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Transcript of Arts zine may 2016
s t u d i o
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E arts zine issue 15 may 2016
slp studio la primitive
EDITOR
Robyn Stanton Werkhoven
CONTRIBUTORS
Sally Ryan Yosua Aethyrin
Paul Maher Brad Evans
Barbara Nanshe David Graham
Naomi Wild Eric Werkhoven
Dungog by Design Melanie O’Dell
Lorraine Fildes Robyn Werkhoven
Gallery 139 Edmond Thommen
Autumn Fest Len Metcalf
Art Systems Wickham Chris Meredith
Above: Provincial Gothic, oil on canvas, 104 x 63cm
Paul Maher © 2014
Front Cover : Narcissus 2.0 after Carravaggio oil on linen
110 x 80 cm, Winner Kennedy Prize 2014, Sally Ryan © 2016
Issue 15 - May 2016 2
Kenneth Reed AM, oil on linen 120 x 85cm, Finalist Black
Swan Prize 2015, Sally Ryan © 2016
Please do not copy articles in this magazine without
written permission of the Editor.
Copyright © 2015 Studio La Primitive, All rights reserved.
INDEX
Editorial………………………… Robyn Werkhoven 4
SLP Antics………... ………… E&R Werkhoven 5
Featured Artist ………………… Sally Ryan 6 - 19
Poem …………………………… Brad Evans 20 - 21
Featured Artist …………………. Paul Maher 22 - 33
Poetry…………………………… Josua Aethyrin 34 - 41
The Kiribati Project…………… Lorraine Fildes 42 - 53
Poem……………………………. David Graham 54 - 55
Poem……………………………. Melanie O’Dell 56 - 57
3+1 Exhibition………………….. Edmond Thommen 58 - 65
Poem…………………………… Eric Werkhoven 66 - 69
Party Exhibition………………… Barbara Nanshe 70 - 73
Creatives Abroad………………. Barbara Nanshe 74 - 85
Kustom Karz & Kulture……….. Autumn Fest 86 - 95
Dungog By Design ……………………... 96 -101
ART NEWS……………………. 102 -117
Back Cover……………………… Kim Wanless 118
Issue 15 - May 2016 3
EDITORIAL Greetings to all our ARTS ZINE readers for May 2016.
May issue 15 of STUDIO LA PRIMTIVE ARTS ZINE includes interviews with nationally and internationally recognised
artists. Interviews include the award winning portrait artist Sally Ryan talking about her work, and Newcastle artist Paul
Maher.
Lorraine Fildes presents Tungaru - The Kiribati Project, a personal story about identity, climate change and threats to
traditional cultures.
Artists Barbara Nanshe and Naomi Wild talk about their forthcoming exhibitions in Europe - Creatives Abroad.
Don’t miss reading our new essays, poetry, art news and information on forthcoming art exhibitions.
We introduce two poets to our Zine, Melanie O’Dell and Yosua Aethyrin.
The ARTS ZINE features professional Hunter Valley, national and international visual artists, poets and writers, glimpses
into their world of art and their creative processes.
Submissions welcomed, we would love to have your words and art works in future editions in 2016.
Deadline for articles - 15th June for July issue 16 2016.
Email: [email protected]
Regards - your editor Robyn Werkhoven
Issue 15 - May 2016 4
E
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S Eve of April Fool, E&R © 2011 www.studiolaprimitive.net Friday 13th, E&R © 2011
Issue 15 - May 2016 5
SALLY
RYAN
Issue 15 - May 2016 6
SALLY RYAN - INTERVIEW
Portrait Artist - Contemporary Realist.
Sally Ryan is an Australian artist living and working in Sydney. She has been the recipient of many
prestigious art awards. “Sally has a strong commitment to classical drawing and her work reflects a fine
tuned sensitivity to the drama of light and shade, and the heightened effects of photorealism.”
“I paint because beauty matters. Every person on this earth is undergoing, or has undergone,
their own brand of turmoil of which few may understand. Whilst it is impossible for a portrait
artist to simply step into a sitter’s shoes, through the careful scrutiny that a realist work requires,
I seek to unveil the essence of a person’s being and represent it in a way that recognises the
beauty inherent to the human condition.” - Sally Ryan
Opposite page: Story Lines, portrait Michael Caulfield, oil on linen 54x42cm Sally Ryan © 2016
Issue 15 - May 2016 7
California Dreaming
Oil on board 54 x 42cm
Finalist Mortimore Prize
Sally Ryan © 2016
Issue 15 - May 2016 8
“I grew up and was educated in Sydney. I have always gravitated toward creative pursuits but my attraction
to the world of Art has come mainly from a life long enjoyment of drawing, colour and design.
The catalyst that brought me to the road I’m on today occurred in 2008. At the time I was teaching art to
boys at Sydney Grammar Prep School in St Ives. My son, 16, suffered an aneurysm bleed, was hospitalised
and underwent brain surgery. A genetic link was suspected and scans revealed an aneurysm in my brain
and almost as soon as my son had recovered, I underwent surgery too. It was a difficult year. Whilst
recovering from my operation I discovered the Julian Ashton Art School in the Rocks. It was like coming
home. I felt I was meant to be there. All thoughts of returning to teaching quickly disappeared.
Apart from teaching I had also worked in graphic design and as a ceramic artist. Figurative art has always
been of interest to me, and after a period of intensive study and a scholarship year at Julian Ashton I began
working full time as a portrait artist.”
Issue 15 - May 2016 9
Greste’s Mother Waiting for
Peter
Oil on linen
Sally Ryan © 2016
Issue 15 - May 2016 10
“Although I also paint still life and the occasional landscape my work today is predominantly portraiture and I
describe myself as a contemporary realist. With a grounding in classical drawing and painting techniques,
it’s my aim to represent my subjects faithfully.
The incredible talent of other artists, past and present, excites me and I continue to be motivated by the
daily challenge that painting brings. It is also wonderful to feel part of the long tradition of classical painting.
One of the loveliest aspects of portrait painting is meeting interesting people. I have felt especially privileged
to paint a number of such people, including
Professor Michael Morgan – leading neurosurgeon
Michael Caulfield – author, historian and film producer,
Kenneth Reed AM – philanthropist and art collector,
Lois Greste – who campaigned for over a year to have her son Peter released from gaol in Egypt and, in
particular, Dr Catherine Hamlin AC– whose life long dedication to improve the lives of women in Ethiopia
following childbirth injuries is so recognised and admired around the world that she was nominated in 2015
for the Nobel Peace Prize.”
Issue 15 - May 2016 11
Frances Nies
Oil on linen
61 x 84cm
Sally Ryan © 2016
Issue 15 - May 2016 12
“My painting of Dr Hamlin AC, which was a finalist in the 2013 Archibald Prize, is perhaps my most notable
achievement but since 2010 I have been a finalist in a number of national portrait prizes, including the Doug
Moran, Portia Geach, Shirley Hannan, Black Swan and the Kennedy Prize, which I won in 2014.
Internationally I have twice been a finalist in the international ARC Salon and was also honoured to have a
portrait hanging in the Australian Embassy in Washington as part of an exhibition with Portrait Artists
Australia in 2014.
2015 continues to bring new people and new paintings into my studio. I currently have a commission with
the Victorian Parliament, painting the former premier Ted Baillieu. I also have a number of other portraits on
the go that includes both drawings and paintings as well as children and a kitten. Each painting involves
considerable hours of work to reach completion but as one is finished the process of a new one is begun
and added to the group of paintings I am working on.”
Issue 15 - May 2016 13
Dr. Catherine Hamlin AC
Oil on linen 105 x 78cm
Finalist Archibald 2013
Sally Ryan © 2016
Issue 15 - May 2016 14
“My main goal with art is to paint as often and as long as possible, whether it be portraits, still life or
landscapes. It is my intention, for the foreseeable future, to be painting portraits and it is my hope that I will
continue to meet and paint interesting people. Landscape painting offers challenges for the future and I
cherish the moments I get to take myself outdoors with my brushes.
It is also important to me to encourage and support other artists. Painting can be a lonely activity and it is
easy to feel discouraged at times. Painting days with a model and fellow artists in my studio are a lot of fun
and provide a sense art community as well as valuable time painting from life. I enjoy other artists’
exhibitions and occasionally buy art I admire when I can. Promoting the skill and beauty of classical painting
is also a goal and I feel so encouraged by the growing number of Classical Ateliers around the world that
are attracting and producing very talented young painters.”
Issue 15 - May 2016 15
The Defendant
Oil on canvas
44 x 54cm
Finalist Doug Moran
2012
Sally Ryan © 2016
Issue 15 - May 2016 16
Rob Mansfield
Oil on linen 40 x 30cm
Sally Ryan © 2016
Issue 15 - May 2016 17
Issue 15 - May 2016 18
This year I will have paintings in two exhibitions.
The first will be in Melbourne, opening May 1 at the Burrinja Gallery.
The exhibition is titled ‘Women Painting Women’, and includes portrait works of seven
female artists.
The second exhibition will be in Sydney in June at the Danks Street Gallery with
the Shades of Reality Art Group. This will be the fourth annual exhibition for this
group.
http://www.sallyryanartist.com/
Opposite page: Dr Rashpal Singh oil on board, 124 x 94cm , Finalist Shirley Hannan 2012, Sally Ryan © 2016
Issue 15 - May 2016 19
delly - Brad Evans
when blame was in the air
we'd all turn to delly.
Don't ask me why, he wasn't a bad bloke,
it's just that mud stuck to him somehow:
"DELLY!" We'd all shout
and delly would start his protest
and turn to the teacher:
BUT SIR, IT WASN'T ME!
And we'd all shout back:
YES IT WAS, DELLY! WE KNOW IT WAS YOU!
JUST OWN UP, DELLY, DON'T DENY IT!
Issue 15 - May 2016 20
And then he'd slam his schoolbag
on the desk
and shake his head muttering to himself
about another lunch on detention.
I guess he saved teachers
the hassle
of having to find out
who really was at fault
whenever
shit
went down.
- Brad Evans © 2016
Issue 15 - May 2016 21
PAUL
MAHER
Issue 15 - May 2016 22
PAUL MAHER - ARTIST INTERVIEW
Paul Maher has exhibited in the Hunter since 1988, punctuated by an exhibition in Paris in 1999. Following
the 1989 earthquake, Maher’s work was included in Shifting Grounds at the Art Gallery of NSW.
Represented in the Newcastle Art Gallery collection, his mosaics form part of the Lake Macquarie City Art
Gallery Sculpture Park and feature on Beaumont Street, Hamilton. Paul was a finalist in the Kilgour Art Prize
exhibited in Newcastle Art Gallery in 2015.
“Paul Maher is a Newcastle-based artist whose practice centres on suburban landscape painting and
drawing. Paul is a compulsive sketcher, who habitually fills A5 art journals with drawings of suburban
Newcastle life. Through daily drawing expeditions, Paul captures his changing built environment, the antics
of people and their pets in parks within a urban coastal setting. Paul aims to translate the directness of his
drawing style and a familiar Australian landscape into his paintings and iPad drawings.” - Ahn Wells,
Director at Gallery 139.
Opposite page : A Room of One’s Own, mixed media on paper, 58 x 37 cm, Paul Maher © 2015.
Issue 15 - May 2016 23
Silken Girls Bring
Sherbet
Oil on canvas
130 x 130cm
Paul Maher © 2015
Issue 15 - May 2016 24
When did your artistic passion begin?
“I always loved drawing from a very young age. It was the thing I did and it often got me out of trouble. I
changed high schools in Year 11 to do Art because in those days not all schools offered it as a subject. From
there I went straight from school to art school”.
Describe your work?
“I believe as participants in culture we need art to stimulate our minds before our senses. As an artist I try to
trigger something from our collective memories or personal experiences before engaging or disturbing the
senses.
My art could be categorised as figurative expression. Primarily it is 2 dimensional: - painting, drawing and
printmaking and contains elements of naivety in terms of representation and traditional pictorial conventions.
In spite of formal training, this aspect of my work has become more prominent in my recent work.”
Issue 15 - May 2016 25
Issue 15 - May 2016 26
Up and Under, oil on canvas, 163 x 143cm, Paul Maher © 2015
What inspires you?
“What has consistently kept art-making fresh for me over the past 20 years is the energy in my work that
comes from drawing from life. Whether it’s the figure or the landscape, my work seems to retain a
spontaneity by drawing from what’s in front of me. It leads to mistakes and invention because I’m trying to
get things down quickly before it or my vision changes. I’m also attracted to spaces and structures on a
grand scale. Like the harbour from a high viewpoint or the hillside in my recent work which dramatizes the
scale of the urban landscape”.
Name your greatest achievement, exhibitions?
“Probably my biggest achievement is to be still making art 35 years after first going to art school. That’s
probably the hardest thing, to stick to it regardless of competing priorities. Some of the high points over that
time are taking a large body of work to exhibit in Paris in 1999 through the l'Association Culturelle
Franco-Australienne. It was also great for my work to be made part of the Newcastle Art Gallery’s collection
in 1998 and to be hung as a finalist in the Kilgour Prize last year.”
Issue 15 - May 2016 27
A Room of One’s Own
Oil on board
182 x 81cm
Paul Maher © 2015
Issue 15 - May 2016 28
What are you working on at present?
“I am making a number of larger paintings that have grown out of recent works on suburban coastal
landscapes. They are also derived from social observations I’ve made from visiting and drawing in the
public space and they look at the psychological implications of the lone figure verses the group in the
landscape.”
Your future aspirations with your art?
“I want to make good images that are relevant to our time. I also want to make well-constructed images;
that’s both compositionally and by way of painterly technique. I would also like to be able to keep doing this
for some time.”
Forthcoming exhibitions?
“I am currently working on an exhibition scheduled for May at the Depot Gallery in Waterloo with two other
Newcastle painters, Peter Lankas and Dino Consalvo organised through Ahn Wells at Gallery 139. It is
great to be included in this show with such adept painters.”
Issue 15 - May 2016 29
Hatchback Headland
Oil on canvas
126 x 83cm
Paul Maher © 2014
Issue 15 - May 2016 30
Other interests?
“One of my interests is listening to podcasts in the studio. I painted some of the central paintings from my
last show at Gallery 139 in November last year listening to podcasts about the Royal Academy’s summer
exhibition on Diebenkorn. Not that these podcasts influenced my work stylistically, but it’s instructive to
listen to discussions about how an artist struggled with the art making process. I like that it connects me to
what is happening in another part of the World. I listen to a lot of Guardian short story podcasts too.
My favourites at the moment are The Centaur by Jose Saramago and The Beauties by Anton Chekhov.”
- Paul Maher © 2016
Issue 15 - May 2016 31
Provincial Gothic, ceramic H 35cm, Paul Maher © 2014 Samantha Armytage, ceramic H 35cm, Paul Maher © 2014
Issue 15 - May 2016 32
Paul Maher in his studio - photo courtesy of Ahn Wells
http://paulmaherart.com/ Issue 15 - May 2016 33
Yosua Aethyrin
Yosua Aethyrin, poet and humanitarian.
Yosua’s poetry has strong social and
philosophical content, with penchant for the
irreverent and the surreal.
He has been published in Canada, America
and Australia and the UK in magazines and
E-zines and limited production booklets
published from 1990s through up until 2006.
Issue 15 - May 2016 34
Gold - Yosua Aethyrin
For so long
I grasped for understanding.
In time
the tension had relaxed
into some sad ache.
I would hold her
calm
consider
contemplate
and quest.
I have maps
of consciousness,
flow charts
of considerations
and an index
of related emotions
and events
arranged in rainbow flavors
and ascending order of engagement
Issue 15 - May 2016 35
It remained
folded
pressed
packed
and ready
for some mysterious departure.
The latches worked
and I had oiled the hinges
and waxed the leather
but the contents were dry
and bundled
like stone newspaper
with faded engrams
of echoes,
of past,
of foreign scripting,
and obscured
with a delicate
fine brown
wax paper
and vinegar.
Issue 15 - May 2016 36
There were some curious odds and ends between the neat rows
but the bulk of the sun sepia
pressed and flattened wardrobe
of these pasts
were never anything but dream images of a fathers
acknowledging gaze, notions of patriarchal concerns,
a scorned
forlorn
downward turned
blinkered frown
of the sunlight,
and an impossible riddle
of contempt
and self denial
or loathing.
A mothers tears.
A maidens pillow,
and
an impossible passable Demeter
of a metronome heartbeat.
Issue 15 - May 2016 37
Azure skies would wrent and tremble with the shuddered quiver of her tears
Of her denial,
Of her avoidance,
and the waltz of tea cups
in garish Halloween
sun bleached
bone china
Christmas teacups
for every season.
A pipe.
Cherry red
a smoldered ember
of the dying dreams of war
to swing time anthems ,
big band
floozy woozy
woo hoo hoosies blues.
Thunder crash
this tower into an thousand crystal shards.
Issue 15 - May 2016 38
This impossible princess ,
No more.
Too late.
Too much.
Too tired.
Too sick.
Too totally wiped out
so that every concern,
every missed gesture of kindness,
every unseen thought
of loving compassion,
every pure motive,
was lost
missing to the wayside
of some
war to end all wars superhighway,
Throbbing
with a cabaret snare drum slur
and resounding
with a trombone wha wha wha ,
Issue 15 - May 2016 39
I love Lucy
with her one chance
at the big show
and the funky wonky bugle boy of company G
or the honky tonk bordello craps alley
of the piano man
that didn't start the fire.
No smoke on the water.
No purple haze.
No floating mountains
with their faces in the sun.
No credence
and never again
a clear water revival.
This torrent,
this flash flood off the red desert
has to come
and wash away our burning beds.
She folds the sepia stone newspaper wardrobe back into
its tasteful cherry leather suitcase
and rests her foggy head upon it
Issue 15 - May 2016 40
in the levy gutters
by the shrubs
and bushes ,
on the wayside
of this rusty
ironed
bloody flood.
She'll be right.
She'll Be right.
Hush.
Don't be afraid.
She'll be right.
Mother Mary.
Mother of god.
Sweet Jesus.
Sweet lord,
She'll be right.
Shhh - Yosua Aethyrin © 2015
Issue 15 - May 2016 41
Tauranga Art
Gallery Tungaru: The Kiribati Project
Lorraine Fildes
Issue 15 - May 2016 42
Tauranga Art Gallery
Tungaru: The Kiribati Project
A personal story about identity, climate change, and threats to traditional cultures.
The Kiribati Project is a collaboration between contemporary New Zealand artists, Chris Charteris and Jeff
Smith. The show incorporates sculpture, photography and interactive video. Tungaru is the pre-colonial
name for Kiribati.
Travel always offers up surprises and on my last trip, a cruise around New Zealand, did just that – I saw an
exhibition relating to Kiribati. We know that climate change is causing sea levels to rise and this is affecting
low lying islands and the nation of Kiribati is the most affected by this. Kiribati will probably not be visible in
the next century – it will be submerged. I will give you a brief history of the islands that make up this nation
and also a map to show where the islands are situated. From this you can understand why it is important
that projects like Kiribati have been promoted. It is one way in which the culture of this island nation may
be carried into the future - perhaps in the territory of another nation.
Opposite page :The mat is woven with pandanus leaf and decorated with designs made up of lines of small circular discs of coconut,
interspersed between others made of glittering pearl shell.
Issue 15 - May 2016 43
Curving its way above and below the equator, the Republic of Kiribati (keer-ə-bahss) comprises 33 coral
islands divided among three island groups: The Gilbert Islands, the Phoenix Islands, and the Line Islands.
All of the islands are atolls (ring-shaped islands with central lagoons) except for the island of Banaba in the
Gilbert Islands which is a raised limestone Island. Of the 33 islands of Kiribati, 21 are inhabited. They have
a total land area of 800 square kilometres and are dispersed over 3.5 million square kilometres. Their
spread straddles the equator and the International Date Line, although the Date Line is indented to bring
the Line Islands in the same day as the rest of the Kiribati Islands. The permanent population is just over
105,711 (July 2015 est.) over half of whom live on Tarawa Atoll. Most of the population is concentrated in
the Gilbert Islands and only one of the Phoenix Islands (Kanton Island) is inhabited and only three of the
Line Islands are permanently inhabited. The capital of Kiribati is Tarawa, an atoll in the Gilbert Islands.
Map of the Republic of
Kiribati
Issue 15 - May 2016 44
Now it is time to examine the works in the exhibition. First we will look at the contemporary works of sculpture and applied
art by Chris Charteris, created with materials and techniques inspired by the traditions of his Kiribati heritage. The largest
and most impressive of his works is called Te Ma. It is a curving palisade construction of 8,000 Ringed Venus shells
collected from his local beach in Coromandel, New Zealand. Kiribati communities built monumental heart-shaped coral fish
traps in their lagoons and this is what Chris first saw on his flight into Kiribati.
Issue 15 - May 2016 45
Kiribati was first settled by early Austronesian-speaking peoples long before the 1st century A.D. Fijians and
Tongans arrived about the 14th century and subsequently merged with the older groups to form the
traditional Kiribati Micronesian society and culture. The islands were first sighted by British and American
ships in the late 18th and early 19th centuries, and the first British settlers arrived in 1837. A British
protectorate since 1892, the Gilbert Islands became a Crown colony in 1915–1916. Kiritimati (Christmas)
Atoll became a part of the colony in 1919; the Phoenix Islands were originally under the care of the USA but
were added to the British colony in 1937. The Line Islands, a chain of eleven atolls were claimed by the
USA under the Guano Islands Act. But eventually eight of the islands were given by the USA to form part of
the Republic of Kiribati, while the other three islands remained the territory of the USA. The Republic of
Kiribati, became independent on 12 July 1979 but it was not until The Treaty of Tarawa was signed shortly
after independence and ratified in 1983, that the USA relinquished all claims to the sparsely inhabited
Phoenix Islands and those of the Line Islands that are part of Kiribati territory.
Issue 15 - May 2016 46
“Yes, maybe someday”
Photo by Jeff Smith
The heart shaped coral fish trap is what Chris Charteris would have seen from the air and incorporated into his sculpture “Te Ma”.
Issue 15 - May 2016 47
These mats are woven with pandanus leaf and decorated with designs made up of lines of small circular discs of coconut,
interspersed between others made of glittering pearl shell.
Issue 15 - May 2016 48
Tarawa Atoll and others of the Gilbert group were occupied by Japan from 1941 to 1943 during World War II.
The expulsion of the Japanese in late 1943 involved one of the bloodiest battles in US Marine Corps history.
Marines landed in November 1943 and the Battle of Tarawa ensued. Further military incursions into the
colony occurred in the late 1950s and early 1960s when Christmas Island was used by the USA and Britain
for nuclear weapons testing including hydrogen bombs. These Island people have had a hard life and now
their very existence is threatened by the increased sea levels resulting from climate change.
In June 2008, Kiribati officials asked Australia and New Zealand to accept Kiribati citizens as permanent
refugees. From what I have read refugee status at present has been refused. Kiribati is expected to be the
first country to lose all its land territory to global warming. In June 2008, the Kiribati President Anote Tong
said that the country has reached "the point of no return." He added, "To plan for the day when you no
longer have a country is indeed painful but I think we have to do that.“ In early 2012, the government of
Kiribati purchased the 2,200-hectare Natoavatu Estate on the second largest island of Fiji, Vanua Levu.
In April 2013, President Tong began urging citizens to evacuate the islands and migrate elsewhere.
It is hoped that projects like the one I saw in Tauranga Art Gallery in New Zealand will help this nation keep
their culture alive even if they lose their islands to sea inundation.
- Lorraine Fildes © 2016.
Issue 15 - May 2016 49
Middle photo: Coconut is a material used strongly throughout the project, a fibre that binds Kiribati culture together. This
explains the title of a circular wall work “Te Nii” – the giver of life. It is comprised of half coconut shells, stripped of their hair
but for central stripes, and linked by coconut fibre string .
Left photo: Te kaibangaki te kora – coconut fibre string cross.
Right photo: Another object particular to Kiribati culture is the shark tooth-edged coconut wood sword. Charteris has created
his own version of the sword employing fan palm, called “Bwebwerake”, meaning new growth.
Issue 15 - May 2016 50
Film maker and animator Jeff Smith documented their time in Kiribati and has created digital works with interactive
elements. At the bottom of the left hand photo you can see 3 of my fingertips. As I moved my hand over the machine in
front of the video screen it caused fish like images to move across the screen and explode in beautiful colourful formations.
Issue 15 - May 2016 51
The above photos: Another interactive work by Jeff Smith - In Te tia Buaka ni Kiribati, Smith has animated Charteris’s
uncle Baia and friend Unnang, wearing traditional Kiribati suits of armour. When visitors move in front of the projected
images, the warriors mimic their actions. This photo is by Sam Hartnett and was on the following website
http://www.tautai.org/tungaru-the-kiribati-project/#prettyphoto[group]/5/
Following are two photos showing me interacting with the suit of armour. My arm is up in both as I am taking the photos.
Issue 15 - May 2016 52
Left photo: “Te Mauri” (Good Health)
Coconuts play an incredibly important part in the Kiribati society, hence you could say good health depends on the bountiful
supply of coconuts on the islands.
Right Photo: “ I-Tungaru” (People of Tungaru)
The Christian church played an important part in the colonial history of The Gilbert Islands and now in the life of the
Republic of Kiribati. The first schools were started by the churches but are now being taken over by the Government.
Photographs courtesy of Jeff Smith © 2016. All Rights Reserved
Issue 15 - May 2016 53
Succulent
- David Graham
gramercy this morning
plant on the sill
the winds are waning
an older soldier’s singing
signs of delay
only a second
the buildings have shaken
neighbours have left
gain demolished their home
Issue 15 - May 2016 54
and at the foundation
layers of past
exhumed for the moment
the steamroller rumbles
plowing pinpricks
sowing families
the sun also rises
birds are crying
dust falling glumly
but you just keep growing
still and silent
plant in the window
- David Graham © 2016
Issue 15 - May 2016 55
Melanie O’Dell
Melanie O’Dell is a poet and writer from Newcastle -
“ I began writing mid last year. It all began with writing
poems to entertain and make people laugh.
I performed live at stand up comedy nights locally in
Newcastle and poetry reading nights such as Word
Hurl Anti-slam. Since then, my style is progressively
moving towards shedding light on how society operates
and how desperately some aspects of 'humanity' need
to change.” - Melanie O’Dell © 2016.
Self portrait - Melanie O’Dell
Issue 15 - May 2016 56
‘You look nice’
It's time,
time for a shift.
Celebrate your fellow females
present them with a gift;
a gift of gratitude
rather than a measly 'you're pretty' comment...
It's time we praised intelligence - that's damn certitude.
- Melanie O’Dell © 2016
Issue 15 - May 2016 57
3+1 Photographic Exhibition 3 - 22 May 2016
Opening Night Saturday 7th May 4-7pm
@ gallery one88 fine arts Katoomba • 188 Katoomba Street
CHRIS MEREDITH LEN METCALF EDMOND THOMMEN
Issue 15 - May 2016 58
3+1 Three photographers, one model one photoshoot.
Three Sydney photo-artists, Chris Meredith, Len Metcalf and Edmond Thommen invite you to view “3+1” -
an exhibition of images from an art-nude photoshoot with three photographers and one model.
The shoot took place on a sunny Monday morning in December 2015 near Cronulla with an internationally
acclaimed fine-art model. The three took turns to direct the model and create their work - sometimes calling
on each-other to assist or advise on a particular set-up. Whilst the three had never worked together in this
way before, they all knew each-other and had worked individually with the model, so there was a relaxed
and supportive atmosphere throughout.
Photographers normally prefer to work alone but chose to collaborate on this occasion so that they could
encourage and push each-other creatively both on the shoot itself and during the post production process.
The exhibition reveals that the three photographers represent their subject in vastly different ways. The
images cover the full spectrum of styles from monochrome fine-art through to contemporary almost abstract
interpretations of the female form.
The artists hope that visitors will enjoy not only the images and the spectrum of creative styles but also
challenge themselves to consider how they choose to portray their subject when they take a photograph.
Issue 15 - May 2016 59
http://www.christophermeredith.com.au
CHRIS MEREDITH
Issue 15 - May 2016 60
Chris Meredith Natural Curves
Meredith takes his inspiration from the natural patterns and shapes that occur in nature and the curves of
the female form.
Figure nude studies are combined with semi-abstract close-ups of waves, ripples, rocks etc to generate
images that are designed to be both instantly pleasing and challenging at the same time.
When working alone, Meredith works with his models underwater, so as to achieve shapes and poses that
wouldn’t normally be achievable on land. As this was a collaborative project and very much on-land, many
of the figure studies have been paired with patterns of ripples or waves to maintain a sense of natural
fluidity and movement.
Comments Meredith “I want viewers to explore my images and find something new each time they return.
For me, the perfect result is when I’ve created an image that delivers a new dimension that goes beyond the
combined effects of patterns from nature and curves of the body”
Previous exhibitions by Meredith include “H2O” (Underwater nudes) and “Mermaids of Balmoral” (which
reveals the results of a fantasy scientific study into the mermaids that inhabit the skies above and waters
below Balmoral beach).
Issue 15 - May 2016 61
Len
Metcalf Naked Landscapes
Issue 15 - May 2016 62
Len Metcalf Naked Landscapes
relationships with nature
Flesh and stone. Nude, naked, stripped bare. Natural untouched environments. Humanity respecting and
worshiping Gaia. Humility for our bountiful, yet threatened mother nature.
In these works Len Metcalf explores our spiritual connection with the natural world. He finds great peace
and spirituality from this connection. Fearful of humanity’s loss of connection with nature, he searches for
reconnection. Exploring beauty in its purest forms. Finding peace again in mother nature.
Len has been photographing for as long as he can remember. Creating paper based works of art is his
passion. Len teaches photography and continues to immerse himself in incredible natural vistas, camera in
hand, in search of beauty.
http://www.lensschool.com
Issue 15 - May 2016 63
EDMOND
THOMMEN
Blended Nudes
Issue 15 - May 2016 64
Edmond Thommen Blended nudes
Edmond Thommen describes himself first, and foremost, as a Photographic Artist. For him the magic starts
with the camera and his photographs.
The female figure forms the basis of his artworks. They may soften or highlight the body’s outline by
blending it into several layers of images he superimposes on the figure. Sometimes the figure seems to
disappear behind a barrage of organic materials or man-made structures - until the viewer’s eyes start to
actively search for the lines that in his or her mind “must be there” behind the scene.
His work is “layered” and is visually and intellectually demanding on the viewer to find the form.
In doing so, viewers delve beyond the surface. Indeed, Edmond’s photographic artworks encourage us to
look; and, if we look properly, ‘to see.’
http://www.thommenart.com.au
Issue 15 - May 2016 65
Collaborative drawing
Eric & Robyn Werkhoven
Lovers with Sculpture.
Issue 15 - May 2016 66
ERIC WERKHOVEN POEM
Drawing Together.
We draw these pictures of people.
We draw these lovers floating in a blue sky.
Gestures where the hands drop gifts.
And eyes not clouded over from the wear and tear of the struggle,
which is both an earthly and cosmic dance.
Where two lovers meet, and love one another intimately,
like drawing water out of a deep well, for the children to drink.
Raise up to the many tunes of creativity and passion that lays submerged,
because love needs to be protected.
Issue 15 - May 2016 67
Collaborative drawing
Eric & Robyn Werkhoven
Lovers with Skull.
Issue 15 - May 2016 68
We draw these people to fill one page after the other.
Some afternoons the floor is covered with their celebrations.
And we graciously collect them, to work on them later.
Lovers caught in an embrace, seeking shelter in the murmuring heartbeat.
Stroking the paper skin.
No need to erase all those lines, but for a few smudges of labour
that reconnects us to the piquant world.
Our love flowing out towards these joint stages of becoming whole,
to prolong the gesture where two hands touch each other.
- Eric Werkhoven © 2016
Issue 15 - May 2016 69
THE PARTY EXHIBITION 4 - 28 MAY
NANSHE GALLERY 148b Beaumont Street, Hamilton, NSW.
Opening Hours: 9am - 5pm Wed to Fri 9am - 3pm Sat or by appointment ph.0477 505 332
http://nanshestudiogalleryshop.com.au/
Issue 15 - May 2016 70
THE PARTY EXHIBITION
The Party is an exhibition celebrating the beginning of the 5th year at Nanshe studio Gallery at 148b
Beaumont Street, Hamilton. The exhibition, like all others in the gallery, celebrates the work of local artists.
They include both emerging and established artists as well as a Novocastrian now living in my birthplace of
Tasmania. The figure, which seems to have made a recent comeback in popularity, fits easily in all styles
and modes of expression-classical to post modern, realism to abstraction and pop. The figure will be the
main subject of “The Party” . The artists Mal Cannon, Robyn Werkhoven, Lydia Miller, Kim Waneless, Tony
Langford, Maureen Smythe and Christine Frogley all have their different styles which should prove to be a
good mix to express the feelings of the group phenomenon. We have all experienced The Party whether or
not we enjoyed the event. There is something which attracts us to images of the human experience, the
human condition. It excites me that there will ultimately be a connection to the image because people can't
help to relate and associate with the experiences that the artist brings to us about ourselves. - Barbara
Nanshe © 2016.
Issue 15 - May 2016 71
THE PARTY
EXHIBITION
4 - 28 MAY
Mal Cannon
Robyn Werkhoven
Lydia Miller
Kim Wanless
Tony Langford
Maureen Smythe
Christine Frogley
The Send Off, acrylic on canvas 30x 30 ins, Mal Cannon
Issue 15 - May 2016 72
Gather, ink scraffito on chromololux card 42 x 29 cm, Kim Wanless © 2016
THE PARTY - Official Opening - Thursday 5th May 5.30pm
NANSHE GALLERY 148b Beaumont Street, Hamilton, NSW.
Opening Hours: 9am - 5pm Wed to Frid 9am - 3pm Sat or by appointment ph.0477 505 332
Issue 15 - May 2016 73
Issue 15 - May 2016 74
Creatives Abroad -
Barbara Nanshe and Naomi Wild
Creatives Abroad -Barbara Nanshe and Naomi Wild-Under the Dreaming Newcastle. London. Berlin.
Barbara Nanshe and Naomi Wild are local entrepreneurs, business women and artists who have
organised 3 exhibitions of their work this year of mixed media images; sculpture and Jewellery.
The exhibitions will begin on the 27th of April for one week in Newcastle at Nanshe studio gallery.
The second on the 30th of August for one week in London at The Chelsea Gallery; and the third on the 7th
of September for two weeks in Berlin in Neukolln at Reuterstrausse 53. The artists have built a crowd
funding campaign through the Australian Cultural Fund. The campaign is active to raise money for the
transportation of the artists and their work abroad, until June 2016. They are hoping to raise $8,000 and
form a community interested in their journey and connections abroad.
Issue 15 - May 2016 75
Community Engagement
Since the Earthquake of 1989 and the closure of BHP in 1999, Newcastle has struggled under the weight of derelict buildings and
mass unemployment. The artists feel akin to Berlin as even though the experiences of devastation are quite different, the outcomes
have been very similar. Art has become the language of a community rebuilding and redefining itself. Individual creativity is the
microcosm of that definition.
Both artists have involvement in the rebuilding and enriching of their local community through art practise. Barbara Nanshe has
founded an art space in Hamilton for local emerging and established artists to exhibit their work. As the artists build their individual
art language, they make place for other artists to build and engage in their own.
Through the proposed exhibitions and workshops and by transporting their individual creativity abroad Nanshe and Wild will
contribute to the language of others and immerse themselves in a vibrant art culture to inform, contribute and experience firsthand,
art that has allowed another community to thrive. The immersive nature of their engagement allows them to share their vision and
expertise through a residency style platform and connect Newcastle’s art movement to other parts of the world.
Under the dreaming
Women have dreamed for centuries of a place in their own land. They are the creators yet have worked traditionally within the
parameters of male centric cultures. This body of work draws upon the strengths of women and how they are aligned with the spirit
of creation. Under the Dreaming speaks of preparedness, via a visual medium, to conjure strength for what is to come and honour
for what still remains. Barbara Nanshe and Naomi Wild draw from universal symbology; the wild earth; the sky and the psyche to
produce powerful work that speaks to men and women alike.
Workshops will be offered abroad to engage the community. The workshops presented by Nanshe and Wild will facilitate a place to
belong through exploration of the self with use of symbolism and the weaving technique. Many of the references will come from the
artists’ work in the Exhibition.
Issue 15 - May 2016 76
Barbara Nanshe
Barbara Nanshe is an artist who uses sculpture and jewellery design to speak of her interest in the environment and the human condition.
Under the Dreaming umbrellas the use of symbols to form a language that speaks of the attachment of psyche and environment, connectivity
through existence and expenditure of energy.
Barbara makes reference to the natural world, women’s anthology and the power of the elements in much of her work.
Weaving is an ancient art often carried out by women in the presence of other women for the community. Barbara believes that community
cohesion can be produced through communal activity. This belief is represented by her use of the technique to make divining dolls and spirit
forms from recycled copper and silver wire and enamelled copper wire. Barbara includes semi - precious stones, crystals, wood and natural
animal based materials of shell, bone and coral to place and anchor each energy represented.
Drawing with wire Nanshe defines space, and represents place. She symbolically positions the spirit within the environment for the conductivity
of energy to begin. Since energy is her focus each spirit doll can be removed from place and worn against the skin.
Adornment plays a big role in connecting the environment with the psyche. Barbara builds on this concept by combining her Deva Dolls with
beads and other objects to create pieces which can be readily worn for empowerment and presence.
Left: Earth and Water Copper, Crystal,
Enamelled copper 2015
Right: Dancing Through the Cosmos
Copper, horn, Crystal, Jasper, Carnel-
ian, Magnesite, New Jade, recycled
glass Sterling Silver 2015
Issue 15 - May 2016 77
Deva Dolls - Barbara Nanshe 2015/16
Made from recycled copper wire, with Enamelled copper wire,
Swarovski Crystal, Vintage brooch parts, Garnet
Smallest 3cm wide by 6 cm tall Largest 6cm wide by 13cm tall
Barbara Nanshe – Under The Dreaming
Issue 15 - May 2016 78
Left: Atlantis Washed by Sea
Wall Piece 2015
Made from recycled copper wire,
Magnesite (dyed),
Chrysoprase, Azurite
24cm wide by 30 cm tall
Right: Doll from Look Within
Made from recycled copper wire,
Magnesite (dyed),
Telecommunications wire
Enamelled copper, Vintage
Button and Swarovsky Crystal
6cm wide by 13 cm tall.
Barbara Nanshe – Under The Dreaming
Issue 15 - May 2016 79
Naomi Wild – Under The Dreaming
‘Warrigal Dance’
Mixed Media- Eucalypt & indigo dyed textile, shibori resist, ochre paints, lino print, free machine stitching. 2015
Issue 15 - May 2016 80
Naomi Wild
Naomi Wild is a mixed media artist whose creative work is an extension of the relationship she has
with the land. Her work draws upon plants for dyes and rocks and minerals for paints, all of which she
collects herself.
Her imagery is full of references to native Australian wildlife and the symbolic relationship between the
creatures, land and spirit of the artist.
Each piece is a rich textural experience as the layers of dyed and painted natural fibres are then
overprinted with lino and ‘drawn’ on with free machine stitching. This very unique collaboration of
techniques is the pulling together of Naomi’s artistic career. She returns to a symbiotic relationship
between her inner and outer landscapes, always exploring the personal myth amongst ancient story and
even more ancient country.
Naomi works from a Jungian perspective, always using the creative process to explore, enhance and where
needed, to heal her human experience. The formation of each work is heavily imbued with these processes
and the works themselves seem to impart some of this medicine to the viewer. There is a shamanic flavour
to the work that has the ability to connect the audience with the energy from which it is made.
Issue 15 - May 2016 81
Naomi Wild – Under The Dreaming
Wattlebird
Mixed Media- Eucalyptus & indigo dyed textile, ochre
paints, lino print, free machine stitching. 2015
‘Peace’
Mixed Media- Natural Fibres, Eucalypt & indigo dyes,
Hand ground ochre paints, free machine stitching. 2015
Issue 15 - May 2016 82
Naomi Wild – Under The Dreaming
Breathe of Kianga
Mixed Media- Eucalyptus & indigo dyed textile, ochre
paints, lino print, free machine stitching. 2015
Kookaburra Healer
Mixed Media- Eucalyptus & indigo dyed textile, ochre
paints, lino print, free machine stitching. 2015
Issue 15 - May 2016 83
Nanshe and Wild
Media:
www.creativesabroad.squarespace.com
www.instagram.com/creatives_abroad/
www.facebook.com/Nanshe-Wild-Creatives-
Abroad-431720050286251
www.nanshestudiogalleryshop.com.au
www.instagram.com/nansheandgallery/
www.facebook.com/nanshestudiogallery/
Issue 15 - May 2016 84
Barbara Nanshe and Naomi Wild, photo courtesy of Nanshe Gallery.
Crowd Funding Campaign:
https://australianculturalfund.org.au/projects/under-the-dreaming/
Please join our campaign.
Issue 15 - May 2016 85
FRIDAY NIGHT MAY 6TH,
SATURDAY MAY 7TH &
SUNDAY MAY 8TH
2016
MAITLAND SHOWGROUND
MAITLAND, NSW
Issue 15 - May 2016 86
DAVID LOZEAU at AutumnFest Muertos Down
under Tour 2016
HOT ROD WALT at AutumnFest
Meet Walt and get your favourite piece Pinstriped
Walt has been Gretsch Guitar approved and will available to create
something special for you!
GAV BLACK - art
Issue 15 - May 2016 87
DAVID LOZEAU
Issue 15 - May 2016 88
David Lozeau
David Lozeau is an American artist and children's book writer who has achieved media recognition
principally for his paintings and exhibits relating to the Day of the Dead.
Based in San Diego, California, Lozeau is part of a modern art movement that depicts skeleton characters
as if they were alive. His paintings also pay tribute to cars, motorcycles, and guitars which have led to col-
laborations with Harley-Davidson and Fender Guitar Company.
Lozeau's representations of vintage cars and motorcycles align with the Kustom Kulture movement which
celebrates mid-century American design. His work has been featured in Disney Parks' Wonderground Gal-
lery, and he has twice been a Disney Parks artist-in-residence. He is a guild member of the Spanish Village
Art Center in San Diego.
“It’s been four years since Chop Top Promotions introduced me to Australia and I’m thrilled they’re bringing
me back in 2016. Last time around, I met rockers, pinups, and gearheads from Melbourne to Newcastle,
and I can’t wait to see my old friends, explore different cities, and just be a part of this amazing Kustom Kul-
ture scene once again. I have a ton of new art to share and am even painting a few special pieces that are
inspired by the land down under.” - David Lozeau
All photos and articles courtesy of Fitzy - Chop Top Promotions.
Issue 15 - May 2016 89
HOT ROD WALT - WALT RICHARDS
Issue 15 - May 2016 90
HOT ROD WALT - WALT RICHARDS
Hot Rod Walt" - Walt Richards, was born in 1966. Lived the first half of his life in the very rural town of
Beemerville New Jersey. Moved to North Port Florida in 1989. In 2006,moved to the Atlanta area where the
music scene is huge and the southern hospitality is overwhelming. He plays guitar and sings in the
Psycho-DeVilles, but also works on custom cars and motorcycles, Walt does hand pinstriping decorating
really just about anything you can imagine on a car or bike. He has just hand pinstriped over 160 special
edition "Hot Rod Walt",Gretsch Guitars. Walt Richards is an authorised pin striper for Gretsch Guitar's..
Hot Rod Walt and the Psycho DeVilles formed in 2002. They have released 7 CDs... "Out of the garage and
onto the street", "Psycho Cadillac", "Supercharger", "Night Prowler", "Rockabilly Rodeo", "Country Gold"
and "Rock N Roll Life".... He takes pride in recording only original music and has about 200 original songs
to his name.
All photos and articles courtesy of Fitzy - Chop Top Promotions.
Issue 15 - May 2016 91
GAV BLACK
Issue 15 - May 2016 92
GAV BLACK
Mad about drawing from an early age, Gav Black was raised in Newcastle , Australia on a diet of Revell
model kits and ‘Scanlens’ Ratfink bubble gum cards. From the age of ten he and his step dad would go to
hotrod shows fuelling his thirst for custom cars, hotrods and chrome.
When Gav left high school he began working at a automotive kustom shop where he would marvel at the
local airbrush guru Gary Pocket lay down his craft on a daily basis on panel vans of the time.
This is when Gav Black was exposed to “Ed Roth’ and his Ratfink characters and started collecting the
T-shirts and bubblegum cards. For many years doing the usual labouring jobs, all the while he was drawing
and painting on friends motorcycles , cars and surfboards. After a short while his talent was recognized and
he was soon invited to take up a position in a tattoo studio after a friend took some of his art to show his
tattooist friend .
Moving around from shop to shop in Australia for many years and later moving to the UK in 96 to live and
tattoo for a year. He remained a tattoo artist for 20 odd years but always wanted the freedom to paint and
draw monsters and hotrods at his own leisure.
Issue 15 - May 2016 93
Paintings - Gav Black © 2016
Issue 15 - May 2016 94
Back in Australia he was trying new mediums and he was starting to paint on canvas with paint pens and
also surfboards in his favoured ‘lowbrow’ style., People started to notice and soon he was selling his
pieces . He lists his influences as Ed ‘Newt’ Newton , Robert Williams , Ed Roth , Boo, Von Franco and Dirty
Donny to name a few.
While playing around with his lowbrow art he always wanted to learn the art of pinstriping. He was always
heavily involved the car scene, owning many custom rides over the years. So to pinstripe was a natural
progression.
Pinstriping now for around 6 years he is still learning and considers himself a novice of the art. Gav Black
likes big colourful pieces but will paint, draw or stripe pretty much anything that will stay still long enough.
Contact Gav at GEARDADDY.COM.AU or Gav Black on face book.
All photos and articles courtesy of Fitzy - Chop Top Promotions.
Issue 15 - May 2016 95
DUNGOG BY DESIGN - Artisan Collective - YARN BOMBING
Issue 15 - May 2016 96
DUNGOG BY DESIGN
This month we take a look at Dungog by Design’s latest creative project— YARN BOMBING
“Yarn bombing, yarn storming, guerrilla knitting, kniffiti, urban knitting or graffiti knitting is a type of graffiti or
street art that employs colourful displays of knitted or crocheted yarn or fibre to decorate mundane public
objects and places. The new art form brightens up cold urban environments and brings a smile to the
passer byes”.
It has developed with crews yarn bombing worldwide, sometimes the installations may have peaceful
protest messages with political statements.
Houston USA artist Bill Davenport was creating and exhibiting crochet-covered objects in Houston in the
1990s.
The movement has been attributed to Magda Sayeg, from Houston, USA, who says “she first got the idea
in 2005 when she covered the door handle of her boutique with a custom-made cozy”.
Sayeg’s accidental yarn bombed creation, triggered off a global community of yarn bombers, with yarn
bombing crews founded across Europe, North America and Australasia.
One of the most active groups in Australia is “Knitting Nannas Against Gas”.
Issue 15 - May 2016 97
Misha Bevan at work on a bench, photo courtesy Dungog by Design
Issue 15 - May 2016 98
Dungog by Design textile artist Misha Moon (Bevan) and her crew – Lorraine, Dawn, Kat and Jen have
been busy decorating the benches around Dungog. The first bench to be covered is in front of the Dungog
by Design shop/ gallery Dowling Street.
“The bright and striped yarn bombed seat that makes everyone smile”.
“Locals and visitors are frequently photographed seated outside the gallery on the covered seat which was
created by many hands on the vintage knitting machine loaned by artist Misha Moon.”
Dungog Shire Community Centre benches are now adorned with colourful knitted striped covers.
Local Living Dungog donated $100 towards the cost of yarn for this project.
“We are very happy to support creative work that builds on a vibrant Dungog community” – says Jo New of
Local Living Dungog.
“Come and enjoy the comfort and colour, and help us thank the wonderful workers at the centre for all their
efforts especially after the ‘big storm’. Dungog by Design is pleased to be able to create and give something
that makes people smile.”
Issue 15 - May 2016 99
Misha Bevan who lives in East Gresford in
the Hunter Valley NSW, “Is a whiz with the
knitting machine and created over 30mts. of
knitted snake that was then stitched and
hooked onto the slats of the bench seats”.
Misha is a talented artist who has exhibited
her textile creations and installation work in
curated exhibitions in Newcastle in recent
years. Her stunning knitted Gothic sculptural
work for the Adornment – Wearable Art
Exhibition at Newcastle Art Space Gallery,
received much praise from the public and
fellow artists.
Left: Misha Bevan installing her work at Adornment
Exhibition, Newcastle Art Space in 2013.
Issue 15 - May 2016 100
“Dungog by Design is an artisan collective with over twenty
creative members who live and work in the surrounding
Dungog district, in the beautiful Hunter Valley.
Exhibiting and selling their own contemporary designs, the
artists are a diverse group of talented people. Including
ceramics, textile and fibre art, hand bound books, jewellery,
hanging work in ink, oils, watercolour and print, clothing and
homewares, the shop is a treasure trove of original pieces.
Address: 224-226 Dowling St, Dungog. NSW.
Monday - Friday 10am - 4pm, (closed Tues & Wed) Satur-
day, Sundays, 10am - 3pm.
Enquiries email:[email protected]
www.facebook.com/DungogArtisansCollective/?rc=p
Dungog by Design – original, handmade and inspiring.
Handmade 100% natural fibre rope bags by Carol Gehrig.
Cedar brooches - Barbara Ramsay
Issue 15 - May 2016 101
2 Danks Street Waterloo, NSW.
Gallery 139 presents
CONSALVO | LANKAS | MAHER
at The Depot Gallery, Sydney
24 May - 4 June 2016
Issue 15 - May 2016 102
Gallery 139 is committed to developing the professional art practice of it's Gallery Artists outside of
Newcastle. This exhibition is scheduled for 24 May - 4 June 2016 at The Depot Gallery in the Danks
Street complex is the first of many exhibitions, Gallery 139 plans to present around Australia.
Consalvo, Lankas and Maher have been asked to exhibit together because while their painting
styles are distinctively different, their art processes and subject matter often overlap which will inevitability
form a cohesive and relevant group show together. This exhibition will be curated by Gallery Director, Ahn
Wells.
An exhibition opening is planned for Saturday 28 May in the afternoon. If you would like to receive an invite
to this event in Sydney. Please contact the gallery on [email protected] and ask to be
added to the mailing list for this event. The artists and gallery greatly appreciate support from our local com-
munity.
Official opening 28th May 3pm
The Depot Gallery 2 Danks Street Waterloo, NSW 2017
Gallery hours: Tuesday - Saturday 11am - 6pm
Issue 15 - May 2016 103
Exhibition 6th May – 22
nd May
BACK TO BACK GALLERIES
Official Opening: Friday 6th May at 6pm.
57 Bull Street Cooks Hill NSW 2300 T: 49 293 677
Open Friday, Saturday, Sunday 11am-5pm
Issue 15 - May 2016 104
FROM THE GARDEN - EXHIBITION
Back to Back Galleries Presents new work from Newcastle’s Athena group of
Artists:
Faye Collier, Helene Leane, Jeanne Harrison, Julie Anne Ure, Pat Davison,
Sandra Burgess, Sue Stewart, Varelle Hardy and Bronwyn Grieve.
“A garden to walk in and immensity to dream in-what more could he ask? A few flowers at his feet and
above him the stars.” ― Victor Hugo, Les Misérables
A defining feature of our group is its diversity, both the variety of media its members work with and,
consequently a broad range of approaches. In the Exhibition “From the Garden” Athena artists explore a
range of ideas inspired by gardens, interpreted through a variety of 2D & 3D works including ceramic
works, collage, painting, printmaking, soft sculptures and works using fabric and wax.
www.newcastlepotters.org.au
Issue 15 - May 2016 105
ART NEWS
Re-opening of SOAG Art Gallery at 15 Elizabeth Street, Tighes Hill.
[email protected] Issue 15 - May 2016 106
We are pleased to announce the re-opening of SOAG Art Gallery at 15 Elizabeth Street, Tighes Hill.
We will be offering exhibition hanging space which will be managed by the exhibiting artists.
The School of Arts Gallery (SOAG) has two hanging spaces downstairs measuring 120 sqm. There is one
large room upstairs measuring 60 sqm.
The building is 107 years old. It was purpose built for the original use of education and training as a
pre-curser to the TAFE colleges. The architecture is Victorian / Italianate and it has a large garden courtyard
with off street parking available.
Artists will gain the opportunity to curate, manage, promote, design, hang and market their artwork.
This will be an invaluable opportunity for artists to experience the business side of the art world.
The gallery will also be hired out for functions such as: weddings, naming ceremonies, corporate
presentations, music recitals, wakes and receptions.
The downstairs exhibition space costs $720.00 per week and the upstairs rental cost is $350.00 per week.
There is a minimum 2 week exhibition rental period. Hanging equipment and 3 dimensional plinths are
provided by the gallery. Exclusive art buyer mailing list, eftpos, wifi and catering packages are available on
request.
To book your exhibition now call Diana Middleby or Stanley Wollen
Mobile; 0425215295
Mobile; 0425215289
Email; [email protected]
Issue 15 - May 2016 107
3+1 Photographic
Exhibition 3 - 22 May 2016
CHRIS MEREDITH LEN METCALF EDMOND THOMMEN
Opening Night Saturday 7th May 4 -7pm
186 - 188 Katoomba Street, Katoomba, NSW 2780 Blue Mountains, Australia.
Hours: Tuesday - Sunday 10:00am - 5:00pm
Telephone: (+61 2) 4782 0188
www.galleryone88finearts.com
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Issue 15 - May 2016 108
Issue 15 - May 2016 109
BEYOND COLOUR
WED 27 APR - SAT 14 MAY 2016
OFFICIAL OPENING: Saturday 30 April, 2-4pm
The gallery curated exhibition, Beyond COLOUR reveals
the different way in which the four exhibiting artists capture
and remove colour in their practice.
Matthew Tome, Sieglinde Battley, John Heaney,
Lynette Bridge.
RUMINATION - FLYNN DORAN
WED 18 MAY - SAT 4 JUN 2016
Rumination is about the process of deconstruction, removing all
unnecessary elements of a design. The works are inspired by the
poetry and the personal debris we leave in the wake of life. Layers of
history occupy the sculptures fasacde. The forms become
expressions of life, unencumbered by the necessity of traditional
construction.
Gallery 139
Beaumont St. Hamilton, NSW
www.gallery139.com.au
Lynette Bridge blush 2015 mixed media on board 922 x 1200mme
2015
Rumination - Flynn Doran
Issue 15 - May 2016 110
FINE DRAWING Exhibition 8 - 25 JUNE 2016
Melissa Bull
Sarah Cockroft
Christina Frogley
Vanessa Lewis
Tanya Matas,
Susan Ryman,
Greg Slevin,
Robyn & Eric Werkhoven
Gallery 139
Beaumont St. Hamilton, NSW
www.gallery139.com.au Susan Ryman 2016 coloured pencil on paper, varnished
Issue 15 - May 2016 111
STUDIO LA PRIMITIVE
ARTS ZINE
Click on cover to view the
previous issues.
Issue 15 - May 2016 112
STUDIO LA PRIMITIVE
ARTS ZINE
Click on cover to view the
previous issues.
www.studiolaprimitive.net
Issue 15 - May 2016 113
studio la primitive Eric & Robyn Werkhoven
Contemporary artists
Studio visits by appointment
Ph: 02 49389 572
www.studiolaprimitive.net Issue 15 - May 2016 114
EXHIBITIONS MAY - JUNE 2016
6 - 22 May
From the Garden
Amanda Hardy, Bronwyn Grieve,
Helene Leane, Pat Davidson,
Julie-Ann Ure, Sandra Burgess,
Varelle Hardy & Sue Stewart
(various mediums)
27 May - 12 June
Ripple Effect and the
Human Condition
Mojgan Habibi, Dawn Perry,
Sharon Ridsdale.
(clay)
17 June - 3 July
Blue on White
Members of Newcastle Studio
Potters Inc.
(clay)
57 Bull Street Cooks Hill NSW Hours: Fri Sat Sun 11am - 5pm www.newcastlepotters.org.au
Issue 15 - May 2016 115
ARTSYSTEMSWICKHAM 40 ANNIE ST. WICKHAM, NEWCASTLE NSW.
Phone: 0431 853 600 Colin Lawson
www.art-systems-wickham.com/
Issue 15 - May 2016 116
ARTSYSTEMSWICKHAM - exhibition calendar 2016
May 6 – 15 BREONY DELFORCE
May 20 – 29 MATTHEW TOME
June 3 – 12 MELINDA AVERY
June 17– 26 DAN NELSON
July 1 –10 ALDONA O’BRIEN
July 15 – 24 NICOLA BOLTON
www.art-systems-wickham.com/
Issue 15 - May 2016 117
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S Always Profile, ink scraffito on chromololux card 42 x 29 cm, Kim Wanless © 2016
Issue 15 - May 2016 118