Monday 12 September 2011

Exhibition Opening this Saturday!

Looking forward to seeing the culmination of this project! - the artworks exhibited in the Blue Place.! 
This Saturday 17th September 11am.  Dick Adams will be opening the exhibition.  Be great to see everyone there!
There is a lot of activity in Kempton as well as part of the Open Your Eyes program. Check it out on www.tasregionalarts.org.au/openyoureyes

Thursday 11 August 2011

More photos in the Project Pics!

HI everyone ,  Have uploaded more photos of the developing artworks - from Lisa and  Ash, and Helen, Jan, Loueen, Dean, Sharnie and Angela, and  Sue and Jess.
Great  to see the works!
Reminder that Caroline Amos, our curator, and I will be collecting artist statements and stories, and information about your works over the next week..  5 weeks till we open at Kempton!!  very exciting!
thanks!
Leigh

Thursday 28 July 2011

Great to see photos of Marta and Casey's work, and Tamara and Emma's work - beautiful work and stories.  And thanks Lisa for the pictures of kempton and info about the raku firing.
Reminder that our next get-together is at Oatlands on next Wed 3rd August, 9.30 to 11.30 .  see you then!
Thanks for your contributions!
Leigh

Raku Demonstration



Weather permitting a Raku clay firing demonstration will take place at this location - next to The Blue Place, Kempton on the 17/09/11

The Blue Place at Kempton where the CollaborART Exhibition will be opened at 11.00am on Saturday the 17th of September, 2011







Friday 22 July 2011

Marta Brysha and Casey Day

As a starting point we were given the general theme of "a sense of place".  For me (Marta Brysha) this meant both a geographical and psychological place, that is, I had long dreamt of living in a remote and rugged place, but was bound to the big city by work and education commitments.  Big city life did not suit me.  I felt trapped by the endless noise and chaos of such an environment.  It stifled my creativity and I was not a happy person.  Moving to the Central Highlands changed all that.  Peace, tranquility and the mental and physical space to create has transformed my life, both practically and, although not meant in any religious sense, spiritually.

For my partner, Casey Day, her life journey is really just beginning.  She lives in the lovely hamlet of Tyenna and while she enjoys the beauty and freedom of the countryside it can seem a rather lonely and remote place to a girl in her teens.  Inevitably she looks towards all that the greater world has to offer.

So, how to combine our collective experience into a cohesive and meaningful artwork?  We decided to do 2 separate but thematically linked works.  My title:  From There to Here; Casey's title:  From Here to There.  We then explored potential imagery to communicate our themes.  Casey developed a theme of a flower growing from a large seed.  After several preliminary drawings she settled on image below.


Next she dyed the fabrics she planned to use to create her image.


Casey arranges her fabrics in the order that they will appear in the completed work


  Drawing and fabrics side by side.


Threads dyed and ready to begin stitching.  The spots on the fabric are not very clear in this photo, but they were block printed on the fabric using gold metallic fabric ink.


Casey hard at work in my studio


Casey using the two-handed technique of embroidery that I taught her.

To depict my title of From There to Here I am working on an image of bird flying free of what is both a cage and a depiction of city skyscrapers.


The work is mounted onto a frame to keep the fabric taught so that puckering does not occur during stitching.  The cage/city motif along the bottom of the work was achieved with block printing with a geometric wood block printed first in black and then turned 90 degrees and overprinted in metallic gold ink.




Work in progress.  The block printing is more obvious in this shot.


Close up of the bird (in progress).  Note I have used the same block that Casey used in her work to print the background of the sky (reminiscent to me of a star filled milky way.

The bird figure has been adapted from a traditional batik motif know as "the sad bird".  Very appropriate to my theme.  In the finished work there will be a series of tail feathers drifting to the bottom of the work, indicative that although the bird has escaped there was a price to pay.

This blog post was also published on Marta Brysha's blog



Thursday 28 April 2011

Welcome to the CollaborART Blog!!

Finally we are live on the collaborART blog!  Artists involved in CollaborART suggested that we set up this blog to share ideas, photos etc as we work toward the exhibition on the 17th and 18th September. 

Please write a comment, add a photo, share an idea.  We would love to hear about your artwork and how your collaborations are going!

Looking forward to hearing from you!

Leigh