place, and resilience.

Toolboxes 02 originally belonged to my grandmother who lived in Crane Street, Ballina. Their forms and colours evoke strong personal memories—of her shed, her practical independence, and a childhood spent in and around that home. The soft pinks reference a cabinet owned by the artist’s mother; the green tones echo the interior of his grandmother Lillian’s house, with its swing-door garage and workbench where she mended things herself.

Though each work stands on its own, the series carries a shared sense of nostalgia—not as sentimentality, but as a lived connection to women who were capable, light-hearted, and self-reliant. These toolboxes, once built for function, now hold space for memory, presence, and quiet transformation.

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