ceramics

As an artist I have to write lots of artist statements. I am always so grateful for you my dear internets, because each and every artist statement I write I always treat as if I am writing to you. I generally give my artist statement a trial run here on the blog to see how it reads and more importantly to see how you react to it and to ask your opinion on my words.

Some artists statements are so convoluted and so wanky and I become so baffled by them, that I stop reading after the first sentence because they have boggled my mind. I know that in their first year at Art School, students are taught the common  language of art which ostensibly makes it easy to have a conversation across all disciplines.

But Oh My Word internet, for us common folk that are reading these statements at an exhibition,sometimes the statement is less a statement and more an incomprehensible puzzle that makes me feel quite the dullard.

But I digress. This post is about MY artist statement and mine are never ever wanky. (Ever.)

I woke up this morning around 6 and being a Saturday, I thought I would stay in bed and snooze for a bit longer. But my brain was awake and filled with words all busting with impatience and clamouring to be put onto a a page with their friends. So here we are again internet it is just you and I in the early morning, you and I and my words.

Oh and by the way, David’s first day at school went well. He didn’t go to school for his second day though and yesterday he broke up with his girlfriend again. So he is home for the moment and will most definitely be going to school for his third day because muggins here, will be bloody well driving him the 50 ks to school.

Now what were we doing? Oh that’s right Artist statements.

Here we go then, tell me what you think of this one.

Fired Up, Kim Foale

I was invited to be part of this exhibition because I am “fired up” about what I do. I am passionate about my work and if you are here today at the opening please feel free to ask me any questions that you may have and I will try very hard not to talk your ears off. I am the one with the purple hair and stripy socks. If you missed the opening and would like to talk to me, my cards are here, shoot me an email and we can have a yak.

 3.2 million items of Plastic Pollution enter the world’s oceans every day. Plastic bottle tops, helium balloon clips and cigarette lighters are common ingredients, found in this deadly plastic soup. If I think too deeply about the implications of that amount of pollution clogging up the already messy ocean, I could become paralysed with despair and inertia.

So I don’t think about the vast amount of plastic that is thrown away every day. I think about small bits of plastic that I can actually do something about. I think about bottle tops and cigarette lighters.

Disposable cigarette lighters by their very nature are designed to be thrown away. The cigarette lighters that are glued onto my canvas were removed from the stomachs of dead Laysan Albatross chicks on the Kure Atoll in Hawaii in 2009. These cigarette lighters were  floating on top of the oceans and the adult Laysan Albatross collected them in their search for food and fed them to their chicks. Eventually the Laysan Albatross chicks stomachs were filled with plastic pollution and they died from starvation.

I often use plastic pollution that has been removed from dead sea birds in my work. I painted this canvas using a cigarette lighter as a palette knife and the primary colours used are the bright colours of everyday plastics. I used the same cigarette lighters to make marks in the Southern Ice touchstones that fill the “dead albatross bowl”. The touchstones whilst beautiful are a poignant reminder that we are filling our oceans with plastic pollution. I hope that their small beauty will inspire you to think about small ways that you can help as well.

I also used plastic bottle tops and other small items found on the beach to make marks in the clay. The black eggs are a reminder that if we don’t act soon, all that will be left of our seabirds are photographs and trays of hollow eggs in dusty museum cases.

One person can make a difference.

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After I wrote this I went back and read the guidelines for my artist statement and it is supposed to be only 150 words. I have 462 words.

Bugger.

I will cull it tomorrow.

My words are tired now.

Thank you for listening.

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No rhyme or reason

by frogpondsrock on January 31, 2012

in Arty stuff..,blogging,ceramics,thinking out loud

To the words that pop into my head. Or to the order in which I do things.

I am so time poor at the monet internet that this blog is sorely, sorely neglected.

Maybe tomorrow I will write an insightful blog post full of charm and wit.

I am typing so hurriedly that I wrote monet instead of moment in my second sentence and I sat for ten minutes pondering the significance of that word exchange and I thought it looked so nice that I have left it there. I am now thinking about blurry paintings and what a shame it was that Monet had a hissy fit and destroyed so many of his paintings.

Speaking of paintings.

I am part of a group show in Burnie in the north west of the state, that opens in less than four weeks and we have all been given a canvas to use as our Artist Statement. I painted my canvas yesterday. I am going to add some text to explain my work as well as some photographs of  the work in progress and maybe glue a cigarette lighter onto the canvas as well.

The hardest part about any job is starting.

Apparently you have to rub some white spirits over the canvas to break down the fibres. As the canvas was propped up on the shelf drying, I asked twitter how long I should wait before I started chucking some paint about. The answer I liked the most was straight away. So I set to work

These photos were taken with my phone.

I started off using a piece of cardboard as a paintbrush and smeared some yellow poster paint all over the canvas.

The cardboard soon became soggy and left little pieces of itself on my canvas, so I changed tools and started to use a cigarette lighter as my brush.I also fingerpainted quite a bit as well.

And this is the finished background to my Canvas Artist Statement. All I need to do now is tell the story of the body of work that I have made for “Fired Up” and have it all done by the end of February.

And of course remember to breathe…

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Frenetica.

by frogpondsrock on January 12, 2012

in Arty stuff..,ceramics,Dead Albatross bowls,friendship,Fun

New work by Kim Foale and Philadelphia Hanson-Viney

These next images were very hurriedly taken in my studio last night. They give you an idea of the work, that will be on display in the Off Centre Micro Gallery from today the 12th of January until Wednesday the 8th of February.

Now I have to race up to the studio, wrap the pots up and transport them all into the city, where Philly and I will set them up in situ in the gallery later on this morning. I will take photos of the work in the Micro Gallery and do an edit of this post this afternoon. Wish me luck internet.

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I am not panicking but the temptation is there internet, the temptation is there.

Do you remember when I mentioned I was having an exhibition on January the 26th with Eve Howard? An exhibition that was mostly all my friend Eve’s idea? Well internet, Eve has reluctantly cancelled as she is too busy to do our Albatross exhibition justice and we will have a fabulous joint show together at a later date.

This in itself isn’t enough to make me panic, not even enough to make me falter in my artistic stride internet. No, not at all.

What has made me contemplate panicking is the fact that another exhibitor at the Off Centre Micro Gallery has cancelled their booking and because of this cancellation, I decided to bring the date of my exhibition forward 2 weeks.

Commence panicky breathing and OH MY FUCKING GODS now.

That means that I have to have my work ready in TWELVE DAYS internet. Not the luxurious twenty six days I had up my sleeve yesterday.

12 days.

Eeek.

On the upside, I have asked another ceramic friend of mine, the very talented Philadelphia Hansen-Viney to share the space with me. Philly is going to bring some of her work up here tomorrow and we will do a bisque firing on Monday and then I plan to do a glaze firing by next Saturday the 7th of January at the very very latest.

I am going to be cutting it very very fine internet.

Very fine indeed.

I will keep you posted.

*image by Robin Roberts.

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Ceramic eggs revisited.

by frogpondsrock on December 15, 2011

in ceramics,friendship

The work creates the work is my mantra.

Well not really a mantra as I don’t fervently mutter it under my breath as I slave away in the studio smearing the sweat of hard won creations all over my brow.

It is just a knowing, a simple rule, a fact of my life.

The work creates its own energy and thus more work is created.

Recently, while having drinks together in Melbourne, Mrs Woog asked me to make a ceramic egg for her husbands birthday gift. Apparently we had already discussed this commission via email but for the life of me I couldn’t remember the emails. That line was the cue for any of you reading who I have promised work, to send me a reminder email as well. Sorry in advance for the delay.

Knowing that the egg had to be shipped to Sydney I didn’t want to make one of my handbuilt Dragon eggs as it would be akin to posting half a brick. If you have ever tried to post a brick to anyone, you will know that it is very,very expensive.

*image by Robin Roberts

In my studio practice, I handbuild, I use the wheel and I slip cast. I decided that the egg for Mrs Woog needed to be slipcast so as to be easily (and cheaply) shipped to Sydney.I had an egg mould here that I had made when I was still in the early planning stage for my sculpture display at ChauncyVale. I had only used this mould once or twice as I soon discovered that slipcast eggs were far too delicate to be left outside in the bush. In hindsight I now know that nearly all my eggs were too delicate to have been left in the bush.

So I made the ceramic egg to Mrs Woogs specifications and shipped it off to Sydney.

I have an exhibition coming up at the Off Centre Micro Gallery at the end of January. Eve Howard and I are working together with the theme of our exhibition to be The Albatross. We haven’t sorted out all the details yet, except for the dates. The joint exhibition runs for four weeks with the opening either on the 26th or 27th of January 2012.

The commission for Mrs Woog gave me a clear idea of the work that I need to make for my show with Eve Howard and these are the pieces I am working on.

*images taken with my HTC phone.

The work creates the work.

Thanks to Mrs Woog for the inspiration.

 

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