Monday, February 6, 2012

Holiday reveries!


I arrived in Newcastle Thursday evening to a wet and windy airport... 17 degrees is cold for summer here!
Next day my friend's children and I equipped ourselves with umbrellas and went foraging for material for our drawing workshop that morning.


The local community garden where they often spend time was a great place to find what we were looking for, and whilst there, we found real foragers from local restaurant Bacchus gathering things for the menu that night. They also plant and garden here and were more than happy to chat.


Loved these pretty garlic flowers... remarkably pungent... one flower is said to be virtually as strong as one small garlic segment.


I squeezed in quite a bit over two days... my gracious hosts J & P were delightful and with so many stories and exciting developments to hear about I forgot to take photos ... except for the casual workshop which I will put on my studio blog soon. 

Below are a few snaps of a gathering at another friend's home where I remembered my camera... lovely ambience, company and home cooked deliciousness thanks to M & W!




The youngest member of the party had had a big week!


Next morning I was out with camera for a while and catching up with an interesting artist friend from Uni (postgrad days) in 2007 so it was wonderful hearing about her recent projects.  A grey but clear day we walked along a small stretch of coastline to this favourite place. Photos and paintings have been focused on this place by a huge number of people... it was great to visit once more!







The Saturday afternoon train trip from Newcastle to Sydney was a treat, especially when reaching the Hawkesbury River with its magical scenery. I took one photo after another from the speeding train trying to get a good shot that didn't feature electricity cables, bridges or trees blocking views.








Many a poet and writer has written about these winding waterways and islands, the oyster leases, people on remote reaches escaping city or other. I've always fantasised about having an old cottage as a holiday escape only reached by boat along here ... long train trips between these two cities at frequent intervals over the years afforded many an hour to imagine!


Waking up this Monday morning in the bustling harbour city of Sydney, clocked onto holiday time, fills the week with promise. Yesterday at a sunny picnic at Lavender Bay ... here overlooking both bridge and opera house ( if you peer closely under the right side of the bridge you'll spot it) ...  my brother and his wife were great company. We found a huge shady tree, a breezy spot, to put our rugs down and lie reading books ... or napping in the case of my brov who'd been kayaking at 6.30am on the harbour!





The ferries were chugging past and boats of all kinds could be seen bobbing around. Later I will pop back to tell you about the secret garden I visited at Lavender Bay... located on the foreshore behind the boats in this image above.

Enjoy your week won't you!
S x

Wednesday, February 1, 2012

pinch and a punch...

... first day of the month!

This morning I booked tickets for a trip to Sydney leaving tomorrow before everything begins in earnest. I was to go on this holiday at Xmas but you know how it goes when the year's been too fast and too full.... given the chance to change your mind sometimes home can seem like simply the best place to be.

Now I feel so much more ready for a week and a half of walking here and there, catching up with friends whilst staying with family, and viewing some interesting shows. With that studio overhaul I've really gotten back into painting (and using my camera) so the return home will be to an organised living space and studio with  plans well under way for the months to come.

First I wanted to share some shots taken of that special painting job referred to last month here. A Xmas gesture to my mother was this room makeover! I possibly should have taken these in less of a rush... the light is not good and low res images don't help ... but you can get a sense of the finished room I hope.

the corner next to the door with the stained glass circle window
looks like someone is now proud owner of a new painting!
a cosy corner for writing and reading...
light filmy curtains are a must in the sub-tropics!
a place for momentos

I don't seem to have managed to get much colour consistency in my shots to show the particular grey I used. What I will say is that it works beautifully... the new colour is both soothing and pleasing.
Best of all it was greatly appreciated and well worth all the days of effort to see the smiles and pleasure it has brought. Just a few tasks remain to cross off the list... a couple of pictures to hang, whilst the door needs to be painted carefully as layers of paint were revealed after a washing down with sugar soap. The rest was far less complicated.

On another note altogether, last night I gave a slide presentation for a local environmental community group's monthly meeting in a library close by the Botanic Gardens at Mt Coot-tha. It was great to meet people again I'd met before and have interesting conversations with new people.... a delightful crowd indeed.

This was the perfect chance to review aspects of my work from recent and earlier times through the process of putting this together. I like to put ideas into context so there was imagery representing the span of time, right back to fossil seeds all the way through to recent past and present. Ive selected a few images here from what was a diverse coverage of the topic.




2009 - homage to the seed dinner in 2009
postcards sent by lovely bloggers for the Mail Art Show
in homage to the seed 2010
introducing the ideas behind the oval painting below

discussing the KEW MSB residency late last Year in the UK
drawings of a Lebanese seed pod that was quite fascinating
Wolfgang Stuppy contact person for my residency... below
seeds he's photographed in his work as a Seed Morphologist

talking about my projects for 2012... one of which is to
produce a book that expands on the previous one from 2010
my work from the last few weeks... concertina books


There were 168 images on the slideshow, some content heavy, others simply offering visual variations on a theme... stimulus that prompts questions and so on. They were such a wonderful group... very engaged and open. The entire process... first assembling the focus and thread of ideas in the slides yesterday, and later presenting, was a fantastic experience. I learn so much from  recapping and formulating the overview that speaks to the central themes in the work and project, close up and at large.

If you visit my studio blog you can see images at my (newish) flickr site of this latest work on concertina books and here read the latest post on this most recent artwork.

Have a excellent week or two won't you! Back before long,
Sophie x


The Office... interesting!

The Office


Artists: Gerda Steiner and Jörg Lenzlinger Brazil

"A fully furnished open-plan office in the administrative centre of Brazil is overwhelmed by fertility. Shoots begin to sprout from a workstation, the office plants grow like wildfire, sumptuous vegetation spreads, and the table tops start to bud. It rains fertilizer, and the workplaces as well as the computers are gradually coated with a layer of fertilizer crystals like a patina." More




Whats your office like?

I'm just about to download some photos to post of what I've been up to.
See you soon!
Sx

Saturday, January 28, 2012

Order ... then I guess the inevitable!


If you pop over here to the studio blog you can see small low res images of the studio after a clear out and re-organisation.



Weary of the feeling there was no room to breathe it gave me great pleasure to rethink this essentially very small studio space and make whatever changes would resolve the dilemma of feeling crowded.
I have space under the house not suitable to work in but ideal to store large paintings and such.

The computer moved into the window area of the next room with a great view from the bay window. I thought carefully about what could go and that also helped. At the moment I'm doing a lot of small work, mostly working on concertina book formats. Also being planned is a second printed book for my homage project following on from the first which was published late 2010.

Even though I have ideas for large pantings on my mind the book and preparations around that may keep me working small scale for now. I'm picking up work this semester tutoring in Visualisation at the QUT Architecture faculty. Having connected there previously, and finding staff most engaging and friendly, an afternoon a week collaborating with other tutors and students in a very large open space offers an alternative from the routine of solo work at home. Ive had a keen interest in designed spaces over the years, lingering on from an adolescent obsession with designing houses and such. I'm rather keen to put my mind to this fresh departure in thinking.

And what is this you ask...
       
          some might recognise it as a jacaranda seed!

I spent some time drawing one under the microscope at the Millennium Seedbank last October. I was captivated by its delicate structure... this image is quite a low resolution so it might be difficult to see quite what I'm talking about.


Today at the homage blog I added articles on the KEW Millennium Seedbank as an update... always such a lot to read over there!
       Time to be off now.... Have a good weekend won't you!

Wednesday, January 25, 2012

Resources? WHat are our most precious resources?

First some pics.... from seed capsules tumblr of course!


 iceblack, via beverleyshiller)

Sometimes i feel like doing this...

walkerartcenter:

“le dérèglement des sens”
 (via Merce Cunningham Dance Company in ‘Roaratorio’ - Review - NYTimes.com)

Not that I can ... but I have imagination!


Pause to wonder...

Litter?
     yes...

sweetpeapath:

Litter (detail)
by Anita Hutchinson
recycled textile art
courtesy of Edge - Textile Artists Scotland
Litter by Anna Hutchinson via Sweetpeapath from  Edge - Textile Artists Scotland
And this extraordinary painterly view...

the-rx:


A landsat satellite image a of a swamp in Russia.
landsat satellite image a of a swamp in Russia. from The RX tumblr

When I moved to Brisbane in 2008 locals were catching every drop of excess water in every bucket they could find the drought had gone on so long. One could almost hear annoyed mutterings about yet another person moving to this State and using their precious water. How dare I?

Well I thought about that and the place I had just left, Newcastle, in the Hunter region of NSW, which had such a good track record with water use because they had been charging for its use for many years and the locals had been careful in consequence. It was also a MUCH less affluent and showy place on the whole... presumably without a huge home, pools and lots of cars on large driveways, water use is less! 

A boom state Queensland had been when I arrived ...and they kept coming till the GFC slowed that down. Last summer the rains certainly did come.  This year so far has been rainy too ....nowhere near as catastrophic in term of deluges...but the last couple of days have brought flash flooding so I was outside in the middle of the night checking drains and moving stuff under the house. Our run-off is from neighbours with drains on their properties that get blocked. So at midnight there I was in the next door's yard with my brother to the rescue unblocking their drain of bark chips so the water could flow out where is is supposed to and not drown us! I was reminded how necessary it is to think and work together if we want the best results for all.





When I came home from my getaway last week this wonderful big fig tree (photo taken two years ago), that takes up half the street, had been chopped back so harshly we were in shock. Its already pruned frequently for power lines and the trucks using the street... huge limbs were now gone...though not once has there been any reason to worry that these stately old limbs were a danger. I was just pleased to hear we weren't the only ones in the neighbourhood horrified by this.

Trees that have taken decades to grow chopped out (or stripped back) in no time! Ive been seeing to much of that around here of late. Yet... paradoxically, because we are next to a tennis court and there are several huge wonderful shady trees on this part of the street, we get many vehicles parking here to eat lunch or rest throughout the day. They come to sit in their vehicles in the shade... buses servicing local schools, removals trucks, tradies... which reminds me each time how invaluable trees are to us... but do we forget this? 

Over at the homage blog I have been reblogging some excellent articles found of late... I know how much you... like me... like to be seduced by all things wonderfully artistic and inspiring...and I guess the homage blog is short on that at times. BUT can I just fly the flag for a stopover at Homage today... ask if you might take a moment to read one of the articles I've reblogged of late. I know some of you pop in when you can... its a darn nuisance really not having a single blog... so I am not wanting to be be greedy and demanding in wanting your time...

simply saying...

I know you all care about theses themes ... and are doing things in your own signature way to make a difference...

so IF you can retweet or reblog for me I would be VERY grateful as the latest posts are all from reliable and news-worthy sources... I am simply being a vehicle... (OK... a little added editorial) for passing things on... so if you can be too I'll be SO delighted!

Lucy... big thanks for retweeting:
 lucinda dodds 

@ 
 always has the best links RT food sovereignty ... are we talking about that enough?  .



OK... I just did a tricky thing and linked this from the Homage blog so you can visit there more easily.

Yale Environment 360: Value of Conserving Habitats Could be Worth $500B to World’s Poor
Jan 25, 2012
As we in the...
Food Sovereignty in New Orleans
Jan 24, 2012
Found at the...
Improve your plant life balance!
Jan 21, 2012
An interesting...
The biodiversity crisis: Worse than climate change
Jan 20, 2012
The biodiversity...
Diverse ecosystems are crucial climate change buffer
Jan 19, 2012
This article is...
Why plant science matters!
Jan 19, 2012
The following...
low tech vertical farming from Sweden
Jan 13, 2012
Found via Green...
thought for the day!
Jan 13, 2012
Next year's...


I hope you don't need a whisky after this reading ... but you know... its stuff that's gotta be chewed over.
Maybe I'd better find something really good to finish up with!

How about a cup of tea?


stilllifequickheart:

Rosemary Valadon
Tea for Two III
2006
stilllifequickheart: Rosemary Valadon  - Tea for Two III



Friday, January 20, 2012

pics from up the coast...


It was a wild old day when I set off on my coastal escape. 

Heavy rain slowed things down ...but I had a lovely afternoon with my niece at North Arm, near Yandina, before joining friends at Coolum for the evening. Next day we found a dry hour or so for a beach walk ...the coast looked windswept but the ocean water was rather tempting as it was warm enough for a dip!




These images are very low resolution ... still getting use to the laptop i-photo. Tried adding them to Flickr and Facebook this morning... I'm only keeping a public Homage to the Seed page on Facebook...  the wonderful followers here at Blogger are  the friends I want to keep in touch with ... I can't quite see how there could be enough time to keep track of the friend scenario over there at FB so I have not gone that way!
As for Flickr ... well I am a slow learner over there... nothing much happening yet... thinking about a new camera at the moment. Anyone know of a fail-safe camera for dummies... I really have little interest in gadgetry...i like on-off buttons,,, point and click. Well ... I do like being as artful as possible with framing things... but the technology for recording the image.... simple please!! 



Coolum .... steps up from one of the many small beaches.


When we settled in at Noosa on Monday afternoon at our accomodation it was bucketing down. The pool was steps away, a private jetty a little further along... and where were we? Inside with our noses to the window staring out.No... it wasn't that bad!!

 A trip to Organika for a few supplies and coffee (+ to check emails) was highly worthwhile, in large part because I discovered that my fav bookstore/gallery (that had been next door) where I had a show early in 2010 has relocated to Melbourne where its doing well ... situated close to the State Library in the heart of the city. 
Organika in Wyeba Rd, Noosaville
Embiggen Books previously next-door to Organika in Noosaville...
Warren and Kirsty at Embiggen's first wonderful home - next to Organika!

I just found a great blog post on the new Melbourne store... so if you get to/live in that fine city be sure to pop in! And here's a photo (below the map) from the blog post. 




Embiggen Books on little Lonsdale St in Melbourne


the Melbourne store

Back to the getaway story....

It rained heavily day and night Monday... and when I woke at 5am next morning I was itching to go explore. Despite grey with heavy clouds it was definitely not raining outside. At 5.30 I headed out with an umbrella and a little cash hopeful to find a coffee spot after my walk.

I came across this tree after hearing a quite amazing cacophony ( will send pics to a botanist friend for the name of this tree) coming from its blossom-heavy branches. Excuse my low res pics... can you see what was hiding in this riot of yellow?







Not just one... but a whole host of what I think were Rainbow Lorikeets. If ever there was need of a good photographer to capture this sight of a tree laden with delighted birds after the heavy rains... feasting on the nectar from these blossoms.



I think I passed two others on my walk along the beach. I guess everyone was tucked up asleep... you'd have thought the town completely deserted on this morning ... a rare sight over summer in this popular place I must say!




and yes... I did find a place that opened early... I was here by 6.30am and as you can see getting a seat was not an issue! The morning paper from Brisbane was gloomy about possible flooding... but then it was the 12 month anniversary last week for those who'd been through a particularly harsh summer of floods in our neck of the woods. 


another cafe view... 



Just about home from my walk it started raining again... luckily my spotted brolly, which I picked up at an Op shop in Cornwall last October, was on hand!




I managed to get in a swim everyday ...  and found cafe's with wi-fi. I'd brought along my inks and brushes here ...  and as getting to the end of a busy day I was left to occupy a corner seat for a long stretch!
Berkelouw Books (and cafe) has long been a favourite of mine so I was so pleased to discover a few years ago they'd set up in Queensland at 87 Memorial Drive, Eumundi. 




This is a cotton paper book Ive been working in of late, playing around with the possibilities this paper offers. A basic mono-print below ... pressing onto the page that has been applied with paint straight from the tube.




my watch from the November Paris excursion... no... i didn't apply it with paint and press!





This concertina book I started at the KEW MSB in October... I find it interesting to keep adding and altering images at whim! There is something about this format that so suits mobile art-making.


MORE IMAGES of this work at STUDIO ARCHIVES blog ...posted also today!

Just noticed one of Berkeleouw's Sydney stores has this wine bar below.Now that's an idea!


Page-turner ... patrons relax with wine in the inviting surrounds.


The river-frontage of where we stayed was very peaceful. There were kayaks we could hire... perhpas a trip back here sometime when its sunny!















This amazing plant contains so much detail...  where to start drawing?





Yesterday before heading for home we stopped for a coffee... loved this very homemade fruit scone!



This chair perhaps will be waiting for me if I return... next time we'll hope with clearer skies!




Well... there's much to do now... its been a wonderful time away and I'm ready to hit the studio... so more soon!
Have a good week won't you!
x