Her own business
In the early nineties, Cath co-created Art Park.
“My business partner then was Louise Bickel,” she says, “She and I met, and immediately it was like, ‘Yep, we’re going to take on the world, we’re going to be the Australian ESPRIT studio’, ESPRIT and Benetton were our inspiration in those days. And we worked, we worked so hard. We just had the most incredible time. We had lots of fun, we travelled a lot, we had great women working for us, and we made it very vibrant. There was nothing quite like it at the time. Marimekko had been a major influence in our psyches as such. Marimekko is now high in everybody’s mind. Everybody knows who Marimekko is. But in those days, only those textile crazies knew about it here in Australia.”
Cath and Louise’s hard work paid off, “We would work for the rack traders,” Cath says, “working from all sorts of people from Nike through to Seafolly, Woolworths, Target, Kmart, all the big manufacturers, and then on the side, we would print our own range of fabrics and develop them into homewares. And that really took off.”
Workshops
After a storied career with Art Park and her subsequent company, Prints Charming, these days Cath shares her wealth of experience by running workshops through her outstanding facility, the Happenstore, “I like to evoke joy and freedom in my work,” she says, “and I like to give forward that feeling to everybody out there. Because making is such a joyful process.”
“I’ve known since I was tiny that the mental health benefits of making are enormous. And that’s what I want to bring forward in this time of my life. And that’s what I do through the workshopping process. That’s why workshopping is so important; people can feel the joy and understand that by making something, they can alleviate so much tension and thought processes that may be negative. By focusing on making, you’re completely transported into another world. You’re not thinking about anything else but the beautiful stitches evolving in front of you or the beautiful marks you’re making on your fabric. It’s a really powerful process.”