Saturday, May 28, 2022

Kingaroy Regional Art Gallery June 2022

 I have been quiet with blogging the last few months. I have been steadily working on an exhibition in a local gallery. I had decided to make an exhibit of 3 series of my textile art. This involves a bit more than just making a few more quilts. I have also been working on my Incubator and Mastermind program with Lisa Call hoping to grow as an artist, so been a bit busy. Having IT issues which necessitated a new laptop didn't help either. The exhibition is called SHUTTERS: Looking Out. I am trying to convey the images of landscapes that people trapped inside might see when looking out the window which usually has blinds or shutters for privacy. My mother is currently residing in aged care and this is her usual view, and then when covid-19 "trapped" people inside, my artwork ( to me) has taken on an increased relevance. 

For the exhibition I decided to join the modern world and have a postcard made with a "'dreaded" QR code, yes, I can not see the need for signing in when the contact tracers are overwhelmed in a pandemic. This QR code takes an interested person to here, so hopefully they enjoy the experience and read more about my art.



On the back of  the card are my contact details, so you can contact me directly if you manage to pick up a postcard by visiting the gallery or scan and visit and leave a comment.


I made a few new pieces for the Exhibit. Here are a few examples of the series. This piece is Yellow Glimpse. I have been adding layers and just wanted to make a bright hopefully cheery  piece. I started this in December 2021 before Putin invaded Ukraine. I am sure many people will have their own interpretation about it now.


This piece is from the Tracks - Road  Untravelled series. Jungle Eyes. 




This is a familiar one, Drought from the Landscape series.


This is Remnants- Detritus from the landscape series when Tangled Threads had remnants as their theme. 


These are from a series designed for this exhibition. I was inspired on a now not so daily  walk through our paddocks, when I saw a busted anthill on the road. I think our bobcat blade had partially destroyed it when it was racing down the track one morning. I saw the openness of the inside structures and thought WOW! Shocking for the tenants, because they had to rebuild which they had already started to do. I thought about the similarity to coral. I decided to make 6 small pieces using a holey overlay technique over my strip pieced landscapes. Some overlays are batiks, some are organza, some stitching using 12 wt polyester thread, no longer am I scared of people seeing my stitching. Some holes have been created with a fine tipped soldering iron on crystal organza. 


I think there may be more to come in this series. After spending the last few months, working on it, I will wait to see where it takes me next.


This bright one was the first, the pink one is the current last. Am thinking of combining the crystal organza with the solid overlay in a few more pieces when time allows.

Family wise, we had the birth of a seventh grandchild in late March. Exciting and eventful, we welcomed a little boy into the family. All are doing well now. 

Australia wise, we had our triennial election for our government. Seems like we are becoming a more divided nation with heaps of nastiness. With our preferential system of voting, we have ended up with a Prime Minister who nearly 70% of the population don't want and he ends up with the top job. Wait and see what happens I suppose. Was interesting to read today, his pet dog now has his own twitter account. Maybe I need to modernise and get one too, so I can waste more time reading all his news. 

I think I have enough time constraints keeping up with my selected activities. Hoping for more spare time shortly, particularly with winter approaching. I also have my Tangled Threads group exhibit in July to complete yet. The Quilt Trail is on July 23/24 so have to help with that. Hope some of you can get to see my art there.

Monday, February 21, 2022

Where did Spring and Summer Go?

Where did Spring and Summer disappear to? I did promise regular blogging. That kind of disappeared into a fog. A fog of grief, anger and lethargy. A few factors involved. The sudden death of my mother in law and the circumstances around that and the farewell for her, seemed to carry over for awhile. The impacts of vaccine discussions, mandates about who can do what and how, every time you are brave enough to turn on a TV. I also had to have further vaccines to be allowed to work. This also added to the lethargy, to the extent that I can fully understand why more people are saying No. 

Summer did bring some rewards. We managed to beat the drought, fruit flies, birds and dogs ( yes working dogs love fruit) and were rewarded with some fruit to eat and bottle.

 

Even better, 2 of our young lychee trees gave a small crop in January. 

We did score some rain, the Stuart River did get some runs in it. The water did go over the bridge. This was early one morning as it was still rising. 


I did manage to do some art work. I have work being exhibited in 3 galleries this year. 2 as part of the Tangled Threads group. We are putting our Road Untravelled work in Wondai Gallery for March.


This is Regeneration- After the Firestorm. My artist statement mentions the green shoots, broken fences, swirling emotions like the firestorm itself, trying to pick yourself up and climb out of the disaster. I would like it to be hung along side Firestorm- Which Way Out, so the viewer can study both together. 

This is Urban Tracks as part of the Road Untravelled series. The freeway on the left, fenced off from the urban jungle is part of the artist statement for it. 

Pathways to Hope, arrived back in my mailbox today, after spending 2 months in Victoria at Box Hill as part of the Australian Quilts in Public Places Exhibition. 

This is a snippet of Alchemy, to be completed for Tangled Threads in Kingaroy in July 
2022. A long way to go on this one yet.


We were very thankful for our rain this year. I drove through the area south of Ban Ban Springs  when the roads opened again after severe flooding. There would have been 2-3 metres of water flooding through here during the heavy rains. Sadly loss of life did occur from the sudden fast rising water along the Burnett Highway. I was supposed to drive home that Friday night, and then back to work Sunday night to do extra night shifts and had decided to stay over.
This is the Boonara Ck Bridge at Murgon turnoff from the Burnett Highway.


For my next solo exhibit of my work, I am thinking of including some of Bindy's alcohol ink pieces. She likes trying to manipulate that ink into abstract floral arrangements. I think they are worthy of being exhibited despite her lack of confidence.  Am trying to decide. See how we go. We decide by June so time is fast running out.



I had also signed up to Fibre Arts in April at Ballarat, with Lisa Call. Sadly covid uncertainty stepped in and it has been postponed. I am back doing her Incubator and Mastermind this year, so am hoping to make some progress on my confidence. 
I also signed up for IT support  with Business Station. $44 for 7 hrs support, all you need is an  ABN, funded by our federal govt. They help you choose webinars and videos for assisting you with aspects of IT which may help you in small business. I really need to learn spreadsheets better. And photography, and better time usage and ...... really a few more things yet.
Next time, I hope to show you more of my new work for my next solo exhibition. 



Sunday, September 19, 2021

Winter's End

 

According to my calendar, winter finishes around September 11th. This was the date of the coldest day of a school year that I can remember. A cold front must have come through that day as we spent the day freezing at Gayndah State High and nobody had a coat to put on. I wait until this date to welcome spring. Mind you, this year a couple of cold fronts have snuck through after this date so my latest motto is "be ready for anything." I did do a few swimming laps of the unheated pool at work last week so am ready for summer.
I found a kookaburra enjoying the Drunk Parrot Tree before all of the leaves had emerged from their brief winter sleep.


2 weeks later and the leaves are all out. The many blooms will soon be fully open and the birds will have a field day.
This is the corner of the orchard with the latest gadget. The wallabies have been eating the new grape shoots so we have erected an electric fence around the edge. This photo shows how the drought is still continuing though our mainstream media doesn't seem to care. 




I have been busy at work once again covering unexpected staff shortages, (think this may get worse as there is now a policy for mandatory covid -19 vaccinations and some people genuinely object to that) but I have found time to make an entry for a juried show. This is the close up photo I sent in. I used strip piecing, applique, double and single stranded quilting. Waiting to hear if I have to send the quilt in for the show.
I made this small one to send into SAQA's trunk show.  I really liked the Purple Night piece I sold at Wondai, November 2020 and this piece is similar. I called it Midnight Garden, so hopefully it arrives in the USA before the deadline. If not, I wonder if it gets returned to me. 
Our yellow clivia bush has rewarded us with its first flower. 

An orange one also popped up beside it.
Over the last 2 weeks, we had contact with, and subsequent visits from the grandsons of  Thomas James Scott who was the first lessee of "Ivanhoe" in 1905. He married his wife Constance in 1916, and they lived here until 1939 when they sold and moved to Kalinga in Brisbane. We have discovered there was a tennis court here as well which we didn't know about. They were both pianists and some of the stories we have been told about dances being held here seem true. This photo seems to be from the 1930's and shows the side of the house where I currently drive my car in to park underneath the house. We are enjoying discovering snippets about what life was like in the old house 100 years ago. There have been some amazing co- incidences discovered between the Scotts and the Wagners so far. One, that interests me is that one of the brothers was a medical scientist in pathology just like me, and the other is a horse/cattle person just like my husband. Interesting looking at the old photos and family history.
Will keep you updated on any further happenings, in both my textile art world and Ivanhoe history.

Monday, August 23, 2021

Winter in South East Queensland

 Well, I did promise 2 updates in winter so there might be 2 fairly close together. Does anybody else suffer the mid winter blues? We have pretty mild winters here with some frosty mornings and a few days of cold westerly wind days but no really cold days for weeks at a time. Something has to explain why I seem to have been a bit slack about a few things of late. Don't misunderstand me though, I have managed to meet all commitments and tasks including the dreaded BAS and accounting work but there just seems to be little joie de vivre lately.  I did enjoy seeing the plum trees flowering a week ago- meaning the warmer weather is coming. I managed to prune all of the deciduous trees this year so maybe I need to include tasks like that higher up the happy to achieve list. Perceptions can change a lot of things.

I have had pieces of my artwork on exhibit in Chinchilla, Kingaroy, and soon to be at Goombungee Galleries so I must take pride in that too. We had an exhausting day out on the Quilt Trail in July held in conjunction with the exhibition in Kingaroy. My "Drought" piece was displayed in the members only Bundaberg Quilt Exhibition and was awarded The Judges Prize, they gave out 3 awards- Best of Show, Joan Finlay Log cabin award and the Judges pick. Their FB page had numerous photos of the show and someone has suggested maybe a workshop could be held to make a quilt like mine. Food for thought, might think about for 2022.

Maybe the Ekka being cancelled for the second year in a row might have something to do with the current mood of some queenslanders. I know of a few Queensland Axemen pretty upset they can't chop wood competitively for a second year in a row.

Probably the matter that is still on people's minds is the Virus that will keep on keeping on for a while yet. Debates about it all, have seen us turn off  MSM. I hear arguments from both sides about what to do, I read articles about the CDC cancelling Sars Cov-2 testing regimes and when you read the article in full, you discover the CDC has been completely misrepresented. Fact vs fiction and it has been going on everywhere.  Including here reading what I write, how do you know what you read on the internet is true? All a matter of trust isn't it?

I saw an advertisement for Australian Quilts in Public Places Exhibition in Victoria calling for entries for a juried show. I got out of my lethargy for 10 days and have made an entry. I won't show you any of it as the rules state: must not have been exhibited previously so am presuming that means on here. Will have to wait and see if it is accepted. I still have to photograph it so am hoping my new camera etc. will suffice. I played around with it today and have learnt a few more things about it.

I have also managed to get  a veranda rails section fully painted so maybe I have just been a bit hard on myself lately. We did purchase 2 5M high trestles earlier in the year, they were put in use last week. Dusty work, I was pleased that I was not allowed up on those trestles when the work was happening. 


 Maybe the other reason for the lethargy is my paid job. Upheavals in rosters due to multifactorial  staff shortages and no extra staff members in our lab to cope with the deluge of covid testing each time they find a case in Qld is starting to wear a few of us down. 

I hope to feel better about things soon. I have been working on a few new art pieces and I played around with a different technique today. 


An experimental piece of work, in the beginning stages. This is during the quilting part. More to come later.

Spring is nearly here, maybe the weather might just turn and be on our side soon.  2 views of our Gulf Gold Plum tree, a sign of promise. Hope your winter blues are on the way out the door too.. 



Thursday, June 17, 2021

Tales of Autumn, and Processes.

Autumn visited us briefly, then winter struck and finally the Chinese Pistachio rewarded us with this display. 

The coldest morning so far this winter, I visited the Lapunyah Gallery in Chinchilla to see our Tangled Threads Exhibition. Blue Flag and 


PMAV Prison were on display in my corner along with 5 other pieces.

Some progress photos of a new series called Coral Anthills I have been trying to find studio time for.


Decisions about quilting, underlays, orientation. This is called designing as you go 101. Turning vague ideas into reality can give you a few headaches besides the one, post Covid-19 vaccination. 

Think this is final, not unstitching  it. New camera seems to be functioning ok, so many buttons to press. So much to learn.

Desert Roads somewhere near a Wadi, is ready for exhibiting in Kingaroy Art Gallery from June 29 until July end.

As is Firestorm- Which Way?

I have rewritten the artist's statement for each piece. Am now including that in my label on the back.
The challenge theme for Tangled Threads was  Wood. I interpreted it as "how on earth are you supposed to include wood in a quilted piece" I have seen embroidery using twigs, I could have said " the rod is wood" but I decided to use some hand dyed fabrics and the colour connects strip piecing. A different orientation, no alternate set ( 2 sets the same) and a loose flange or three . The idea being a pile of milled timber ready to use for building a timber home.

Home--- where I have been trying to find time to finish what I started at the beginning of autumn.
Sanded, primed, waiting for undercoat. I used Feast Watson Timber Primer to try to make the paint last longer. 
 Undercoated, filled and now waiting for 2 top coats of paint. Think my hair got some as well when painting the bottom rail.

Next--- finish the 4th piece for Kingaroy Gallery, finish my Incubator and Mastermind 6 month program, work on new work  and work on more veranda panels ( 2 waiting for sanding to be completed). Next update, well I will try to have two in Winter, I need to be accountable to someone, may as well be me.
 




 

Tuesday, May 18, 2021

Fibrearts Workshop with Glenys Mann

Glenys Mann, an Australian Art Textile Warrior ( not sure if she'd like that title) but I have bestowed it upon her. She has been at the forefront of contemporary fibre arts here in Australia for many years.

I had the pleasure of 3 days of her company and saw the Art Textile Biennale in Toowoomba  as well.

Her workshop didn't teach me a new technique, but I delved into the thought processes of an artist. Studied other Artists and along with the other 11 participants met new ones. 

The second day exercise was to speak about an artist you liked, and do a small project based on secret messages, pockets from that artist.

A few days before the workshop, I stumbled as you do, on a blog called Tanglewood Threads by Penny Berens of Nova Scotia, Canada.

Wow, I was amazed at her stitching, but her words and lack of them amazed me. Her messages still come through. Don't believe me, read her blog and you will understand my message.

Here are 2 photos of the beginning and end of my day2 assignment. Yes, I know its poor quality photography, I am working on that. Step 1 has arrived but am still waiting for a new camera.




 The secret message  has to do with paths, rocks and everything in between. Send me a message if you want to know more. 

Saturday, May 1, 2021

House Repairs and Possible New Directions in Art and Photography

 I am sure you are familiar with the old house we moved into in 2010. This photo is from 2014 when I had finished painting the south eastern corner of the veranda. I am now in the process of finishing the north western side. I have spent hours removing paint, sanding the palings and railings down for more painting.



Work in progress, and I am happy to say a final sand with the finest grit paper is left for this panel. Then the arduous task of priming, undercoating and painting begins. Take a note of the floorboards here as well, they need replacing and my goal is to have the palings all painted before that happens so I don't have to put masking tape around each one of the palings before painting.


This shows the poor state of the post decoration prior to a sander being used on it.


This is the inside of the north east corner and I have a problem with the support beam. It has fallen down onto the post and is  hollow for about 15cms up the roof support beam. I think I will get some expander filler and place in there, hoping it will keep the roof up for awhile yet. Speaking about the roof, that is starting to get to be another big issue as it will probably start leaking next time it rains ( maybe there is an upside to a drought after all).



Back to my art. This is a poor quality photo taken on my iPad of a piece I made based on Mark Rothko's art. It is called Simplicity and was part of the Tangled Threads word challenges in 2017-2018.
It is made from 2 pieces of fabric. The dense quilting hides the seams and I attempted to make the piece look like a woven piece. I have always liked the weaving art of Ptolemy Mann and short of taking up weaving, I would like to make some textile pieces emulating it. I am yet to figure out a way to do that with the quilting threads. So I will keep experimenting in some new work. 

This piece was also in the Tangled Threads Word Challenge, called Habitat. I saw a similar piece on pinterest and tried 3 techniques in this piece. Mum has it on her wall in her Nursing Home giving her much joy to look at it.

The photography is pretty poor for both of these pieces, so I am currently researching ways to improve it. I already have a photography backdrop stand for quilts so am now investing in some lighting equipment to see if that improves the images using the small camera I have. If not, then maybe a new camera and some lessons in how to use it and maybe more lessons on photoshop for me.

More stuff to try and learn, it certainly is a busy journey.