Ocean Dance by David Goebel & Rory Carter
Dave and I share a passion for drawing and painting, and creativity in general. Together, over the years, we have steadily been nurturing and growing Dave’s practice; exploring mediums such as Printmaking & Ceramics, and sharing his work with the public, including his solo show ‘Rhythm’ held at the Portland Arts Centre.
My own art practice forms a resource/platform to push and expand Dave’s artistic repertoire. This is evident in the production of Dave’s canvas paintings, whereby Dave was encouraged to make the leap into large-scale works. Dave’s willingness and ability to step into new artistic experiments, is inspiring and joyous to watch. Although, I don’t interfere with Dave’s image making, I feel it’s somewhat a collaborative process.
The ‘Ocean Dance’ exhibition features a new body of work, where I cross the threshold from observing to actively drawing and painting on the same works with Dave. Throughout the development of these works, I have learnt a lot from Dave. Particularly with the series of large-scale paintings. Dave has such a calm approach to his art making, quite often he would re-assure me during a painting session, ‘relax Rory…’ he would say. Dave took, the un-needed seriousness out of these works, and helped me ‘let go’ in some way. The last couple of artworks for me felt so nice to paint with Dave, just jamming on the canvas, watching these joyous, quirky narratives appear.
28 June-23 July
To be opened by Michael Toms, from Warrnambool Astronomy Nights
on Friday 30 June 6-8pm
Eleven South West Printmakers Des Bunyon, Delia Crabbe, Sue Ferrari, Ben Fennessy, Britt Gow, Jean Gleeson, Jodie Honan, Marion Manifold, Liza McCosh, Ruby Richardson, Maree Stewart have chosen the inspiration of “Sky” as the theme for this latest exhibition at The F Project Gallery, simply called ‘Sky’. The exhibition opens on Friday 30 June and continues until 23 July.
Printmaking techniques include monoprints, etchings, woodcuts and linoprints. This artform of original printmaking is often confused with the process of copies made from original works such as paintings, also referred to as prints. The artist printmaker creates an original artwork, sometimes a unique state, where only one print is made, or sometimes a print is available in limited editions created from etching plates, wood blocks or lino blocks.
As is always the case with a group collaboration, the interpretations and the printmaking techniques are varied and create a wonderful exhibition.
Des Bunyon
The sky as in ' blue sky 'is an illusion created by a combination of sunlight and air molecules.We humans have created a myriad of stories that reflect our interaction with the sky. We have gods and deities from every culture that come from the sky or reside somewhere beyond the outer reaches of the atmosphere where sky becomes outer space. We observed how birds could fly freely and unencumbered in the sky and sought to do likewise. We used its existence in our cultural responses through artisitic expression both literary, visual and musically. I chose to look at metaphorical references such as' Head in the Clouds ',Pie in the Sky ' ' Ladder to the Sky ' and ' Black Cloud 'etc We have populated the sky with many superheroes such as Superman. The sky is like the observing self that is always there, making room for both difficult and enlightening thoughts and feelings.
Head in the Clouds 1/5 | Etching | 250x320 | $195
Imagine- Above us only Sky 1/5 | Etching |250x320 | $195
Pie in the Sky 1/5 | Etching |250x320 | $195
Look! Up in the Sky! 1/5 | Etching & Collage | 250x320 | $195 | SOLD
Ladder to the Sky 1/5 | Etching | 250x320 | $195
Black Cloud 1/5 | Etching | 250x320 | $195
Marion Manifold
The Lonely Sea and the Sky works are inspired by John Masefield’s poem “Sea-Fever” (below) which reminds me of Warrnambool’s foundation and legacy from pioneering early settlers, and the hardships and sometimes desolate joy of those who arrived by sailing ship.
I must go down to the seas again, to the lonely sea and the sky,
And all I ask is a tall ship and a star to steer her by,
And the wheel's kick and the wind's song and the white sail's shaking,
And a grey mist on the sea's face and a grey dawn breaking.
I must go down to the seas again, for the call of the running tide
Is a wild call and a clear call that may not be denied;
And all I ask is a windy day with the white clouds flying,
And the flung spray and the blown spume, and the sea-gulls crying.
John Masefield’s "Sea-Fever"
7. The Lonely Sea and the Sky 6 | Linocut & Wash | 560x760 | $400
8. The Lonely Sea and the Sky 3 | Linocut & Wash | 360x560 | $300
9. The Lonely Sea and the Sky 2 | Linocut & Wash | 360x560 | $300 | SOLD
10. The Lonely Sea and the Sky 1 | Linocut & Wash | 360x560 | $300
11. The Lonely Sea and the Sky 7 | Linocut & Wash | 560x760 | $400
Maree Stewart
I pause to notice and contemplate the wondrousness of everything that comes to us through the sky enabling the existence of life. From drifting into imaginings the Sky Wanderer emerges from the vastness of the sky and commences its journey…
12. Sky Wanderer- Artists Proofs | Set of nine collagraphs | 300x210 each | NFS
13. Sky Wanderer | Photocopied Zines (x3, more available to order) | $10
Jodie Honan
Across Gunditjmara Country in south-west Victoria, sky fills half the world, cohabiting with the volcanic country and the celestial and atmospheric bodies. This series of small collages use past lino prints reconfigured into distilled skyscapes to capture the massiveness of volcanic hills against the vast sky.
All prints are linocut print collage on Somerset 300gsm and all $50
14. Pair of Shadowy Hills- Day Sky | SOLD
15. Bumpy Hill- Day Sky
16. Small Shadowy Hill- Day Sky
17. Side of Shadowy Hill- Day Sky | SOLD
18. Big Shadowy Hill- Day Sky
19. Shadowy Hill- Day Sky
20. Big Hill- Day Sky
21. Pair of Hills- Day Sky
22. Blue Moon | SOLD
23. Two Hills and Meteor Shower- Night Sky
24. Shadowy Range and Blue Moon- Night Sky
25. Small Range with Meteors- Night Sky
26. Shady Hill and Blue Moon
27. Hill and Meteor Shower- Night Sky | SOLD
28. Shadowy Range- Night Sky | SOLD
Ruby Richardson
A cloud collectors atlas combines images collected while cloud watching (always cloud watching) with the photo-graphic method of cyanotype printing. This set of prints is influenced by a slight leaning towards surrealism and a healthy obsession with the shape of clouds.
29 - 38. Hand coloured cyanotype print on 638gsm rough press paper | 160x160 | $90
29. SOLD
30. SOLD
31. SOLD
32. SOLD
33. Available
34. SOLD
35. SOLD
36. SOLD
37. Available
38. SOLD
39 - 42. Small hand coloured cyanotype prints on 638gsm rough press paper | $50
39. SOLD
40. SOLD
41. SOLD
42. SOLD
Ben Fennessy
Living at Killarney, I get to see amazing sky views which I’ve attempted to represent in these three-layered mono-prints – on Upo paper and two sheets of glass. (Prints 2 & 3) On April 24 at 5.17am, I was lucky enough to wake up and see the Southern Lights – Aurora Australis – a lifelong dream. (Print 1) As a child, I was fascinated by dioramas at the Melbourne Museum, (now the State Library). My first year at the National Gallery School was in the basement of the museum so I had access to view these magical three-dimensional displays again. Last year, I saw some 17th Century examples of images on glass layers at the Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam and was inspired to try to make the sky prints on sheets of glass so they could be transparent and 3D.
43. Auro-rama A/P | Mono prints | Not For Sale
44. Skyorama A/P | Mono Prints | Not For Sale
45. Killarney-orama A/P | Mono Prints | Not For Sale
Britt Gow
The universe was not created for the human mind to understand, yet it is the nature of the human mind to try to make sense of it. From prehistoric humans noticing how the stars resembled sparks of a fire to the concept of a larger being draping a pin-pricked black cloak over the earth and religious texts conjuring the Almighty moving the heavenly bodies from above the firmament with his own hands, we struggle to comprehend the immensity of space. Carl Sagan, an American astronomer and cosmologist, helped mere mortals to visualize the vast scale of the universe by saying “…the total number of stars in the universe is greater than all the grains of sand on all the beaches of the planet Earth” and “our planet is nothing more than a mote of dust suspended in a sunbeam”. It is inconceivable to most of us that we are as insignificant and inconsequential as an atom on a mote of dust, yet it is thus in both space and time. Our fleeting lifetimes are a nanosecond, and all of human existence is a mere second, in the 24 hours since the earth’s formation. Rather than responding with despair and nihilism, I hope my artwork promotes reflection on the beauty and wonder of nature and reminds us of our connection to the earth on which we stand. When you consider the engineering genius to conceive and construct wind towers, I am optimistic that you can share my humility in the face of Mother Nature, the peace and tranquility felt under a starry sky and the exhilaration of the winds that carry clouds above our vast horizons. These artworks are created with two separate printmaking processes. The first layer is a hand-pulled monotype, in which ink is rolled or painted onto an acetate sheet and then put through a press to transfer the ink to the damp paper. The second process is using a collagraph plate, created by scoring, collaging, texturing and shellacking cardboard. The plate is then inked, wiped, polished and put through the press a second time to layer the two images
46. Rural Skies | Unique State Monotype & Collagraph Print | 380x560 | $600 | SOLD
47. Nebulous | Unique State Monotype & Collagraph Print | 380x560 | $600
Jean Gleeson
These works represent the ‘gravitational pull’ of the moon, its effect on tides and also in the sense of hypnotic calm I feel when I gaze at it.
48. Gravitational Pull I | Blind emboss, chine colle & lino on silk | 500x610 | $150 | SOLD
49. Gravitational Pull II | Emboss, chine colle & lino on silk | 500x610 | $150 | SOLD
Delia Crabbe
I’ve always loved the patterns of raindrops on windows, and the blurring & distortion of the view they can cause. This year my ‘Sky’ focus became clouds & rain, and the close up view of raindrops on glass. I learnt how to print onto metal & some plastics, and so have experimented. The end result is mainly earrings- perhaps a more functional print product than my usual (I’ve got too many artworks for walls)! One that’s a bit of fun in any case!
50. Windows View- Rain and Powerlines | Print on Aluminium | $95 | SOLD
51. Windows View- Rain and Vegetation | Print on Aluminium | $95
Earrings:
52. Raindrops (Large, 2 piece) | $40 | SOLD
53. Raindrops (Brass) | $35 | SOLD
54. Raindrops (Light & Dark) | $30 | SOLD
55. Raindrops (Light) | Not For Sale
56. Raindrops (Dark) | $30 | SOLD
57. Raindrops (Clouds) | $25 | SOLD
Liza McCosh
In my artistic practice I have constantly drawn on the elements of nature to inspire imagery that comments on the environment. In particular, the sky with elements of air and water, has been a continual theme I have turned to in representing how all of nature is interconnected and integral to all life cycles. The Arterial series of prints attempt to represent the merging of sky with other aspects of nature: sky, earth, water and vegetation in a constant cycle of interdependence and regeneration. In constructing the artwork, I have used imagery from my painting and photography alongside digital media and transfer printing techniques; layering surface on surface leaving an imprint of nature’s elements and my employed media to emerge in the final images. Acknowledgement: This body of work was supported by a Sustaining Creative Workers Grant, a Victorian Government initiative delivered through Regional Arts Victoria. Dr Liza McCosh 2023
58. Arterial #2 1/10| Digital print on Hahnemulle photo rag paper 300gsm
540x437 | $395 framed, $295 unframed
59. Arterial #3 1/10 | Digital print on Hahnemulle photo rag paper 300gsm
540x437 |$495 framed, $395 unframed | SOLD
60. Arterial #5 1/1 | Digital print on Hahnemulle photo rag paper 300gsm
540x437 |$495 framed, $395 unframed
61. Arterial #4 1/1 | Digital print on Hahnemulle photo rag paper 300gsm
540x437 |$495 framed, $395 unframed | SOLD
62. Arterial #1 1/10 | Digital print on Hahnemulle photo rag paper 300gsm
540x437 |$395 framed, $295 unframed
Sue Ferrari
From my hilltop home wind is the unseen force that constantly transforms the skies, creating a continuous flow of fleeting experiences.
63. Caught in the Breeze | Mono print on silk fabric | $320
64. Turbulence | Mono print on silk fabric | $380
Quiet Conversations by Jan Allan
For me, painting is the ultimate problem-solving activity. To make a balanced harmonious composition, to choose harmonious colours; to use the most effective brush strokes and to know when to stop.
My objective is to convey a feeling of quiet and peace. Each painting presents new challenges. I paint from life, objects from my collection. I enjoy creating compositions that can isolate an object and finding the inherent beauty within that object. Hopefully there is dialogue occurring between the painted objects and dialogue between the image and the viewer. I aim to make the objects ‘special’ to draw the gaze of the viewer; to establish a quiet conversation.
In This Present Moment- Jenny Altmann
5th - 30th April
Painting and Drawing allows the murky waters of my mind to achieve the capacity to be contemplative, access quietude, stillness and peace. A gentle turning towards the ever present moment, where I can celebrate the uplifting environment, the dignity and poise of humanity and draw on the intuitive through which I can recognise my true self as resilient, fervent and light-hearted. I love all forms of art and art history: a constant searching which informs my own work.
Any form of creativity expresses with jubilance a life which is difficult to speak of. With humility I endeavour to share an aspect of such sanguinity to my viewers. Communication and persuasion is an honour and privilege for which I am ever grateful.
"Every moment and every event of every person's life on earth plants something in each soul. For just as the wind carries thousands of winged seeds, so each present moment can spring up in the fertile soil of freedom, spontaneity and love" Thomas Merton
Terra Madre (Motherland, Homeland, Mother Earth) - Irene Crusca
3rd - 28th May
Opening Saturday 6th May 6 - 8pm
As a first-generation Australian, my parents’ passing left me with a diminished connection to the Sicilian culture that I had grown up with. A recurring theme in my work has been an exploration of place and rootlessness. Recently, I have noted urgency in my need to come to terms with this understanding from a personal perspective.
Terra Madre reflects on personal identity through my mother’s presence, her storytelling, the costumes she once donned, the food we ate and the objects and trinkets that surrounded and gave us meaning. I use juxtaposition and superimposition of images to reflect on contemporary identity and place.
A Moment of Stillness- Peter Clayfield
My approach to photography has always been more intuitive than scientific. Some of the subjects I choose to photograph, may not at first glance appear worthy of attention. Once I sense the creative potential of a scene I endeavour to distil a simplified and resonant image out of an apparent chaos of forms. My aim is to capture a moment of stillness and beauty midst the flux of life.
I have chosen to concentrate on black and white photographs for this recent body of work. I like to create a sense of mystery and a touch of the surreal in my images, which seems to work better in black and white. There is also a timeless quality to black and white images. They evoke the work of my heroes from the early days of creative photography in Europe and America – Henri Cartier-Bresson, Irving Penn, Elliott Erwitt, Bill Brandt, Diane Arbus, Ralph Eugene Meatyard, to name a few.
I feel that black and white images lend themselves to creative invention and rely less on the visual ‘pop’ of colour photography. Colour can often distract your eye from what is important in a subject. There is a long held notion that colour photographs represent a form of objective reality, which of course they don’t. Ansell Adams wrote, “You don’t take a photograph, you make it”. A photograph is the result of a myriad of subjective, pictorial and technical choices, and is not merely the recording of a slice of ‘real life’. I also think this quote from Edgar Degas, “Art is not what you see, but what you make others see”, is relevant to photography as well as painting.
Being one step further removed from reality, black and white photography has enabled me to concentrate more on structure and compositional elements in my work. In some ways, I think it is a greater challenge to produce a visually pleasing image in black and white. I have enjoyed the process of creating the works for this exhibition.
All works are $500, framed, and available in editions of 5.
A Slice of Life Through My Eyes- Neil Griffin
8th Feb - 5th March
Opening 11th Feb 6 - 8pm
I’d visited many galleries over the years and sometimes thought ‘I could do that’ but not done anything about it. One day my wife slammed down a copy of the Adelaide WEA brochure and pointed out the ‘Acrylics for Beginners’ course saying, ‘Go and do this or just stop talking about it’. And that was the start of my painting career in 2007.
I began with acrylics but very soon moved to oils as my main medium. I enjoy creating ‘quirky statements on life’ as a way of provoking people to think, to see differently, consider cause and effect and maybe be amused. I also enjoy painting people and animals. I have started sculpting using clay and soft stone, which takes me back to my childhood days of playing with plasticine.
I am largely self-taught via magazines and occasional workshops. I pick up tips all the time from fellow artists and lots of You Tube clips.
In Adelaide I have exhibited in several public exhibitions and am a Fellow of the Royal South Australian Society of Arts. I produced a 2015 Calendar of Viet Nam as a fundraiser for the SA Vietnam Charity Group. I was also commissioned to paint a mural which was installed in the Bahn Mi Vietnamese Café, Grenfell Plaza, Adelaide CBD.
When I moved to Hamilton Vic, I joined art groups both in Hamilton and Dunkeld and exhibited in the Rotary Art Show, Mud Gallery, Café 109 and Koopmans and several other sites in both the Glenelg and Southern Grampians Shires.
Since moving to Warrnambool in March 2022, I have joined the Warrnambool Art Gallery, F Project and WADAS. I have exhibited several times through WADAS.
I had a piece published in the Artist Palette Magazine, Issue No.107 which included an article and demonstration piece of the work ‘Card Sharks’.
This is my first Solo Exhibition, showing the diversity of my work which reflects ‘A Slice of Life’ as seen through my eyes. Life that is not just a series of ‘pretty pictures’ but rather weird, quirky, amusing, challenging and rarely straight forward. My perspective, different to yours and maybe many others but, a slice of life from where I sit.
Tamara Sharp- Portrait of a Landscape
11 Jan - 5 Feb
Opens Sat 14 January 6 - 8pm
My heart and photographs are intrinsically linked to the land, the discussion around purpose of land and the forces behind ownership within the community. Throughout the years, I have travelled constantly but am drawn to the familiar, memories of a landscape that reflect hard labour, and embody stories of generational attitudes towards the environment. Within my photographic journey, I find myself in a landscape torn by fragmented conversations and poverty. This exhibition openly reflects my lived experience and the evident fragility of nature.
Small Works- Members’ Show 2022-2023
14 DEC 2022 - 8 JAN 2023
Opening Sat 17 Dec 2 - 4pm
Our members’ show returns in style this year after a three year hiatus. Featuring over 90 works by more than 50 of our members, the Small Works show promises a wide variety of works in a number of different mediums and skill levels from both fresh and familiar local names.
Get in quick to view this show, as works are removed once sold!
Members featured in Small Works are listed below:
Julie Poi
Kate Melican Rollo
Kathryn Ryan
Kayleigh Walmsley-Sims
Kelsy Landwehr
Kirsten McLean
Kristy Roche
Leon Melis
Liz Rodriguez
Mandy O’Neill
Marion Matthews
Maryann Owen
Matthew Stewart
Megan Cullum
Merran Koren
Michelle Caithness
Nathan Stebbins
Oliver Vizon (3 y.o)
Paul Burman
Rebecca Hill
Richard Walter
Ricky Schembri
Rosina Gannon
Shari Nye
Sian Burman
Tamara Sharp
Alexandra Davis
Alison Withers
Ann Krause
Anthea Rafferty
Bob Emeny
Brendan Kelly
Caroline Healey
Clive Murray-White
Colleen Campbell
Damon Kowarsky
David Higgins
Des Bunyon
Ellen Moloney
Harley Manifold
Helen Bunyon
Helen Fitzhardinge
Hyunju Kim
Irene Crusca
Jan Allan
Jane Curtis
Jane Downing
Jeffrey Vizon
Jo Brian
Jo Merriman
Joanne Russell
John Coxon (Jay Cee)
There And Back Again- Damon Kowarsky & Hyunju Kim
After nearly two years apart because of COVID Damon and Hyunju were reunited in Melbourne in December last year. Since then they have got married, taught workshops in printmaking and bookbinding in Sydney, Newcastle, Canberra, and Portland, travelled to the Blue Mountains and Woolongong, and undertaken residencies at Eramboo Artist Environment, Portland Bay Press and Terang Arts Hub.
The works in this show were made during and after the pandemic, and look to more recent travels in Australia as well as memories of previous adventures. For both Damon and Hyunju it has been a huge pleasure to explore closer to home, and to return to The FProject and share their newest works with the community in Warrnambool.
Juxtaposition - Siân & Paul Burman
Juxtaposition brings together the work of long-standing partners and artists Paul and Siân Burman. Working in close proximity in their shared studio, where they regularly bounce ideas off one another, they each bring to their art practice quite contrasting approaches in terms of subject matter, painting style and even medium. And yet both artists share a common passion for the environment in which they live and both revel in using palettes of bright, vibrant colour.
Siân Burman’s work embraces the interaction of water with land in different settings. These paintings highlight the energy, colours and luminosity of water and sky, and the ever-shifting moods of this relationship, as shaped by the seasons, time of day and weather patterns… from stillness and reflection all the way to volatility and turbulence. Siân’s work celebrates the beauty and uniqueness of our coastal and riverine environments. She works mainly, but not exclusively, in oil.
Paul Burman paints primarily in acrylic. Although his paintings often position buildings and other man-made structures – our suburban environment – against a natural backdrop of trees or a vast blue sky, the main focus is something more timeless and elemental: patterns of heightened light and sharpened shadow, when colour and form resonate under a bright, low sun. For the most part, Paul’s work depicts local and familiar sites captured in a sun-baked moment of dreamy and siesta-like stillness.
Juxtaposition brings together in one exhibition paintings which are compositionally and stylistically very different – from oceans, rivers and estuaries to heritage buildings, a crash repair garage and a laneway; from a surf club observation tower to coastlines and skies. And yet all these works are shaped by a common delight in exploring, engaging with, and coming to better understand the environment we inhabit.
ARTOLESCENCE- Warrnambool & Moyne Secondary School Students
21 Sept - 16 october
Opening 6pm Wed 21 Sept
With live soundscape and electronic music performance by SW MESS.
ARTOLESCENCE captures a selection of artworks and crafted objects across multiple disciplines by Warrnambool and Moyne secondary school students. This exhibition is one of several events that shines a light on our region’s talented young creators as part of the Warrnambool & Moyne Youth Showcase series in the South West Youth Fest Calendar this September.
Id- SWTAFE Art Teachers
id - SWTAFE Art Teachers (24th August - 18th September)
Opening evening Friday 26th August 6-8pm
id - a collection of work from Sue Ferrari, Jean Gleeson and Nathan Pye. Displaying vastly different styles, the three discuss ideation, societal influence, personal experience as it relates to identity.
The three artists share a vocation, educators at South West TAFE, and bring a wealth of experience within their chosen fields. On display will be large scale drawing, sculptural pieces, installation works and digital paintings which promise to be a varied and stimulating take from the trio.
Artist Statements:
Jean Gleeson: "These works tell a story of the genetic inheritance I was born with. Tales bearing the gravity of gender stereotypes, tragic loss, sadness and joy. Into the mix are childhood memories and symbols that tease out the origins of identity, the relationship and pull between East and West.”
Sue Ferrari: “My interest lies in how we identify with commonplace objects and cloth, the shared social histories and our personal association that gives them meaning, each intimately linked with the human experience. This narrative features the highs and lows of life, fortune and misfortune, through the process of adaptation.”
Nathan Pye: “What do we wear as armour, what do we wield as weapons? What will tell our stories and who will tell them? This body of work discusses the formation of identity, via internal and external factors, both willingly and unwillingly, the control and loss of control of our bodies and identity when they are exposed to the other.”
No Rules - Killarney Basket Makers
27 July - 21 August
This group exhibition displays the talents of the Killarney Basket makers, Minda Baxter, Cherree Densley, Isobel Esmore, Sylvia Harbour, Dianna Heeps and Joanne Russell. The women all hail from Killarney and surrounding towns Port Fairy, Koroit, Casterton, with one contributor, formerly of Penshurst, posting her work from far away desert country in Queensland after relocating there in 2021.
“We create ornamental and functional pieces out of harvested, acquired or scavenged materials. We come together to support and encourage each other in basket making and continue to develop our own unique styles. The exhibition title ‘No Rules’ reflects the uniqueness of our work. We all enjoy creating things that are a little unusual, with lots of experimentation out of a strong foundation of traditional basketry skills. There is so much beauty to be found in our own local environment and you will be amazed how common materials become transformed by imagination and ingenuity.”
View No Rules virtually:
Beneath The Sky's Verandah: Paintings and Ceramics by Georgina Sambell
Beneath The Sky’s Verandah: Paintings and Ceramics by Georgina Sambell
1 June- 26 June
Opening Saturday 4 June 6-8pm
This exhibition is a selection of paintings and ceramics made within Sambell’s studio over the past year. Sambell says that, ‘the works have not been made to suit a theme nor as a series, but come together to be in conversation with one another’.
Sambell’s work deals with verities of time and space, life and death, and aims to address the social and spiritual aspects of human nature.
‘Overture’, Oil on Canvas, 116 x 96cm, 2022, $1800
‘Intermission’, Oil on Canvas, 112 x 91cm, 2022, $1800
‘A Crows Feast’, Oil on Canvas, 81 x 76cm, 2022, $900
‘A Tears Shadow’, Oil on Canvas, 122 x 96cm, 2022, $3900
‘The Gun’, Oil on Canvas, 35 x 41cm, 2022, $600
‘The Dining Table’, Oil on Canvas, 96 x 86cm, 2022, $1800
‘Frozen Peas’, Stoneware Ceramic, 25 x 12cm, 2022, $650
‘Bottling Growths’, Stoneware Ceramic, 30 x 12cm, 2022, $500
‘In other times I was a child’, Pastel on Paper, 81 x 111cm, 2022, $1500
‘Half Time’ Oil on Linen, 33 x 38cm, 2022 $700
‘Untitled’, Stoneware Ceramic, 20 x 20cm, 2022, $800
‘The Never Ending’, Oil on Canvas, 126 x 155cm, 2021, $4400
‘Triumphant Lingering’, Oil on Linen, 34 x 39cm, 2022, $600
‘Untitled’, Stoneware Ceramic, 22 x 17cm, 2022, $450
‘Awaiting’, Oil on Canvas, 61 x 41cm, 2022, $700
‘Orchestrated chaos’, Stoneware Ceramic, 24 x 15cm, 2022, $400
‘In Flight’, Stoneware Ceramic, 22 x 10cm, 2022, $400
‘Untitled’, Stoneware Ceramic, 24 x 16cm, 2022, $400
‘The Tunnels’, Stoneware Ceramic, 30 x 18cm, 2022, $450
‘Rebirthed’, Stoneware Ceramic, 23 x 15cm, 2022, $400
‘Baggage Claim’, Oil on Canvas, 122 x 152cm, 2022, $4200
‘Blue Summons’, Stoneware Ceramic, 20 x 14cm, 2022, NFS
‘The Overpass’, Stoneware Ceramic, 17 x 9cm, 2022, $500
‘The Crossing’, Stoneware Ceramic, 12.5 x 12cm, 2022, $350
‘Untitled’, Stoneware Ceramic, 15 x 10cm, 2022, $500
‘Ready to Travel’, Stoneware Ceramic, 21 x 12cm, 2022, $500
‘Swing and Lift’, Stoneware Ceramic, 34 x 16cm, 2022, $850
‘Untitled’, Stoneware Ceramic, 23 x 10cm, 2022, (Chipped Top) $200
Co-existence of Incongruence: Heather Stewart
29 June - 24 July
Opening Saturday 2 July 4pm-6pm
Over the last few years Heather Stewart has increasingly adopted a multidisciplinary practice to find a way forward to understand how we alter and contemporize our idea of normality. The exhibition at F Project is ostensibly eclectic but united in one idea about human diversity or rather a question about how we alter our view of what is normal. The human heads and bodies are not necessarily gender specific although historical references to archetypal female imagery provide the viewer with an element of familiarity. Stewart is trying to explore how much incongruity the mind finds acceptable in order to take on new information and alter its perception of what it means to be human.
In the small sculptures, she has tried to balance the abstraction of anthropomorphic tree forms with mimetic clay heads, shoulders and sometimes feet and hands. In their entirety the visual language of all the sculptures, including the busts exhibit a disparity in colour, materiality and form, the white clay contrasting with the shellacked tree forms; clay against perspex.
The collages comprise a variety of juxtaposed images taken from popular and disparate sources; comics, magazines, tissue box designs etc. Stewart aims to marry the known with the unknown; the random with the familiar, in order to convince the viewer of the validity of the forms. Art historical references and mythological identities such as the figure of Flora, and the Greek Muses provide a stabilizing focus point and hopefully some element of aesthetic beauty.
Stewart says; Initially I wanted to reconcile the evident material disparities. At best I’ve aimed for a serendipitous co-existence of incongruence.
JACK WILKINS EXPERIMENTAL PHOTOGRAPHY PRIZE 6 APRIL- 1 MAY
Reminiscing Warrnambool 4 May-29 May
Reminiscing Warrnambool 4 May-29 May
*note: #8 not pictured -it is a small print of Camping Fun; and #14 not pictured -it is a small print of Surfside Caravan Park.
** PLEASE CONTACT gallery@thefproject.org.au if you wish to make an enquiry about one of these artworks or 0428870233.
Colleen Campbell
This is my first solo exhibition.
I have been casually painting with Glenn Morgans Tuesday night classes for a few years now.
I paint to remember. Where I’ve been, what I’ve seen. To record time. To bring pleasure to me and anyone who views my work.
My paintings usually start with a photograph, then I add my own colours and style.
Reminiscing Warrnambool, is about buildings, places and experiences that are no longer there or have changed with Warrnambools growing landscape.
I hope my work sparks memories, good memories and puts a smile on peoples faces .
This exhibition will also be able to be viewed online at our Virtual Gallery after the opening launch on Saturday 7 May 2022 www.thefproject.org.au
AWAKE : JEFFREY VIZON 9 MARCH - 3 APRIL
Awake
Solo Exhibition
Jeffrey Vizon
On its surface, the body of works from Jeffrey’s first self-published picture storybook and solo exhibition, Awake, is a tale of a brave, young warrior navigating a journey of self-discovery and renewal with themes of transcendence and hope. The tale is based on the strength and perseverance of a girl’s true journey, which touched the lives of many, including Jeffrey.
Jeffrey’s evocative pencil artworks draw in his own experiences and landscapes from his home region, South West Victoria, to illustrate an alternative universe in which this narrative takes place. Below the surface, Awake captures Jeffrey’s journey of grief, hope, and life’s transitions that took place over the span of the two-year creative process of this collection.
Jeffrey hopes that others can connect with the raw emotion that has been weaved into each piece in this dream-like body of work so that every individual viewer can deep dive into their own emotions and find their own narrative within the melancholy world of Awake.
AWAKE : JEFFREY VIZON
1.Ripples Through Time Pencil on paper H 69 x 88 cm NFS
2.The Crossing Pencil on paper H 69 x W 88 cm $2000
3.Stairway to Heaven Pencil on paper H 57 x W 49 cm $1200
4.The Doors Pencil on paper H 69 x W 88 cm $2000
5.The Guardians Pencil on paper H 88 x W 69 cm $2000
6.Tree Man Pencil on paper H 59 x W 51 cm $ 850
7.Mr. Rabbit Pencil on paper H 43 x W 51 cm $ 950
8.Into the Dark Pencil on paper H 33 x W 40 cm $ 660
9.Into the Void Pencil on paper H 33 x W 40 cm $ 660
10.Into the Light Pencil on paper H 69 x W 88 cm $ 850
11.Legs Eleven Pencil on paper H 69 x W 88 cm $2000
12.Awake Pencil on paper H 69 x W 88 cm $2000
13.Bridging the Gap Pencil on paper H 69 x W 88 cm $2000
14.Nostalgia Pencil on paper H 69 x W 88 cm $2000
15.Melancholy Pencil on paper H 52 x W 66 cm $1600
16.Running Free Pencil on paper H 52 x W 66 cm $1600
17.Into the Woods Pencil on paper H 71 x W 58 cm $2000
18.Jimmy Pencil on paper H 50 x W 56 cm NFS
19.Reflection Pencil on paper H 50 x W 57 cm $1600