Wednesday, February 11, 2015

A Changed Direction


NZ Rhyolite ready for sanding and polishing.  I love working with Rhyolite and have completed two settings in two different forms of this stone.

When I started this blog I did not realize the convolutions the path of my life would take.  The gyrations of fate have landed me in a tiny, prettily peaceful town in North West Queensland.  In a beautiful environment with that most precious of assets, time, I am now resurrecting this blog in a different form.

Four years ago, I resettled in Australia with ambitions to return to my former occupation.  I designed four collections of porcelain work using images from the coastal region in which I was living.  Apart from some commission work, most of this work is still unfired.   Eventually I realized my problem accessing a kiln on a regular basis was going to be an ongoing problem.   I finally acknowledged the futility of building up a stock of greenware in the hope of a kiln falling out of the sky and decided to spend my time getting to know the area in which I was then living.  I joined the local Gem Club. 
 
When we lived in the Middle East I had taken every opportunity offered to go out with a group of naturalists.  These trips occasionally included a geologist who was willing to share his knowledge with mere amateurs.  This person opened up a new world to me.  I like the outdoors and have collected pebbles all my life, as all artists, particularly potters tend to do.  Shells and beach debris, are another major influence on my designs.  In my new life on Queensland’s central coast, one of the most beautiful areas in the world, I looked forward to weekends spent fossicking in the mineral rich environment.    

NZ Daisy Stone – another form of Rhyolite.


This did not happen.  Instead I spent my Saturday afternoons learning the qualities of various gemstones, how to identify stones, cut and polish cabochons, and eventually the arcane art of faceting.  Of course, once one has a collection of fine stones, silversmithing follows.  I would have liked it to be goldsmithing, but that skill, alas, lies far in the future when the price of gold crashes. 
Monday evenings were spent learning silversmithing.  I had already some small skills in this as we’d covered metalwork during my art course many years before and I had successfully combined porcelain and silver on occasion. 

During this learning period the number of failed projects littered my life like so many dead Dry Season leaves.  I am a slow learner and the difference between clay and metal is vast.  Like all craftworkers and true artists lapidaries and silversmiths are sharing people and I will be forever grateful to my tutors and guides during this period.

Persistence always pays and now I am completing my second collection of settings, and have designed and begun my third collection.  It is an exciting time.  I hope you enjoy the journey and the knowledge and skills I can share with you.  I look forward to any constructive criticism or comment.
Claire Wood
Email:  InTheAtmosphere@gmail.com



Saturday, May 26, 2012

Tate Adams at Artspace

In 2003 Mackay took a further step towards being a regional centre of substance when Artspace, designed by award winning CoxRayner Architects, was opened.


Until then artists had flourished in Mackay, but Townsville and Cairns were perceived to be the main bases for the creative arts in North Queensland.  Both Perc Tucker Gallery in Townsville and Cairns Regional Art Gallery worked to promote regional arts and to bring to the community works of significance from national and international artists.


A public gallery must have a relevant collection on which to base its future development and Mackay Regional Council Collection was started in the late 1980s by the Mackay City Library.
Irish/Australian Tate Adams donated his personal collection to Artspace in 2002 when he was 80 years old and embarking on another phase of a remarkable life.


Adams was already recognised as a distinguished printmaker and teacher when he and George Baldessin founded Lyre Bird Press in Melbourne in 1977, after the Crossley Gallery and Print Workshop, also founded by Adams, closed.  


Although George Baldessin died a year after the founding of the press, he is still recognized as one of Australia’s greatest printmakers.


For the following twelve years Lyre Bird Press was a hot topic among aspiring printmakers and the source of great interest among Australian artists and collectors and influenced the development of the artist book as an art form in this country.


Among the early works published by Lyre Bird was the 1981 Diary of a Vintage by Tate Adams, and John Brack’s Nudes in 1982.


In his mid-60s Adams went to Broome in Western Australia.  While there he produced a series of prints that reflected the remnants of the pearling industry on which Broome’s original wealth depended.  A more fluid style is obvious in this collection of prints and it heralds Adams’ later semi abstract works.


The publication of those prints in 1989 in Port of Pearls, coincided with Adams’ move to Townsville and the beginning of his collaboration with artist Ron McBurnie.


After a three year hiatus Lyre Bird went back into production from its new North Queensland base.  The Mackay Regional Library purchased a copy of every book produced by Lyre Bird until Tate Adams closed the press in 2002.


Adams gifted his personal archives to Mackay City Council to celebrate the gallery’s opening.  Among this collection of 216 prints and drawings, 20 artist books, original wood blocks, catalogues and reference material, are the works previously mentioned.


The Tate Adams' collection is now on a rotating display in the Cox Rayner Gallery at Artspace.  The collection provides a great opportunity for the visitor to engage with an engrossing art form and with a part of Australian art history.


In one of those serendipitous moments that often occur in the Australian creative space Melbourne based artist Ted May’s perceptive and witty portrait of Tate Adams won the prestigious Xstrata Percival Portrait Award in 2010


As well as the Tate Adams’ Collection, artists’ books are the focus for Artspace which holds the third largest collection in Australia after the National Gallery of Australia and the State Library of Queensland. 


The National Artists’ Books Award (The Libris Awards) was established in Mackay in 2006 and will be held in 2013 to celebrate the gallery’s 10th anniversary.


Claire Wood 
Reviewer
In The Atmosphere
Email: InTheAtmosphere@gmail.com
See also:   Just Claire Woodlonglines
27th May 2012


Artspace Mackay is located in the Civic Centre Precinct, Gordon Street, Mackay, QLD 4740.  Entry is free and the opening hours are Monday – Closed, Tuesday – Saturday 10am – 5pm, Sunday – closed.   Details of their exhibitions, collections and events can be viewed at http://www.artspacemackay.com.au/


Perc Tucker Regional Gallery is located on the corner of Denham and Flinders Streets, in the city centre.  Entry is free and the gallery is open Monday - Friday: 10am - 5pm, Saturday - Sunday: 10am - 2pm.  Details of their exhibitions, collections and events can be viewed at http://www.townsville.qld.gov.au/facilities/galleries/perctucker/Pages/default.aspx