Wednesday, May 30, 2012

"New Works" by Catherine Hale

"New Works"
Exhibition opens 6 July 2012 at 6 pm
Exhibition runs to 29 July 2012



Catherine Hale is an artist working in the Central West of NSW. Having grown up in Sydney she knows that there is more to life than living under the flight path a block from Parramatta Road.

She is now based in Bathurst and is the proud owner of a recently built backyard studio. Within this space, overlooking chicken coops and vegetable gardens; Catherine joins the frames, stretches the canvases and creates her paintings

ARTIST STATEMENT

My figurative paintings are executed from the imagination. They are narratives drawn from people and landscapes encountered:
Ø     during travels in a caravan round Australia
Ø     working on a multicultural program at the community centre
Ø     caring for Bathurst elderly and
Ø     volunteering at school vege garden working bees

I also work in landscape and still life; these are the inhabited spaces without the people.


"After the Fire" - Ceramics from Marjo Carter, Pauline Wellfare, Valerie Stuart & Margaret Ling


"After the Fire"
Exhibition opens: 6 July 2012 at 6 pm
Exhibition runs to 29 July 2012

Fire in its many forms has a potent and primitive place in the collective memory.
We recall the conflagrations that devour the countryside.  Yet we are also familiar with the hearth and stove where fire provides warmth and food. 
          
In this exhibition, some very different examples of the wonderful transmutative powers of fire, flame, heat and smoke when harnessed by the ceramic artist, are clearly evident. Each artist has an individual response to, and expectation of, the fire.

Margaret’s pots are simple, robust, handbuilt forms which wear the complex markings that result from the flame and smoke of the pitfire. Surfaces come alive with the suggestion of movement - a visual terrain across which the eye can travel.

By contrast, Pauline's fine porcelain pieces, transformed by heat but unmarked by it, reference the renewal of life and growth through seeds and pods, so delicately carved and polished. 

The soft, evocative qualities of smoke create the distinctive visual effects and surface decoration on Marjo’s pieces. And Val, significantly inspired by the forms and textures provided by nature, responds to the red hues of earth, enhanced and enriched by the passage of flame.

Results often prompt the imagination of the viewer, reading into the intricate matrix of pattern created by the passage of fire, flame, smoke. 

Marjo Carter
Artist Statement:

Currently, my studio practice revolves around individual handbuilt pieces that feature the softer, evocative nature of smoke firings. I have found much enjoyment in smoke firings, using natural sources such as leaves, grasses, pine needles, etc to create distinctive visual effects and surface decoration.

Another unique aspect of my work is the application of hand lettered calligraphy to the works, adding poetic meanings and depth to the pieces.



Margaret Ling
Artist statement:

I am inspired by nature and the primitive - the colours, the forms and the textures of the natural world around us.
              
My pots are simple, robust, handbuilt forms which wear the complex markings that result from the flame and smoke of the pitfire. Through this process I am looking for  surfaces that are alive with the suggestion of movement - a visual terrain across which the eye can travel.

The surface drama contained by the stillness of form.

                                          
 Pauline Wellfare
Artist Statement:

Making pots has been a passion for 25 years now, and I can’t see myself doing anything else.

Surface treatment is an important aspect of my work.  I like the work to be both a tactile experience as well as a visual one. Pieces are carved, sanded and polished a number of times during the firing and finishing processes in order to achieve the smooth, subtle surfaces I desire. The major inspiration for form, colour and decoration of my work comes from native vegetation I see in the surrounding bush, as well as the plant life I find in my garden.

                

Valerie Stuart
Artist Statement:

My work combines both wheel and hand building techniques. I use a variety of surface decoration and firing techniques in order to achieve a desired effect. My inspiration is drawn from everyday forms and textures provided by nature. When taken out of their context these characteristics impart a feeling of familiarity and surprise when viewed in a different framework.