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Brisbane-based artist Isabelle Cameron emerged victorious at this year’s Australian Wearable Art Festival, taking home the Festival’s highest honour for the second year in a row, Supreme Winner, at the gala night held on the Sunshine Coast.

The Australian Wearable Art Festival, a collision of art and fashion, concluded its highly anticipated event on Saturday night, showcasing a spectacular display of 38 national and international boundary-pushing wearable artworks.

Ms Cameron, whose outstanding crochet piece, entered in the Avant Garde category, ultimately took home three prizes for her piece ‘Stardust’ – the Supreme Winner, the Avant Garde category winner and one of four artists chosen to be featured in the Textile Fibre Forum magazine.

Judges Jacinta Giles, QAGOMA curator, and Julia Rose, renowned floral wearable artist, said that of the 38 entries in the festival, each showcasing the artists’ talents and stories, Ms Cameron’s piece stood out as it delivered a high level of technical skill with a fresh and innovative design.’

The piece engaged the audience through a sense of joy and cheekiness and moved seamlessly on the model,” Dr Giles said.

The symbology of ‘Stardust’ represents the artist unmasking and expressing autistic joy, embodying both terror and beauty. The piece encourages you to embrace your true self. Using crochet as her technique, Ms Cameron showcases this often underestimated and under-created craft as fun, daring, dynamic and limitless. 

With participants hailing from all corners of the world, including Romania, Japan, the United States, and across Australia, the event demonstrated its reputation as a growing international art and fashion spectacle.

Among the festival’s four main categories —Trashion, Sustainable Nature, Floriana, and Avant Garde— the audience witnessed spectacular works made from plastic waterbottles, inner tubes of bicycle tires, 3D printing and flowers. 

Local Sunshine Coast-based artist, Viera Keogh was overwhelmed to take home the People’s Choice Award – a new award for 2024, Best Headpiece and also the Winner of the Floriana category. 

“This piece is a heartfelt protest inspired by the peaceful Velvet Revolution in Slovakia and my aim is to show that victory can be achieved without weapons,” said Ms Keogh. 

“I spent most of last year growing and drying flowers from my home for this entry and I am so pleased to have my work recognised in this way.”

Australian Wearable Art Festival is supported by the Queensland Government through Tourism and Events Queensland. Sunshine Coast Council is the official destination partner for the Festival. The Festival would also not be possible without key partners including Visit Sunshine Coast, Argon Law, Hello Sunshine and In Noosa Magazines, My Weekly Preview, Fresh PR & Marketing, Horse & Water and Converge Marketing.

Australian Wearable Art Festival will return in 2025 with dates set for 8-9 August.

For more information about the festival, please visit www.australianwearableart.com.au

Media contact: Helen Perry, Fresh PR & Marketing | P: 0431 065 964E: helen@freshprm.com.au

Australian Wearable Art Festival 2024 Winners

Supreme Winner sponsored by the Sunshine Coast Council

Winner: Isabelle Cameron from Brisbane – ‘Stardust’

Trashion sponsored by In Noosa Magazine and Hello Sunshine Magazine 

Trashion Winner: Antoaneta Tica from Romania – ‘Sprinkle’

Runner Up: Natalie Hamblin from Queensland – ‘Plastic Rain’

Sustainable Nature sponsored by Argon Law

Winner: Vivien Eardley from Queensland- ‘Tigresa’

Runner Up: Eloise Galea from New South Wales – ‘Shed-Nava’

Floriana sponsored by Fresh PR & Marketing 

Winner: Viera Keogh from Queensland – ‘Homage to Humanity’

Runner Up: Karen Jones from Queensland – ‘Sing Sing’

Avant-Garde sponsored by the DeDeyne Family

Winner: Isabelle Cameron from Brisbane – ‘Stardust’

Runner Up: Viera Keogh from Queensland – ‘Homage to Humanity’

Best Headpiece sponsored by My weekly Preview

Winner: Viera Keogh from Queensland – ‘Homage to Humanity’

People’s Choice sponsored by 92.7 Mix FM 

Winner: Viera Keogh from Queensland – ‘Homage to Humanity’

Emerging Wearable Artist sponsored by Helen Perry and Wendy Roe 

Winner: Suzy Syme and Andrew Costa from Queensland – ‘Reef Rising’

Textile Artwear Publications Winners (who receive editorial coverage in the Textile Fibre forum Magazine):

  • Natalie Hamblin from Queensland – ‘Plastic Rain’
  • Isabelle Cameron from Brisbane – ‘Stardust’
  • Antoaneta Tica from Romania – ‘Sprinkle’
  • Suzy Syme and Andrew Costa from Queensland – ‘Reef Rising’

Brisbane-based artist Isabelle Cameron emerged victorious at this year’s Australian Wearable Art Festival, taking home the Festival’s highest honour for the second year in a row, Supreme Winner, at the gala night held on the Sunshine Coast. The Australian Wearable Art Festival, a collision of art and fashion, concluded its highly anticipated event on Saturday night, showcasing a spectacular display of 38 national and international boundary-pushing wearable artworks. Ms Cameron, whose outstanding crochet piece, entered in the Avant Garde category, ultimately took