Presented below the spectacularly beautiful stained glass ceiling of the NGV Great Hall for the duration of the Melbourne Art Book Fair, Print Kitchen will play with the connection between printmaking and food-making.
May 17th, 2023
Conceived and facilitated by Artek Halpern-Laurence, participants will enter the studio-come-trattoria to create their own etching, watch it be ‘cooked’ by a team of chefs operating the giant spinning wheel of the onsite etching press — and, with the ding of a bell, collect their very own print to take home and enjoy.
On graduation from RMIT in 2016, Halpern-Laurence establishing the print studio Huge Mumma Spice Merchant at Warrandyte, North West of Melbourne. Having studied photography, printmaking and sound, Halpern-Laurence was fascinated by the possibilities of printmaking. As such, he commenced his career producing hand-screenprinted T-shirts and works on paper, which he sold at markets around Melbourne and continues to sell through his website and Instagram.

Huge Mumma Spice Merchant hosts workshops and collaborations that demystify print processes and focus on printmaking’s ability to create connections between people by making art more shareable and accessible. As such, his printmaking practice spans various techniques and experimental methods, including drypoint, stone lithography, risograph, screenprinting and modifying office laser printers, and often incorporates reclaimed and repurposed materials. Since establishing his practice his print portfolio has continued to grow with work being shown at Melbourne Now this year, and the upcoming Print Kitchen along with a good solid exhibiting portfolio.
Related: Sculptor Laurence Edwards in Orange

Designed to facilitate an understanding of the act of printmaking, while making the artform more accessible to the public, Print Kitchen is already being touted as one of the highlights of the Melbourne Art Book Fair.
As an exhibitor in this year’s Melbourne Now, Halpern-Laurence’s multicoloured screenprint responds to visions of the ‘Metaverse’ and ‘Web3’ of Facebook, which Mark Zuckerberg described as “an embodied internet where you’re in the experience, not just looking at it.” It’s inspired by a Meta keynote with some memorable sentiments: “we are already living in the Metaverse” and to overcome our “clunky and rudimentary” interactions with this hybrid physical-and-digital reality, we should be using VR headsets.

Halpern-Laurence satirises the techno-utopianism of Silicon Valley, where claims around new technologies either misrepresent pressing real-world concerns or ignore them entirely. His take on the monthly calendar reveals a game of snakes and ladders, including reminders to ‘Breathe! Connect to nature! Work! Walk the dog!’, in parody of the platitudes of productivity culture.
Melbourne Art Book Fair
artbookfair.melbourne
Huge Mumma
hugemumma.com
Photography
Phoebe Powell





We think you might also like this story on RMIT’s Ian Howard Memorial Scholarship.
INDESIGN is on instagram
Follow @indesignlive
A searchable and comprehensive guide for specifying leading products and their suppliers
Keep up to date with the latest and greatest from our industry BFF's!
From the spark of an idea on the page to the launch of new pieces in a showroom is a journey every aspiring industrial and furnishing designer imagines making.
CDK Stone’s Natasha Stengos takes us through its Alexandria Selection Centre, where stone choice becomes a sensory experience – from curated spaces, crafted details and a colour-organised selection floor.
At the National Wool Museum, a new exhibition traces the evolution of Godfrey Hirst and its long-standing role in shaping Geelong’s industrial and design identity.
BLP’s new Sydney Children’s Hospital, Randwick building brings together paediatric care, family-centred design and Australia’s first Children’s Comprehensive Cancer Centre in a major addition to the Randwick Health & Innovation Precinct.
Hecker Guthrie brings a natural, material-led design to Green Cup’s new Chadstone store, pairing pine, steel and glass with a grab-and-go layout inspired by the brand’s fresh, organic ethos.
The internet never sleeps! Here's the stuff you might have missed
Hecker Guthrie brings a natural, material-led design to Green Cup’s new Chadstone store, pairing pine, steel and glass with a grab-and-go layout inspired by the brand’s fresh, organic ethos.
It’s designed for how you live, not just for how it looks.
The Fisher and Paykel Melbourne Experience Centre by Clare Cousins Architects with Fisher and Paykel Design and Alt Group has been awarded The Retail Space at the INDE.Awards 2025. As a winning project, it redefines the possibilities of retail architecture by creating an immersive, material rich environment shaped by place, culture and craft.