Thursday, August 4, 2011
Thursday, May 26, 2011
SALA Exhibition 2011
This is our picture that we've submitted this week for our SALA (South Australian Living Artist) Festival Exhibition coming up in August. In the pic you can see my drawing of a girl with a sleeping wombat, one of Cathryn's cards and 3 of Shannon's silver pendants. There are also some of our work tools. We are very excited about our upcoming exhibition at Ethos Gallery. My exhibition is going to be called 'Artemis' and I will blog more about it all soon......
The 3 Little Pigs
This one was my design and my wolf huffing and puffing, my little pig was in the House of Straw, Cathryn's was the House of Sticks and Shannon's was the House of Bricks. This collaboration was really fun though I realised I found drawing and painting really small a big challenge.
The 3 Billy Goats Gruff
This one was Cathryn's design and beautiful background. She did the biggest goat, I did the middle one and Shannon did the smallest one on top.
The 3 Bears
This one was Shannon's design - her bear is on the right, mine is the big central one with a bee on his tie and Cathryn's is the one on the left.
Cocoon
'Cocoon' 16 x 10inches 40 x 26cm Watercolour 2011
This piece and Cloud Tears were both done right-handed and very slowly. I consider 'Cocoon' to be the final piece in my Fringe exhibition. The little girl is safe, protected and healing in her cocoon on her leaf surrounded by golden light.
Drawings on the wall
Shannon and Cathryn very kindly helped me hang my exhibition because I wasn't able with my elbow. We hung netting on one wall and pegged the left handed unframed drawings on it.
I was really very touched and consoled by the people who felt able to talk to me about their grief during the exhibition. It is such a very human experience to grieve and yet it can be very lonely as well. In western culture grief does not seem to be well dealt with, unlike many other cultures.
Falling with Wound
Another left handed drawing and painting - a human figure falling with a giant wound in their side, trailing gold dust.
Falling II
And this drawing was done completely with my right hand. So working with the same idea but with different hands and thus different sides of the brain. Well I found it very interesting ;)
Tasmanian Tiger Tears
'Tasmanian Tiger Tears' 15.5 x 10.5inches 39.5 x 26.5cm Watercolour 2011
This piece is the right handed drawing and painting that evolved from the left-handed 'Thylacine Tears'. The background represents maps, particularly maps of the rugged mountains and thick forests of Tasmania where hopefully Thylacines still live, hidden from the world. Though sadly they probably were killed out and we mourn them. Hopefully we won't have to mourn the Tasmanian Devil who's numbers are dwindling in the wild due to a terrible cancer.
This piece is the right handed drawing and painting that evolved from the left-handed 'Thylacine Tears'. The background represents maps, particularly maps of the rugged mountains and thick forests of Tasmania where hopefully Thylacines still live, hidden from the world. Though sadly they probably were killed out and we mourn them. Hopefully we won't have to mourn the Tasmanian Devil who's numbers are dwindling in the wild due to a terrible cancer.
Sedna
'Sedna' 15.5 x 11inches 39.5 x 28cm Left handed drawing and Watercolour 2011
Like learning to hand embroider with my left hand I have also been trying to teach myself how to draw with my left hand, it seems a lot harder. You can't control it as much as you can with your dominant hand. You just have to let it do and draw what it wants. I believe your left hand is more connected to your creative right half of your brain. It has certainly been interesting seeing the very different things I've been drawing with my left hand as opposed to my right. I drew and painted this image completely with my left hand, this no-armed mermaid just appeared, I was not consciously thinking of her previously. I believe she is Sedna, who is the Inuit Goddess of the sea and marine animals. There are many stories about her, the one I know of is where her fingers are cut off and she sinks to the bottom of the sea while her fingers become sea animals like seals and whales, and she becomes their Goddess.
Like learning to hand embroider with my left hand I have also been trying to teach myself how to draw with my left hand, it seems a lot harder. You can't control it as much as you can with your dominant hand. You just have to let it do and draw what it wants. I believe your left hand is more connected to your creative right half of your brain. It has certainly been interesting seeing the very different things I've been drawing with my left hand as opposed to my right. I drew and painted this image completely with my left hand, this no-armed mermaid just appeared, I was not consciously thinking of her previously. I believe she is Sedna, who is the Inuit Goddess of the sea and marine animals. There are many stories about her, the one I know of is where her fingers are cut off and she sinks to the bottom of the sea while her fingers become sea animals like seals and whales, and she becomes their Goddess.
I'm Blue
'I'm Blue' 10 x 10 inches 25.5 x 25.5cm Left-handed Hand Embroidery on Painted Cotton 2011
Shannon, Cathryn and I decided that our theme and title for Fringe 2011 would be Trilogy: 3 Artists, 3 Stories. My focus (and it could be said my art therapy) was 'Trilogy of Trauma', thus working through my grief with the loss of my Grandmother, then my Father and then the shock and pain of my accident and facing the potential loss of the use of my right hand and arm in life and art. Part of my artist's statement read as this:...2010 for me has been about loss, enormous grief and pain, of endings, of fracture, falling, fear, fragmenting, of breaking, and nightmares. Out of all this I've been making my art, even if it's been with my left hand. I need to make art to survive, to keep going, to keep living. The images that have been appearing in my art are: falling, fragmented girls, mermaids with no arms, many tears, and animals or humans trying to rescue or protect, or cocoon, and feel safe. The express the need when grieving or wounded to curl up, to cocoon one's self, to hide, to shut down. The Thylacine or Tasmanian Tiger has also been appearing in my work. I lived in Tassie for 8 years and I realised the Thylacine is a good symbol to represent someone we have lost, who has become extinct, and who we grieve for.
It was very difficult to create this very personal, carthartic work but it has been helping me through the darkness to find my way to the light again.
I felt like I was going mad not being able to draw or stitch so I ordered an emboidery frame on the internet (you rest your embroidery frame on it and it can sit on your lap or a table and it doesn't have to be held) and taught myself to hand embroider with my left hand. The hand embroidery 'I'm Blue' above is completely stitched by my left, non-dominant hand. It now feels totally normal to stitch that way and you can't tell the difference between a piece that I've embroidered with my right or left hand. Above are also two detail photos of it - one was taken while it was in progress and the other is taken from the back.
Wednesday, May 25, 2011
Adelaide Fringe 2011
My very good friends at Ethos Gallery - Shannon, Claire and Cathryn, have been amazing in their support of me during this last year. They wanted me to go ahead with our proposed Fringe exhibition in March 2011. It became something for me to focus on and also a huge challenge in that I had to find other ways to make art with only very limited use of my right hand and arm.
I'm back
Finally I'm back posting, it is a relief, it has been a long time between posts. I thought I'd start with a pretty pic (ie an autumn leaf I took a picture of in a park near my house in Mt Barker - I do love those Autumn reds) and then go to the not so pretty ones. Not long after I last did a round of postings on my blog in October 2010, I slipped on a few drops of water on tiles in my house and fell badly. I'm double jointed and I fell on my right palm with my elbow locked, I heard a crunch then found myself in enourmous pain. I had to be taken to hospital in an ambulance where after extremely painful xrays it was found that I had a very badly broken elbow and I had also ripped all the ligaments and everything. I had surgery the next day where there put in a lot of screws, a plate and wire to put my elbow back together. The above xrays are from a few weeks later. You can see the huge droopy half cast in the xray and all the staples along the incision. I am a right handed artist with now a very severe injury to my right elbow. What followed were months of recovery and physio and pain. I am now 7 months down the track and still in quite a lot of pain and discomfort and most likely will be for some time to come according to the doctor and physio. My accident happened on the 4 month anniversary of my Dad's death. To save my sanity I had to find new ways to make art.
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