Saturday, February 21, 2009

The Girl in the Tower



The Long, Long Braid, 2001, Acrylic on 4 canvases, 141.5 x 40.5 cm
Click on image to enlarge.

There was once a maiden who had lived her entire life in a tall tower in the middle of a dark and almost impenetrable wood. Her father had locked her in there many years before. No one could exactly remember why any more. It seems that fathers did that a lot in the olden days. At least he made sure that she had a substantial store of provisions before vanishing completely from her life. The tower had no door - just a window at the very top at which the girl would sit and dream of all the wonderful adventures she would have, if only she could escape.

With the passing of time it seemed her empty days grew longer and longer - and so did her hair. Just looking after it - washing, drying, brushing, combing and braiding it - became a full-time job, but certainly not one that relieved the tedium of her days.

Stories of her beauty and her lustrous locks spread far and wide until one day a handsome prince rode by on a milk white steed, curious to see if the rumours he had heard were true. A single glance at the figure in the tower told him they were. But it seemed he would forever be condemned to worship her from a distance.

Next minute there was a flurry of movement at the window. In no time at all the girl had lowered her braid - it was now the exact same height as the tower - and was beckoning him to climb.

In even less time he had clambered up and was by her side. The handsome prince was full of tales of his great adventures in the outside world, of vast armies he had defeated, of entire kingdoms he had conquered and of countless maidens he had wooed and won. But none of these maidens, he assured her, could compare to her, because not one of them had such long and wondrous hair.

The girl begged to be able to join him in his adventures. But of course her hair would be a hindrance and she would have to cut it off.

He begged her not to do so - it was what made her so uniquely beautiful. He could never feel the same way about her without her glorious long hair.

They argued late into the night until both fell asleep, exhausted. The prince awoke early the next morning, and to his disbelief, found he was quite alone in the room.

Then he noticed what looked like the end of his lover’s braid tied to the leg of a chair. The rest of it was trained out of the window.

He staggered across the room just in time to see the girl climbing to the ground. Her hair was cut short like that of a lowly pageboy. He couldn’t believe his eyes - she must have borrowed his sword while he slept.

Years of fighting to keep her increasingly unruly hair under control had made her something of an expert in knot and ropework techniques. She gave the braid a short, sharp tug. Immediately it loosened from the chair leg and fell noiselessly at her feet.

The prince’s heart leapt to his throat. “How on earth am I going to escape?” he cried.

“Grow your own hair!” answered the maiden as she mounted the milk white steed and rode off into the sunrise.

Friday, February 20, 2009

…a thousand words, Tweed River Art Gallery, NSW


Anon, 1998, colour linocut, 56.5 x 38 cm.
Click on image to enlarge.

Curated by Susi Muddiman and Gail McDermott, the exhibition features works selected from the Print Archive of the Print Council of Australia.

Tweed River Art Gallery
Cnr Tweed Valley Way and Mistral Road
Murwillumbah NSW 2484
Phone: 02 66702792

The exhibition will run from 27 March – 13 September.

Anon was originally part of a body of work called Private Collection. It was exhibited at Australian Galleries, Melbourne, in 2000 and comprised drawings, miniature multi panelled paintings and relief prints. This series, which marked a major change of direction in my work, evolved after a visit to London in 1997. In a small upstairs room in Kenwood House on Hampstead Heath I discovered an astonishing collection of mourning jewellery and portrait miniatures. Subsequently I investigated other similarly fine collections, most notably in London’s Victoria and Albert Museum and the National Portrait Gallery. But it is the contents of that modest room at Kenwood House which had the greatest impact, possibly because this was where what was has been a long, ongoing journey began.

A significant part of my previous work, namely the Tattooed Faces and Figures, had focused on women's sewing iconography, sometimes incorporating motifs such as lace and other textile-related patterns. This eventually led to a number of experimental works wherein linocuts were printed onto fabric, layered and hand stitched. The last, and most ambitious, of these was The Daughter of Time (1997, linocut on white and grey interfacing with hand stitching 200 x 76 cm.) The last-minute incorporation of two overlapping oval braids was quite intuitive, little more than a compositional device. Uncannily, however, it anticipated the next phase of my work, in which hair, particularly intricately patterned knots and braids, would take centre stage.

The motif of lace was also carried though in the majority of the relief prints that directly followed this work, including Anon. It is printed from two blocks onto semi-transparent Japanese Mending Tissue, which was chosen both for its sensitive and receptive surface and its resemblance to the fabrics with which I had previously experimented, particularly interfacing. As with the Fabric Pieces, the paper is an integral part of the visual language of the work.

Initially the manner in which the hair in mourning jewellery was painstakingly woven and patterned translated into my own work as an extension of the sewing iconography I had previously employed. But very soon hair, with its opposing qualities of seductiveness and creepiness (as in the context of mourning jewellery) assumed a significance all its own. For Anon and its companion works, I extended my research to an investigation of Celtic knots. In order to exploit the increasingly intricate knots and braids to the fullest, I was obliged to turn my protagonists’ faces away from the viewer. The title of this work best describes their subsequent fate.

Deborah Klein
Melbourne, February, 2009

Saturday, February 14, 2009

Pameran Seni Visual : ARKE-SIGNS


Pameran Seni Visual : ARKE-SIGNS
Menampilkan 3 Perupa
( KATIRIN – RIDI WINARNO – HERMAN LEKSTIAWAN)

PEMBUKAAN PAMERAN
Hari/Tanggal : Sabtu, 14 Februari 2009
Pukul : 19.30 WIB
Tempat : Tujuh Bintang Art Space – Jl. Sukonandi No. 7 Yogyakarta
Dibuka oleh : Bapak Drs. Suprapto Sudjono, MFA PhD - Rektor ISI Yogyakarta
Pameran berlangsung : 14 Februari – 9 Maret 2009

KURATOR : Kuss Indarto


PENGANTAR PAMERAN
Dalam kesadaran untuk menimbang nilai-nilai kebaruan yang relatif tercakup pada karya Katirin, Ridi Winarno, dan Herman Lekstiawan, maka peta kuratorial ini diberangkatkan. Sesuatu yang baru, yang berbeda dari yang biasa mereka geluti selama inilah yang menjadi titik utama pengamatan. Oleh karenanya, tema Arke-Signs, sesungguhnya dihasratkan sebagai sebuah pemetaan awal bagi ketiga perupa yang secara drastis dan evolutif, telah melakukan upaya pembenahan diri secara kreatif untuk melakukan perubahan demi pencapaian kemajuan. Kerangka tema Arke-Signs kiranya juga sebagai sebuah dukungan "moral" bagi ketiga perupa ini yang telah dengan sadar membangun nilai kreativitasnya dengan sejumput nyali untuk berubah. Mungkin tak semua karyanya berhasil memberi keyakinan sebagai hasil pergeseran atau perubahan, namun upaya telah dimulai. Titik permulaan sudah dicanangkan oleh ketiganya. Dan ini pantas untuk diapresiasi!


INFORMASI & KONTAK, HUBUNGI
Tujuh Bintang Art Space
Jl Sukonandi No. 7-Yogyakarta 55166, Indonesia
Tlp +62 274 545577 Fax +62 274 583377
Mobile +62 8139 1634 777
email: info@tujuhbintang.com
website: http://www.tujuhbintang.com

(Rwn)

Monday, February 9, 2009

Arkesigns

Hari ini Pameran bertajuk Senang-Senang telah berakhir. Tujuh Bintang Art Space mempersiapkan event selanjutnya yang oleh Kuss Indarto selaku kurator pameran diberi judul ArkeSigns.

Arke berasal dari bahasa Yunani untuk istilah filsafat yang artinya awal atau permulaan. Signs berarti tanda-tanda. Jadi ArkeSigns bisa diartikan tanda-tanda awal. Arti jelasnya akan diulas di post selanjutnya.

Pameran yang mengangkat 3 perupa, yaitu Katirin, Ridi Winarno dan Herman Lekstiawan akan berlangsung dari tanggal 14 Februari sampai dengan 1 Maret 2009. Pembukaan dilaksanakan hari Sabtu tanggal 14 Februari 2009 pukul 19:30 di Tujuh Bintang Art Space Jl Sukonandi 7 Yogyakarta


Informasi lebih jelasnya bisa dilihat di www.tujuhbintang.com atau call di 0274 545577

(Rwn)

Thursday, February 5, 2009

My New Blue Press


It finally arrived! Many thanks to Paul Compton and Shane Jones for delivering the press and carrying it up all those stairs.
Click on image to enlarge.

Perupa Indonesia ke Milan

Sembilan perupa Indonesia ikut ambil bagian dalam pameran bersama di Galeri Primo Marella, Milan, Italia, 11 Februari- 11 Maret mendatang, dengan tajuk ”South East B(l)ooming”. Mereka adalah Agus Suwage, Entang Wiharso, Haris Purnomo, Ugo Untoro, Gede Mahendra Yasa, Ketut Moniarta, Wayan Suja, Davy Linggar, dan RE Hartanto. Rifky Effendy bertindak selaku kurator perupa Indonesia. Menurut perupa Haris Purnomo kepada Kompas, Rabu (4/2) malam, selain perupa Indonesia dipamerkan pula karya 10 perupa Filipina ditambah satu perupa dari Malaysia. Rombongan dari Indonesia akan bertolak akhir pekan ini. (Rwn)

Kompas Cetak 5 Jan 2009
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