Kudos acknowledges and pays respect to the Gadigal and Bidjigal people of the Eora nation. They are the traditional custodians of the land Kudos operates on. We create, design, share, and exchange our work and knowledge on this important meeting place. We pay our respects to elders past and present and extend that respect to any First Nations people who engage with Kudos. This is and always will be Aboriginal land.


AboutResources
Metamorphosis13/06/25 - 18/06/25

Curated by Ada Eni Xu and Lige Qiao featuring Ada Eni Xu, Aurelia King, Charlotte Foster, Lige Qiao

38 Lander St, Darlington

Paper transcends cultural, racial, and religious boundaries, standing as a silent witness to the evolution of human history and thought. Its physicality—its texture, weight, and fragility—imbues it with a unique capacity to record the passage of time. There’s often a disconnect between the art of the paper and what’s viewed as the artwork itself. Much like the Kafkaesque disconnect between the body and the mind, paper restricts the mind within its borders, extracting from the mind marks to be recorded, kept. But its role extends beyond mere documentation; it serves as a testament to change—the change of people and the art they make, but also the change of paper itself, for paper is ephemeral. It records the past, exists in the present and disintegrates into the future. How can paper, then, become the narrative it archives?


































Documentation by Soomin Jeong


Kudos is proudly supported by Arc Creative and Arc UNSW Student Life