Showing posts with label Art. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Art. Show all posts

Friday, June 4, 2010

Weather Observations, New Work, Turlee and Mungo National Park

Well we have been travelling now for 7 months. I've got a persistent sore left hip and I am missing my washing machine. Travelling like this is very physical and some of the positions I get myself into are frustrating , living in such a small space is mentally and physically challenging. However I'm always up for a challenge. Luckily I can open my caravan door to the great outdoors.

After our lovely break in the Yarra Valley we have been touring around Victoria and made a quick visit back to New South Wales,Turlee, (which I forgot?) where we stayed on a station for 3 nights, and visited Mungo National Park. I am posting this from the Flinders Ranges in South Australia. So you might appreciate my blury head space. Turlee is where I started on some new work about weather for a group exhibition I am participating in next year. Turlee, treated us to amazing sunrises and sunsets which has inspired this new work. I am very excited about the show and I am also making a video work to present. Below are some images I took whilst on my stay.


New work progressing and observing a little cloud on the way to Turlee


The Shearing Shed Hat, symbols that reminded me I was on a Station way out West

Turlee Sunset

 
Country people have to have a sense of humour, Turlee


Turlee's Shearing Shed. Imagine the stories that come out of here.This is were felt comes from.

Willandra Lake, Mungo National Park. This took me back to the Serengeti in Africa I was imagining giraffes, elephant and wild animals herding and grazing.

On the other side of the lake, Walls of China




Mary (Me) shearing my little lamb, Mungo Station wool shed.
I remember fondly as a child playing in my Nanna and Poppy's shearing shed. It
was such a place of fantasy for a Young girl. I used to fly over to WA in the school holidays. My Nanna and Poppy who have both now passed owned a very large sheep and wheat property near the Stirling ranges in Western Australia. Talk about hard work as a women back then. They were the pioneers.

Wednesday, June 2, 2010

Art, Spirituality and Human Rights

Philanthropist Society $10,000


Dual/Family Charter Lifetime Membership

Prominent recognition in members-only newsletter, website and Chapel printed programs

Four VIP seating passes for all public programs

Complimentary copy of all program audio CDs

Invitation for two to attend all private receptions following select 2009-2010 season public programs

Private dinner with the Chairman of the Board of Directors and the Executive Director

Trip to New York City (flight and hotel included) to attend a donor reception at the private home of Christopher Rothko (son of Mark Rothko)


There is so much I am discovering via blogging. This morning I clicked on Art Biz and read the post. WOW! check out Rothko Chapel.I'm in heaven. If their is ever a reason to go to America, this would be it for me, just to go and see this. Now I just need $10,000 to buy a ticket to the Philanthropist Society.

Friday, May 21, 2010

Escape to Melbourne and Invest in Art

While we were staying at the Yarra Valley, I snuck away for a 2 day child free escape to Melbourne. Phew! I needed that.
I stayed with my wonderful girlfriend Jade who I have known for 11 years we used to work together at the Sheraton Hotel in Brisbane. Jade lives in Camberwell. (Don't know why I wrote Cabramatta, I must have sydney on my mind). Jade is currently housing 2 country Italian boys from Sicily who are studying English.What entertainment, wish I was 20 and single. Jade and I caught up on all the goss and had a quick window shopping jaunt. I went to the movies by myself at Chadstone, which was so therapeutic! I went and saw the movie Date Night, it was a weekday and their were 6 people in the cinema. I couldn’t stop laughing, I was crying. I was so loud. I had never been to the movies before by myself. I am looking forward to this again.

While I was in Melbourne my lovely friend Susan Buret was having a solo exhibition at Anita Traverso Gallery. I was very excited to be able to attend her opening, I had not been out in such a long time ohh! And to get dressed up.

Susan and I met at a art workshop in Brisbane around 2004. Since then we have both pursued our art careers and have met again many other times, at art workshops, gallery openings and events, BAD and for the occasional cup of coffee. While we were travelling, I also poped into see her in her new studio up in the southern highlands of New South Wales. I like Susan’s work because I am interested in conceptual work and pattern. What you see is not what you get from Susan’s work. It is thought provoking open to interpretation and intimate. Jades favourite piece in the show is Mist2 she said she found the work erotic and she saw lots of legs.

Mist2 2009 Acrylic Linen 1500mmx1050mm, Susan Buret



My favourite piece in the show is Mist 1. I can see a Bush landscape, with gum tree branches sprawling on a misty morning. Small filled bits of pattern add emphasis to the mystery and journey that invites me in to look closer. I want the patterned screen to drop down, if magically just for second, so I can bathe directly in my mystical misty gum tree. The very act of this unveiling though would diminish my interest and intrigue. Do we really want to know what happens next.Or do we want to create our own destiny and path. I feel a sense of memory with each layer a silhouette of fine transparent silk shadowing the past and gently moving forward.

I am biased so you need to go and have a closer look for yourself to see just how much depth is layered within the work. Susan’s show Stolen Geometry from the Gardens of Love is on till May 29th, Anita Traverso Gallery, 7 Albert Street, Richmond, Melbourne. Vic 3121.
Prepare to be mesmerized, you’ll want to take home your favourite piece, so take your credit card and invest in a piece of beautiful original art.


Mist1 2009 Acrylic Canvas 1500mmx1050mm, Susan Buret


Art is one of the few investments that is a pleasure to own and, if chosen carefully, can bring excellent financial rewards. With rapidly increasing sales and record setting prices, Australian art is attracting an increasing number of new investors.

Unlike property, art is virtually maintenance free. It won’t collapse in front of your eyes like a company can and it doesn’t command financial planning fees and commissions, regardless of its value. To find out more reasons why? to invest in art please click on Art Equity

Sunday, October 11, 2009

How to make your art project interactive and fun

Lately I have been asking myself, What do I want to do to have fun, laugh, smile, be child like, release my inhibitions? I am realising I am becoming an absolute bore so serious all the time. With a need to get things done, move forward, over achieve, and come up with plans and goals. Ironically for me, this is fun fun fun. A brain storming boot camp with a catchy introduction of "trade not aid, learn how to tie knots with the hill tribes of Africa" would be something that would just turn my beating heart into a ray of sunshine and turn those laugh lines into deep valleys. I'd really like to loosen up a bit. So this morning when I clicked on Passion Pages blog "the fun theory" I was over joyed to see the post. The inspiration is definitely one of fun and smiles. However for someone like me, it leads to more contemplative thought, on how I could make my art projects more fun and interactive. Maybe I should interact more and leave the how to's to someone else. ahhhh! Nope that would be no fun. I just can't help myself. Here's to having more fun!

Sunday, October 4, 2009

St George Bank, Green Dragon Art Prize Grand Winner, Wendy Brown

Wendy Brown with her winning artwork Six degrees
75cm x 1m canvas, made from Charcoal, synthetic polymer, and shellac

I'm excited to announce that my friend Wendy Brown was named Grand Winner of the 2009 St.George Bank Green Dragon Art Prize. Wendy received $2500 prize money and and her artwork will hang in St.George’s Brisbane corporate office.

Wendy's winning entry, Six Degrees, is a compilation of images reflecting a hectic life interwoven with cultural diversity and secret aspirations.
Congratulations! Wendy, my mouse is dancing for you.

To read more about Wendy's exciting win, and the St George Bank's, Green Dragon Art prize click here
candyxx

Friday, August 28, 2009

Alice in Wonderland-day 2


Miss Italy - Digital enhanced image from collage self portrait from series 'Sticks and Stones' by Candice Herne

I woke early in a slight dehydrated, morning-after haze. It's been along time between drinks, I had forgotten what effects wine had on me and that I was so used to getting up early. I was quietly trying not to wake the house. I wasn't too successful as Belinda woke soon after. We mossied around and planned our day. Melbourne University was our first stop. Belinda is studying Environment and hopes to get into a consultation role when completed.

While she was at her lecture, I wandered around Lygon St and the outskirts of Fitzroy. Gravitating towards the book stores, I browsed away the time and spotted the book, Handmade in Melbourne presented beautifully on a 'look at me' shelf. Alyssa Milton's label Lyssy May is featured in the book. I walked out of the store with a new companion in a book called 'How To Be An Explorer Of The World: Portable Art Life Museum' by Keri Smith - very appropriate given my current circumstances and it didn't disappoint. I highly recommend this little treasure/art, creative book to start you on your way, where ever you may be.

I had a fun conversation about fashion, art and design with a little gay Greek god in a cute contemporary fashion boutique. The shop was closed, so I was peering intensely, nose squashed up against the glass, breathing in all the interior decor (I find that interiors and what shops have on their walls is what really draws me into a store). He - the gay Greek god - kindly and so politely opened up early to satisfy my nosiness. I felt like we were instant best friends chatting freely about art. I had to cut our rendezvous short as I had to rush back to uni to put more money in the parking meter.

I stopped by the student union info counter outside the uni to ask for directions to the galleries. Ian Potter Museum of Art was only 100m up the block so I made my way there and wandered around. There was a great selection of traditional, historical and contemporary art on show. My mobile woke me up from my enchanting encounter - lecture complete!

Next stop was Alyssa's studio in Kensington. Did you know iPhones have street directories? Who knew? Belinda has an iPhone; technology! Phones do so much these days - yes, I don't get out much.

It was lovely to catch up with Alyssa and unexpectedly her Mum, at her studio. Her studio is very bohemian and romantic from a visual perspective. It's one of those places that as an artist you may dream about; having a studio space in a beautiful, rundown, old European architectural warehouse-type building with other artists. Actually, 'Alice in Wonderland' is not far from the truth. As you enter Alyssa's studio building up some stairs, through the tiniest of doors, covered with worn out writing, stooping down low to climb inside. And inside her studio the space is packed with beautiful fabrics scattered all around the place, bags, and pictures. Juicy for the artist's eye. Alyssa is out there doing her thing, making headway bit by bit, getting involved and working hard.

I was also there to pick out a handbag and choose one of her handmade felted brooches, as the winner of a competition she held a few months ago. After much deliberation I chose the black and red peacock satchel and a cute yellow and blue felted brooch for Suki. It's so inspiring and re-assuring for me as a artist to actually go outside the studio and connect with other artists and the general public. That's what I love about BAD - it's not only a meeting place, but a place to practice being a holistic artist (from conception through to completion and beyond). I find it's the in-between where many of us stall; from writing and talking about our work, to exhibition, marketing, PR and the rest - it all can be so daunting at times. When I hear how other people accomplish things, it some how takes the myth out of it all and becomes more achievable for me.

Next stop (not the last!) was back home for a nap to sleep off the red wine and the pound of blue cheese and fig jam I ate the night before. Now that's a combination divine! Try it! Mild blue cheese with fig jam on water crackers - yum!

"Oh do we have to go?" I moaned. I needed more sleep. We had plans to meet up with some friends at the Transport Bar in Federation Square. A quick makeover and we were cute explorers once again!

Walking across the bridge with the Victorian street lamps to Federation square, with the wind blowing the cold night air, transported me back about 12 years and the joyous feelings I had walking around London. Those were the days.

The Transport bar was the chosen meeting place as apparently it's good for the 'perv'- talent watch, cute guy spotting. This was critical on our agenda as both Angela and Jade our girlfriends had 'a room at the Inn' they were single. As for Belinda and I our rooms had no Vacancy, we were both married. However window shopping and shopping for others is always fun. Can't say anything was as half as attractive as the Haute Couture dress I saw at Euro Trash.

The evening was fun, flowy, chatty, girly and tasty as we talked about favourite food and nibbled on nachos, fat chips and wasabi mayonnaise. At one point in the evening one of girls said, 'Do we want to go to another bar?' instantly someone replied, No, you know what it's like when you move bars, you loose the MoJo-spirit of the night. We all agreed spontaneously, with a little laugh. On reflection, I find this very amusing as I feel it is one of realisations that
A. I am growing up or B. I am getting old. 15 years ago we all would have been zipping around from bar to bar, with the energy and vigor of a springbok (deer like animal)-yes I'm getting old who would use the word Springbok ha!.

Time for more beauty sleep, it was way past all the Cinderella's bed times, kiss kiss, hug hug, home we go with a Jigity Jig. Got home to Bel's where the boy's, John and his mates were having a night in watching sport, having a few wines and eating chocolate. I joined them for a night cap and chunk of coconut chocolate and went to bed for more sleep.

The Dandenongs tomorrow!
more trip coming soon.............................................................................

Tuesday, June 23, 2009

Felting Exhibition:Thusday, 9th July to Saturday, 22 August





I am exhibiting 3 new art couture, felted head pieces in the up coming group show.
'That felted feeling'

presented by
Queensland Spinners Weavers and Fibre Artists and Pine Rivers Art Gallery

Please join us for opening night: 6 for 6.30pm Friday, 10 July, FREE
Pine Rivers Art Gallery, Unit 7/199 Gympie Road, Strathpine (parking off Mecklem Street)
RSVP & Enquiries: 3205 0555 by Monday, 6 July

Free Artist Talks, afternoon tea and demonstrations every Saturday at 2pm

Workshops: Saturdays 11am to 1pm
For details and bookings phone 3480 6941

Gallery hours: Monday to Saturday, 10am-4pm
Free Admission

Tuesday, May 12, 2009

Installation and Contemporary Art

I have had this wounderful article on my Hat Design blog for a long time. I'm rearranging the furniture and I have decided to put it on this blog now for its final resting place. Sometimes I just don't know where to put things. Enjoy!

Materials and Meanings
By Janet Koplos

Two significant aspects of ikebana recommend it to the field of contemporary art. One is sensitivity to materials; the other is symbolic meaning. It shares both these factors with sculpture and installation as they are known in the West today. In addition, ikebana and installation are both ephemeral.

An extraordinary feel for materials is one of the famous characteristics of Japanese aesthetics and seems to extend to every aspect of life. This sensibility probably arises from the Shinto belief that the gods (kami) can be present in any remarkable natural object or phenomenon. If a rock or a tree may be the habitation of a god, it carries a spiritual power beyond our Western generality of the sublime. And if a natural substance can have that power, it deserves respect in all its forms and uses.In addition, ikebana has a conceptual structure: the theory of composition consists of “the Leading Principle (Heaven), the Subordinate Principle (Earth) and the Reconciling Principle (Man).”

Although beauty is certainly part of the scheme, ikebana is far from being just a pleasing formal design of posies in pots. It is meant to provoke thought.

This artistic expression originated in Buddhist altar decorations honoring the dead. All the various schools of ikebana in Japan today trace their history to the Ikenobo family of Buddhist priests in Kyoto beginning in the Muromachi period (16th century).Flower arrangements are also part of the aesthetic program of the tea ceremony, another creation of medieval Japan. The tea ceremony began as a humbling, peaceful practice of heightened concentration in a militaristic culture. A social and aesthetic activity, it centers on the visual and tactile qualities of the objects used. A scroll and a flower arrangement carefully placed in the display alcove called the tokonoma are typically the highlights of an essentially empty room in which the ceremony occurs.

In such a reductive setting, subtleties of color, texture and form can be discovered and appreciated.In modern times, the tea ceremony sometimes seems no more than a social grace practiced by young women, and seasonal flower arrangements ornament traditional homes and many public places, from corporate lobbies to hotel rooms. Ikebana is less religious in its associations but still appreciated for its seriousness and visual impact. In its extreme modern forms, this art takes on aspects of performance. Ikebana has been created on stage, using not flowers but trees: the drama of the arrangement is emphasized by use of unexpected materials and complexity as well as large scale. Ikebana may be pictorial, when the arrangement is placed against a wall, but it also may be fully three-dimensional and command the room in which it is set.

Typically, it is site-specific, made for the particular proportions and other details of a given room.Expanding in concept and practice, ikebana, during the late 20th century, shaded easily into contemporary art. My book, Contemporary Japanese Sculpture (Abbeville Press, 1991), included several artists directly linked to ikebana, two of whom, Kosen Ohtsubo and Gaho Taniguchi, are part of the Wave Hill exhibition. Another artist in this show, Chisen Furukawa, has been a resident in the international studio program at New York’s P.S. 1, that incubator for leading-edge contemporary art.Ikebana training certainly has not limited its practitioners to repeating tradition! Hiroshi Teshigahara, director of the celebrated Sogetsu school established by his father, Sofu, created a bamboo tunnel in a New York gallery a few years ago.

The first public work of Jae-Eun Choi, then a student at the Sogetsu school, consisted of filling the school’s stone lobby (designed by Isamu Noguchi) with topsoil and planting grass, which germinated during the run of the exhibition. Ohtsubo once filled a room at the Hara Museum of Contemporary Art in Tokyo with lightning-like zigzags made of disposable chopsticks doweled together with toothpicks. A younger ikebana-trained artist, Shogo Kariyazaki, has exhibited blocks of soil seemingly sliced straight out of the earth, and a rowboat filled with clay. Sound was part of Taniguchi’s work when she strewed a gallery floor with straw and dried beans. Flowers per se are not involved in works like these, but other once-growing things or natural substances are central.

The installations are highly tactile, and they often involve earthy odors. These works differ from traditional ikebana in presenting the natural substances in unexpected places or combinations. The viewer slows down and attends to the experience.Such works have affinities with abstract installations by Western artists—for instance, the kind of large-scale yet detail-oriented environments that the American artist Ann Hamilton creates. They can also be compared with the British sculptor David Nash’s sculptural forms extracted from deadfall trees, or his notable growing structures, such as a cluster of trees pruned to grow into a dome. Equally they relate to the arrangements of leaves, berries or other natural materials—in the gallery or in the landscape—by the British artist Andy Goldsworthy or the German Nils-Udo.I

n the Japanese context, ikebana-inspired works have a seamless historic lineage. The emphasis, you may have noted, is on ephemeral materials or malleable forms: not stone but soil, not wood but bamboo, not metal rods but chopsticks. Mainstream contemporary sculpture in Japan embraces disposable materials, for reasons that vary from the conceptual to the practical. Many young artists, lacking studio space to make or store their works and also lacking a likely market, create installations of things that can be discarded at the conclusion of a show.Significantly, one of the most influential Japanese art movements of the late 20th century concentrated on “direct contact with something real” akin to the motivations of ikebana-inspired art. This movement, called Mono-ha, was at its height from 1968 to 1972 but has been widely influential; several of its originators remain true to its principles, which include using materials unaltered and undisguised, and recognizing that the material makes as crucial a contribution to the artwork as the artist does.

Contemporary Japanese sculpture with an ikebana sensibility can be understood and appreciated without knowing its historical or literal roots. The forms make their magic by transforming the familiar. Anyone who has ever relaxed on the grass and made a chain of clover blossoms can recognize the elements, and anyone who has ever looked at a flower or a seed and envisioned a universe can grasp its implications.Footnotes[1] “Both Buddhism and Shintoism teach that the things of nature are not essentially unlike mankind, and even that they are endowed with spirits similar to those of men. Accordingly awe and sublimity are almost unknown in Japanese painting and poetry, but beauty and grace and gentleness are visible in every work of art.”

Masaharu Anesaki, Art, Life and Nature in Japan, Tokyo, Charles E. Tuttle Co., 1973 (orig. pub. 1932), p. 10.[2] Kakuzo Okakura, The Book of Tea, New York, Dover Publications, 1964 (orig. pub. 1906), p. 58.

Sunday, April 12, 2009

Travelling Artist

If your feeling a bit consumed in your daily life and want to take off to exotic countries and visit art galleries and experience life as a travelling artist. Visit Susan Buret's blog as she shares with you her wanderings through the streets and art galleries abroad.

Tuesday, March 10, 2009

Designed Statements

Jaime Beattie Shopping Bags
I have just purchased 3 of Jaime's Bags to add to my art collection. I'm looking forward to framing and hanging Jaime's Bag's of thought.
I found these great propoganda bags on Alyssa's site. Thanks for showing us your shopping, Alyssa.

Sunday, March 8, 2009

We can not achieve anything alone


Morning Inspiration. The following is what happened this morning.


Rhody (4): Mummy come and have a look at this. Close your eyes. Da Daaa! A "Colourful Cubby House" I made it! Daddy helped a little bit.

Rhody (4) with a little help from Daddy

Thursday, March 5, 2009

It's been a few days since my last confession


I did some more Flower arranging again today. With the original flowers from a few days ago. I'm looking forward to seeing what they look like in a few more days.

Sunday, March 1, 2009

Flower Arranging











I did some flower arranging today. This work is a follow on from 2 painting "Variegated Society" and "Reclaim Regrowth" my Nurture verses Nature Series I started in 2008, which was exhibited last year at Brunswick St Gallery Melbourne. I am interested in looking at humanity and society, through nature.

I walked around the garden this morning collecting flowers then dismantled them on to a white board. And then aranged them, and took photo's.
こんにちは、私は今日整理する花をした。 このアートワークは私の"の別である; 性質はNurture"を作詩する; シリーズ。 私は性質を通して探検の人間性および社会に興味がある。 親切な点Candice Hernexx この翻訳は意味を成しているか。

Friday, February 13, 2009

Tuesday, February 3, 2009

Hold My Hand Miss Jane


Hold My Hand Miss Jane - from photographic portrait series by Candice Herne


This portrait is of my husband Rod. This is a tribute to Mr Squiggle - remember the 70's ABC show. "Up side down Miss Jane" said Mr Squiggle. "Hurry Up" said the black board. We both have affection for Mr Squiggle. We both think that this picture resembles a animal (cat, dog ) face. If you sqint your eyes it will come to life.




Friday, January 30, 2009

Inspirational Weather Project

Image by Candice Herne
My participation in the International Weather project was so much fun.

For me it was such a stimulating, dynamic, and inspirational project. As a Visual Artist and Mother of 2 it is a challenge finding worthy, contemporary projects to contribute to, without having such a time consuming impact on my me and my family. This project is one of the most valuable, creative adventures I have been on in quite awhile.

Not only did it inspire me. It has fine tuned my conceptual skills and made me think about how I communicate. I was rewarded everyday through the meditation of taking the photographs and the analysis of my partners post, and working out how to respond directly. For me it was a concentrated, purposeful project.

As Miriam and Hege highlight connections are made, where previously there where none. For me, this was the most enlightening and delightful unexpected outcome of this experience.

To quote my partner Vaydehi "I never new that weather could be so interesting"
Candyxx
I just noticed I missed spelt connection in the labels for this post. Typing to fast I wrote "commection". I like it, it the experience was definately a "commection" communicate to connect, I like it!

Sunday, August 10, 2008

What am I on about?


'untitled' ink pen drawing and digital manipulation by Candice Herne 2009


I have been thinking about what my work is actually about.

As an artist, it can be difficult to pinpoint what one is on about most of time. I think of and view the world through a picture frame. My brain is like a gallery where I'm always cutting and pasting and hanging up bits and pieces; capturing sound, sights and smells that imprint themselves so I can look, think and question. Then somewhere down the track they seem to manifest into something I call Art.

I am definitely a voyeur of life; interested in philosophy, human psychology, the natural world and how we all co-exist. I am intrigued by the ups, downs, easts and wests of life and death and everything in-between.

I see my work as purely representational of me exploring my own identity and place in the universe and how today's society influences, leads and herds us to make cultural, political, religious and spiritual judgements.

Through my process I am always questioning, analysing and looking for answers and trying to find a way to identify and connect with people. Ultimately my mission is to feel peace; inner peace, community/neighbourhood peace, world peace. R.I.P.

Candice Hernexx
*please note I have changed the image to this post 4/08/2010