Artist’s statement for the exhibition The Wind, The Wind
Toshiko Oiyama
In the stillness of a forest, I think of the air I am floating in. Its calmness belies the howling winds it can turn into any moment. In the vastness of the outback, I think of the wind that has been shaping the landscape, second by second, from the beginning of time. Thinking of the wind, I think of the Buddhist tenet that all is transient.
For me drawing is a way to ask questions. One question I ask is what it means for all things to be in the state of transience. Observing the winds that make the shadows dance and ruffle the sea, I draw and experiment to ask that question.
The multi-panel format that I am using is one such experimentation. Drawings turn into something different visually in response to the adjacent drawings. It is as if by juxtaposing un-related drawings one can start a conversation between them. Another experimentation is the play on the physicality of paper. While the ink or charcoal create illusion of space and depth on paper, puncturing or tearing that same paper demonstrates its physical limit and flatness. The oscillation between the illusionary space on paper and the reminder of the flatness of paper causes in me a sense of vibration and constant change that is transience
Feeling the movements of air on my face, I draw and experiment to think about my question.
Janet Clayton Gallery is proud to present the exquisite works of Theresa Byrnes. Fresh from a long haul flight from New York carrying a selection of mixed media works on paper, Byrnes' brings with her a distinctive style that is intuitive, organic and above all, heartfelt.
Enjoying a stellar reputation in the world of contemporary art, Byrnes has successfully exhibited in New York,Washington, London, Rome and her home city of Sydney. Theresa's story will feature on the ABC's 7:30 Report later in June, and the opening on 18 June will be filmed.
Byrnes' work reaches into the unfathomable emotions triggered by something as simple as a visit by a sparrow. Theresa wrote last year:
"This series of paintings is not based on epic or political themes, so nothing grandiose. This exhibition is small and frail, sweet and personal. My heart, my understanding of life and love expanded a million miles after my first encounter with a fallen baby sparrow.
In the summer of 2006 a sparrow fell from its nest and into my heart. Its tinyness in my hand, I felt the ferocity of itsspirit and was immediately and profoundly changed. Nothing I had ever encountered in my life, romantic love, disability, financial struggle had ever taken my focus away from painting, but the love and kinship I felt for this tiny bird did. Sparrow love is the greatest love I have known. The paintings in this series I use both my hair and feathers. My hair is used as in a brush for painting; my human plumage. The feather is a quill for the writing of words and is the plumage of birds. In these paintings I marry the human and the bird, the painter and the writer, for I am both."
Shortly after writing this piece, Theresa conceived her baby son, named Sparrow.
Fellow artist Carolee Schneemann says of Theresa's work:
"Covered in viscous shining paint, drenched with color, Theresa Byrnes body becomes the agency of a visual, spatial transformation-marking, splattering, stroking surrounding surfaces. The effects are fierce and luscious, extending the radical marks of Kline, Pollock, and the dimensional implications of Abstract Expressionism."
January 29 to February 23 2014
15 AUGUST – 8 SEPTEMBER 2012
ROBYN GORDON: DYNAMIC BALANCE
Growing up I played a game with my grandmother. Housed in a cylinder was a brace of fine coloured sticks that one would hold tight fisted then release. The ensuing woven mass complied to some natural code of gravity, chance, or physics, drawing you into its spatial play. As we took turns to remove the sticks our deeply considered reductions only set the mass adrift - a continuum of natural arrangements like a jostling flotilla on the dining table. And a new dynamic balance was found.
Robyn Gordon’s assembled reliefs offer that same sense of chance and wonder. In a defining new step she has cast her signature polymer clay forms against a solid field of colour. But she pushes it further. Like our game of sticks constantly arriving at new compositions, Gordon’s objects find their own placement, often flirtatious as they hover and engage the edges of the canvas, and finally break free as wall based installations.
Working with polymer clay for more than thirty years, Gordon’s expression seems effortless and incredibly cohesive across this dynamic collection of forms. What one doesn’t immediately register is that these are surprisingly physical works to make, a somewhat brutish act of rolling, scoring, scaring and impregnating the surface with information, which is built up over multiple firings like traditional ceramics or pottery. Made either side of breaking her wrist, Gordon’s compulsion was perhaps even more driven for this exhibition, finding new strengths in the work’s reductive clarity. She pushes beyond the physical space of the object to a psychological or emotional space, brought out superbly by these quieter grounds.
You can almost witness the execution of a mark: determined, complete, confident, evocative, and at times nostalgic. There is no apology for their decoration. It is indeed their textures that keep them connected to an organic form, and yet as drawn elements constantly shifting weight, direction and tone they usher an abstraction that sits beyond a logical course. It is a most articulate command of the material’s range, compositionally engaged on both a micro and macro level.
Take the piece Nature’s Mystical Patterns, for example, a catalogue of surfaces from spidery thin wire, mesh gauze, lace and ribbon drawn into a poised column-like meter against a dense black background. It’s read on two levels. Our eye languishes in the detail but pushed back the grouping evokes a collection of shields, grove of saplings, or perhaps the museological arrangement of specimens. We bring our own associations. The same compositional consideration is applied to Silence of Space and Order in Chaos where the elements are more formally ‘lined up’ flirting between chaos and order. In Silence of Space the individual units are orderly stacked building to a crescendo of scale, its slightly oriental feel constructing a vertical landscape narrative. In contrast Interacting Endlessly teeters at the brink of anarchy, the momentary freeze of its elements not unlike those randomly dropped sticks. Its languid tension captivates us.
The forms have become increasingly weightless and playful against the solid hues. Simple colour acts as a stage upon which to reveal the unknown and to wonder in nature. Talking with Gordon she explained her ‘intoxication with nature’s beauty and absolute fascination in the connectedness of forms’ as central to her inspiration. I am reminded of the words of Richard Feynman, ‘Nature uses only the longest threads to weave her patterns, so that each small piece of her fabric reveals the organisation of the entire tapestry.’ Gordon is not trying to replicate nature. Rather her quasi-organic forms reach beyond the natural world, oscillating between familiarity and abstraction. It is a bigger picture.
On every level her ambiguous reliefs unsettle our formulaic viewing practices, unwilling to be categorised. She has always used her materials organically, happy to co-join precious metals with plastics, polymer and paint, choosing to construct her collages and wearables for their aesthetic bounce and unorthodox conversation. They are made to be enjoyed visually.
Time in many ways is a metaphor embedded in these works; we just have to read their titles to understand their alchemy. But time is also testament to Gordon’s resilience to experiment and to find new directions. It is not surprising that she takes bold and elegant leaps with this exhibition. It is a world where old and new converge and we are magnetically drawn into the fray of its dynamic balance.
Gina Fairley
Freelance Writer & Curator – South East Asia Contributor, Art Monthly Australia
Regional Contributing Editor, Asian Art News + World Sculpture News – Co-director, SLOT
Richard Feynman The Character of Physical Law (1965), Ch. 7, “Seeking New Laws”; http://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Richard_Feynman
Graphite and ink on Hahnemuhle 26 x 7cm