Article ‘These Float my Boat’ by Marina Marangos

Marina Marangos writes beautifully about the Red Hill Gallery and its latest exhibition ‘All Afloat‘ in her article “These Float my Boat”. Here at Artchat we thought it was worth a share and a read, this article has been reproduced with her consent.
These float my boat
I drive past it, ride the bus past it, cycle past it and each time there are different paintings in the window. This intrigued me. There is such a variety of art and mediums on display that I was curious to see what lay within. So one day I walked there and took myself inside. There are some very knowledgeable and helpful art consultants there who told me a little of the history of the building and the Gallery, but also about how the Gallery works. The building itself used to house the Old Organ and Piano Shop. It is one of the oldest established Galleries in Brisbane, and has been operating now for 28 years. Margaret Campbell – Ryder is only its second owner and director and given that she has a passion for showing art she quickly changed the way the Gallery displayed it. The window is changed if not every day, every other day – there is almost a sense of anticipation about the new display. Will I like it, will it be my kind of art, is it something that I must have? Margaret sensibly understands that there are as many tastes as artists, and while she is eclectic in the artists she chooses to exhibit she does cater for many and varied expectations. The Gallery is beautifully organized to lend itself to exactly that, with exhibitions on the main Gallery floor but also a full sized basement which houses more artwork. I hasten to add that I loved not only the artwork but also the beautiful glassware and the bronze sculptures which are dotted around the gallery. It is a Gallery which offers artists of different mediums an excellent outlet to express their creative spirit.  As I enjoyed my initial interaction with the Gallery I went to the opening of their “All Afloat” exhibition, which is on until the 27th of April 2015. 

Dan Mason

The current exhibition, which has, a bit of a nautical theme, is the work of Dan Mason, Warren Salter and Michael Parker. Dan Mason who acknowledges his love of the ocean and the natural world, displays some large canvasses with sea bottom blues and turquoise light, interspersed with vibrant reds and earthy oranges. His canvasses all bear the most romantic names. “Drawn by the light of the Moon” is the one displayed here. “Two strong hearts” depicts two boats in a mélange of colours that jump out at you and want to make you sail away on them. 

Dan Mason

Warren Salter draws his inspiration from his family and memories of times loved and lived. His piece called the Boat Builder shows he is not a stranger to strong colours but also vividly reproduces images that are comforting and close to many. 

Warren Slater

Michael Parker combines wooden slats, which flow and glide in the water he creates upon them. He loves his boats and often accompanies the paintings with a turquoise bluey green copper which he uses to line the bottom of his canvases. Painting was in his family, as were boat building and lakes. I have to confess being terribly drawn to these, particularly the one I have photographed for you here called “Weekend Chill.” The rope hanging down from the boat is so well crafted that I was convinced it was three-dimensional. The way he paints the water gives you the stillness of the water on a chilly day. 

Michael Parker

The Gallery is open weekdays 10 am to 5 pm, weekends 10 am to 4 pm seven days a week. There is parking and a small garden tucked at the back should you feel the need to sit down and reflect on the art before you. The Gallery is on 61 Musgrave Road, Red Hill, Brisbane 4059. Tel no 07 3368 1442

For more articles by Marina please visit her blog page Weekend Notes. We thank and acknowledge Marina Marangos for allowing us to reproduce this article.
Posted in Art, Art Ideas, Australian Art, Blog, Brisbane, Colour, Contemporary, Exhibition, Figurative, Painter, Painting, Presents, Red Hill Art Gallery, RHG, Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Comments Off on Article ‘These Float my Boat’ by Marina Marangos

Artchat [Blog Interview #65] – Michael Parker

Michael Parker Michael Parker answers questions we put to him about himself and his art in our latest blog at ArtChat.

AC: You spent some of your early years in Europe observing the masters, what are some of your best memories?

MP: Viewing many European galleries was a great experience. I cycled twice around Europe camping along the way. I just loved this form of transport. Cycling allowed me to stop when, and where ever I chose. I could smell the smell, hear the sounds, and take interesting trails that I may have missed had I travelled by car or train.

AC:  You have a lot of experience with different mediums, do you have a favourite?

MP: I love all of them, I really do. However, if I was only allowed one it would be Encaustic Wax. I find its translucency, and capacity for layering and etching, really exciting qualities.

Michael Parker AC: Your work in this exhibition is multifaceted (e.g. recycled timber and copper), how important is the element of texture to you? How do you think it affects the viewer’s experience?

MP: It’s very important in this series because I’m trying to depict the side of an old boat. The textures of wood and copper play an important role. People really enjoy and appreciate this when they understand the reasoning behind it.

AC: What are your favourite three art movements and why?

MP: I enjoyed the Pop Art of Warhol in the 80’s. I also, with no direct influence that I’m aware of, became a screen printer in the 80’s, and did that as a job for 15 years. This year I’ve started buying screen printing supplies again. I’m looking forward to incorporating these materials into my work soon.

The Neo-Impressionism of Jean-Michel Basquiat is another 80’s artistic influence. Basquiat is my all time favourite artist – what a legend.

I must mention that I loved the traditional work my mum would paint. She produced land and sea scapes, in oils on canvas. Growing up, watching and smelling her use oils to paints still one of my strongest memories – she inspires me to this day. God bless my mum!

AC: Tell us something about yourself that would surprise us.

MP: Too easy! I once kayaked the 7th largest river in the world that being our very own Murray River, solo, over 2500 km.

Michael Parker  will be exhibiting at the Red Hill Gallery, 61 Musgrave Road, Red Hill throughout April 2015 alongside two prominent contemporary male artists Dan Mason and Warren Salter  in the exhibition “All Afloat”.
Michael Parker

© Red Hill Gallery

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Artchat [Blog Interview #64] – Warren Salter

Warren Salter

Artchat caught up with Warren Salter with some questions about his art and inspirations and about his current exhibition at Red Hill Gallery in Brisbane.

AC: You have mentioned some world renowned artists such as Picasso, Monet, Dali and Streeton as influences, what is it about them or their works that influenced you and your artwork?

WS: Mainly its how these artists use their paint, deliberately avoiding photorealism, a painted look and tonal choices that give way to a surreal quality.

AC: What kind of art do you most identify with?

WS: Anything that suggests beauty to me, or imparts good will or suggests love. Warren Salter

AC: You have a distinctive personal style, how would you describe the collection of figurative and landscape works?

WS: These works in this latest exhibition are a projection of things that I feel strongly about, love, childhood memories contributing to the formation of the person, family, beauty in nature … for me, all of these things are a reflection of a benevolent universe. I paint in a fashion that suggests a surreal dream like feeling.

AC: Where do you find your inspiration for your painting?

WS: I find inspiration in nature, music and people, though It would be better to say that inspiration finds me … usually after I have started an idea I am flying blind, the inspiration appears after a certain amount of labour.

AC: You have been surrounded by the creative arts since a young age, when did you know that painting would be your profession?

WS: I painted and drew prolifically as a child, and even sold my work at school.. I even studied art at college, but the idea of being a professional painter didn’t arise until I moved to Queensland twenty years ago where I met artists making a living from their talents. Warren Salter

Warren Salter will be exhibiting at the Red Hill Gallery, 61 Musgrave Road, Red Hill throughout April 2015 alongside two prominent contemporary male artists Dan Mason and Michael Parker in the exhibition “All Afloat”.

© Red Hill Gallery

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Artchat [Blog Interview #63] – Dan Mason

Dan MasonArtchat caught up with artist Dan Mason prior to his  exhibition ‘All Afloat’ to talk to him more about himself, his studio and last but not least his artwork.

AC: Where are you based and why?

DM: I work from my studio at our home on a hill near the Queensland and New South Wales border. There are trees all around that capture the sea breeze and I can see the ocean in the distance. This elemental interplay is the greatest inspiration for my work. As a lifetime surfer, I feel like I became an environmentalist by default – nurturing our natural world in a sustainable way is the only way forward for humanity and for our planet. Through my work I try to capture our worlds beauty and life-giving energy.

AC: When and how did you first fall in love with art?

DM: I won the school art prize in grade one, although it wasn’t until after a year of a Psychology major at Griffith University, that I decided to switch Visual Arts, a faculty that embraced thinking outside of the box, instead of within it.
Dan Mason

AC: What is your studio like?

DM: My studio is well organized so that I can pick up where I left off, when those creative impulses start firing, without scrounging around looking for a particular colour or brush.

AC: When do you feel your most creative?

DM: This depends, although I’ll say that rather than force it out, I’m learning that it’s ok to stop, go for a surf or a walk, and come back to it with fresh eyes. I can work for anywhere between 4 hours and 16 hours at a time if the connection is strong. Music has always been my drug of choice, and song lyrics often find there way into my artwork titles. Energy in the studio is like a rollercoaster ride, so the music can be Led Zeppelin, AC/DC, The Rolling Stones, Triple J radio or silence – sometimes silence is best.
Dan Mason

AC: How would you describe what you do to someone who hasn’t seen your art?

DM: It’s tough for me to describe my art. When people find out that I’ve been painting full-time for over twelve years, they usually say, “That sounds really cruisy”, when in truth inventing something new each day is a super challenging endeavor, although when it works it’s very rewarding. I’ve spent 50 000+ hours painting, playing and developing my oil and mixed media technical armory, and feel as though I’m at a point where I can call on all of this learning to create solid work. In a way, I’m only just beginning.

AC: What do you aim to achieve through your art?

DM: My work aims to celebrate our natural world and create a dialogue between us and it … then again, this is the whole point isn’t it – we are the natural world, and by learning to respect it, we are respecting ourselves and our children’s future.

Dan Mason will be exhibiting at Red Hill Gallery 61 Musgrave Road, Red Hill, Brisbane in the month of April, alongside two other prominent artists Warren Salter and Michael Parker in the exhibition ‘All Afloat’.
Dan Mason

©Red Hill Gallery

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Childhood Memories of Warren Salter

Warren Salter “In all my years as a professional painter with forty plus solo exhibitions behind me, this is the first collection of paintings I have produced with a continuous, conscious thread driving my ideas.

Each painting is inspired primarily by my Australian heritage, memories of my childhood, and my own experience of having kids.

I have always been driven to paint artworks inspired by the mysterious beauty of nature and childhood, albeit in a somewhat fragmented way, experimenting with ideas and visual concepts, but with too much emphasis in the studio of how it may or may not be received in the marketplace.
Warren Salter

Every artist is ‘winging it’ every day, and therein lies the muse. I am far more comfortable now, allowing myself to be the carrier or bearer of what’s going on inside, letting it breathe, giving it credibility, allowing myself to be guided by it, and with that in mind I have painted this exhibition……. creating each painting from a true story, memory or experience that carries emotion for me, and others I suspect, resulting in a body of work I can speak honestly and clearly about, and am truly proud of.” Warren Salter.

Warren Salter will be exhibiting at Red Hill Gallery 61 Musgrave Road, Red Hill from April 10th until April 30th alongside two other prominent male artists Michael Parker and Dan Mason in the exhibition “All Afloat”.
Warren Salter

© Red Hill Gallery

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MICHAEL PARKER – THE STORY OF HIS SERIES OF BOAT PAINTINGS

Michael Parker Delivery 4

Michael Parker delivering his boat series for his upcoming exhibition.

 

Michael Parker explains the story that inspired him to paint his unique boat series.

“Painting from my studio in Mordialloc, I was asked by a gallery in South Australia to create a painting for an exhibition to celebrate the towns’ annual Wooden Boat Festival.

I wanted my painting to be unique- something that would stand out in the exhibition.

I took a walk for inspiration to Pompi’s Boats- a boat builder specialising in wooden boats not far from my studio, and I was immediately taken with the beautiful textures of the old boats in the yard.

Some of the old boats had copper-covered hulls, beautifully patina’d by the salt water and there were patches scattered over the hull where, I guessed the boat had hit up against rocks.
Michael Parker

It was here that my idea was born to recreate the side of the boat using recycled timber as my canvas, along with copper and patches of metal.

Thus, each timber plank is first prepared and then hand-nailed to a wooden frame to create the panels of a wooden boat.

The boats are then painted from photos that I have taken, and continue to take whilst on my travels.

I use acrylics oils and copper as my mediums.

I hope that you enjoy the boat paintings.” Michael Parker

Michael Parker

Michael Parker will be exhibiting at Red Hill Gallery 61 Musgrave Road, Red Hill from April 10th until April 30th alongside two other prominent male artist Warren Salter and Dan Mason in the exhibition “All Afloat”.

© Red Hill Gallery

Posted in Art, Art Ideas, Australia Fine Art, Australian Art, Australian Artist, Beach, Blog, Boats, Brisbane, Bronze, Coastal Landscape, Colour, Contemporary, Exhibition, Interview, Love, Michael Parker, Painting, Red Hill Art Gallery, RGH Art Chat, RHG | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Comments Off on MICHAEL PARKER – THE STORY OF HIS SERIES OF BOAT PAINTINGS

Mel Brigg [Blog Interview #62]

Mel Brigg
Art Chat recently sat down with Mel Brigg to talk about his upcoming exhibition and we had a chance to learn a little bit more about him. Since arriving in Australia from South Africa in the seventies he has built his practice and he was a finalist in the prestigious Doug Moran Art Prize in 2012. Mel’s work is contemplative and evocative, often making a graphic comment on social injustice or the singularity of the human condition. The pure beauty of the surface texture and light is enough for his collectors to keep coming back for more. His inspiration often comes from the vast plains of Australia’s interior, which gives the work a powerful sense of infinite space.

AC: Your work is heavily influenced by mood and atmosphere. Describe for us how this increases emotional content for you.
MB: Being a fairly emotional person, my mood will determine the colours and content…I recall some 40 years ago someone asking me what had happened, because my work looked happy and colourful……..I replied that I had got divorced !

AC: Please tell us how being self-taught has allowed you to develop your unique style.
MB: I think many students are influenced by their lecturers, I had to battle it out on my own, it was a matter of working 18 hours a day or starve!Mel BriggAC: Charity work is very important to you, does this come from what you saw in South Africa and how does this influence your choice of subject matter?
MB: Naturally, some of my works such as the Exodus series are influenced by my African experience, but one has to keep in mind the charities function, and try to paint something that is relevant to that.

AC: Can you remember your earliest influence when you were growing up and what made you decide to use the visual arts to communicate so effectively?
MB: My father throwing my first work in the rubbish bin……….so I thought…… I’ll bloody well show you!

AC: What do you consider your greatest achievement to date?
MB: Being accepted into Australia on a visa called “distinguished talent”.

AC: If you could bring any artist from any era into the studio to spend a day with you, who would it be?
MB: Van Gogh…I love a good argument.

AC: What is your most treasured possession?
MB: A collection of drawings my children did when they were very young.
MelBrigg02AC: If you had an unlimited budget what art would you collect and why?
MB: There would be no more budget, because I would buy everything I enjoy.

AC: What is your favourite quote or saying?
MB: SHIT! …….every 2 minutes in the studio!

AC: And finally when you are not in the studio what are you likely to be doing?……..
MB: Mowing the lawn, cooking, enjoying a good glass of red with friends.

“It could be called modern impressionism, but because I paint such a diverse range of subjects, still life and portraits, it’s difficult to slot into any one category.” Mel Brigg

“The exhibition ‘Passages’ is hauntingly beautiful and as with all paintings by Mel Brigg, many carry an underlying message giving the viewer an insight into Brigg’s journey through  life and what he has seen along that road, all captured on canvas.” Margaret Campbell-Ryder, Director Red Hill Gallery

For an up close view of Mel Brigg’s new work, come visit his solo exhibition at Red Hill Gallery 61 Musgrave Road, Red Hill Brisbane in the month of March.

Mel Brigg

© Red Hill Gallery

Posted in Art, Art Ideas, Australia Fine Art, Beach, Blog, Brisbane, Coastal Landscape, Colour, Contemporary, Exhibition, Interview, Landscape painting, Mel Brigg, Painter, Painting, Q&A, Red Hill Art Gallery, RGH Art Chat, RHG | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Comments Off on Mel Brigg [Blog Interview #62]

Lola Santiago [Blog Interview #61]

Lola SantiagoLola Santiago’s luscious, rich abstract paintings have us here at ArtChat buzzing. We couldn’t wait to interview her and find out a little more about her and her wonderful paintings.

AC: Lola your work starts with colour washes. Do you allow the first washes to dictate what comes next or is it more controlled than that?
LS: I like to let my colours take me where they want, I follow the colours flow.

AC: When you were young who were your heroes, and were they artists or other figures?
LS: I loved Miro, Chagall and Dali

AC: If you could spend a day with any historical figure who would it be?
LS: It would definitely have to be Helen Keller, her movie and book as a child made an impact on me.

AC: Your work is always vibrant and rich. How important is colour to you?
LS: I could just as easily do sombre and not rich colours, I love all paint.

Lola SantiagoAC: Is there anything you do to get into the creative zone or does it happen naturally when you arrive at the studio.
LS: It happens freely

AC: What is your favourite childhood memory?
LS: Musicals with Gidget and Elvis, on Sundays rainy days, and Mum cooking Sunday roast

AC: Do you listen to music when you work and if so what inspires you?
LS: Yes, I listen to classical and 2CH, all things inspire me.

AC: Have you always been drawn to abstract art and why?
LS: I love abstract and the freedom it gives me.

AC: Do you have any other creative activities in your life besides painting?
LS: Gardening, Cooking.

AC: What is so inciting about the night that inspires you to paint after dark?
LS: The quietness, the peace.
Lola SantiagoLola Santiago  will be exhibiting at Red Hill Gallery 61 Musgrave Road, Red Hill, Brisbane in the month of February together with two other promising female artists Linda Vario and Danielle McManus in the exhibition  “Women Of Substance” .

©  Red Hill Gallery

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Linda Vario [Interview #60]

Linda VarioAfter arriving in Queensland and settling on the Sunshine Coast from South Australia 16 years ago, Linda Vario has taken inspiration from the beauty and colour of the coast and hinterland of this beautiful part of the world. She has used a variety of materials and her luscious, rich surfaces have intrigued her buyers. Linda had a chat with us and we have found out a little bit more about her and her practice.

AC: In your words how would you describe your paintings?
LV: Labour intensive – most of my paintings have between 30 to 50 layers. This takes quite a bit of time as you can imagine, I have to wait for each layer to dry before I start the next. For this reason alone I usually work on 3 to 4 paintings at one time. While one is drying I can work on the next.
I gravitate toward the colour red and I have to be careful not to paint every painting in that colour.

Linda VarioAC: Can you remember when you first knew you wanted to be an artist?LV: Yes I can – I had been very ill and the doctor could not give me any more pain relief. He said in an offhanded manner, “Why don’t you go and do an art class or something to take your mind off the pain”. So I did. I did not take art at school as I did not know what to expect. After I took my very first class, I knew that is what I wanted to do for the rest of my life. I then went on to take formal training.

AC: If you could spend a day with anyone living or dead who would it be?
LV: My Mum, she lives in Adelaide and I miss her so much.

AC: Linda, a lot of people are fascinated by the beautiful glossy finish on some of your work. Can you tell us a little bit about that?
LV: I have been one of the founding creators of resin art in Australia. It is a frustrating but rewarding medium to work with. Through many trials and tribulations with different brands of resins I have now formulated my own recipe and get this made for me by a chemist overseas, as every brand on the Australian market goes yellow over time – but mine does not.Linda VarioAC: Where do you paint and do you work set hours or when inspiration grabs you?
LV: I paint in a purpose built studio on my beautiful property on the Sunshine Coast. I show up for work every morning at 8.30am, I then work through to 12.30pm, I then stop have a sandwich then back to work at 1.30 – 5.00pm.

I never wait for inspiration to take hold. In my opinion inspiration is for amateurs – the rest of us just show up and get to work. Great things grow out of activity.

AC: Describe what you can see from your window?
LV: Oh my view is so divine. As we built my studio we took full advantage of the vista of lush green hills cascading into the rushing creek below. The bird and animal wildlife is abundant. No need for music in my studio – I just listen to the birds and nature.

AC: Did you have a mentor or person who supported your desire to be an artist when you were young?
LV: The integral people in my life have been my Mother and Father, Brice & Ruth Douglas. Both business people who brought me up with a positive attitude and taught me to “never, never, never give up”. They taught me that before the Lorna Jane T-shirt ever came out. Lol. My Brother Stuart Douglas, a successful business person in his own right, helped me immensely to present my work in a professional manner.
In the last 10 years David Hart has become my most important mentor and help. Without his insightful advice, hands on help and guidance I would not be where I am today in my career.

AC: What do you do to relax when you are not painting?
LV: A true girl at heart – I love coffee with my girlfriends.

AC: What is your favourite place in all the world?
LV: Queensland of course. I have travelled extensively around the world but I can honestly say that nowhere else in the world is as good as Queensland. What a privilege to live here!

AC: Tell us something that we may not know about you?
LV: I write a prayer directly onto each canvas before I start painting on it. I pray for the person who is going to buy the painting and I pray that it will bring a blessing into their home. I also then, each evening before I go to sleep, pray a corporate prayer for everyone who has bought one of my artworks.
Linda VarioLinda Vario will be exhibiting at Red Hill Gallery 61 Musgrave Road, Red Hill, Brisbane in the month of February together with two other promising female artists Danielle McManus and Lola Santiago in the exhibition  “Women Of Substance” .

©  Red Hill Gallery

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Danielle McManus ArtChat [Blog Interview #59]

Danielle McManus  Danielle McManus has beguiled us with her whimsical, gentle figures for a long time. Set in a dreamlike landscape, her work inspires us to stop and “smell the roses”. Art Chat has had a talk to Danielle to see what she has been doing and what we can expect from her new exhibition.

AC: Danielle many people relate to your depiction of life and the stories you tell with your work, do you have a plan or do you allow intuition as the first step?
DM: Most of the time my work comes from a story either from my own experience or those of my kids or from stories of family history. I’m usually thinking of a particular story or feeling when I am designing the work. Other elements, however, come from intuition; such as the flowers I use or the birds etc.

AC: Can you remember the first person who encouraged you to pursue a career as an artist?
DM: The first person I can remember to encourage me was my cousin Jo. She liked to draw herself and I would stay with her during the holidays where she would encourage me to develop my drawing. Jo travelled a lot and spent a lot of time in England, so she also introduced me to Beatrix Potter, which led me to want to be an illustrator of kid’s books. I still have a passion for children’s books; I don’t know what I’ll do when my daughter is too old for them!!

AC: Your work is quite narrative, why did you choose the visual arts to describe your stories.
DM: I don’t think I chose Visual arts I feel that it chose me. I was very quiet as a kid and probably solitary so drawing and painting by myself suited me very well. I seemed to have a knack for it and I guess you do something long enough and practice enough you become good at it. I certainly don’t have the personality to be in the dramatic arts!!!

AC: Flat colour fields feature prominently in your work, do you see the negative space as an important element in the composition?
DM: I like to place my characters in a less detailed landscape to make them stand out I guess. I like to concentrate detail in certain aspects of the work like in the dandelions for example. I think it creates a balance. The poppies are a good example. They are so detailed and so much to look at, you need a large expanse of sky to “even” it out.

Danielle McManus3

AC: What is your favourite childhood memory?
DM: I was so lucky to have such as happy childhood, so I have many fond memories. But I guess one that stands out was when our parents took us to America for our first white Christmas. We had a great time staying with relatives over there and went to Disneyland, which is every kid’s dream!!

AC: If you could choose to spend a day with any artist living or dead who would it be?
DM: I would love to spend a day with Mirka Mora. I have read many interviews with her and I think her story is a fascinating one. I admire her so much, her dedication, her talent and her “no regrets” kind of attitude. She makes “no excuses”; you take her as you find her. She is confident and witty. An absolute inspiration!

AC: Do you work set hours or when inspiration strikes?
DM: I work every day at something. So whether it’s painting or sketching or ceramics, I try to accomplish something every day. As I have had my kids at home mostly, they determine the amount of time I work!! But this year my last little one started school so I will be back to full time work! I think if you choose art as your career, or work for yourself in general really, you need to dedicate yourself to it the same way you would if you worked for someone. Sometimes you’re so tired doing the everyday stuff, if you waited for inspiration you’d never get a painting finished!!!

AC: What can you see from your studio window?
DM: Unfortunately at the moment I have a make shift studio in my dining room! We moved to an old house and we are renovating etc. so we will convert the garage into a studio as the time (and funds!!) become available. So I don’t see too much out of my two smaller windows mainly the driveway and some garden!!!

AC: How do you relax when you are not painting?
DM: It sounds cheesy I guess but I love spending time with the kids. Whether it’s watching a movie, going for walks or to the beach. I don’t want my kids growing up thinking they had come second to my career. Family is the most important thing in my life so hanging out with them is my favourite way to relax!

Danielle McManus will be exhibiting at Red Hill Gallery 61 Musgrave Road, Red Hill, Brisbane in the month of February together with two other promising female artists Linda Vario and Lola Santiago in the exhibition  “Women Of Substance” .
Danielle McManus2

©  Red Hill Gallery

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Salute to Australia – This Great Land of Freedom!

With so many Aussie’s celebrating Australia Day  in many different ways, it is also a time to reflect on how lucky we are to live in such a great country where we have peace and freedom that is not afforded to many countries. We are indeed the lucky country. Happy Australia Day on this special Day January 26.

Red Hill Gallery senior art consultant Jan, has been arranging a street party every year for the past 29 years, they have a hoot of a day including the must have Danny May’s Pavlova and a quiz by Ron the local historian in the neighbourhood – everyone joins in the fun.

We asked some of our artists who will be exhibiting with us in 2015 what Australia Day means to them and if they have planned anything special.

Some of these artists are new Aussie’s so it was great to get their views, enjoy the read. Aussie Aussie Aussie Oi Oi Oi

“Coming from a country divided by racial tensions, Australia Day is even more special to me. To see everyone so patriotically waving the Ozzie flag, and in high spirits, laughing and proud, is a sight that will be etched in my mind forever. I am reminded yearly, how lucky I am, to have been accepted into my new country, I will be out waving my flag this year again. Thank you Australia” Mel Brigg

 Brigg Mel The Arrivals-183x122cm copy

“Australia Day means a day to spend with Family and Friends to take time out to appreciate all we have to be thankful for in this country. We are lucky to be surrounded by such a beautiful landscape and to be free to enjoy it. It provides such inspiration for artists such as myself and I never tire of it. I plan to spend the day with my kids and they love the beach so that’s where we will spend our time. A great way to say “thanks” for being Australian!” Danielle McManus

 McManus Danielle Send your wishes to the moon copy

“To me on Australia Day I reflect on how very lucky we are to live in a country where people have the luxury to create and enjoy art. We are safe and basic needs are taken care of. That leaves us free to feed our souls, a privilege not everyone in the world has. So I reflect on that and then get back to the studio!” Denise Murray

 Denise

“First and foremost, I am free. I live in a nation of great diversity, richness and colour. I am blessed with opportunity – it’s there for the taking by anyone willing. As a nation we boast a proud history. We have fought for, and earned, what we now enjoy. To be an Aussie is something I will never take for granted.  Where else in the world is everyone my mate?  I will reflect of that which has shaped me. I truly feel Blessed to be born here. I have to work on this coming Australia Day but this will not stop me from pondering on my fortunateness – to be called AUSTRALIAN.” Linda Vario

L Vario Red Tributary LV6-15 120x100cm $3990

“Australia Day is an important time to reflect on how lucky we are to live in such a beautiful and diverse country. From the wild untamed landscapes to the opulent cityscapes, it is the source of constant inspiration to me. As an artist I could think of no place better to live. As a fan of 80’s music, I’m certain I’ll be playing Icehouse’s ‘Great Southern Land’  and Men at Work’s ‘Land Down Under’   as I paint in my beautiful studio.”  Starr

Starr Dynamic Sydney Harbour ' 150cm x1mt   copy

“I am so happy to be able to celebrate my third Australia Day celebration this year. To be part of a day that allows all to appreciate just how lucky we are to live in this great country.  I will be enjoying the day with my family and friends, appreciating the warm weather with perhaps ‘some shrimp on the bbq’. To celebrate freedom. To celebrate opportunity. To celebrate choice. To celebrate a new home and to celebrate a new life.”

“Australians let us rejoice, for we are young and free.” Katherine Wood

Wood-Katherine Dark to Light copy

“Australia Day usually comes to us as a nice surprise. School has just started and the  frenzy involved in that suddenly calms with that little holiday. As migrants we had to work out what it was all about and, as time has passed, reflection has become a feature of the day, reminiscing  on and remembering our story of coming here and the challenges and  joys of it all.  My barbecuing skills have only improved slightly because of the gas barbecue .  After many burnt, smoky offerings I came  up with a marvellous invention…….stand outside, in front of the Webber, with the electric frying pan sitting in it on the end of an extension lead. A perfect result every time and, much to the delight of my kids, accompanied by a detailed discussion of the cricket as I pretend to know something about it. Our Australia Day would never be complete without the  recital of a few gems from John Clarke’s Anthology of Australian Verse . I  recommend this very amusing book to  anyone wanting a good laugh.” John Maitland

John Maitland copy

“Australia Day is the time when we focus on the many great things that unite us rather than the petty things which occasionally divide us.  My Australia Day will be spent visiting my dad in Toowoomba and painting in a studio he has set up at his new home there. After so much time spent on the road (and in the air) last year from New York, London etc, I’m pleased to be back in Australia and I can’t think of a better way of spending our national day painting landscapes in the country of my birth. This was one of a series of ‘skyscapes’ I did last time I was in Toowoomba. It’s the sky over a dam on the Darling Downs.” David Hinchliffe

David Hinchliffe sky over a dam on the Darling Downs_edited-1

Australia day means to me ……………..Being grateful for my families access to clean drinking water, food, shelter, clothing and our relative sense of freedom.  I plan to spend the day ……… A brief trip to the beach with my wife and son (and another one in the tum). Then into the studio to paint for most of the day. Dan Mason

You're The Poet In My Heart, 150x150cm, oil and mixed media on canvas, danmason2014_250dpi_2000px copy

“For me Australia day represents my own cultural heritage as well as that of the original Australians. Like a lot of people my age I grew up in a rural environment, and much of my artistic inspiration comes from my experiences on farms and small towns.  I plan to spend Australia day with family as always, a barbie and a couple of quiet beers, then down to the beach for a swim.”   Warren Salter

Warren Salter copy

For details and more information on Australia Day Celebrations Queensland “Festival of being Aussie” click here.

Australian National Anthem –  “Advance Australia Fair”  now go sing your heart out and celebrate everything great in Australia and to be an Australian and “Dream the Dream”

Happy Australia Day folks!

AllAustralian Artists quoted are all represented by Red Hill Gallery at 61 Musgrave Road, Red Hill, Brisbane and has been operating as a fine art gallery for twenty nine years featuring Australian Artists

©  Red Hill Gallery

 

 

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ArtChat [Blog Interview #58] Larissa Blake

Larissa Blake has been exposed to art from an early age by her mother artist Loretta Blake. Her work is vibrant, spontaneous with large planes of pure, unadulterated colour. Largely self taught Larissa is a highly sought after tutor and we are so lucky to be able to have her in our Summer Quartet exhibition at Red Hill Gallery, Brisbane  during the month of December.
Larissa Blake

Larissa Blake is a gifted colourist; her work references the domestic and feminine domains in a celebratory context, using an exuberant, joyful, uplifting colour palette.

AC: Larissa, could you describe your art to our readers.
LB: My images are deconstructed so that I can be expressive with my mark making, and it’s all about colour.

AC: Has a career in art always been in the pipeline or did you have other aspirations growing up?
LB: I’ve always wanted to be an artist, though I didn’t start painting till my late 20’s. I did a degree in Marketing , but was disappointed it wasn’t as creative as I’d hoped. I was studying Herbalism  with the intention of becoming a naturopath but dropped out to pursue my painting.

AC: You have quite a distinctive, raw and spontaneous style which radiates energy, have you always painted this way or did you experiment a lot before deciding this was you?
LB: It has been a 14 year process of experimenting and pushing myself to be more gestural. It takes a lot of practice to make bold expressive marks.

AC: The upcoming exhibition has scenes from your travels abroad and at home. What inspires you to paint a particular scene?
LB: It’s normally aesthetic for me; I’m simply drawn to something visually and or emotionally.Larissa Blake

AC: You tutor quite regularly, do you find this rewarding? If so, in what way?
LB: I love teaching, it’s so rewarding when students grasp a concept and produce something out of their comfort zone. The likeminded company is also inspiring; painting can be a lonely gig.

AC: Where have you travelled around the world and what country and city/town/suburb is your favourite place?                                                                    LB: Europe, India, China, Morocco , lots of Asian countries but my absolute favourite city at the moment is New York City. We stayed in Soho in this awesome hotel called the Mondrian . The painting love in NYC is from the Mondrian’s nightclub (not that I went clubbing – I was pregnant!)

AC: What sort of music do you listen to while you paint?
LB: Anything but classical, I’m a pop and rock’n’ roll girl. I just turn the radio on for company and I’m a big fan of radio national.

AC: And lastly, can you tell our readers something about yourself that they will not know and may surprise them to hear?
LB: I love Astrology , Numerology  and Feng Shui.

Larissa Blake will be showing at Red Hill Gallery, Brisbane as part of the group exhibition “The Summer Quartet” with painters Emma Sheldrake, Karen Atkins and glass artist Keith Rowe.

Larissa Blake

©  Red Hill Gallery

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Art Chat Blog – Starr Exhibition

“If I had a world of my own, everything would be nonsense.”                        Lewis Caroll – Alice adventures in Wonderland
STARR
Imagination is taken to a new level with popular Brisbane artist STARR and her new exhibition. She is as bright, outrageously eccentric and incredibly as unpredictable as her artwork.  The colour  pink is her favourite colour and she wears it on her sleeve… literally. Love and romance is amongst her favourite things, along with her beloved car … a pink corvette of course!
STARR Starr began her professional career at Red Hill Gallery in 2001 where her popularity has increased to new heights. The gallery has hosted many sell-out exhibitions featuring Starr. She creates works that become contemporary icons. Her subject matter is both familiar and universal in appeal. The lush layered surfaces are worked with fast-saturated colour and her signature calligraphic line that traces time and energy.  Starr is a voyeur who has created a unique signature style, creating narrative series and individual works that have become highly collectable.

You can loose yourself down rabbit holes, meet Alice In Wonderland or jump into a pink corvette and be transported into the magical land of Starr. If you like to holiday from reality and visit an imaginary world, then Starr will take you on a luminous journey exploring castles, halls of mirrors, wondrous colourful blooming gardens, princesses in Paris, London, the bright lights of New York and even Brisbane’s iconic Story Bridge.
STARRBrisbane city is alive and jumping at the moment following the successful celebrations for the G20 where world leaders gathered at Southbank. Amongst all the amazing events,  and festivities  Starr’s  exhibition opening at Red Hill Gallery was a must, the arty crowd turned out in force for the opening of “Wanderlust”.  This collection features Starr’s brand new series of work which captivates and brings to life that glorious fantasy world we all like to escape to. Exhibiting November 2014 at Red Hill Gallery 61 Musgrave Road Brisbane Queensland.

Come along to Red Hill Gallery and see why Brisbane loves Starr… see you there!STARR

In the words of Lewis Caroll … “Imagination is the only weapon in the war against reality.”
©  Red Hill Gallery

 

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Interview [Blog Interview #57] Christine Porter

Chistine PorterArt Chat caught up with Christine Porter prior to her upcoming demonstration at Red Hill Gallery Brisbane, to be held on SUNDAY AFTERNOON 19 OCTOBER 2014 between 2pm and 3pm.

Christine is thrilled to be able to show her many clients and followers this intriguing art form at the Red Hill Gallery, situated in Brisbane’s leafy and trendy inner suburb of Red Hill. She will talk about her award winning art and demonstrate the process with her small travelling etching press in situ.   

Painter, teacher, printmaker, publisher … Christine Porter is a woman of many talents. Her delightful paintings and etchings have been a long time favourite in many art galleries around the world – and of course at the Red Hill Gallery.

A full time professional artist, she is represented in many public and corporate collections including the National Gallery of Australia, and closer to home in the Brisbane City Council collection.  Both her rural watercolours and her more personal multi-plate colour etchings have taken her throughout eastern Australia, across the Tasman and around the world. Her last international exhibition was in Edinburgh.   

AC: “Tell us about your artistic journey with Red Hill Gallery?” 

CP: I think it was about 1990 when I first began exhibiting with Red Hill Gallery – almost 25 years ago (Goodness! I can still remember how nervous I was coming in that day). I was 28 years old. One of my first paintings that year won the grand champion painting at our art show in Goondiwindi. The judge asked me who I was showing with in Brisbane.  I was astonished! I’d never considered such a thing! He introduced me to the then owners of the Red Hill Gallery.  I have shown with youever since, and I love it.

My practice in the early nineties concentrated on watercolour paintings of rural Australia where I lived. Since then it has expanded to include printmaking, which I love.  I find that keeping my etchings small, and in multiples, helps keep it in the public eye and also gives me a chance to explore different narratives. I also teach about making art as well as being an art-professional. I have created a small publishing company that publishes my art-cards.

AC: “The process of creating your etchings is quite involved, tell us about how you create them?”  

CP: In its simplest form, images are scratched into a thin piece of metal or plastic (DRYPOINT). Other techniques include ETCHING that involves laying a protective surface over a metal plate, drawing through the coating then dipping the plate into a bath of acid, thus etching the image.   

Printmaking is a choice that’s based on the sort of story I’m telling with the artwork. Sometimes I pick up a brush, sometimes the print studio calls.  It can take up to a year for the image to be resolved, but once the plate is made, it is inked by hand, then printed onto a sheet of paper with a press that looks like an old fashioned mangle, that then squeezes the ink from the scratches onto the paper. The process of inking and printing is repeated by hand for each individual print. The aim is to create uniformity, however there are often small differences within an edition.   

Multi-plate etching involves using two or three plates, with different “scratches” on each that add layers of information to the image.

A group of prints, all the same or similar to each other, printed from the same plate is called an edition. Each individual artwork is signed by the artist, usually on the front, often with a title, and includes a number that indicates how many prints in the edition. For example 15/30 is the commitment by the artist that there are only 30 prints made, that they are all the same  or very similar to each other , and that this print is number 15 of that 30.

AC: “Your watercolour paintings are single one-off artworks, however your etchings are ‘originals created as multiples’. What do you mean by that?  

CP: Etchings belong to the artwork genre of PRINTMAKING. They are original, handmade artworks, like paintings or drawings. However, because this art form pre-dates commercial printing and photography they are deliberately created so that the image can be printed several times, onto separate pieces of paper, all the same or similar to each other.  The signature and numbering of the prints are an important element of this type of art work. Etchings are not printed commercially by a machine or desk top printer (such as the digital process known as giclée printing), but by hand. Each print is individually inked, wiped and printed by hand in a process that is hundreds of years old.

AC: “This is the first time that you have demonstrated your etching technique at Red Hill Gallery. What can we expect to see on Sunday?”  

CP: My plan is to show you some of the unframed etchings I’ve brought with me, including a 23 plate etching that is a bit special, as well as some others you may not have seen. I’m going to create an instant drypoint etching and print it before your very eyes.
I’ve got the plates for the RED SHOES and I plan to print one of those if there’s time. I’ve stories to tell about how this etching has won CHAMPION prizes in competitions across the country. I’ll even be wearing the red shoes that were my inspiration!

There’ll be time for questions and if anyone wants to have a go at making their own little drypoint, etching there’ll be gear there.  I love sharing the magic. Just about everyone finds it an interesting process. There’ll also be a glass of champagne!

(I might even have a small prize for anyone who wears their favourite red shoes to this event on Sunday afternoon…)   

Put on your ‘red shoes’, grab some friends and enjoy Christine’s demonstration at Red Hill Gallery  61 Musgrave Road, Red Hill on Sunday October 19th between 2pm and 3pm. There is nothing like interesting art, champagne and a gallery garden atmosphere to make your weekend.

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Interview – [ Blog Interview #56] Regina Noakes

Regina NoakesRegina Noakes – an artist well recognised wherever she goes.. we caught up with her during her busy schedule coming up to her Red Hill Gallery exhibition on October 10th.

AC: As a well known artist, what is the most unusual place you have been recognised?

RN: It was a wet night, car battery run down, waiting for RAC man. He appears and says ‘ Are you the artist Regina Noakes? I love your paintings’.

I was having breakfast at a hotel and a man coming up to my table and wanting to share it with me. He turns out to be Eric Clapton, who has bought several of my paintings and recognised me from an art brochure.

AC: What does an ‘artistic outlook’ on life mean to you?

RN: I guess I try to look at things and live life from an aesthetic point of view. Quality and refinement are important to me.

AC: When you studied painting in Singapore, did you know it would be your future career?

RN: Yes. From the time I was 5 years old I think I knew. I could not stop drawing and painting at school and at home. My family and teachers always encouraged me. All my presents I received were usually something to do with art….books, paints, pastels, charcoal.

AC: Your work and the figures in them are very serene and calming, what sort of things do you do to relax yourself.

RN: I don’t find painting relaxing. I am totally obsessed when I paint and cannot stop for days. I work hard to bring serenity to my figures. To relax, I watch detective movies….Taggart, Cracker etc . I listen to classical music while I paint. I tend to play the same music over and over again…..loudly!

Regina Noakes

AC: What advice do you like to give to your students when they ask you about becoming a full time artist?

RN: Be prepared to put in the hours….9am to 4pm, 11pm to 4am…..day after day. Make sure you marry a patient husband, preferably an academic who does research and understands about working long crazy hours.

Look at everything selectively, aesthetically and don’t compromise. Only put out work you are 100% happy with.

AC: How do you like your art to be described and what words would you like to hear when others are talking ‘Regina Noakes’ 

RN: Consistent, good, aesthetic work. People come and say they love  the art….and if they have bought a piece previously, they quite often cannot stop talking about it! Many of the paintings are given names by the owners and become part of the family.

See Regina Noakes exhibiting her new works  at Red Hill Gallery in Brisbane  from October 10th  2014
ReginaNoakes-03

©  Red Hill Gallery

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Interview : [Blog interview #55] Stephen Glassborow

Stephen GlassborowStephen Glassborow specialises in making Sculptures in Bronze inspired by Art Deco era . You can see his amazing new work at his 2014 exhibition at Red Hill Gallery Brisbane on October 10th. We found Stephen prior to exhibition opening and had a chat.

AC: Your work portrays a great deal of imagination. Is that something you have always had?

SG:  As a figurative sculptor my first challenge was to master the anatomy. Once I felt I had achieved that goal, I looked to expand my creative energy .It took a while to find ways to bend my thoughts .But once I had discovered the potential of my ideas, they just began to flow.

AC: We hear that you name your pieces before you decide what they will look like, so where does the inspiration for the names come from.

SG: I like to look for clichés or common phrases that possess the potential for a double meaning. That gives me the chance to view the phrase in a different perspective, in a way that it may not have originally been intended.

AC: The Art Deco period is prominent in your work, is that something personal to you or has it evolved over time.

SG: Art Deco and Art Nouveau, was my first passion, when at College. It has always had an influence, but now my creative thoughts are as important .

Stephen Glassborow

AC: What would you say would be the most inspiring environment for you to create in?

SG: Early in the morning or at my local coffee shop. Ideas appear when I least expect them. Often I don’t know where they come from, or why, they just are.

AC: Do you have a favourite piece of work? What do you love about it?

SG: At the moment I love working on my Mini Series. They are small  intimate and relatively quick for me to create Bronze sculptures take so long to make , and I am limited to creating  6 new pieces a year, at the most. Miniatures allow me to give birth to ideas relatively fast, some have been wandering around in my head for years.
AC: If you had an artist dinner party, which 3 famous artists would you absolutely have to invite.

SG:  Clase Oldenburg, Banksy , and Leonardo Da Vinci. They are all are masters of their craft, they are also enormously perceptive , witty, and express  a unique creative talent.

Stephen Glassborow will be exhibiting his new works  at Red Hill Gallery in Brisbane October 2014

Stephen Glassborow

©  Red Hill Gallery

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ArtChat [Blog Interview #54] Dean Reilly – Expect The Unexpected

Dean ReillyDean Reilly is a classically trained artist and graduate of the Australian Design College.He has also been a finalist in two of Australia’s most coveted art awards, the Archibald and Doug Moran Portrait Prize.

We caught up with Dean before his exhibition at Red Hill Gallery in Brisbane as part of the Opposite Attraction Exhibition which opens on October 10th 2014.

AC: When talking of the ‘language’ in your art work, what would you say you are trying to portray with this series of work for your next exhibition.

DR: My creativity has a language I never can quite understand. At this time it seems to wander through fields of sensuality and playfulness. So with my artwork I try to approach it from this point. I believe we are all “sensual playful beings” or capable of being so.

AC: What are your passions in life, and do you like to incorporate them into your artwork at the moment.

DR: My passions come from my relationships, most importantly the relationship I have with myself and this world I live in. My art is a cathartic experience for me and it is my passion to try and understand why.

Dean Reilly

AC: You have an eclectic style of painting. How do you decide about the style of the next piece of work?

DR: I constantly research from popular culture, Classic culture and all the guff of “cut and paste” in between. I keep my eyes open yet shut at the same time for I now understand Picasso “. I do not seek, I find.”

AC: Using a few descriptive words, as an artist, how would you like to be portrayed? If you were a painting, what would the title be?

DR: As a painter whose creativity is unbridled, ranging from the classic to the absurd.

The title would be “Due to copyright constrictions we are unable to show this portrait.”

AC: The figurative form is a focus in your series of work for this exhibition. Are you feeling strongly about continuing to paint the same way?

DR: The human form has become fairly constant of late. You just can’t beat its storytelling capabilities

AC: What would you secretly like to be famous for?

DR: Making the wheel obsolete.

Dean Reilly

Dean Reilly will be exhibiting his new works  at his exhibition at Red Hill Gallery in Brisbane October 10th  2014

©  Red Hill Gallery

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Paul Margocsy – Walking On The Wild Side

Paul MargocsyCreative Artist magazine has just spotted a bird lover and wildlife artist with inherent talent and put him on the cover of their inaugural magazine with an eight page article.

Watercolour artist Paul Margocsy entrances us once again with his vividly realistic depictions of Australian birds and wildlife. He has become so internationally famous for his talent he has been included in a book launch featuring the seventy best living Australian artists.

Paul began his art career painting murals for children’s nurseries. It was in 1978 he discovered his interest in wildlife and became a member of the Wildlife Art Society of Australasia and in the very next year won his first award for the best painting. The rest is history.
Paul MargocsyWith his unique photographic memory, Paul is able to observe animals in their natural environment and then create incredible life like paintings from those observations.

A book launch later, he was then privileged to have an Australia Post commission in 1991 for a series of stamps. The year of 1994 was full of surprises when the United Nations commissioned him to paint a series of endangered wildlife. In 2006 Paul became the first Australian wildlife artist to have a solo exhibition in Hong Kong. He released his second book entitled “Away With The Birds” in 2009.
Paul Margocsy

Paul has been chosen twice to exhibit at the “Birds in Art” exhibition. He was one of only 80 artists (from over 3500 entries) from around the world to be selected to tour for a year each.

The Leigh Yawkey Woodson Art Museum is located in Wisconsin.  It is best known for its annual “Birds in Art” exhibition, which exhibits contemporary artistic representations of birds. Paul has had the honour of being asked to exhibit on two occasions.

He has held solo exhibitions in London and Japan, six solo shows in America and two at the exclusive Raffles Hotel in Singapore.
Paul Margocsy

For a bird’s eye view of Paul Margocsy’s new work, meet your friends at his solo exhibition on September 5   2014 at the Red Hill Gallery Brisbane.

©  Red Hill Gallery

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ArtChat [Blog Interview #53] – David Hinchliffe

David Hinchliffe
AC: Please tell us about the special pigments which you recently purchased in Marrakesh and their beautiful quality.
DH: While I was in Marrakech, I came across a herbalist who had a range of pigments which I bought. In addition to a range of magentas and sunflower yellows the most exciting of these pigments was the famous Majorelle Blue, named after the Majorelle Gardens in Marrakech which were restored by Yves St Laurent and which today are a major tourist attraction in that city. I enjoy mixing the dry pigments with refined linseed oil and using them with my regular oils.
AC: Your paintings always start with colour washes, so when you are doing these washes, do you have a particular composition in mind or do you allow the wash to determine the next step?
DH: I’m always a bit reluctant to divulge all the details of my painting preparations as they’re an essential part of the final look of the painting. It’s taken me years to develop the technique. Basically I apply thin washes of colours as an ‘imprimatura’ or underpainting.

While most artists seem to paint straight from the white canvas, there are some who use a flat mid-range imprimatura (perhaps a thin sienna wash) and then build their painting from there. However, I like to create an almost abstract organic underpainting vigorously blending several colours on the surface of the canvas or linen and then allow it to dry before beginning the final painting. I sometimes like the underpainting so much that it can be a challenge to paint over it. As to whether I have a particular composition in mind when I commence the underpainting, most of the time I do, but sometimes the result of the under painting itself changes my original conceptualisation of the painting. I’ve been known to sit and look at some of my canvas surfaces for hours after I’ve blended the colours before I see the image of the painting forming in my mind.
David HinchliffeAC: Do you concentrate on one theme at a time or do you vary your themes from day to day?
DH: Most of my work these days is streetscapes — New York, London, Paris, Venice, Brisbane, Sydney, Havana, Marrakech — images of the places I’ve been. I have so many images in my head; I sometimes think the hardest part of my day in the studio is not the actual painting but deciding WHAT to paint. Which city will it be today?

AC: Do you always use a brush for your final highlight impasto?
DH: Yes, although sometimes I use my fingers or my thumb to blend the paint. For some effects I use a feathered brush to blur edges.

AC: What kind of art do you most identify with?
DH: That’s actually a harder question than it sounds. I’m very eclectic in my personal tastes in art. I think most people tend to identify my style of painting with the impressionists because my paintings tend to give an impression of my subjects because of the way I treat light and shade. I do think the period of the French impressionists of the late 19th century remains the single most exciting epoch in the history of art. However, I personally love the vigorous gestural style of the expressionists.David HinchliffeAC: Who are your 3 favourite artists?
DH: That’s another hard question. I have so many “favourites”, it’s a bit like a great box of chocolates. I’m currently fascinated by the work of Lucien Freud who died only recently. Despite the pressures of the 20th century to forge new frontiers in art, Freud unashamedly stuck to his distinctive figurative representational painting. He’s a painter’s painter. I also like Francis Bacon and David Hockney all from the UK and there’d be another 20 artists of the modern era whose names I could reel off including great Australians like William Robinson who I studied under. And of course there are old masters like Vermeer and Rembrandt and Turner whose works I always go to in the New York Met or the National Gallery in London. It’s unfair to be restricted to just three.

AC: Tell our readers something about yourself that may surprise them?
DH: The thing I most enjoy about getting back home is hopping on my scooter and driving to the studio. I find driving boring.

AC: What do you like doing when you’re not painting?
DH: THINKING about painting. I’m pretty boring like that

AC: What was your most inspiring destination during your recent travels?
DH: It would have to be Morocco. I always love painting in London, Paris and New York and I am very very lucky that my work takes me to these extraordinary cities, but this time around I was so pleased to be in places like Fez and Meknes and Marrakech that are so completely different visually from those big international cities.

David Hinchliffe
Exhibiting August 2014 at Red Hill Gallery

©  Red Hill Gallery

Posted in Art, Australia Fine Art, Australian Art, Australian Artist, Brisbane, Colour, David Hinchliffe, Exhibition, Five Minutes with, Landscape painting, Painting, Q&A, Red Hill Art Gallery, Uncategorized, Urban | Comments Off on ArtChat [Blog Interview #53] – David Hinchliffe

Joseph Zbukvic – People & Places 2014 – Part 2

Joseph Zbukvic‘MARKET STUDY’
“Victoria Market in Melbourne is renowned for its fresh produce and it’s not far from my studio. I am a regular shopper there but this time I brought my sketching gear and came up with this study. If you look at the closest figure you will find that it’s yet another cameo of myself. Actually if you look at all figures in my works you’ll find me somewhere!  I do it for the fun of it but it also helps me to get involved with the subject.”
Joseph Zbukvic

Joseph Zbukvic‘AFTERNOON IN VIENNA’
“I really enjoyed my last visit to Vienna and I still paint subjects from that trip. Everything about it is beautiful.  The buildings, the people, the Fiakers and best of all: the cakes! In this painting I tried to capture the late afternoon light on those wonderful facades. Not an easy task given the complexity of the buildings, combined with the horses, which are the most difficult subject on the planet! I think this one worked well. I hope you agree.”
Joseph Zbukvic

Joseph Zbukvic

‘FISH MONGERS, ISTANBUL’
“Another one with a bit of colour. I love the red aprons which is such a clever choice of colour, given the nature of their work. I have also done many paintings of butchers who for some reason wear white. I guess it is due to hygiene reasons. This is another study and it’s quite unfinished, which I think is its special quality. Istanbul was a wonderful place to paint and I look forward to doing an exhibition on it in near future.”
Joseph Zbukvic

Joseph Zbukvic
‘GRAND CENTRAL STATION GUARDIAN, NY’
“This figure on top of the station in New York really took my eye. It reminded me of the Royal Eagle I painted for the last exhibition I had at Red Hill Gallery. I know one of the figures is a Greek travelling God and another is Hercules, I forget the third. It was the fourth of July on that day and there were many police around. I was watched over by a large policeman while I worked on this site and I felt very safe indeed! I particularly like this piece and its unfinished state. There is a certain quality that I like in work like this, which doesn’t exist in highly finished pieces.”
Joseph Zbukvic

Joseph ZbukvicTHE BACK GATE
“Another quintessential Australian scene. Despite my world wide travels I still love Australian landscape and find endless subjects everywhere. This was painted near Melbourne and it’s the type of subject I like, where there is not really anything significant and yet it makes a wonderful composition. A lot of people would drive past this scene and never see anything in it and yet I think it makes a lovely subject because of its simplicity. It makes you think and look again at something you thought you didn’t see but know it’s there.”
Joseph Zbukvic

Joseph Zbukvic‘BACK FROM FISHING’
“I used to do lots of seascapes, not so many nowadays. I still return to this type of work every now and then and thoroughly enjoy it. Because of the simplicity of the subjects it’s very important to do the figures correctly. In the end there is not much else there really. The interaction between the figures is the very subject itself. They help us walk onto the beach ourselves and interact as well.”
Joseph Zbukvic
Joseph Zbukvic‘BARGES IN BRITTANY’
“I love the rigging on old-fashioned boats. It cuts fantastic lines through the sky. Made for sable brushes! I particularly like the low horizon on this work and the way it’s actually quite minimal as a subject. These barges were still working and I was amazed by the fact that they didn’t have any engines! Sadly it was a still day I’m not one to put up its sails. I would’ve loved to have seen that! It would’ve made a fantastic subject!”
Joseph Zbukvic

JZ21‘PLOUGHING PARTNERS’
My grandfather had a team of draft horses and I loved watching him ploughing. Sometimes he would let me ride on top of the plough as a weight to make deeper furrows. I still remember the sound of the blade turning over the soil. Sometimes I would see a mouse or other animals jump out of their burrows and my grandfather would tell me what they were. These were lessons to remain with me for the rest of my days. This one is for him.
Joseph Zbukvic

Exhibiting July 2014 at Red Hill Gallery

©  Red Hill Gallery

Posted in Art, Australian Artist, Brisbane, Colour, Exhibition, Painting, Red Hill Art Gallery, Uncategorized, Watercolour | Comments Off on Joseph Zbukvic – People & Places 2014 – Part 2