NEWS: Compound Interest
by James Marten

You might have seen Bec Adamczewski’s beautiful murals about Tasmania. This month she opens Compound, a solo exhibition at Salamanca Arts Centre.
Compound is your first solo exhibition since art school. How did this come about and why now? Over the last 20-or-so years, my creative career has had many seasons; as a graphic designer, a mum, illustrator, object designer, volunteer, design educator, and a muralist! From each of these seasons, I have been fortunate to blend the parts I really love into a career which I adore. While I’ve had work in group shows over the years, there has always been a deep desire to create artworks which tell a story over multiple pieces. In mid-2025 I took the plunge into a new season with a new studio space at Salamanca Arts Centre (the first space of my very own!) and created the body of work for Compound.
What does the title Compound mean to you, and how does it relate to the work inside? The title references the compounding pressures shaping and changing Lutruwita/Tasmania’s environment; climate change, land clearing, and ongoing misuse, along with the compound layers of visual language within each artwork. Organic photographic textures from local habitats are inlaid within the smooth forms of digital illustration; each artwork is a blend of mediums and meaning.
The work sits across illustration and photography. How do those two disciplines interact within this body of work? The ‘in-between’ places have always fascinated me! Where design meets craft, the crossover of art in urban spaces, and how experimenting with different mediums can tell new stories to new audiences. I have always loved botanical illustration and wanted to create work which is a nod to the rich history of scientific art – the art of observation. Reimaging these ideas through digital illustration techniques and adding depth by inlaying photographs, has created a body of work where I celebrate and highlight common, threatened, and endangered local birds, mammals, reptiles, fish, and insects of Lutruwita/Tasmania.
What do you hope people take away after experiencing the show? I hope that Compound is an invitation to slow down and notice the beauty around us and connect with the delicate balance of our unique endemic species, intrinsically linked with their habitats… even jack jumpers can be beautiful!
You also create large-scale murals. Which is your current favourite around town? That is such a great (and tough) question! I would have to say my current favourite is Time and Tide at Blinking Billy Point, Sandy Bay. It was such a fantastic project to work on with TasWater, City of Hobart and Art for the Sea. Time and Tide allowed me the opportunity to mentor two fabulous emerging artists Kate Deane and Shiloh Quilliam, and take part in workshops listening to young people’s views on care for our oceans. I love all the local species we highlighted, loved the teamwork, and loved the location!

