Showing posts with label Artist. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Artist. Show all posts

Sunday, September 5, 2010

Introducing Sue Michael - Workshop Participant, Adelaide, South Australia



Sue Michael
Adelaide August 2010

During my childhood, my family travelled extensively across Australia in a caravan. My Grandparents could never travel this far due to work/ farming commitments. I too am like them. It has been 24 years since I have had more than a couple of days travelling across a state border. Those childhood vistas occupy my thoughts even now. This painting ‘Great Divide,’ is inspired by old slides. I have collaged 35mm slides, made tritpography- like images using dual projectors, then finally mixing our family’s slides from the 1960’s and 70’s.with stranger’s holiday snapshots. New landscapes emerged from my experimentations. The eyes stare back.

I must cross those borders once again to visit the earth energies.




My collaboration with Lindi Harris’s image continues the theme of longing to return to the earth energies that I was acutely aware of as a child.

Suitcases will be photographed at various locations around Adelaide.

Lindi’s original image has gone through a few photographic abstractions and been replicated into ‘tiles’. I have covered three suitcases resulting in a French toile feel to these Australian landscapes. Other peoples’ hearts always go with you when you travel. Vessels for these well wishes are supplied with the luggage tags.

The Earth's waters are both boundaries and pathways for peoples, objects and ideas.
Fumio Nanjo

Wednesday, August 12, 2009

Poem by Wendy Grace Dawson (now Allen) in response to "Toss in Greymouth" by New Zealand Artist Colin McCahon

Dialogue with Toss Woollaston and Colin McCahon, written by Wendy Grace Dawson (now Allen)

Performed at The Suter Gallery, Nelson, New Zealand, June 14th and 15th 2002

A collaborative performance with composer Ian MacDonald, cellist Kate Sherwood, Dialogue with Toss Woollaston and Colin McCahon written and performed by Wendy Grace Dawson (now Allen).

This poem and performance is in response to the painting Toss in Greymouth 1959, by Colin McCahon, held in The Suter Gallery Collection, Nelson, New Zealand.

About the Painting and the Performance.

Toss in Greymouth by Colin McCahon (1919-1986) was created in response to a letter by artist friend Sir Tosswill (Toss) Woollaston (1910-1998). Colin McCahon subsequently gave this painting to Toss Woollaston where it hung for many years in the Woollaston family home, until 1984 when it was gifted by Sir Tosswill Woollaston to The Suter Gallery in Nelson.

As research for this poem, I interviewed a friend of Woollaston's who knew the history of this painting - thanks Gurli Hansen for that interview. I also researched material about both Toss Woollaston and Colin McCahon. It was discovered that the text in the painting includes a inconsistency by Colin McCahon from the original letter by Toss Woollaston. Dialogue with Toss Woollaston and Colin McCahon acknowledges and reflects this difference. It was a privledge to have members of the Woollaston family at the collaborative performances held at The Suter Gallery.


Dialogue with Toss Woollaston and Colin McCahon

written by Wendy Grace Dawson (now Allen)

I

Alit on the flax a Tui at dusk.
And broke the late evening open with song.

II

Look at my true New Zealand.

Unpicturesque ordinariness.
Barren empty landscape.

Rounded hills.
Spaces between.

I am dealing with the essential monotony of this land.
A landscape with too few lovers.

Tau cross.
Figure of Toss.
Stands.
A fellow lover of that land.

III

Stormy skies.
Brooding, moody, solemn.
Glimpse of a headland.

Earth wrestling with sky.
Painter wresting with canvas.

IV

Light separating from darkness.
Painting's essential task.

I am the source of the light in this darkend landscape.

Words made clear, and spoken directly to the viewer.
A conversation in paint.

Look at my true New Zealand.
My vision, my invention, my discovery.

V

Alit on the flax a Tui at dusk,
And shot the late evening open with song.


© Copywrite Wendy Grace Dawson 2002

For more information about this painting please check out:
The Earth's waters are both boundaries and pathways for peoples, objects and ideas.
Fumio Nanjo

Thursday, January 29, 2009

Negotiating Boundaries - Australian Art

Negotiating Boundaries

Gates, salt lakes and hallowed ground

Boundaries are present in our lives in diverse ways. They may be natural or man-made, psychological or social. They may have a spiritual significance. Boundaries may be negotiated in diverse ways. This is the domain that Negotiating Boundaries explores.

The region where I, a descendent of first settlers, grew up and now live encompasses Lake Alexandrina and Lake Albert, from Strathalbyn to Milang and Narrung and the northern reaches of the Coorong. Mount Barker is a constant feature of the horizon. For me the lakes region has a profound spiritual atmosphere.

In this region some boundaries are man-made constructions such as gates and fence lines, while other boundaries follow natural forms of waterways, shore lines, salt lakes and horizons. Such forms can become metaphors for boundaries marking colonisation and exclusion. They also become metaphors and suggest transformation.

Around Lake Alexandrina and Lake Albert old farm gates and fences of corroding, battered metal and wire, stand or lean in discomforting elegance. The gate is familiar, yet ambivalent. On one hand the gate constrains and controls, denoting colonisation of land and people, yet it also conveys possibilities of openness and transition. For the Ngarrindjeri nation this country, with its salt lakes, freshwater lakes and the Coorong, is hallowed ground, a spiritual place. 1 In past history, colonisation and control of Ngarrindjeri lands and people was not negotiated. Cross-gates over Coorong country personifies the gate as a sign of authority on one hand while suggesting transcendence on the other.

Today, decomposing man-made boundaries can be a metaphor for new possibilities of negotiation, including cross-cultural exchange and reconciliation. In this collection, Negotiating histories was created in collaboration with artist and Ngarrindjeri elder, Ellen Trevorrow. Suggestions of country are overlaid with rush woven forms, aged found wire, a pair of mapping callipers and a constructed gate symbolising shifts in ownership and relationships. Further works shows Mt. Barker, Wommamukurta - Mountain in the Plain, a site of ancient burial customs of the Peramangk people, with floating veils, weeping or blissful, patterned with disintegrating gates, a token of our mourning and remembrance.

For many people this country with its dark alluvial soils, limestone outcrops and flattened horizons is apparently lifeless and at times dark and foreboding. Yet unexpected flashes of colour at salt lake’s edge, in vegetation and sky denote life. The austere, vast expanse of sky, land, water and sparkling crystalline salt flats emanate a spiritual ambience. While this atmosphere may be sensed in the optimism of dawn or the melancholia of nightfall, it is also evidenced in summer when light-drenched, bleached out surfaces of salt lake and grassland saturate the eye. It becomes a ‘thin-place’. 2 There can be a sense that material life is indeed finite, and the infinite and intimate Other is present. In this context, corroding gates and remnants of fences become metaphors for encountering and negotiating a material-spiritual nexus.

Decorative forms of disintegrating gates leading to Warrenji Station, a Ngarrindjeri place of significance, become reminiscent of universal signs for wholeness. In one series iconic gate fragments levitate over, or lie embedded in, land and roads - disembodied, seemingly benign.

Shimmering salt lakes, round or elliptical, suggest soul forms. In many spiritual traditions salt and light are symbols of a blest life. In works entitled Hallowed ground and Night flight, subtle shifts of light in darkness and floating, often incomplete, salt lake or soul forms, imply that negotiating and crossing material-spiritual boundaries is an uncertain and mysterious process.

The art of conveying such ambiguity can be described in the words of Korean artist, Lee Ufan, as ‘creating relationships between transparent and non-transparent things, making and non-making. Through this process the work comes to incorporate the known and the uncertain’. 3 In Negotiating Boundaries broken layers of colour lie over dark, textured surfaces built up with earth from the region, sometimes deeply scarred, or float on glass. Found wire and metal objects and cast stone are unexpectedly introduced. Some surfaces are salt encrusted and will be subject to change during the life of the work. Further uncertainty is generated in works such as the Borderlands series and Warrenji saltflats - rotating. Here the viewer negotiates boundaries visually. Landscape forms on multiple panels are layered, inverted, reversed, rotated and suggest that landscape, like life, is subject to fragmentation and change. Thus boundaries of gates and fence lines, salt lakes and horizons may be freshly negotiated and evoke new meanings.

This series contains the darkest works in the artist’s oeuvre to date, acknowledging the ominous times we grapple with, where hope is fragile. However, the work affirms that the spiritual may be present in darkness as well as light.

Helen J. Stacey MVA UniSA 1997, MVA (research) UniSA 2004, Associate Royal South Australian Society of Arts, July 2007

1. In Ngarrindjeri Nation Yarluwar-ruwe – Caring for Ngarrindjeri Sea Country and Culture, the Ngarrindjeri Tendi (Council) states, ‘Ngurunderi (the Creator) taught us our Miwi, which is our inner spiritual connection to our lands, water and each other and all living things (this) is passed down through our mothers since Creation’. (p.8) (copies available from Camp Coorong, Meningie)

2. In God, where are you?, Darton, Longman & Todd, London, 1997, Gerard W. Hughes refers to an indigenous Celtic theological notion of ‘thin places’, where the borderland between the material and spiritual world has little substance, a notion with similarities to indigenous Aboriginal theology of land which affirms the spiritual interconnectedness between place and people. (see footnote #1)

3. Ufan, Lee, ‘The Subjects of Sculpture’, The Art of Encounter, trans. Anderson, Stanley N, Lisson Gallery Turner, London, 2004, p.30.

The Earth's waters are both boundaries and pathways for peoples, objects and ideas.
Fumio Nanjo