Back to Australia

I am leaving tomorrow for my twelfth trip to Australia. I want to get lost in the country like the girl in McCubbin’s painting above….actually titled, “Lost”. His work is always so dramatic in subject, palette and scene. This is one of my favorites.

This time I return to Melbourne and the friends who get me to where I need to be. One day with them and then it is off to Baldessin Press in St. Andrews.

First a flat white. Melbourne has the best coffee anywhere and especially in these little back city cafes.

 

 

We might just drive by my most favorite sculpture in the city, the Burke and Wills Bronze statue. Hopefully a trip to the National Gallery of Victoria.

And maybe I can whip up some savoury muffins again in Anne’s AGA stove. So good!

Then it will be off to Baldessin Press to teach a book making workshop and do a bit of my own work. The country and the studio have inspired much of my work about Australia.

I love the Saturday market there in St. Andrews. I have found such treasures there.

After that I will have two more days in Melbourne before heading off on train to teach in Allansford. I have not been there before and look forward to more time working with students and doing some of my own work. Catching up with sketchbooks is always important to me on these trips.

Once finished in the southern part of Victoria I will be back at Grampians Texture in Halls Gap for the third time teaching. This time it is another masters class with students I have known for years. Some of us will spend a few days together before heading out to Adelaide and Goolwa, SA for the final leg of the trip. Here is some of their work done in my classes.

I will miss this country and miss the iconic imagery that has inspired more than just me. Here are a few more pictures of “Australia”.

I will try to post a new blog while down under. Here is one last detail of a piece I made about being in Lake Mungo.

 

Taking a Break in Asheville then Finishing Up with the Samples Book

This is the view going over to Asheville the other day. The fog seems to love laying like whipped cream over the town of Franklin. We drove up to have an overnight stay with friends and ate wonderful food. It is hard to find anything but good food in that town. Loved spending time with friends, their cat and of course shopping for clothes.

 

When I returned to the very messy studio of putting things away from teaching the week before and trying to redo my old samples book, I got back at it. The new samples book is not as long as the old one and almost every single sample was re-pasted into the new size of 12″ x 12″ x 4″. I used some leaf contact printed cloth for the covers and printed paper for the straps. All the folios that were stitched in were colored with shellac and a walnut dye left from the previous week’s class. I couldn’t bear to toss it out so brought it home in jars.

I removed the beads from the long stitched spine of the previous book and attached them to the long threads of the new book.

Here are some of the interior pages. This book is packed. I wanted to keep all the sample techniques to use for myself in the studio and have as a reference for students if I teach this class again. The pages are not as pretty as students’ were last week but they are familiar to me and full of the information that I will need.

 

These are just a few of the pages. I was happy to see the end of this project. Over the past several years I would just stick more samples loosely into the back of the old book. It gave me a chance to really look at the work involved and realize again how much “documentation” is important to the way I work. Even though some of the samples look like a dumb idea, they were worth keeping. I learned a very long time ago that today’s “dumb” is tomorrow’s “genius”.

I liked teaching this class and have modified it a bit with a new title for the students of today….the ones I have more often than not, who want something “pretty” by the end of the week, not a bunch of techniques that they are not likely to use in their own work. For me the samples are the work. They are the product and will be what I count on later.

And then there was that glorious Snow Moon last night. My iphone does not do it justice but here it was waiting for us to come back home last night after dinner with friends.

Tomorrow is the meeting of the Art Group here and at the very least I will have two finished books to show them. Then I need to concentrate on getting ready for Australia and leaving home for five weeks. I am so happy to be going again.

When I return from down under it is back to those specimens with watercolor on gessoed boards. I think the big dragonfly will be next. While in Asheville I went to the art store to get new small brushes and a walnut ink colored very fine marking pen. It will make those tiny wing veins seem doable. All for now…..

Staying Focused

It has been difficult to stay as focused on my work and my routines this past several months. In September my husband was diagnosed with early dementia. Things change. We change. I don’t change easily but I have learned that I can. It has taken time to focus and take advantage of the time I can have in the studio….learning when is the best time to afford the luxury of peace that making art gives to me.

For weeks I quit doing my tai chi and yoga because I could not focus on the moves and made excuses to simply not do it. The time I always spent on this was late afternoon when work in the studio was pretty much at a standstill. But it seemed that the distraction of being needed elsewhere came more often at that time. I would start and stop one thing after another while getting used to how things will be.

When I took my lessons in the three kodas I learned in tai chi, it was twenty years ago. I decided then that I would make a book of the moves, illustrating them and describing how they were done. My teacher said she had never heard of such a thing. I told her I wanted to do tai chi into my nineties and knew that by then would need some help remembering. The book would be that needed prompt. After so many weeks of ignoring the practice, I found I needed this book. I would start over and over and over until the body remembered. Sometimes in the middle I would freeze, forget, want to quit, but I didn’t. Some of the yoga stretches and stances are harder after such an absence of practice. My body feels more “blocky”, hard to maneuver. This will take more time and pushing myself.

Here are some pictures of my treasured little book. It started as a lesson in hard covered traditional binding of a blank journal. Not the best job and I really do hate blank pages, so it seemed perfect for the job of translating what was giving me some inner peace and strength into a visual and useful form…..an instructional manual so to speak.

I really am so glad that I took my lessons so seriously as to make this book for “when I am ninety”.

Meanwhile in the studio when we got the prognosis, I made pages, lots of pages that I gessoed and then stitched using a sewing notion tool to get the stitches exactly the same size. When I felt particularly at a loss, I would draw into them with graphite and only the watercolors made from the soils of our yard. Each folio is only about 4.5 x 3.5 inches. I could keep my lost feelings small and get them over with….and get on with it…..whatever “it” was that day. At first I colored several of them. Then I put them into a wooden box where they fit perfectly and are there if I need them….but not so often now. Here are a few of those pages.

When I found the stack of gessoed boards a while back I decided to just use them with silver point drawings that were then to be water colored. The first one was the drawing of trees in a forest with a magical door to something…..just somewhere else. The silver point drawing was nice and took lots of time. It was all coming out of my head….something I don’t normally do….I like something physical in front of me to draw. Anyway after I drew it, I decided to watercolor it, then add caran ‘dache crayons. It became very muddy, so I took it outside and used my electric sander over the surface. It made me see how memory is. You think its there, all in order and bright and clear…and then parts fade, parts get stuck, parts become even more parts. I may have posted this before on my blog, but here it is in the context of where we were at the time.

These gessoed boards were not well done….far from it, so they were perfect to work on. I liked how this one in particular even developed a hole right down to the wooden base. It personifies fading memories.

Then I started on the other gessoed boards. Just taking some of my collected bits and pieces and capturing them as best I could. And now I am doing more of them with the fabricated specimens. Some will be framed, some will be exhibited in a large open drawer on a table below them ….looking like an actual specimen collection. Building an imaginary something with spare parts. Then recording it as if it truly mattered. And to me right now it does. They are something I can control and see to completion. Here is the latest one in the studio yesterday. I don’t know if I am through with all the details, but it is very satisfying to work on.

And thanks to a very supportive collection of family and friends, my trip to Australia will be just as wonderful as all the rest that came before. They will take turns staying here at the house and make sure that all runs smoothly. I am extremely lucky to have them all so willing to take over. And as much as I have said it before, almost every trip down under, this might be my last time there. I intend to make the most of it and have the best time with students and friends ever. A new suitcase that is just the right size arrives tomorrow and there are collections of relative materials ready to pack inside. My boards for white line printing are all cut and sanded, samples of books and bindings, tools for making earthen pigments….lots of things are waiting to be put into that suitcase.

Speaking of Australia, yesterday two things arrived in the mail. One was from a friend in the art group. He subscribes to Archaeology magazine and sent a wonderful article on the remains of bushranger, Ned Kelly. The other was so generous and unexpected. I wish I could put a face to the woman who took the time and certainly expense to send me this year’s book by Kim Mahood, an Australian writer and artist, titled, Position Doubtful….mapping landscapes and memories. In italics on the back cover it says as follows:

Imagine the document you have before you is not a book but a map. It is well-used, creased, and folded, so that when you open it, no matter how carefully, something tears and a line that is neither latitude nor longitude opens in the hidden geography of the place you are about to enter.

Isn’t that wonderful! Bruce Pascoe says, “Mahood is a writer of country. Her chapters unfurl like the ribbons of red dunes.”

The woman who sent me this most perfect gift wrote a note telling me that she took a class of mine many years ago and recently bought my book on Earthen Pigments. She found it to be very helpful in her efforts to extract colors from the ground. And when she bought the Mahood book for herself she found that halfway through she kept thinking of me, so sent me this copy.

I am so grateful. It could not have arrived at a more perfect time. There is magic and memory in the grounds we walk on. Thank you, Kathy Salter for reminding me of this. Maybe our paths will cross while I am back in your much-loved country.

Now back to the studio or wherever I need to be.

Workshops Coming Up In Australia

I have just short of five weeks to spend with students and friends in Australia this coming Spring….Spring here, Fall there. It is going to be a very good time for me. There are four workshops planned to fill the time.

It all starts here at the door to the studio at Baldessin Press in St. Andrews, VIC.

March 4th and 5th we will do as many book bindings as possible. Here are some examples of what can be achieved. Register at info@baldessinpress.com.au

Next stop is Beautiful Silks in Allansford, Vic.    https://beautifulsilks.com/workshop.html

This is a very intimate setting for a small group to meet up and explore the possible forms and placement of Memory Vessels. We will start with making paints from soils of places of memory to use on the works made in class and later in the students’ studios. Here is an excerpt from the description for the class taking place March 10, 11, 12. Contact Beautiful Silks above for more details.

This is a three day class that delves into how we can physically contain a memory. Our goal is to create an individual vessel that can be held, positioned and put away whenever there is a need to either keep it handy, look at it another way or keep it safe. There are memories that simply need to be cast off altogether and the vessel form might need to be dispatched in a flurry of ash or floated down a stream. Often one memory leads to another and only a series of vessels that are either tied/placed together in a particular order or piled into another larger container will hold the collective flood of memories. And maybe they simply need to stop coming and this is a way of saying, “Enough!”

These can take so many forms but here are some ideas……

 

On March 18th through the 23rd I will be teaching a masters class on white line printmaking for stitching into books and sculpture at Grampians Texture in Halls Gap, Vic. This class has been full for some time and there is likely a waiting list. But here is a bit of what we will be doing with paint making, printing and stitching.

Then after spending a few days working together in a large house with friends and ideas, I move on to Goolwa in SA to repeat the Memory Vessels from April 1 – 3 before flying home the following day.

Contact for that workshop is jenniworth1@gmail.com

I hope to see some of you in class or on my travels in Australia.