Saturday, March 12, 2016

Gillian Lavery - What has evolved.

Walking to the gallery this morning and I realised something.
I haven’t been here for a few days...
I don’t know what has evolved, what has been created and what has changed during the week.

It is not often that you go to mind the gallery of an exhibition you are in with the sense of not knowing what you will be greeted by.
More often than not you install a show and then it stays that way until you take it down. But that is not the case for this exhibition – and it is really exciting.

As I settled into my minding/drawing shift I noticed the subtle changes in the colour of the bees wax on Kath’s works and the shifts the powdered charcoal had made. I reacquainted myself with Ren’s drawings, making note of the additional marks on the paper and the quite dramatic transformation of the canvas (see below). The feeling of activity and energy lingered in the space. It was an energy I then used to continue my own drawing. I wonder if this sense of activity is as evident to the viewer and whether this changes their experience of the exhibition.


Renuka Fernando, Continuous Drawing, 2016, mixed media on canvas and preparatory sketches    

When Ren popped in later on we discussed how the works had changed, what she tried, what worked, what didn’t, and where to go from here... 

I am looking forward to seeing what happens next week.



Gillian Lavery
www.gillianlavery.com



William Kentridge Anything Is Possible





I thought that I would share this documentary on William Kentridge.

He is very articulate about his practice and how play and experimentation in the studio is an integral aspect of his process.



I hope you enjoy it!



Gillian Lavery

Wednesday, March 2, 2016

Install week - work in progress

We've been in the gallery for three days now and our Tracing Materiality projects are underway! Here's a preview of the works in progress, you can view more on Instagram - @renfernando @kath_fries @gillian_lavery #tracingmateriality - and the gallery will be open from Saturday for Marrickville Open Studios Trail, so you can see in person how our works are evolving with our Continuous Drawing processes.

Renuka Fernando

Renuka Fernando

Renuka Fernando

Gillian Lavery

Gillian Lavery

Gillian Lavery

Kath Fries

Kath Fries

Kath Fries

Kath Fries

See videos and more photos on Instagram
www.instagram.com/explore/tags/tracingmateriality/

Interview - Marrickville Art Post MOST feature

Art Post: What's On - MOST Feature interview
artpost.marrickville.nsw.gov.au/node/20226

Tell us a little about yourselves and how this project came about?
The three of us were discussing how we all work with open-ended processes, so our idea for this exhibition started with a conversation, which became a series of conversations, exchanges of ideas, questions and references. Many of these circled the idea of “not knowing” and how this notion plays a role in art practice, so this project and exhibition explores the notion of practice as a place where things can happen, as opposed to producing finished objects.
What is the current creative project you’re working on and what is the inspiration behind it? 
Gillian Lavery – I am currently exploring ways to open up the process of making artwork to the viewer, to give it more visibility and importance rather than focusing on the end result. After travelling around Japan, Europe, the UK and Iceland, and undertaking two artist residencies last year I am still processing everything that I have seen and experienced. I know that these will continue to inform my work for the next few years, though I am not exactly sure how yet.
Kath Fries – My work for Tracing Materiality explores tactile and sensory engagements with beeswax and paper, using scratching translucencies, drips, changing natural light and the beeswax’s aromatic presence. I plan to create installations in Chrissie Cotter Gallery that respond to pre-existing aspects of the space including the natural light of the windows, old bolts in the ceiling and the lightboxes by the staircase. These installations will combine site sensitivity with the tactility and mutability of beeswax as a drawing material.
Renuka Fernando – I’m currently working on series of small rapid sketches which I began on a recent trip to Canada. Although I don't consider the drawings referential as such, they are influenced by my road trip across British Columbia during the winter. From these sketches I will be working on a larger drawing, which will take place within the gallery during the course of the exhibition. I like to be led by the drawing process itself and respond to the materiality of the drawing and the surface up which it is made. In turn I consider the drawing to be essentially linked to the place in which it is made and I hope to respond both to the gallery space itself and the other works which will be occur within the gallery.
What drives your creativity?  
We all share a similar desire to think about things through materials and processes. It's a way to understand other people and the world and connect to others, be it family or other artists, writers or thinkers.
What creative artists have most inspired or influenced you - and why?
Gillian Lavery - William Kentrige is of particular interest to me at the moment. Part of this is the way that he articulates his process and emphasises the importance of play and open ended experimentation in his practice. Louise Bourgeois has influenced me for a very long time and it was seeing her work in Paris many years ago that prompted me to go to art school. I am inspired by the way that she had stayed true to her subject and herself against all odds, she made what she wanted to, what she had to. She also works across so many different mediums - though I am particularly interested in her drawings and textile pieces. 
Kath Fries - I’m most interested in the practices of artists who work with the instability and changing nature of materiality. Like Hannah Bertram, a Melbourne artist, works with dust to create meticulous, decorative, temporal installations that are deliberately destroyed at the conclusion of the process. I was lucky to visit Teshima Museum in Japan an few years ago and was really inspired by the serene water droplet Matrixinstallation by Rei Natio, where visitors sit inside a tranquil architectural/landscape space, designed by Ryue Nishizawa, to watch and feel tiny trickles of water seep out of the undulating floor and gradually be absorbed back into it again.
Renuka Fernando - I have always been drawn to artists that have an interest in the mark making process. I saw a retrospective of Cy Twombly’s work in London and I was overwhelmed by the sheer scale and energy embedded in his marks, particularly the Bacchus series (2005). Locally I have always loved the work of Sally Gabori and Tony Tuckson. To be honest it’s very difficult to narrow it down to only a few.
What are you aiming to communicate through your work?
We all tend to think of our practices as a way of opening up a space of exploration. We don’t have a message beyond inviting people into a space that is different to what they experience in their every day life. 
What do you hope will be the outcome of it?  How will you judge its success?
There are many levels of success in a work of art. We are mostly interested in how one work or exhibition provides a path for the next work. Installing and exhibiting these works together might generate a whole new line of enquiry. As long as we are learning, pushing ourselves and taking risks then we are satisfied. If the viewer enjoys it and gets something out of it too - then that is an added bonus. 
What is your next project? 
Gillian Lavery - I am working on something for a group show at 107 Projects in Redfern in May. I am hoping to use some of the experiments that I was working on in Iceland for that show and see where I can take them. 
Kath Fries - I’m working on a paper-bark doorway installation with oyster mushrooms growing in it for a group exhibition ‘Out of Time’ at Airspace Projects, Marrickville in May. 
Renuka Fernando - In June I will be doing an artist residency with the Chris O’Brien Lifehouse Foundation in Camperdown. The residency takes place within the hospital and I will get the opportunity to work with patients and visitors introducing the ideas of mark making as a means of self-expression and play.
What are your future goals?
Keep making, playing, thinking… 
What are your favourite places in Marrickville (park, music venue, bar, coffee shop, other) to work or wind down?
Gillian Lavery - When I had a studio in Marrickville I loved spending my lunch at Henson Park. I enjoyed lying in the grass and watching the sky and listening to people walking their dogs, children on the play equipment and the occasional tennis match. 
Kath Fries - I live around the corner from Willie the Boatman microbrewery - we’ll have some of their beers at our Tracing Materiality exhibition opening! Also on Mary Street is Sample Coffee Roasting, they have a lovely café and I buy their coffee beans. Over the road is St Peter's Fruit World, which stocks a great range of fresh fruit and veggies as well as local yogurts, cheeses, tofu and dumplings made in the Marrickville area.
Renuka Fernando - I love that little hole in the wall Vietnamese place on Illawarra Road, they do the best Banh Mi in Sydney.

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Sunday, February 7, 2016

Gillian Lavery - Some preliminary thoughts on time, chance and not knowing.

Like most, the idea for this exhibition started with a conversation. This became a series of conversations, exchanges of ideas, questions, references... Many of these circled the idea of not knowing and how this notion plays a role in art practice. I came across this idea in On Not Knowing: How Artists Think (by Elizabeth Fisher & Rebecca Fortnum (eds). I found the notion of practice as a place where things can happen, as opposed to an object, enlightening. It is a mode of working that I am continuing to explore.

Each of the artists in this exhibition has a very different way of utilising not knowing. Kath uses materials; in this case bees wax, as tools with which to draw, exploiting their unique qualities and properties. The artwork is installed in relation to the particular space. It is in one state of completion when the exhibition opens, however, due to the vulnerable nature of the materials, it is perpetually unfixed and proceeds to transform over the duration of the exhibition. The artwork is never fully stable, nor does Kath control or pre-determine the exact outcome. She sets it up and allows the materials to interact with the environmental and architectural conditions of the location. She therefore allows chance, change and not knowing to play a large role in the artwork.

Kath Fries, Solace, Hill End, 2013



Similarly Renuka’s work is not static, she is constantly changing and adjusting it in the space. Renuka enters the gallery with a set of materials and reference points in hand, and works in response to these within the space and time frame of the exhibition. While the result or outcome is not predetermined she has control over how the work changes; each decision is made in the moment.

Renuka Fernando, Studio Articulate, 2015

It is a generous gesture to share the figuring-it-out, studio-like space with the viewer. It is a reminder that what you see in the gallery is simply a point in time in the history of an artwork even though we tend to think of it as ‘the end’, whole, complete, finished. It is rare the artist themselves will think an artwork as an end point, nonetheless it is often viewed as such.   




In this exhibition I have two different but complementary artworks. The first is two stop-motion making/unmaking documentary animations. I never completely know how these documentary animations are going to look; I only know what it feels like to make them. Each time I have incorporated a situational component that places me in a less controlled position. I enjoy discovering the work when it becomes an animation, seeing what occurred from a different perspective of making.  

Gillian Lavery, Blondous Spiral (screen shot), 2015, animation


The addition of a wall drawing provides an alternative reference to time and a different aspect of not knowing. I know the shape and types of mark that I am going to make; the pencils that I am going to use and I have a set time frame. But I am not exactly sure what will occur during the making of this work. It is always a unique experience to engage with the audience when one is working in the gallery space.


This wall drawing will be created and destroyed over the course of the exhibition. At the finissage event there will be a formal erasure of the drawing. In concert with the animations created through unpicking, the erasure of the drawing will form a starting point for new work. It is a deliberate choice to work in a way where rather than the material artwork it is the act of making (or unmaking) that is the primary focus.

Wednesday, January 27, 2016

Kath Fries - beeswax on paper experiments

I've been working with beeswax as a sculptural material over the past few years, fascinated by the texture, viscosity, history and metaphorical potential of this material. Recently I've been exploring different ways of applying beeswax to sheets of paper by heating, cooling and marking it to extend the translucency and malleability of this material. I plan to expand my experiments into large installation pieces for our upcoming exhibition. But in the meantime, I thought I'd share a few photos of my studio experiments. 
Kath Fries

Kath Fries, Beeswax on paper - translucency, studio experiment 2015

Kath Fries, Beeswax on paper - peelstudio experiment 2015

Kath Fries, Beeswax on paper - cracksstudio experiment 2015

Kath Fries, Beeswax on wall and tree branch studio experiment 2015

Wednesday, January 6, 2016

Gillian Lavery - Ideas behind my spiral drawings


I thought that it would be interesting to share some of the starting points and ideas behind the spiral drawings in this exhibition.


My interest in the spiral began a few years ago when I was researching Australian Aboriginal basketry techniques. I was particularly interested inspired by the coiled basketry that was made by the women from Gapuwiyak in the exhibition “Women With Clever Hands.”


I began drawing these woven objects in an attempt to understand them and think about them through drawing. It occurred to me that I was drawing them as if I was weaving them rather than trying to depict them.



http://www.wagga.nsw.gov.au/__data/assets/image/0006/8268/Milpuna_Budingal_-_Coiled_basket_detail_20102.jpg
Joyce Milpuna Bidingal, Coiled basket (detail) dyed and woven pandanus


I then began a stitching process based on the drawings that I had been making. I was interested in the feedback loop of making and drawing. I wanted to explore what happened when you switch from one mark making process to another, examine what elements of material and line arise.



Since then I have been using the spiral to explore meditative mark making processes and this line of enquiry led to the creation of an animation of the stitching process.


I undertook a yearlong stitching project and wanted to find a way to share the process of making with the viewer knowing that ultimately they would only be seeing the result of the project. It was an attempt to invite the viewer into the process of building an artwork stitch by stitch. I wanted to invite them into a contemplative space that the making gave to me.

pranayama, 2014, cotton thread & silk.  Image by Miho Watanabe.




 The two spiral drawings I’m working on for this exhibition were created during recent overseas residencies. One took place in Japan, in 40°C heat and 100% humidity, and the other in Iceland in -9°C with accompanying wind and snow. The two places diametrically opposed in climate and many other aspects and performing the same repetitive actions in both their differences became more apparent. As my fingers froze and I kept dropping the remote for the camera when I was filming in Iceland I could not help but reflect upon the sweat that was pouring down my back when stitching the spiral three months earlier in Japan.

Children's paper lanterns at a festival in Onishi, Japan.
 

A 10 am sunrise in Blondous, Iceland.



By Gillian Lavery