Showing posts with label Lucas parklands. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lucas parklands. Show all posts

Sunday, June 20, 2010

'SAILS' aftermath

It has been a week since our hectic 'Lucas Parklands Sculpture on the Edge' exhibition. I am still recovering.
It was a huge success with about 1,000 visitors through the gardens, good sales and heaps of positive comments. We have been invited to exhibit in another local garden later in the year. Our arts organistion, 'Arts Connect' is flat out with grand plans and ideas for the future. Very exciting. I love my local arts community.
My 'Sail Away' installation did just that - one of the 3 sails moved around the dam a little bit as it was fixed to a floating log which obviously drifted around, so the corner became very dirty.
I tried to wash the dirt out and left the corner in strong bleach overnight - and guess what - the bleach has destroyed the fabric! Hmmmmmmm
Interesting effect but probably not usable in a practical sense.
Here are some of my favourite pieces from the exhibition:
'Renewal' by Fiona Dempster,
'Returning' by Fiona Dempster,
'Forest Letters' by Ken Munsie,
'Sounds of the Bell' by Kim Schoenberger,
'Windows to the Soul' by Kim Schoenberger,
'Droplets' by Barry Smith,
...and to finish off, a cheeky 'peek a boo' 'Sails in the Forest' from me.

Friday, June 11, 2010

Gumleaf Garland

Today I 'installed' my gumleaf garland, adding leaves to it until the last minute to make it long enough to drape nicely over the tree. How many leaves? No idea - I'm NOT about to start counting.
It was strangely difficult to photograph, but here goes.
 
 
I also managed to get better photos of  'Back to the Source' - the 20 metre long painted strip of fabric - again, difficult to photograph.
 
 



Wednesday, June 9, 2010

SCULPTURE ON THE EDGE

13 artists have installed 56 sculptures in the garden and rain forest walk of Lucas Parklands [a private 20+ acre property near Baroon Pocket Dam]. The exhibition was organised by Arts Connect, a local arts organisation with lots of drive and enthusiasm.
These are my pieces:

'Sail Away' dedicated to Delwyn's dad..
It has been a hectic few days with lots of physical work - lifting, bending, climbing ladders, scrambling over rocks and getting stuck in the mud, but I think the effort has been well worth it.
  
 'Sails in the Forest'
We have a bit of fine tuning to do on Friday before the open garden on the weekend. Lots of organising and hard work just for 2 days, but it has been a very rewarding experience for us all.
  
'Sailing on the Edge' 
 
'Back to the Source'

Sunday, June 6, 2010

WABIBITO

This is the latest splodged fabric for one of my installations at Lucas Parklands. I really love this piece. The plan is to wrap a rock, Christo fashion on a mini scale!! 
I have just read a post by Delwyn about WABIBITO - people who are followers of the wabi sabi way of life. Thanks Delwyn, it's rather fun to have a quirky sounding definition of what I believe in. I was sitting in front of the telly tonight emptying pyramid teabags and was totally content. Someone on the TV was trying to entice me to a bigger house, a grander pot of superannuation [I have none], a swimming pool in the back yard, ra, ra, ra, and at that moment I didn't want to have one more skerrik of anything. I was very happy sitting cross legged on my uncomfortable couch emptying teabags. I am blessed.


Thursday, June 3, 2010

GUMLEAF GLORY

Well - my third blog for the day!! I've really outdone myself!!
This afternoon, I filled a basket with gum leaves to continue my gumleaf garland, and couldn't resist posting on the beautiful colours of the leaves.
We don't have much of an autumn here in the subtropics [winter temps rarely drop below 15 in the day and 8 at night], but my evergreen 'blackbutt' eucalyptus tree sure is producing some gloriously coloured leaves.
I think the birds and possums knock down the green ones and they change to lovely mottly reds then golds and browns as they lie on the ground. This basket made about 30cm of garland. Still a way to go.

20 metres of fabric

 

Yesterday I joined my dyed sheet bits together, then late in the day I painted and splodged with a house paint brush on a long stick- the fun part.
NOTE TO SELF - rememer it gets dark and cold and sometimes rains at the end of the day!!
So here I was in the dark, trying to lift the wet painted 20m strip of fabric off the newspaper so that it didn't dry and stick to the paper. I draped it over various stools and things but then couldn't shut the studio door overnight. Hmmmm - I HAVE had rats in there on a previous occasion when I forgot to close the door.
Next morning - no rats, dryish paint and some exciting sections of painted wabi sabi fabric strips.

Wednesday, June 2, 2010

Lucas Parklands Sculpture exhibition

I don't class myself as a sculptor by any means, but I have joined in with local friends and colleagues who are exhibiting on June 12th and 13th as part of the Arts and Garden Festival in Maleny and Montville. Arts Connect Inc [a Montville based but rapidly expanding arts organisation] is organising the art side of things. I am making some 'ephemeral' and fibre based pieces for the weekend. My fabrics will be a stark contrast to the natural bush surrounding but I hope they will make a statement and get the audience thinking about 'art' and its various contexts. The piece above, 'Sail Away', was a 'trial run' a couple of weeks ago and will be dedicated to Delwyn's dad.
I am about to splash black paint along this length of fabric - about 20+ meters, draped along my deck into my studio. It was originally a lovely heavy linen hospital sheet which I dyed and stained and marked will various 'stuff'. I hope to drape it down a tree, over a rocky outcrop and maybe into a dam at the Lucas parklands. We'll see!!
How inspirational are the folds of this jersy fabric? I am toying with ideas such as "A FUN GUY" [ a fungus] and "RED MOSS" and attaching bunched fabrics to rotting logs.
The "'GUMLAND GARLAND" is coming along well, but I want it to be twice this length - hoping for a windy day to blow the leaves off my tree.
This is how I want my Gumland garland to look in the forest [this is a photoshopped pic].
Our big set up day is Monday 7th, so it will all need to fall into place in less than a week. My friends Fiona Dempster, Barry Smith, and Kim Schoenberger are all involved and have brilliant works. Keep an eye on their blog sites - they are great bloggers.

Thursday, May 13, 2010

Lucas Parklands Exhibition

A group of locals is involved in a sculptural exhibition at the Lucas Parklands Open Garden on Queen's birthday weekend in Montville [4 weeks away].I have decided to go 'ephemeral installationish' so that I can use lengths of fabric floating in the breeze and contrasting with the rain forest.
First step - to paint some old cotton sheeting fabric with a big brush. I wanted the leaves to satin the fabric so I left it outside in the weather for several weeks. I will cut strips of the stained cotton and sew it to strips of new cotton sheeting, hopefully using hand stitching and heavy thread. I want it to have the raw and earthy feeling of 'bush' sewing.
Second step - to buy $100 worth of stretchy jersey fabric in white, cream, lime green, red and grey.
Third step - to make some triamgular 'sails' and do a trial run in situ with the help of my good friend Ken.
 Fourth step - to play with some photoshop ideas for other fabric installion pieces.
Fifth step - making a 4 - 5 metre long 'gum leaf garland' to drape over a tree echoing a lovely long piece of bark.
 
I have a few other ideas as well - see how I go for time and energy!!