Wednesday, July 17, 2013

The Cuckoo's Nest in Broadsheet

Massive props to all those who came from near and far to the opening of The Cuckoo's Nest at Linden last Friday night. The crowds were bountiful, the live Men with glasses were confused and a little afraid. It was ACE. For those of you who may not have already seen, artist and curator of the show Tai Snaith, and fellow artist Kate Tucker were interviewed by Anna Metcalfe of Broadsheet about the show. For those who want a little more insight on the exhibition, the interview is below, or the full article can be found by clicking here.

SO MUCH FUN!

xx
L.

image courtesy Kristoffer Paulsen


On a recent winter's afternoon, Melbourne artists Tai Snaith and Kate Tucker came together to talk about working with talented creative women, domesticity gone wild and their new group exhibition, The Cuckoo's Nest.

Anna Metcalfe: So what are the key things you're exploring in the show?
Tai Snaith: Well, as an artist, you create work that's loaded with personal meaning, but then you pass it to someone else who puts it into their home and kind of appropriates it. That's quite weird. The work needs to be empty enough for the owner to project their own ideas onto it, but full enough to be challenging or compelling. I wanted to play around with the idea that a lot of art you see in magazines and blogs is very nice looking, but is not challenging. What's the idea? I think the ideas of living with design and living with art are crossing over. Sometimes that works, but they are not the same: art comes from a more personal place, whereas design is like functional art.
Kate Tucker: We are asking, ‘when does it just become superficial?’ In the project, which I'm doing as Low Phat Wytchkraft with my sister [Jessie Tucker], we are interested in the idea of curating a home to present a certain image and that image being fake or branded – just a projection of the life you want the outside world to see. On the one hand, having amazing design and art in your home can be wonderful, but at the same time following interior magazines can be a materialistic pursuit, totally removed from creating a sense of meaning in your home.
AM: While you have been playing with the ideas of interiors and art in domestic spaces, it sounds like the work has become kind of psychedelic and crazed?
KT: Showing the work at a big fancy house like Linden, we're all tapping into the slightly hidden parts of the domestic experience – representing the fake facade, but also the crazy reality beneath. As a group, we talked about domesticity-gone-mad scenarios, like hoarders' houses.
TS: Many of the artists’ ideas have gone a bit nutty. Like Siri [Hayes] showing weapons her kids made and Beci [Orpin] has made birdhouses that go inside – it's nature inside the house. Dell Stewart's work is a ceramic tea set, but it is for mushroom tea, so it is all a bit strange but appealing. Lucy James has collected hundreds of images of men with glasses, categorised them and pinned them all up like a butterfly collection. Lucy's work is interesting because it is like she's a 'man hunter' and turning traditional femininity on its head, but at the same time playing with the idea that you need to collect a man to complete the perfect home.
KT: There's an undertone of danger to the works. It is celebrating beauty and juxtaposing that with stuff that's a bit wrong.
AM: It sounds like some of the work is directly overturning the ideas of feminine niceties and sleek interiors.
TS: The work's breaking down our desires and challenging existing ideas. We are empowering domesticity. All of us in the show are living quite domestic lives in our own ways, but are strong women. The show also raises the idea of what you do behind closed doors and looking at the awkward part of living. Siri's works are prints of her Instagram photos. They came about because she wouldn't let her kids have toy guns, but then they started making weapons out of wool and sticks and things they found at home… Often we create this stylised image of ourselves online, that is totally unreal and perfected. The internet has changed the way we present ourselves outwardly and the show is trying to unpack some of that. The Selfie Quilt I made was quite hard for me to put out there, I've been taking these photos for two years and I was looking at them glowing in their folders, and I just thought well, fuck it, that is what I do every day.
AM: This is all quite self-reflective. Ellequa Martin's Thinking Chair is all about reflection – she has created a chair to contemplate the universe on. Your piece Taste doesn't reflect on life in this way, does it Kate? It is more about an idea?
KT: Yes, we wanted to look at the idea of the 'good room' and setting up a table centrepiece so everything is just right. We've created a banquet, and used a rainbow symbol to tie it all together, so everything has a rainbow on it or in it. There's a rainbow trout with rainbow guts. The overall image we created is totally over the top!
TS: It is like Martha Stewart on LSD.
KT: Exactly! It is all kind of absurd, but also fun and celebratory. Jess and I have always been the lady at home embroidering and making things, so it is interesting to say ‘Okay, let's make whatever we want to make and include anything that realises the idea’, and use all of our skills in an intuitive way to make an expression of both craft and aesthetic object. Through combining those two things we constructed this really detailed vision. It is very detailed. It is about giving ourselves permission to do that, too. We just let ourselves go – no limited colour palettes here!
The Cuckoo's Nest runs from July 12 to August 11 at Linden Centre for Contemporary Arts, 26 Acland Street, St Kilda.

Wednesday, July 10, 2013

Preview of Men With Glasses!

I know I am TERRIBLE at keeping things a surprise, but I know not all of you will be able to make it to the gallery on Friday night, so I thought I'd share this tiny treat.

My gorgeous husband made this little film during yesterday's install, unbeknown to me - a delightful preview of the Men With Glasses installation, which is showing at Linden Centre for Contemporary Art, as part of the Innovators 2 program. For those of you who don't know, this work is part of a massive group show The Cuckoo's Nest, featuring a glorious collection of female artists, curated by Tai Snaith.



A movie I made about Lucy from kentwilson on Vimeo.

For the rest of you, that was merely a taste - hopefully I'll see you at Linden this Friday night from 6pm!

xx
L.

Wednesday, July 3, 2013

The Cuckoo's Nest

The Cuckoo's Nest

July 12 to August 1

at Linden Centre for Contemporary Arts

26 Acland Street, St. Kilda

Opening night: July 12, 6pm

Featuring new works from Beci Orpin, Siri Hayes, Lucy James, Dell Stewart, Low Phat Wytchkraft (sisters Kate and Jessie Tucker), Ellequa Martin and Tai Snaith. Curated by Tai Snaith.


In most bird species, the female builds and feathers the nest before laying her eggs. In the case of The Cuckoo, however, she simply lays her egg's in another bird's nest. This idea of hijacking someone else's space is in some ways similar to what we do as artists. We make personal objects, images and ideas and  they often end up in someone else's home and life. In The Cuckoo's Nest a group of seven female artists will be treating Linden a little like a display home for a new way of living with art.
— Curator Tai Snaith



Men With Glasses - the antiquated online dating service you never thought you'd need, analogue style. A collection, in the thousands, of heads categorised into looks, occupation, feelings, you name it. This collection delves into notions of obsession, hoarding, stalking. This is husband hunting at its darkest. Find your man. Men who wear glasses are often associated with intelligence, high-powered jobs and bookish good looks. Who doesn't love a man who reads?

This collection visually references the study of entomology, jovially suggesting 'all men are insects'. This opens up discussion about the role of men in women's lives in the past and in the current climate and how we categorise people in general. Are all men liars, as Sam de Brito tells us every weekend in his Age column? Are they all bastards? Why do we all want one so badly? Is it still important to 'have' a man? If you already have a man, do you have him or does he have you?

This gem collection weaves into the idea of The Cuckoo's Nest, creating a dark and dirty love nest of all the potential suitors a girl could, would, should have. Part psychopath cave, part museum archive, these men have been are preserved based on their one common visual thread: glasses.



Come down to Linden next Friday to join me for a drink, there will be enough Men With Glasses for everyone!

x
Lucy

Wednesday, June 26, 2013

Monday, June 24, 2013

a monkey on my back

It's been hard to get into the studio of late – job applications, assignments, weird shifts, illness and the ever present COLD have all affected my ability to make stuff. However, I feel that it is important to have away time from creative practice in order to cultivate ideas and desires. I am getting pretty itchy to get back into it! I have had plenty of time to stew my thoughts and hopefully in the next week or so, things will settle down in time for them to amp right up.

The next 6 months are pretty packed with projects and I am looking forward to sharing them with you!

In the meantime, here is a little somethin' somethin' from my brain to keep you going.



xx
L.

Tuesday, June 4, 2013

when the universe needs to kick you in the teeth


Don't be fooled by the picture. The universe has not literally kicked me in the teeth. However it has taken me down a peg or two. After attempting to juggle a million things at once, I watched this Ted talk – and then went down like a ton of bricks. Pharyngitis!? I am wholly convinced that this talk on vulnerability is the reason I got sick. I'm not moaning about being sick (tedious as it was and is continuing to be) – I know that I needed something to physically inhibit me from trying to do it all, and I think that is often the case with many people. While I do get panicky about 'holy shit I have so many deadlines and I've been sleeping for nearly a weeeeeeek!!!' I also realise that some of those deadlines now need to be pushed back. Stiff shit, right?

Anyway – after spending 6 days in bed, I have had plenty of time for my brain to catch up with my body. I've written a list. I now need to get started on my sublists and get to work. I'm back in the studio, I'm wearing actual clothes (as opposed to jammies), and things are happening – including a lot of procrastination (see image above).

I think I have learned a valuable lesson here. Slow the fuck down and get over yourself.

Happy Tuesday every one! May your winter be bountiful with roast potatoes.

xxx
L.

Friday, May 17, 2013

you are the gardens

Lately I have been experimenting with ways of marrying my collage and watercolour work in a way that stays true to both styles. Despite my love for both mediums, and how different they are, I do get frustrated that I haven't been able to connect them in a more harmonious way. At the moment I am developing work for an upcoming show, you are the gardens, which will open later on this year.

Without wanting to give too much away, I thought I'd share some preliminary experiments with the internet universe!




More to come.

xx
L.


Saturday, May 11, 2013

I am not Greedy Hen and Greedy Hen is not me.

(But this doesn't mean I am not a greedy hen.)

Some of you may be wondering what the hell I am talking about. However, after many instances of having work attributed to me that I have not created, I feel the need, on behalf of the duo that consists of Greedy Hen, Katherine Brickman and Kate Mitchell, to clarify that this image, belongs to them:

Greedy Hen for Washington's 'How To Tame Lions'

I am honoured that people keep thinking I created this - but I didn't! This is the work of these talented ladies who work in a whole range of mediums and a lot of collage to make some pretty gorgeous artwork, album covers, film clips and more. I am a fan of their work, and we obviously have some similarities in our aesthetic, but our work is our own. If your ever not sure - check our websites (Greedy Hen have some beautiful work up on theirs, well worth a look).


For those of you who have no idea what I'm referring to, then doubly fantastic, I hope I have introduced you to an interesting collaborative team.

Most of all though, happy sunshiney Saturday to all - art is good.

xx
L.




Tuesday, May 7, 2013

the anna and lucy show

Hey there!

Just in case you had forgotten about the Anna and Lucy show, I thought I better do a little gem-droplet – just a tease of course, to remind you all that goodies are IN the making. My gem watercolours have now been printed on steel, ready for cutting and sampling ...


Image courtesy of Anna Davern – oooh-wee!

xx
L.

Wednesday, May 1, 2013

The Bookery Cook – now available!




Huzzah! At long last, The Bookery Cook: Art to Eat is now available to buy online and in bookstores. I just received my own copy in the post the other day, and I have to say, it looks stunning. Well done guys, it was fantastic to be involved. Sydney-siders, stay tuned - whispers of a exhibition/launch are afoot.

xx
L.

Wednesday, April 10, 2013

The Bookery Cook - Art to Eat

Hello all!

I know it's been a long time since my last post, but hopefully this exciting packet of news will make up for it. Many moons ago I was approached by the sassy lasses from The Bookery Cook to contribute an artwork for their inaugural cook book. Naturally, when they sent me the list of recipes to choose from, I picked the dessert platter to work with, filled with fruity-nutty-chocolatey treats. I think it may be the sauciness of my subject's legs, but good fortune has landed my work on the cover - I think it sums up the essence of the book, and its authors: Sassy, fruity, nutty chicks who love cooking and art.


This book has been in the making for well over a year, with the book due for release in Australia and NZ on April 24, available online and in stores (UK release in June).  I believe that there will be an exhibition in Sydney to coincide with the release of the book, sometime later in the year (details to come!). So please support these clever ladies and all the (66 in total) artist's that gave up their time and artwork to be involved with this gorgeous project - I have tried some of the recipes (the earl grey teacake is amazing!!), these chicks know their stuff.



Aside from the book, there are loads more recipes and illustrations on their blog – art and food for one and all!

xx
L.

Saturday, March 23, 2013

pom-pommery



I like pom-poms. I'm pretty sure most people like pom-poms - they are round, soft, comforting, comical and fun. Most people I speak to learnt how to make pom-poms when they were children. Of late, I have become bloody sick of them. I can't turn the pages of an interiors magazine, scroll the design files or pass some trendy shop without seeing a cacophony of pom-pom madness. It has made me not want to love pom-poms.

However, I recently made this pom-pom for my Dad, to replace a one he had made himself when he was a little boy, that unfortunately was taken from him. His father was packing up the house to move back to England and wouldn't let my then 5-year-old Dad take the pom-pom with him. He remembers shouting "I want my pom-pom, I want my pom-pom!" and receiving a bit of a smack in return, from what I can imagine was my very stressed, product of the 1950s Grandfather, who was probably more concerned with culling the amount of luggage that was to go on the ship.

It may seem such a small thing, and I would hate for my Grandfather to be painted as a tyrant (anything but, he was pretty ace really). But that lack of interest, or importance placed on the act of creating something yourself, is what my dad (and no doubt many other boys and girls) missed out on. That's not anybody's fault, that's just how it was, particularly in that generation. But it has been a sharp reminder of how lucky I have been to receive the flip side of those attitudes.

All my life, my parents, but, particularly my father, have encouraged, if not pushed me to make things.  They are stern with me if I get lazy, they praise me if I work hard. Every single exhibition, they have attended. While I was studying, I never wanted for any kind of art material - so long as it helped me better my education, develop skills or aid in research, they would do their best to help me get access to it. I believe some of the sacrifices Dad made (like getting a 'good', 'proper', 'solid' job) were to make way for me and my equally lucky sisters to make the choices we wanted to make, rather than what we felt we should have made.

So, I am taking the pom-pom back. Fancy magazines and interiors can continue to decorate with abandon, but for me, the act of pom-pommery (as I have decided to coin it) it represents being allowed to make, and what I worry that my own father missed out on. What every child should have access to. You don't need to be creative, or particularly skilled, just the have desire to make something yourself.

I know it's not the same as the 'magnificent multi-coloured' number my Dad made over 50 years ago, but I hope that it comforts and delights him like they do for me now - mainly because I was given the opportunity to make (and keep) such things. If you're feeling a bit flat, as many of us do at this time of year, go and make something for yourself. Don't concern yourself with how good it is, just enjoy the process, and whatever the result, own it.

Happy Saturday!

xx
L.


p.s. Pretty good pun, my dad being actually being a Pom and all.



Wednesday, March 20, 2013

think less, do more



My new motto. After running some of these workshops lately, I have had many students who were too worried to glue down their precious cuttings that they had laboured (some for weeks!) over. I am right there with them - I have cuttings in drawers with little labels that I have been stashing for YEARS (how crazy cat lady is that?!) that have been so overly stored, that they don't actually look so good anymore (a bit crumpled and pathetic looking - there are only so many times you can pick up a cut-out of a tiny pick axe before it starts to whither).

I found myself saying to these students "think less and do more" (or, "stop talking and start doing!"). What's the worst thing that could happen? That it could look crap? Ok. Sure. Try again. You could waste a Very Important One Of A Kind picture? Yeah, you could wreck it. And?

It is something I could probably afford to apply to my own practice. I have been in the studio since 7.15 this morning. Yep. I have spent about ... 7 hours on the thinking bit, and am only just begun to actually make some visible progress in my 'doing' section. There have been a reasonable amount of distractions: emails, cups of tea, Very Important Facebooking, but also a lot of dithering around, messing up my hair and whining about the lack of progress. It is a very important part of the process.



But at some stage you need to suck it up and get to work.

So, see ya - I have some Very Important Dhalias to deal with - I might wreck them, but if I do, I could always try and paint them again.

xx
L.

Monday, March 18, 2013

happy mondays

Good morning all!

As the weather has finally turned, my intake of camomile tea and chocolate biscuits has spiked dramatically. It is the perfect time of the season to get stuck in the studio and get ready for the next endeavour. But before I get into that, better cap off my latest summer project!

As part of some of the school workshops I've run over the last few weeks, I will also be sharing a selection of my work over the past few years at the school's gallery space. Tomorrow night I launch the mini-exhibition (it's only on for a few days people!) a light goes on and a door opens at Gallery Ranfurlie in Glen Iris. Some work you may have already seen, though it has been beautifully curated into a shiny new collection by Natasha Bienik, Michael Miller and Robyn Price.

One of the 15 works on display at Gallery Ranfurlie

It was an absolute pleasure to work with these lovely people, and talented artists in their own right. I feel completely indulged to have my work hung for me, and I look forward to kicking back tomorrow night with the staff, students, and hopefully some of you! (Almost) all the works are available for sale (ahem, except the one pictured) and I heartily encourage you to go along and have a look.

The opening runs from 6–8 on Tuesday 19 March, and can be viewed from Wednesday 20 – Friday 22 March from 1–4 pm. 

Gallery Ranfurlie can be found at: 
Korowa Anglican Girl's School 
Ranfurlie Crescent
Glen Iris, Victoria

Thanks again to the lovely gang at the school for all of their hard work.

xx
L.

Monday, March 11, 2013

Chicks With Knives!!! Opening Night

Thank you to all who came along and supported Chicks With Knives!!! last Saturday. The night was a roaring success (I think the foodtruck, bar and band had much to do with that), with a fantastic crowd.

There are some truly fabulous pieces (by truly fabulous artists) in the show - which are getting snapped up pretty quickly - I recommend getting along and securing a piece of amazing artwork, quick-sticks!

Here are a couple of my works from the show, for those of you who won't get the chance to make the trek.

Vigorous Standing Pose

Fluttering Seated Pose
 Do you think I might have been influenced by my recent jaunts as the Substitute Florist and the Yoga Teacher In Training? What's the saying - you live oxen, you breathe oxen? Or perhaps it's the other way around ...

Anyway! Happy Public Holiday everyone! I hope you're all at the pool drinking Negronis.

xxx
Lj

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