Pages


Showing posts with label Artist-in-Residence Geelong Grammar School. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Artist-in-Residence Geelong Grammar School. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 1, 2022

Insects in art



Pictured above: progress views of my current work, Apiary, snapped in my Ballarat studio shortly before its move to the residency studio at Geelong Grammar School. 


Directly below is the work that inspired it. Portrait of a Woman of the Hofer Family, c. 1470, by an unidentified Swabian artist, is a painting that has intrigued me ever since I happened upon it in the National Gallery, London, in 1993. 


At the time the work was made, Swabia included parts of Southern Germany, Switzerland and France. The artist is unknown, as is the identity of the sitter, although we can still discern something of her background. Her jewellery and opulent costume indicate wealth and the text in the top left hand corner, "Geborne Hoferin," translates as "born a Hofer." 



The fly that has apparently landed on the sitter’s otherwise immaculate headdress is a striking  example of trompe-l'œil (French for “deceives the eye”). It lends a decidedly unsettling element to what would otherwise have been a charming, but conventional portrait. In art, flies have long served as symbols of mortality. Nevertheless, the painted insect could be regarded as nothing more than a visual joke, intended solely to trick us into believing a fly has actually landed on the painting. When viewed in combination with the sprig of Forget-Me-Nots held by the sitter, however, the work seems more likely to be a posthumous portrait, commissioned by wealthy patrons in remembrance of the sitter.


Shortly after first discovering the work, I began an Australia Council residency at the Cite International des Arts in Paris. During my three month stay, I made two works in homage to Portrait of a Woman of the Hofer Family, a small linocut, followed by a more detailed oil pastel drawing. From memory, it was fairly close in scale to the painting on which it was based. I included most of the original compositional elements, with one notable exception. In order to personalise the work, I replaced the fly with a bee, a symbol of more personal significance. Deborah is elicited from D'vorah, a Hebrew a word meaning "bee", the symbol of prophecy in Ancient Greece. When combined with the sprig of Forget-Me-Nots, the print and drawing became personal expressions of homesickness. 


Apiary recalls this painting, evoking a similar era and reinstating the bee emblem. It’s a particularly personal work, albeit in an entirely different context, and I was at pains to paint the bee as convincingly as possible. Only after I’d finished, did I realise the bee is slightly too large in scale.


Lately I’ve had some lively conversations with staff and students during my residency at Geelong Grammar School, where I’ve been making the finishing touches to the work. Chris, a staff member who is also a bee keeper, admired my bee, which was somewhat heartening. When I expressed my concerns that the bee was a little oversized, he replied, “Well, it’s your bee!’ And so it is - so it shall stay just as it is. Thank you, Chris!



On the following day, I was discussing Apiary and its influences, including Portrait of a Woman of the Hofer Family, with a group of students. In an uncanny instance of life imitating art, a fly landed on the subject’s painted headdress, right next to my bee. Unfortunately I wasn’t able to whip out my camera quickly enough before the fly moved on to explore other areas of the canvas. You can just spot it nestled in the darker folds of the painted fabric.

Tuesday, May 31, 2022

Odalisque

Currently on the table easel in the Residency Studio at Geelong Grammar School: Odalisque, diptych, acrylic on canvas, a work in progress now very near completion. 

Wednesday, November 11, 2020

Looking forward to…


In this brief follow-up to Looking forward (Blog Post Monday, September 28) are the latest updates on my future exhibitions, most of them originally scheduled for 2020, but postponed until 2021.

The George Collie APW Award Exhibition at the Australian Print Workshop, a joint survey of my prints and those of fellow award recipient, the late Barbara Hanrahan, has now been confirmed for Saturday, 6 March - Saturday, 3 April 2021.


Revised dates for Backstories, my solo show at Stephen McLaughlan Gallery, were also recently confirmed. The exhibition will run from Wednesday, 7 April - Friday, 23 April. The opening event is on Saturday, April 10 2021.


My residency at Geelong Grammar remains penciled in for May 2021, dates TBC.


As previously posted, my solo show at Queenscliff Gallery will run from Sunday, June 3 - Monday, June 21 2021.


Dates for a third solo show, at Gallery on Sturt in the second half of 2021, are still TBC.


The above information may be subject to further changes. Nevertheless, as things gradually open up in this part of the world, it’s heartening to have something more concrete to work towards.


In that spirit, pictured top is my newly completed drawing, Looking forward, 2020, ink and gouache on Khadi paper, 21 x 15 cm.

Wednesday, January 15, 2020

The shape of things to come

Rambling Rose, acrylic on linen, 40.5 x 30.5 cm (progress view) will be part of my solo show, 
Backstories at Stephen McLaughlan Gallery from 15 April - 2 May

2020 is shaping up to be an eventful year, and with some deadlines rapidly approaching, I've already got my head down.

Meanwhile, my work is currently on view in two shows that opened late last year:

Anthropocene 

Anthropocene, the 2019 R & M McGivern Prize, includes my shortlisted watercolour, Phyllium giganteum homo-insecta (2018). Anthropocene is held across two venues: ArtSpace at Realm and Maroondah Federation Estate Gallery
The exhibition concludes on 2 February 2020. 
Maroondah Federation Estate Gallery, 32 Greenwood Ave, Ringwood Vic 3134
Artspace at Realm, Eastland Shopping Centre, 179 Maroondah Hwy, Ringwood Vic 3134

Wonderment 
European Wasp Woman, 2015, watercolour, 41.91 x 29.72 cm
currently on view in Wonderment at Queenscliff Gallery and Workshop

Six of my Homo-insecta watercolours, including European Wasp Woman, pictured above, are part of Queenscliff Gallery and Workshop’s summer exhibition, Wonderment.
The show continues until 23 February 2020.
Queenscliff Gallery & Workshop (QG&W)
03 4202 0942 0438 866 068 A 81 Hesse Street Queenscliff VIC 3225

Festival of the Photocopier 2020

I have a stall at the Sticky Institute Festival of the Photocopier Zine Fair at Melbourne Meat Market. I'm making three new zines especially for the event and a limited number of back-issues of my Moth Woman Press publications will also be available. In the light of the ongoing bushfire crisis, all proceeds from my zine sales will be donated to Wildlife Victoria’s Victorian Bushfire Appeal: https://www.wildlifevictoria.org.au/
Festival of the Photocopier 2020 is a two-day event. I will be participating on the second day, Sunday 9 February from 12 – 5 pm
meatmarket@melbourne.vic.gov.au
Meat Market 
T (03) 9329 9966
3 Blackwood Street, North Melbourne, 3051.
For the best public transport options, go here: https://meatmarket.org.au/about/getting-here/ Please note that the surrounding area has limited permit, metered and timed on-street parking.

Art Aid for Gippsland

I have two works in Art Aid for Gippsland, a mammoth fundraising exhibition and auction organised by Gippsland Art Gallery in support of the 2020 Bushfire Appeal. On the final day of the show, Sunday 15 March, donated works will be auctioned at nearby arts venue, The Wedge, with all profits going to the Gippsland Emergency Relief Fund (GERF). Artworks will be available to view online in February. For additional information and further updates, visit the gallery's website or follow the Gippsland Art Gallery Facebook Page.
Art Aid for Gippsland runs from 14 February - 15 March 2020.
Exhibition: Gippsland Art Gallery, 70 Foster Street, Sale, Vic 3850
Auction: The Wedge, 100 Foster Street Sale, Vic, 3850.

20 [2020]

In 2020 Tacit Galleries turns twenty years old. To mark the occasion, several artists have been invited to make a work for the gallery's anniversary exhibition, 20 [2020]. I’m delighted to be one of them. 
Exhibition dates:  4 - 15 March, 2020. 
Tacit Galleries
M: 0423 323 188 123a Gipps Street (cnr. Gipps/Islington) Collingwood Vic 3066

Backstories
The Other, 2019acrylic on linen, 40.5 x 30.5 cm, will feature in my solo exhibition,
Backstories at Stephen McLauglan Gallery, 15 April - 2 May

In April, my solo show, Backstories, opens at Stephen McLaughlan Gallery in Melbourne. I’ve long admired Stephen and his iconic gallery, which recently celebrated its 25th anniversary. The exhibition comprises recent paintings and works on paper that develop and expand upon the 'rear view portraits' which have been central to my work for over three decades. 
Backstories opens on 15 April and runs until May 2 2020.
Stephen McLaughlan Gallery
T 0407 317 323  E: st73599@bigpond.net.au
Level 8 Room 16 The Nicholas Building 37 Swanston Street Melbourne 3000 (Cnr.  Flinders Lane).

Residency at Geelong Grammar School

I have been invited to be Artist-in-Residence at Geelong Grammar School in Term 2, 2020. Past AIRs include Lewis Miller, Sue Anderson, Dean Bowen, David Frazer, Tim Storrier, Yvette Coppersmith, Juan Ford, Nick Howson, Matthew Quick, Bern Emmerichs, Robert Lee Davis, David Booth (a.k.a. Ghostpatrol) and Godwin Bradbeer. 
The nine-day residency commences on May 11. 

International Printmaking Biennial Douro 2020

My work has been included in the 2020 International Printmaking Biennial in Douro, Portugal
The Douro Printmaking Biennial runs from 10 August – 31 October 2020
www.bienaldouro.com

Animalia Paradoxa 
Plusiotis victorina Beetle Woman, 2015, acrylic on wood, 32 x 30 cm
will be part of Animalia Paradoxa at Queenscliff Gallery and Workshop in November 2020

In November, my solo exhibition Animalia Paradoxa opens at Queenscliff Gallery and Workshop. Drawn from my extensive personal mythology, a collection of 'unnatural history studies' harkens back to a time when folk tales helped us make sense of our lives. In these ancient stories, life on earth was shared with a fine profusion of flora, fauna and exotic mythical creatures, and the border separating humanity and nature was decidedly more blurred. 
Animalia Paradoxa runs through November 2020. 
https://qgw.com.au
Queenscliff Gallery & Workshop (QG&W)
03 4202 0942 0438 866 068 A 81 Hesse Street Queenscliff VIC 3225