BSc (Hons.) (JCU), BFA (NAS), PhD (UOW)
An acclaimed Australian ceramics artist over the past two decades, Louise is an innovative artist educator, interdisciplinary scholar of affect, materiality, and more-than-human relations, and a collaborative author on recent art and the anthropocene. In creative practice and critical pedagogy she asks bigger questions of how art and diverse artists might attune, respond, regenerate and thrive in Oceania and the Asia-Pacific in the twenty-first century.
Louise is an alumna of the National Art School in ceramics and builds on her tenure as a Ceramics Lecturer (2020–2023), and a Sessional Lecturer, Ceramics (2016–2020). She has lectured at the University of Wollongong (2016–2018), co-developing new subject content on contemporary art and climate change as part of the Bachelor of Creative Arts (Visual Arts) degree. As an interdisciplinary practitioner and thinker, Boscacci has held the positions of Post-Doctoral Research Associate and Associate Fellow (2017–2022; adjunct) and was a founding member of the Material Ecologies Research Network (MECO)/Centre for Critical Creative Practice at UOW.
Louise has exhibited extensively, nationally and internationally, with 14 major solo and 52 group and collaborative two-person exhibitions since 1997, including significant curatorial representations in capstone events, from Clay Energy (Clay Gulgong 2010 invited Master Artist) to Clay Dynasty (2021–3, Powerhouse Museum Sydney). She was awarded the prestigious Australia Council London Studio Residency for her practice in contemporary ceramics, and is a recipient of two New Work grants by the Australia Council for large-scale porcelain works conceived as future archives of extinction witness, and new ceramics and sound investigations. Her distinctive ceramics are held in the National Gallery of Australia, state and regional Australian gallery collections, and numerous private art collections in Australia, the UK, USA, Hong Kong and Singapore.
Boscacci’s recent publications include the multi-author book, 100 Atmospheres: Studies in Scale and Wonder (2019) and chapters in cutting-edge projects, Postcards from the Anthropocene: Unsettling the Geopolitics of Representation (2022) and Water Lore: Place, Practice, and Poetics (2022).
Courses and Subjects Taught:
- STU100 First-Year Ceramics Foundations A
- STU120 Wheelwork Multiplicity; First Year Co-ordinator
- CER200 Ceramics 2 Plate Tectonics, Independent Research Project
- STS 200 Studio Seminar 2
- CER300 Ceramics 3 Studio Specialisation
- STS 300 Studio Seminar 3
- MFA1 CER400 Studio Specialisation; Subject Co-ordinator
- MFA2 Research Supervision
- DFA Research Supervision
- NAS Summer School 2017–2022: Clay, Wheel, Body
Areas of Specialisation – potential MFA and DFA research supervision areas:
- Regenerative Ceramics
- Embodiment, the Senses, Affect and Ceramics
- Clay as Country: Decolonising Clay
- More-than-human Ceramics
- Sound and Ceramics
- Ceramics and Photography
- Ceramics and Drawing
- Objects and Affect in the Anthropocene
- New Materialisms and Situated Knowledges
- Art/Ceramics and Climate
- Art/Ceramics and Ecology
- Art and Environmental Change (Material-discursive Investigations)
- Feminist Studies in Art and Global Environmental Change
- Clay/Ceramics and Time
- Ceramics and Wit(h)nessing
- Objects and Words/Storying/Worlds
- Relational Ceramics Practice