Wednesday, October 31, 2012
Doppelganger
This drawing is called Doppelganger and continues the theme of conjoined twins, evolution and humans place within the natural world. It won a Works on Paper prize at the Coraki Art Prize recently
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Thursday, May 17, 2012
The Dragon's Back
We packed up The Dragon's Back show a couple of weeks ago. Tweed River Art Gallery is such a beautiful gallery and has such wonderful staff to help with installation etc. This is one of the pieces which sold called Elements of the Dragon. I modelled parts from the mythical Chinese dragon in stylised form in clay, fired them then used gold leaf.
Thursday, March 29, 2012
Clouds and cauldrons
Thursday, March 22, 2012
The Dragon's Back ii
THE DRAGON’S BACK
In Chinese mythology, it is believed that dragons create clouds with their breath. They have potent and auspicious powers over water, bringing rain, causing floods, controlling the tides. The venue for this show lies at the base of Wollumbin ‘the cloud catcher’, a sleeping volcano, a gently breathing dragon. The clouds around it merge, scatter and disappear in an endless cycle over the ancient landscape. Wollumbin is like Fucanglong, the Chinese ‘hidden treasure dragon’, the underworld guardian of precious stones and volcanoes.
Three artists, Sue Fraser, Ruth Park and Louise Fulton have carved, molded, pressed, sculpted, glazed and fired each object. The work has been slowly made by hand using clay with its history far more ancient and widespread that any other art material. The vessels are based on forms built in universal and ancient metaphors of our human origin, the body as container of wishes and desires.
Contemplating on each artwork is a way to touch an existence beyond us like the first puff of opium when the smoker rides ‘the dragon’s back’. The dragon’s breath gives the explorer the raincoat of invisibility, allowing navigation between heaven and earth. Epiphany comes when the metaphorical essence of the artwork is inhaled. We are a container into which art is poured. We understand and experience one kind of thing in terms of another. Like food and water, we eat and drink at the banquet table of art.
Chinese language is critical to understanding Chinese culture. The nature of the artwork is a creative engagement with China not just a reiteration of traditional Chinese forms and techniques. The ongoing technical connection with celadon, porcelain and cobalt brushwork show these artists are China literate, not resorting to pastiche or appropriation.
The horses have dragon energy and dragon speed. The gourds are spawn of the dragon. The clouds are dragon’s breath. The fangs drip with dragon blood. The jade jars might contain the dragon’s hot ginger pickle. The moon jars have the beauty of imperfection and the lack of self-consciousness of a lunar landscape.
In seeking the dragon, the artist must take risks to find the pearl, to gain a benefit, to be granted a wish. The creative process is making connections, linking different concepts until the elusive pursuit of resolution is accomplished. Completely ephemeral, the ideas in ‘The Dragon’s Back’ are suggestive then evaporate like a summer cloud. Each piece has escaped the bonds of the artist and is unconstrained. Each piece tells of possibilities and explores the exotic. Each work is a piece of our culture, generation and time. It is something inexpressible and of the heart, something to hold and protect because it is indefinable.
21 March to 6 May 2012
Tweed River Art Gallery
Mistral Way, Murwillambah, NSW
Open: 10 - 4, Wed - Sun
Monday, March 12, 2012
Thursday, March 1, 2012
The Dragon's Back
Gearing up for our show, The Dragon's Back at Tweed River Art Gallery opening on Friday 23 March with Sue Fraser and Ruth Park. This wall mounted sculpture is called Fang and is a stylised element of the asian dragon. The embossing on each fang are patterns based on water aspects, that is, steam, waves, snow, clouds and thunder. Ruth has made an enormous work called The Dragon's Back which is shaped like the caldera rim and Mount Warning's eroded volcanic peak.
Monday, January 30, 2012
summer rain
Tuesday, January 10, 2012
Fairytales in fairyland update
A review by Jeanti St Clair was posted on the local ABC site.
"The idea that fairytales can thrive in rural suburbia is an added theme that emerges for Dave Funnell, Rindi Salamon and Louise Fulton. Fulton has produced a series of 3D ceramic maps of Australia to portray different perspectives on the nation's development from the federation era reliance upon the wool industry to today's mining boom, from the anglisised suburb to multiculturalism."
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