Tuesday 26 March 2024

Blairgowrie Yacht Squadron Art Show


It is delivery day today! I will be travelling down the penninsula to Blairgowrie - showing 3 works. One of the pieces I am showing is 'Sprocketree'. 

'Sprocketree' plus detail above by Linda Weil ©2024

I will also be delivering two new works for Sheridan Jones - these are currently in the boot of my car and I am going to have a sneak peak when I deliver.
Sheridan does wonderful works incormporating cut paper and paper sculpture.

Lisa O'Keefe will also be showing some new works. So this is an art show that you should not miss!

Please come and visit this wonderful show over the Easter weekend. A perfect excuse to come down to the Blairgowrie/Sorrento area. I will be atending the opening night on Friday, 29 March, (which is alot of fun!), and if you wish to join me check this link for tickets: BYS

See you there!

Monday 18 March 2024

Grand re-opening at Tacit!

 After several weeks in hiatus, Tacit Art's new gallery opens this week! Three fabulous artists are launching the new space. Do come along to opening night to help celebrate a new era for Tacit Art.

TACIT ART

Launch of new premises and opening night invitation

Wednesday 20 March

6.30-8pm

Exhibition dates
Wed 20 Mar - Sun 14 April 2024

Tacit Art - new premises
314 Johnston St, Abbotsford, Vic 3067
Ground and first floor

Linda Pickering

Re-Imagined

Inspired by a series of personal snapshots of the buildings of central Melbourne, Linda Pickering has interpreted the proximity of these towering structures to each other and the reflective surfaces in her continued exploration of reductive abstraction.

In looking to create a level of calm, remove the noise and the unnecessary, Pickering has extended her habitual limited palette. The result is the buildings, whilst remaining, have taken on new identities, becoming different versions of themselves as the geometric shape and colour shift and alter their priority on the canvas and their relationship to each other.

See work in the exhibition here

Susan Stevenson

Ghosts in the Concrete

Travelling in Europe last year, I was struck by the soft beauty in the weathered plaster of ancient buildings. The depth of colour and texture in the peeling paint and uneven plasterwork reminded me of aerial photographs of central Australia with cracks from shifting brickwork, blocked windows and forgotten doorways echoing the straight lines and random right angles of European settler land distribution. In the Australian context, however, these lines are no longer just poignant reminders of small lives passing across thresholds and generations. Boundary fences and minor roads have become earthworks visible from the air, supplanting natural landforms as defining features of the continent.

The paintings in Ghosts in the Concrete embrace the often competing strands in our relationship to landscape and history in this country.

See work in the exhibition here

Susan Wald

The Gathering

Susan Wald's luminous canvases, with their distinctive foreground assemblies, invite storying. In each scene, the assemblies become animated; the players take on disposition and purpose. They herd together, their eyes on the interloper; they gain safety in numbers. Sometimes, humanoid, they converse - convivial guests around a dining table. Other times, they form a conga line, dancing along an infinity loop across canvases. The images lure us to find a narrative, despite their subject matter.

For the models of these players are bleached skulls of animals, vestiges salvaged from beaches, roadsides and deserts – goats, a sheep, kangaroos and wallaroos, a fox, a dog. For one, there's a weathered fragment of spine; for the rest, no clues, no shards of former lives. The little heads suggest powerlessness, counter to their likely past lives. The goats' horns suggest authority. This is haunting. Globally, we are witnesses to the menace of such hubris and horn-locks.

See work in the exhibition here
TACIT ART
314 Johnston St
Abbotsford VIC 3067
Australia