MIMIR and Claire Fletcher, ‘Corporate Roadkill,’ 2025. Image courtesy Brenton McGeachie.
MIMIR & Claire Fletcher
CHUTESPACE
Friday 18 April - Sunday 11 May 2025
Thursday 17 April 2025, 6pm-8pm
Inbox (overflowing)
Medium roast
Grind: 9-5
2 spoons – no sugar
Boiling point
Curated networks
Exposure – saturated
Edits needed
Optimise community
Stir
Foundations
Steel-toed development —
Restructure
Stir
Strategically Nurture
Smile
Serve
About the Artist
Claire Fletcher
Claire Fletcher is a visual artist practicing on Ngunnawal and Ngambri Country, ACT, Australia. Working across painting, photography and print-media, Fletcher explores the possibilities of traditional mediums in the contemporary space.
Fletcher is completing her Bachelor of Visual Arts at the Australian National University (ACT). Recent exhibitions include ANU SOA&D Grad Show 2024 (2024), Immaterial 3.0 (2023) and View 2021 (2021). Her work resides in both domestic and international private collections.
MIMIR
Mimir Soboslay Moore ( they/them) is an arts worker and artist who has worked in gallery management, administration, curation, installation and marketing across arts and cultural organisations on Ngnunnawal, Ngambri and Noongar country.
They are passionate about fostering inclusivity and accessibility in the arts through community collaboration and supporting emerging artists and workers.
Mimir's practise through sculpture and interactive installation explores their absurd/surrealist daydreams of dystopian futures, critiquing self identity and social structures under neoliberal capitalism.
About Chutespace
In November 2013 the former Griffith Library after-hours book-returns chute was transformed by Jeffree Skewes and Kerry Shepherdson, into a distinctive miniature exhibition space named CHUTESPACE.
CHUTESPACE is an artist run initiative and continues to be voluntarily curated and managed. Artists of all genres can apply for an exhibition.
Mini exhibitions are featured for four-week periods in line with the M16 main gallery exhibition periods.
All artist proposals are considered, and exhibitions are free to the artist.