silk road

2019: Resilience in the natural world – Resilient Women Traveller Series

The following works will feature in an upcoming joint show at Alternating Current (26 April to 18 May 2019). The show is titled Resilience in the natural world. Melody Spangaro and I have approached the theme of resilience from two different perspectives and dimensions (temporal and geographic), unified by the central theme of exploration of the natural world. I explore the resilience displayed by female travellers such as Isabella Bird, Mildred Cable and others in Central Asia between 1890 and 1930. My works consist of diptychs of the traveller and the landscape in which she travelled. The use of magenta references the colour coding of the Penguin travel series, in recognition of their travel writing. Closer to Melbourne and current time, Melody Spangaro has explored the visual representation of personal experiences and memories of insignificant natural environments. Through exploration of the treatment of abandoned objects, Melody highlights our degradation of the natural landscape, a landscape once as pristine as that explored by the travellers in my works.

 

Reduction linocuts- recent projects

I have continued to work on reduction linocuts, based on a technique shared by Jazmina Cininas. Here are two recent examples:

1. The Hiroshima project- a reworking of a well worked theme

Hiroshima 1 Nov 2014

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

2. The ruined watch tower

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Kaleidoscope – the reuse print portfolio

I recently created some collages from old prints created for the Armchair Traveller portfolio. This set is called Kaleidoscope, for obvious reasons.

The Armchair Traveller Portfolio

I have recently completed a print project which I have titled ‘The Armchair Traveller Portfolio’ (I am sure you can see a trend here).

The project has focused on two key exemplars: the missionaries Mildred Cable, Francesca and Evangeline French, and the explorer Aurel Stein. In view of China’s growing emergence as a major power, it is timely to review how the motivation for these travellers influenced how they were perceived by the Chinese people, both at the time and now (e.g., were the missionaries selfless heroes or patronising meddlers, was Aurel Stein a tomb raider or inspired archaeologist?). This is to better approach future interaction.

The work is based on images that convey the key theme of travel as a means of arrival/escape, and what this means in the context of life journey, self-definition and development. The work includes:

  • travel related symbols such as maps
  • shadows, layers and reflections to convey transience and the multi dimensional nature of life itself
  • geographic markers such as the Great Wall of China, deserts, watch towers, temples
  • silhouettes of travellers in classic hero poses (e.g., with pith hat and natives)
  • images incorporating the phoenix (symbol for renewal)
  • abstraction of source materials (e.g., photographs, maps)
  • rendering of narrative into visual format (e.g., ‘The Gate of Sighs’ is the name of a key point of exile from China into the Gobi desert)
  • representation of artifacts retrieved by explorers
  • use of text (e.g., titles of travel books, names of explorers)
  • photographs of me incorporated into the final works

The works of two key artists have been major influences on this project:

  • the recent Japanese film still inspired etchings of Thornton Walker
  • the recent watercolor on drafting film paintings and etchings of Martin King

The print portfolio consists of  an integrated set of 9 linocuts.  The 9 linocuts consist of 3 sets of interrelated works.  Each row relates to a specific person/set of explorers. Each column relates to particular life milestones or decision points.

–       Row one relates to the life story of the missionary trio Mildred Cable and Francesca and Evangeline French.

  • ‘Cable and French I’ reflects the key factors in their decision to leave the UK for China, inspired by religious ideals.
  • ‘Cable and French II’ shows a major decision point, when they left their home of many years in China to travel through the ‘Gate of Sighs’ and across the Gobi Desert, to continue their missionary work
  • ‘Cable and French III’ shows the end of life stage, when the trio have been exiled from China by the political unrest. The images show the honors they were awarded, and the books they wrote. The plant is a branch of the sand jujube flower, which Mildred Cable had pressed in a book. She wrote ‘whenever I catch its subtle but fading fragrance, I long for a place that seems so near and is yet so far away’[1]

–       Row two relates to me, and shows my major life decisions at similar ages to those taken by the missionaries and Aurel Stein

  • Work one relates to my life changing trip to China at age twenty (the same age that the missionaries left England for China)
  • Work two relates to recent work choices
  • Work three relates to the armchair traveller project, i.e., how I interrelate with the explorers via their books

–       Row three features the key stages of the life of the explorer Aurel Stein

  • Work one shows the factors behind his decision to leave Hungary for India
  • Work two features a ruined watch tower, images of which he photographed during his travels
  • Work three features the summation of his life’s achievements, showing the books he wrote, an image of the Diamond Sutra he found on his travels (the oldest dated woodblock book in existence), and his life in a tent

 


[1] Cable, M., French, F., The Gobi Desert, Hodder and Stoughton Ltd, UK. 1942, pp 68

Print exchange- The Armchair Traveller I

I am participating in a print exchange with 23 other artists. The only common element is the paper size (15 x 20 cm). After much trial and error involving multiple linoplates, a Dremel engraving tool and Japanese wood block knives, I settled on the following image. The plate was printed using black letterpress ink, as an experiment to trial different inks for their stickiness. The letterpress ink on Somerset Velvet Buff 250 gsm created a lovely velvety black tone. The use of the engraving tool enabled the impression of a grey toned figure in the foreground.

The image is titled ‘The Armchair Traveller I’.

Updated virtual layers- the magic of Magic Eraser!

The following images are a continuation of a theme explored earlier in a post ‘Virtual layers‘. New composite images have been created, and previous images have been enhanced and reworked. Industrial strength ‘Magic Eraser’ was used to remove tone and enhance the transparency. Drafting film has been used to add a filmic transparent quality. Watercolor and lithographic crayon have also been used to highlight features.

 

Virtual connections via layers

I am currently exploring the idea of connections between people of different  historical periods, as part of a series on Central Asian explorers and my fascination with them. The Central Asia explorers for this series include the missionary trio (Mildred Cable and Evangeline and Francesca French) and the archeologist Aurel Stein. I have constructed a series of images from layers, using 250 gsm Dutch Etch paper and drafting film. The images are created using the direct transfer method and also watercolor painting on the drafting film.

Below are some examples of works in progress.

More travels from my (red plasticine) armchair

I have followed the lead of many artists (eg Amanda Marburg) and constructed my own still life sets/dioramas from plasticine and other objects. Red plasticine was used to create models for an old op shop wing back arm chair. The remainder of the sets were based on Penguin travel books and drift wood sculptures of ruins of the silk road. The resulting images (see below) were photoshopped and then treated with filters from the new iPhoto application.

Palimpsest paintings – Ruins of the Silk Road

Continuing with the theme of exploring images based on the Silk Road, I have recently experimented with using watercolour paint on book pages (with the book pages taken from a 1950s Tibetan travel book). The pages were treated with gesso before the water colour was applied. The use of the gesso was intended to simulate the creation of a palimpsest (defined as a parchment from which text has been scraped/otherwise removed to create a new surface for reuse). The watercolour behaves in a very fluid, almost oil paint like way when applied to the gessoed pages.