Zoom "Of Your Year In Plastic 01" & "This Gets Recycled 01"
Zoom "Of Your Year In Plastic 01" & "This Gets Recycled 01"
Zoom "Of Your Year In Plastic 01" & "This Gets Recycled 01"
Zoom "Of Your Year In Plastic 01" & "This Gets Recycled 01"

"Of Your Year In Plastic 01" & "This Gets Recycled 01"

€6.400,00
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UNIQUE PIECE



VESSEL
Post consumer high density polyethylene. (recycled plastic)

This piece is from the solo exhibition "Your Year in Plastic," which explores the issue of plastic waste. The exhibition illustrates this by highlighting the difference in volume between discarded plastic waste and recycled plastic waste. In Denmark, we consume an average of 37.4 kg of single-use plastic packaging each year, yet only 5.6 kg of it is actually recycled. The large object represents how much we consume, while the small object represents how much we recycle.

The exhibition featured a total of three sets of objects: a wall hanging, a light installation, and this container.

Tonni Mørch is a Danish artist residing in Barcelona, who works exclusively with recycled plastic. Tonni works exclusively with plastic waste discarded in Denmark, approaching the material through a sculptural process and using their hands to shape a substance traditionally molded only by industrial machines. The development of new techniques and methods for shaping plastic is central to their practice, as they incorporate techniques commonly associated with textiles, clay, and pottery.


129 x 57 x 122 cm
37.4 kg
Turquoise
Copenhagen, Denmark


INSTRUCTIONS
Please note the piece is not food safe, due to the nature of the hard to clean surface.  The piece can be cleaned with dish soap, cold water, and a soft, non-abrasive sponge or rag.

TONNI MØRCH

She exclusively work with plastic trash discarded in Denmark. Working sculpturally and using her hands with a material that is traditionally only shaped by industrial machines. The development of new techniques and ways of molding plastic is the center of her practice, and she borrows techniques commonly associated with textiles, clay, and pottery.

Her love for plastic trash as a material started during her thesis at The Royal Academy. She looked into the vast amounts of trash created in renovations of retail stores. Originally, she sets out to recycle as much of the construction waste as possible, but her focus soon landed on plastic because it was almost always burned.

Her work and investigations led to discovering that the main hurdle for recycling plastic in Denmark was salaries and operational costs, which made it hard to compete with the recycled plastic processed in The Global South. She sets out to develop techniques that would give the plastic a monetary value and make it ‘worth’ recycling.

It sparked her love for plastic trash as a material.

As a discarded material, it is not worth much for most people, but it is for her. In theory, it is also ‘worth’ a lot to the earth because many resources are taken out of it to make the material, and burning something that was so costly to produce is just crazy.

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