Showing posts with label textiles. Show all posts
Showing posts with label textiles. Show all posts

Sunday, 21 December 2014

Where birds sing

An exhibition of work by Splinter Contemporary Artists
at Black Anther Gallery
42 Anslow Street, Woodend
Thurs 27th Nov—Sun 21st Dec 2014
Officially opened 6th December 2014
 
 
We celebrate the beauty of all the habitats where birds sing – forest, grassland, garden, wetland, beach. Artists find common links between themselves and these remarkable creatures, birds. Using a range of materials and techniques, we explore their uniqueness, power, beauty and resilience.

In a world which can depress us with its sadness or wound us with its cruelty, we can yet express joie de vivre. And we are reminded to treasure what we have, our environments, our families, our friends, ourselves.
 

 The following text and all images are courtesy of Meg Doller.
Meg gave the opening speech for Where Birds Sing on Saturday 6th December 2014
 
 
Birds have always been fascinating to humans, and especially to artists. Birds have been explored through stories, dance, music, poetry and of course the visual arts throughout history from the ‘Palaeolithic era to the present day.’[i]


We envy them. We envy their ability to fly and their amazing aerial acrobatics which we glimpse in Isabelle’s Brolga Bull Rushes (above left) where the brolgas fly in perfect formation, paper light above a heavy sphere – the earth. We marvel at their performance skills and appreciate their unique singing voices, illustrated joyfully in Kim’s Clarion Call (above right) which celebrates the avian voice and detailed feather patterns.

 
We’re inspired by their artistic flair and inventive use of found items to construct nests – the most functional art. Margaret and Di’s textile based works both utilise the nest form and nest making materials. Di’s use of textiles (above) envelopes us with warmth echoing the safety of the nest.

 Margaret’s textural use of materials (above) present bird, nest and landscape as eternally linked; their nests come from and become part of the landscape in an endless cycle of renewal.
 
 
Janet’s Joy (above) utilises shiny found items, the envy of any magpie, and a very sensual use of clay to create a home and she skilfully pushes the ceramic medium and illustrates the warmth of the wing in Embraced (below left); the transformation of a typically hard and cool to touch material into a warm and comforting embrace is beautiful.
 
We are astonished and heartened by their ability to eke out an existence in incredibly harsh or inhospitable landscapes. Marcus’s painting The Return (above right) explores the passing of time and the capacity for nature to return. Similarly, Kaye’s Endangered Species (below) forces us to consider a future time when humans may find themselves in a very different situation. 

 
Sue’s meticulous exploration of caged animals in Goodbye Blue Sky is contrasted effectively through the juxtaposition of her whimsical piece In The Enchanted Garden (below L-R respectively). We are forced to consider the ethics of caging wild animals as domestic pets. The title of this work is taken from a Pink Floyd song of the same name. Reading these lyrics will add another dimension to the experience of seeing this work.

 
We draw similarities between ourselves and birds by attaching human attributes to different species, as seen in Chris’s portraits (below) in which she has paired prominent women with birds.
 
Women often see themselves as birds supported by our colloquial use of ornithological language. Lynne’s brightly coloured, mixed media pieces (below) present like a forced smile, hiding the reality of her personal situation – a bird in a Gilded Cage.
 
Throughout history, artists have represented birds realistically, exploring, recording and celebrating their unique features. But more commonly, birds act as symbols. Quite possibly the most well-known illustrated bird – the dove - appears spirit like in Amanda’s poignant mixed media work, Time To Fly (below). This work is heavy and full to brimming with tenderness and emotion.
 
Esther’s painting, In The Wake (below), is similarly emotive and conceptually layered; we observe a downcast face and a series of repeated wing like forms and we feel the slow passing of time after an event.
 
Kath’s mixed media piece, Where The Heart Sings (below), presents a layered, interconnected brood of bodies and amorphous forms revealing relationships centred around one bird. This work explores the ability women have for supporting each other to achieve greatness.

 
We appreciate their diversity. In Australia we have close to 900 bird species.[ii]  Their diversity in size, shape, colouration and attributes are matched by the various habitats in which we find them; where birds sing. Linda has created an Overall View (below), a place for birds that is unified by colour, line and shape.

 
Terry’s stylised forest and sea scapes allow us space to imagine ourselves as a bird; we look out of The Gilded Cage to the forest (below right) and the seascape is reflected in our eyes (below left).

And of course in Australia we have a black swan. Bev’s painting Winter Swan (below) highlights the theory of Black Swan events; we see our native swan contrasted against a stark northern winter, a rare event that comes as a surprise.
 
Splinter Contemporary Artists, a flock of contemporary birds from the bush with one handsome rooster from the city, have continued the artistic tradition of exploring birds through contemporary visual arts with tenderness, insight, humour and flair.
Ravens in the Landscape (triptych) by Meg Doller
 
 









 



Friday, 29 August 2014

Beverley Dowd

Splinter Contemporary Artists member for 16 years


From memory what was the first thing you made with your hands?

Growing up in the fifties there was never money for art materials. At home we used the backs of receipt books for drawings. The first object I remember making was in prep when we were given plasticine. It was a hideous brownish-purple colour, but I loved making a den like a cave with little creatures sheltering inside. I was sad to chuck it back into the box when our art session finished. Much later, at TAFE, I carved this woman from Murray Pine. When I’d only just begun, another student, male and very talented, said dismissively, ‘Oh you’re doing Mary and Jesus.’ Annoyed, I then created ‘Woman with duck’!

 

What are you making with your hands right now?

I love painting and drawing most of all. Recently I have been trying the centuries-old technique of oil glazing. It involves an underpainting in black, grey and white followed by up to 15 separate layers of glazing medium made from Damar Varnish, gum turps and cobalt siccative to which is added tiny amounts of colour. It is such a long process as each layer has to dry completely. (I only got to 8 layers!) At present I am having a go at screen-printing and ceramic sculpture with Japanese transfers. Very much a beginner here. 





Why is the art of handmade so important?

Something made by your own hands is a unique expression of yourself and it has a value and an integrity which machine-made things do not. Machine-made things can be very beautiful and where they display the skill of the original designer, they can also be a work of art. But only a handmade piece conveys the intimate connection between artist/craftsperson and audience/user. My mother was a very skilled knitter who took up weaving in her senior years. She wove the wall-hanging pictured, and as I pass it now, many years after her death, I can still see her working at her loom, totally engrossed in the art of handmade.


 

Photographs courtesy of Beverley Dowd, Lynne Hume and Meg Doller.
Beverley can be contacted via
Splinter Contemporary Artists.
See more of Beverley's work at Splinter Contemporary Artists on Facebook.
 
Spread the word! Please recommend our blog and share our Facebook updates


Twitter: @_c_r_a_f_t_ and @Fed_Square
Instagram: @craftvictoria
Hashtags: #craftcubed #craftvictoria
 

Monday, 11 August 2014

Terry Butler

Splinter Contemporary Artists member for approximately ten years.

 
 
From memory what was the first thing you made with your hands?

Being brought up as an only child, I was given, from a very early age, things to draw, paint and glue with. This was to keep me occupied. I used anything I could get my hands on; bits of scrap paper and materials, anything that could be made into something new, I tried.
 
As an artist/craftsperson, my first love was for drawing, design and painting. During my teens I learned to sew. Having studied dress making and drafting in secondary school I designed and made clothes. As I grew older all sorts of crafts came and went but I still had a love of painting and hand craft. Working for a newspaper I was responsible for layout and design in advertising for publications. I produced brochures on a consulting basis for local businesses.
 
On my retirement I decided to take up painting seriously. After tuition with various prominent local artists I had my first exhibition in oils at Mitchelton Winery in 2005. I exhibited there again in 2008 and 2009. I have been a member of Splinter Contemporary Artist for approximately ten years, exhibiting with the group in almost every show during this time. I have also exhibited in the Friends of SAM (Shepparton Art Museum) exhibition every year for the last ten years as well as many local Rotary Art exhibitions.

 


What are you making with your hands right now? Why is the art of handmade so important?

What I am working on at the moment is a crochet baby cot cover for my friend. Her granddaughter is having a girl in August. I have made three rugs so far this year; one for my daughter-in-law, one for a friend and one for my step daughter, all about 160cm square. I find if I am not doing something with my hands of a night when it’s time to relax then I get bored very easily. Wool in the winter is good to work with. The gift of handmade is priceless.
 


All photographs courtesy of Terry Butler.
Terry can be contacted via Splinter Contemporary Artists.
See more of Terry's work at Splinter Contemporary Artists on
Facebook.

 

Spread the word! Please recommend our blog and share our Facebook updates


Twitter: @_c_r_a_f_t_ and @Fed_Square
Instagram: @craftvictoria
Hashtags: #craftcubed #craftvictoria

 

Saturday, 9 August 2014

Sue Reid

Textile artist
 


From memory what was the first thing you made with your hands?

The first thing I can remember making was a dress for my doll Mary, black velvet. I was very ill at the time and I remember the black velvet with hairs and dust on it. When I was well I could not bear to look at it because of the memory of being so ill. This did not stop my love of sewing and I made many more pieces for my dolls and myself in the years to follow.




What are you making with your hands right now?

At the moment I am making two distinctly different applique pieces using fabric, photo imagery, paint and embroidery thread. I have begun a whimsical piece with flowers and birds which a child may love, and I am planning a more structured, mathematical piece based on op art. I love working with fabric. I love pattern, colour (especially orange) and anything mathematical, that’s me.




Why is the art of handmade so important?

Every piece of handmade has so much of the artist in it. Words used to describe the making of a piece include, love, joy, perseverance, immersion of oneself, making mistakes, learning, soul, skill, passion, planning, spontaneity, all of these experienced by the artist at some time. 




Photographs courtesy of Meg Doller and Lynne Hume.
Sue can be contacted via
Splinter Contemporary Artists.

See more of Sue's work at Splinter Contemporary Artists on Facebook.
 
 

 
Spread the word! Please recommend our blog and share our Facebook updates
 
 


 
Twitter: @_c_r_a_f_t_ and @Fed_Square
Instagram: @craftvictoria
Hashtags: #craftcubed #craftvictoria
 


Tuesday, 5 August 2014

Margaret Lawry

Textile artist
 




From memory what was the first thing you made with your hands?

The first thing I can remember was simple stitching with needle and thread.



 
What are you making with your hands right now?

The piece I am working on at present is for a textile exhibition. A beautiful piece of fabric has been given to me by a friend. Some of the pieces being stitched onto the material are heirlooms, stitched by older members of my family and passed down to me.
 

Why is the art of handmade so important?

I have always made and enjoyed making things by hand and this has given me great pleasure. To make things by hand from simple crafts that are not commercial is a good feeling. I particularly enjoyed; paper making from plants, basket making, again from plants, dried, stripped into lengths and then woven, felt making, making ceramics, and embroidery of any sort whether by hand or machine. My art is traditional or contemporary, sometimes blending both.




Photographs courtesy of Meg Doller and Lynne Hume.
Margaret can be contacted via
Splinter Contemporary Artists.
See more of Margaret's work at Splinter Contemporary Artists on Facebook.
 

Spread the word! Please recommend our blog and share our Facebook updates

 

 

Twitter: @_c_r_a_f_t_ and @Fed_Square
Instagram: @craftvictoria
Hashtags: #craftcubed #craftvictoria