Surfer

This writer looks to the horizon for opportunities to form an opinion. Little gives more pleasure than riding an opinion to shore.
It is exhilarating to be held up by the power and the momentum the opinion provides. Those who have not caught the wave tread water, and can only gaze as the rider flies past triumphant. The opinion rider is often moved to a point where they lose reason and don’t care!

Why spoil the ride with reason?

This blog provides a beach of opinions ridden to shore. Some opinions are formed by the power of the wave more than the substance of the thinking. You cannot pick and choose though. Opportunities that arise need to be seized. This moment of being alive will not last forever.

There is the size of the wave on the one hand, large, small, medium. There are big wave riders who can use the power of the wave to perform tricks and turns. Smaller waves can prove more persuasive in the long run.

As we ride the wave these pleasures add to the exhilaration. As the wave forms and rises and moves, so do we.

Of course, some opinions have no legs. You can see them coming, with their frothy tops, shapely prematurely. Surfer beware!

Grit cafe (aDvertisemenT)

The McDonald’s logo towers above Goulbourn as you drive past on the Hume. 

It sheds a sulphur light over the landscape. The golden gates do not invite this reader to pass through. 

You have to stop for petrol sometimes. Food and fuel are bedfellows and right next to McDonald’s The Grit Cafe plays David to Macca’s Goliath. 

Customers here used to park in the McDonald’s car park but McDonald’s built a fence to stop that happening.

The likes of me is drawn to the audacity. The place is packed, the food great. 

At the next table a couple driving to Melbourne from the Gold Coast have full brekkies.  Bacon and eggs, sausages, tomatoes and mushrooms. Strawberry milkshake for the wife. They found Grit on google, recommended. They have to get to Melbourne by tonight, haven’t seen their daughters for a year.

This is Grit news.

I’m riding The Grit wave, while it lasts. The staff are young. They’ll be drawn to bigger opportunities. Let’s hope there are none here at Goulburn too soon.

Adapting to changes

The Book  2020

The Book 2020

The Books production was a partnership between inspiration, determination and coincidence, like most sculpture.

The work presented itself as a conclusion to the collection of work here at Wamboin, rising to meet the fall of land at the bottom end of the block.

Gails last night imposed a reshaping however, and the conclusion proved premature.

The Book blown over

The Book blown over

The sculptor needs to integrate changes as they occur even if they lie outside the usual processes of production. Disappointment can blind the sculptor to fresh opportunities.

As a consequence the other more modest works in The Park* have had their scale restored, and are not overwhelmed by what now seems an now overblown conclusion.

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The Book blown over

  • The Park is the name given to the property on which these sculptures are assembled.

Volume Variety in Music

The invention of the piano with other instruments around 1700, brought the control of volume not previously available.

Suddenly musicians had another aspect of sound material to employ. With digital pressure or with increased breath pressure, volume could be made more and less loud.

Volume control allows for a different kind of expression of mood than if the hammer hits the string to produce the same volume. The variability of volume creates an emotional response in the listener. With the new instruments composers and musicians were able to release emotion.

In so doing a more basic nature of music was sacrificed, that being the capacity of the note and the interval to provide all the necessary tools to find expression, to give shape.

The addition of variable volume muddies the water and in so doing gives rise to the terrible excesses of late classicism and romanticism and most of the rest that followed.

Too many tools is a punishment and serves to gag the artist’s voice and the desire for formal clarity.

Volume control spelt the end of a beautiful beginning for Western music.

The urge to bring a tear to the eye represents a failure of musical nerve. Likewise the heart is susceptible to volume lifted and lowered.

To be ‘moved’ is to be distracted.

The Germans did beautiful musical work but they led the world astray with technical and musical innovation. The emotional power generated through that music was terribly applied to promoting political causes, causing people to be ‘moved’, and act in the world inappropriately.

The Italians contributed to this emotional well spring. They devised words which became emotional passports to musical excess.

Piano. Forte! Fortissimo! Allegro. Moderato. The die was cast.

We were led to believe we could trust our heart and in so doing we would be led to the kingdom of heaven. That portal is available only through going for the gut.

Just as the points of view of experts can sometimes be warped by different lenses, so too does ignorance warp with equal clarity. This musical theory may itself be susceptible to the tyranny of volume.


The Team

Two flies

Two flies

On the writer’s screen the flies are life size and three D.

Caught with a camera, not squashed with a fly swat.

They were in this formation on the bathroom wall, facing the same way, connected to each other through this action, communicating.

They find the same traction on the wall as we find on the floor. They’re not clinging here.

They are only distanced from each other because of our own distancing focus we shall soon forget.

It’s fly season here. The air is abuzz with them.

Because of the wet weather everything is alive here and we value all life expression.

From this respect shown, they share their intelligence with us and make themselves an ornament on the wall.

Indicating the ‘collaborative’ way.

Eye Failure

Pocket photo

Pocket photo

We are all well aware of the tendency of the eye to be inaccurate in its assessments of things.

The eye, in its corrupt partnership the brain, shrinks rather than expands the world.

It would be pleased, you would think, to be the purveyor of the new, delivering material straight from the world, to be added to the wealth of information stored in the brain.

But no.

The eye gets its hands sticky in its haste to nominate what comes across its path and fails to deliver.

We always have to stay on guard, be wary of the eye’s mischievous inclinations.

The artist and the inventor are past masters of accident control.

It’s well documented, and yet, we often fail to be surprised when accidental opportunities offer themselves.

This writer takes a lot of photos with their phone. They are always on the lookout for opportunities to be presented, but even armed with this determination, much material is lost.

The ’pocket photo’ shown above might also be called a lapcall. Either way, it is a big place, even though taken at accidental close range. It is a mirror, it reflects where the writer is in the landscape.

It is tainted with walking out among the hills and rocks and trees. It’s a more accurate account of where they are, (the writer), than if the camera had been pointed away from the body, outside.

There are valleys here and a road and bush spread evenly, when it hasn’t been farmed or felled.

It is big and in being big makes the writer in awe of where they are, with a new respect.

PS. Most pocket photos fail to deliver news. They are as unreliable as taste driven photos.

Harbour Sculpture Prize Announcement

These notes were read at the announcement of The Harbour Sculpture Prize at Balmain Rowing Club on 21st November, 2020

First of all I would like acknowledge elders past and present from the Wangal people of the Eora Nation who have taken such good care of this place. Thank you.

Thank you to all the organisers of The Harbour Sculpture Prize, Linda Bell, Ingrid Tkatchew, Catherine Timbrell and all those I have not met, who believe in art and hope. The show looks amazing, so amazing that as of 2.30 pm today, I still have not made a decision.

Thank you to all the sculptors who applied and those sculptors who were selected. I am privileged to be part of this celebration of sculpture and culture.

I don’t know how many of you here who have been reading my blog, accessed from my website.

I have for some years been trying to identify what is The Sydney School of Sculpture. We know that a number of sculptors have been working within a sculptural language that is mainly applied to the use of steel and also to the experience and appearance of the local landscape. The project is coming up to being one hundred years in the making. Those sculptors have attempted to synthesise their experience into material. Amid discussion and competition over the years that language has flourished and developed and will be identified by culture historians to have been worthwhile.

Some of the steel works here today belong to the history of that discussion.

Some here today may imagine that my prejudice towards that history will eventually emerge in my choice today despite my stated openness to other modes of practice.

It is not what we are looking for ultimately that guides us. It is what takes us and holds us, that  surprises us and subverts our expectations.

Mastery of material really helps, when the sculptor can account for themselves and their experience. Seeing something that had not otherwise been identified is always good. Sometimes we encounter a sensation we have had, also has a shape we had not seen before.

It’s not what we are looking for but when it’s there in front of us we should have the grace to acknowledge it, so that it can grow and not be starved, as we are culturally, sometimes inclined to do.

The task then is in identifying quality that rises above category. Which work here will stand the test of time? Which of the sculptural songs will we keep humming, down the track?

Art prizes also produce so many more losers than winners. More pain is provided than pleasure here today, despite this festive and wonderful occasion. No matter how many times I have failed in my prize attempts, the bruising is short-lived, because I am there again the next year with the same trust in ‘truth’ I brought with me the last time I entered.

We are all privileged to be part of a culture that can find and hold its voice.  It is imperative this is acknowledged and protected when other forces can so easily dismantle achievements made.

Culture is always under threat. On top of the ongoing presence of the Wangal people, the cultural history of Balmain runs deep.  Since settlement we have been privileged to share our lives here with writers, trade unions, artists, musicians and poets.

That which is embedded needs to be actively maintained. We must continue to agitate against ‘compliance’ to survive here, culturally intact.

This exhibition contributes towards that.

Before I announce the prize winning work, and to extend this beautiful moment a little further, I would like to recite my short poem. It is called the Balmain Traffic Song. It was written in 1990, erected as a sculpture and fence in 1999 in Robert Street Rozelle and was removed last year. The work is awaiting re-installation somewhere in Balmain.  

Our lives are led, the streets are full. The air is filled with the wretched fuel.                    At night the cars are tucked up tight, as close as the curb allows.
By day they flee on a shopping spree, The Mullens Darling run.

From town we come past old White Bay, at 80, 90, a 100 K.
The roads are drains we waste along, Robert Street, here we come.
We're charging up, you can hear us roar.

From time and peace you will hear no more.
There's work and space, and things to do.                                                While the engine is running, our blood does too.                                        

We lock them and shine them and make them sing,                                  Their song is a siren, the Balmain sting.

STOP!

There is something we think we cannot do.                                               There are currents and waves and tides too.
There's a voice that is rising and floating along,                                         And we can steer it and shape it And make it as strong as the voice of the reason of machinery's song.

So while logic and facts and circumstance declare,  A brave new voice returns the stare. It can be done, the cars will go. We must know belief will show .                                    

The winner of The Harbour Sculpture Prize is Catherine Castillo Alferez.

Christine. Would you like to come and accept the award?

 

 

Harbour Sculpture Prize ‘Fungi Feet’  by Catherine Castillo Alferez.

Harbour Sculpture Prize ‘Fungi Feet’ by Catherine Castillo Alferez.

Song of Triumph

It is fair and reasonable the work of the Sydney School is not overtly embraced by the culture. 

It runs against most trends towards the ephemeral, towards equal representation, towards space saving, and that which is easily and inexpensively transported. 

The pleasure for the sculptor lies in the making of the work and the opportunity to show what is made. To be part of the dialogue, to be in the discussion is everything. It is the wealth of the society which allows the sculptors to be their own patrons.

This writer had for many years the hope for a different success. This led to disappointment and fatigue. Prizes afforded to other disciplines, such as sales and wider exposure were not available to the sculptor, in the majority of cases.   

The reality is that most sculptors within the SSS are male and white with a history of privilege out of balance with the community. The alpha male was given free reign for some time, the outcome of which is currently evident. The old front of the queue is the new back of the queue. 

We had imagined patience would provide some sustenance eventually however all patience is a form of impatience and is delusional and had to be handed over, with the other privileges.

The material of choice, steel, stakes a claim for durability however, over time, steel has proved to be ephemeral. Its ‘durability’ was a guise, and a long time proved to be short.

These issues have been brought to light this week by council closing down this writer’s Balmain workshop, when ‘residential’ needs overrode the sculptor’s presence.

This experience of resistance is an extension of the the material’s nature and comes as no surprise.

This is not a lament. This is a song of triumph.

Further Speculations on The Sydney School of Sculpture

There has been the beginning of discussion here on what constitutes the SSS voice. Some clarification is available from understanding what the school is not.

How it is different from English Sculpture, (ES), has been discussed earlier.

Discussing how The Sydney School sculpture is different from Melbourne sculpture will add to that understanding.

Melbourne sculpture employs craft to manipulate material. Mastery of the medium becomes the language the sculptor employs, to speak. The Melbourne sculptor manipulates the material to conform to their intent.

Geoffrey Bartlett, Gus D’Allava, Tony Prior, Bruce Armstrong, David Wilson share this mastery of material. More recently Callum Morton, Patricia Piccinini, and much earlier, Inge King share this aspect.

The Sydney sculptor is the servant of the material. They are more guided by the voice of the material than the voice of the sculptor. Does the material speak or is it spoken to?

In order to allow the material to guide the language, there is little scope for leaving the mark of the individual sculptor. Ironically one forgoes ‘style’ in order to speak clearly. Narcissism and liberation are incompatible.

Dave Teer, Leo Loomans and Paul Bacon should be included as parts of the SSS movement. Their work is derived from the history of the movement. No tradition however, has value unless it provides a launching pad to new life and this is provided by the work of these sculptors.

While Robert Klippel, (among many SSS members), would be repelled by his inclusion here, his work also qualifies.

Trump’s temple

Awaiting Trump

Awaiting Trump

Columns denote ‘temple’ as we wait for the arrival of President Donald Trump to accept defeat at US election.

The US was not born in a day. It took half an hour and the temple here will not enjoy an afterlife of ruin.


There is a sense that when Trump does arrive, he will arrive naked. Too much has been stripped away. He will wear only his expression, pursed lips, with sleeves rolled up and up and away! The hand is punctuating the emptiness with double donuts.

Donald’s Donut

Donald’s Donut

Artist speaks

This writer has been advised that an artist cannot call themself an ‘artIst’. Others may, but not the artist.

This writer paints and sings and makes sculpture. There is no better word than ‘artist’, to bring the parts together.

This writer, as an artist, can give themself a brief, and execute the brief according to the terms an artist employs.

This artist may, for example elect to reflect on China’s changing place in the world, or the way Coronavirus is changing our lives.

What would they bring though to those discussions, as an ‘artist’? Would a lack of expertise in the subjects limit the scope of their reflection? At what point does reflection become ungrounded?

What makes the terms worthy? What is the nature of the well from which deliberations are sourced?

  1. Reflection. An artist is not constrained by time pressures. They are able to immerse themselves, to give themselves over to a subject independently. They are uniquely qualified to ‘dream’. There is no labour charge and they can work both in and out of work hours

  2. Space. An artist is mostly unqualified to speak through lack of expertise. Their thinking is governed by a specific lack of ‘blinding’ detail. Without detail the subject is plainer to see.

  3. Inspiration. An artist is equipped to be inspired and therefore be taken to a level

    of thinking not available through normal channels and disciplines. Inspiration allows breaking through glass ceilings and any others that may inhibit progress.

  4. Key holder. The artist holds the key. They are both the living god’s lieutenant and the dead one’s.


‘The folded forest’ aUstralian galleries 31 Oct - 22 nov 2020

Making art, whichever art it might be, is a research project.

The main function of a gallery is to provide a forum to show that research. Thank you to Australian Galleries.

This exhibition is one part of a long term project that addresses the following questions. 

What is sculpture? How can the life of sculpture be sustained? 

What constitutes clarity? When is something nothing and nothing something?

These works talk to each other to determine that.

They also talk to the long conversation which is The Sydney School of Sculpture conversation. 
 

Work on ‘The folded forest’ began as the new casino at Barangaroo reached into the sky to look down onto Balmain. 

The eye is always absorbed by curves and the sculpture increasingly indicated lineage to that building. We can choose neither our parents nor our influences!

The works are drawn lines on steel cut and bent with heat to swell the steel into three from two dimensions. They employ Corten steel, a grinder with a cutting disc and heat for bending.

The sculptures made themselves out of this process revealing opportunities for both richness and simplicity.

- Michael Snape, 2020

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The sentence

This writer runs the risk of tinkering with words as an amateur might.

Because this writer does not see their writing as a ‘central’ activity, writing constitutes an aspect of laziness when more central work should be undertaken. 

Writing is very similar to sculpture though. Great ponderous words need to be assembled to make sense and induce meanings and feelings in the reader just like a sculpture needs good parts and good connections between them. Sweat is as likely a product of wordcraft as sculpturecraft, after all. 

It gave me great pleasure and pride recently therefore, to have constructed a sentence which had sculptural qualities. 

Addressed to Telstra, it was part of an attempt to have my brother’s phone reconnected. 

To describe its qualities is to leave nothing to either the imagination or interpretation.

The Sentence 2020 Words on screen

The Sentence 2020 Words on screen

Speculations on the sydney school of sculpturE

The sculptors who best encapsulate the spirit of The Sydney School of Sculpture (SSS), are James Rogers, Jan King, Paul Hopmeier, Paul Selwood, Harrie Fasher, Orest Keywon, Michael Buzacott and this writer.

Other sculptors, Ron Robertson-Swann, Michael LeGrand, Ian McKay, Kevin Norton, Dave Horton, Ayako Saito remain more attached to English sculpture and have not adapted the sculptural language to being here.

The work of the second group is less mediated by the local landscape. These sculptors may prefer to be excluded from a ‘regional identification’ when in their minds sculpture has universal themes. This writer identifies those ‘universal’ themes, as English ones.

This distinction has no bearing on the quality of the work. The task here is to identify aspects which best characterise The Sydney School.

Sculptors move in and out of the SSS sculpture space according to their conviction and commitment. Because of the very limited ‘career’ opportunities within the movement, many sculptors over the years have moved on or attached themselves to more art world friendly forms where ‘individual’ practice is championed. Because the work only looks like itself, it cannot be identified as being something else, for which a viewer may be searching.

The physical ingredient the SSS sculptor employs over their more ‘English’ counterpart is heat. Heat makes steel soft. When the heat is removed the steel stays fast. The ‘English’ sculptor forms the work cold. With ‘English’ sculpture, the heat only occurs at the welded joint, between parts.

The ground on which Australia stands is iron ore. Like clay comes out of the ground, so does steel. That ore is extracted and smelted, to become steel. To become sculpture, it goes through a liquid phase again. This heat provides the gateway to expression. The use of steel is an extension of the place. The temperament of the sculptor shapes it. It is a primordial process, instinctive and reactive. The place impacts on the language of sculpture, which is The Sydney School.

The preferred use of steel and heat is one aspect that unifies the SSS sculptors. Steel is also used because it is direct and immediate and does not require a second processing, such as casting. The sculptor’s voice is registered in a robust and durable material and the work can be placed in the weather with minimum damage. The material is relatively inexpensive and can be worked in response to the scale of the human figure.

There has been sustained dialogue among the sculptors to extend the language that the use of steel presents. Through association with one another, individual styles are made redundant. Through their association, the sculpture engine has a sustaining power than one sculptor alone cannot muster. The work of Picasso and Braque before the First World War was equally committed to a trans-individual research practice which was Cubism.

The Sydney School was informed by innovations in the mid and late twentieth century in both the US and Europe. David Smith and Anthony Caro significantly extended the sculptural language. Part of the task of the SSS is to revitalise and extend the Cubism project from which the art world has mostly shied away.

The collective energy generated within the SSS group arises through friendship, competition and argument. The school spans three generations.

Success and market corruption brings about the end of most ‘schools’, as much as neglect does. The sculptors have maintained momentum in their practice by flying under the commercial and critical radar. A Sydney art world that prefers to be dazzled has no time for the slower art of the SSS

To escape a difficult identification with steel sculpture, some very good sculptors are experimenting with more traditional methods such as carving. Harry Georgeson, who was trained at The National Art School and lives in New York carves and casts sculpture. Stephen Ralph, also trained at NAS now carves as does Dale Miles. Cathy Weismann models the figure and casts in bronze. Time will determine which work survives.

This writer proposes the longest legacy will arise through the SSS innovation in the use of steel as the material of choice.

The National Art School sculpture department has for nearly one hundred years provided the sculpture education to establish this language standard and stands alone among the art schools of the world for this reason.*

When this education is applied to reflecting the spirit of place, a long lasting sculptural conversation is possible. The Sydney School of Sculpture is that conversation.

There has been little critical recognition of the achievements of the school. Those champions that were, shrank away or died. It is conceivable that this neglect has served a protective purpose. A writer will need to present themselves soon, before the land out of which all this work came, swallows it again.

All material ultimately does not survive over time outside. All sculpture everywhere is in a queue to come inside. Truth can bide its time as it always does, but there are rumblings here at the back of the internet.

Steel Is a Rock  1999 Michael Snape, Balmain

Steel Is a Rock 1999 Michael Snape, Balmain

Harbourside sculpture Show 2020 Judging criteria

 

Art is said to be an expression, and a means to truth and knowledge. Great art can emerge from social catastrophes. So, by tapping into a creative mind during COVID times, this sense of ourselves and our values may be just the antidote we need to inspire, smooth and offer unity, harmony and clarity. These powerful empathetic expressions give art the reality in the shared message that HOPE never looked so hopeFULL!

As we still have a call-out to artists to express this, we took this opportunity to direct some questions to this year’s HarbourSculpture Judge, Michael Snape. What we got back was not only enlightening, but raw and characterful. His words speak volumes of the reality that we are confronting and give direction to our curatorial policy.
Michael’s words offer a totally surprising and encouraging perspective that we hope will ignite those creative utterances!

Ingrid Tkatchew

[In his own words…….]

What am I looking for? What makes asubmission stand out?

Like everyone, I am looking to be moved, inspired, taken away. I am looking for signs of life. Art takes us ‘out of it’.

That sounds kind of obvious, but it is rarer than you’d think.

I would prefer not to be shocked into taking my attention, and political intent is probably mostly better applied elsewhere.

One-liners are out. Two sentences ok, but three-dimensional paragraphs are preferred.

I would be moved by the depth of feeling expressed in a work. I would be absorbed by that which required being absorbed to make it. Anything too ‘licked’ is out.

The sculptor speaks on behalf of the capacity of the culture to be conscious and alive. The more that culture is reflected, the better the show will be. A good sculpture reflects a cultured community.

Sculpture is not new. It’s ancient. A work which reflects hard-won values will be noticed!

How can our life reflect on that history? Not much, but it should try, and not chuck the baby...! (terrible expression)

A sculpture should show the virtuosity of a musician. It should be able to play the material. There should be coherent language visible. The work needs to be visually audible.
Sentiment, didacticism, and vanity will be noticed and resisted!

Evidence of surrender will be sought. Surrender to material, to idea, to process. How much can you give of yourself before you give in?

A sculpture only exists in the tradition it represents. No work free-stands independently. If it attempts to, it will fall over. Or be noticed for five minutes, or a year or ten, but not twenty!

In summary:

Signs of life. A voice. An urgency. Anything which catches, holds, from which I cannot turn away. Anything which employs the principles of unity, harmony, and clarity. That has genuinely asked itself, ‘What does it mean to be alive?’.

Can sculpture yield to the pressuresimposed by the present?

This is the challenge. This is what I will be hungry to see.

We have talked about the happeningsshaping our world for many artists, how doyou perceive it? Has the currentenvironment projected/changed yourcreativity  has it inspired you?

Has the world changed recently? Does the changing shape of the world inform the artist? Is trauma useful?
I would suggest the more we have to turn away, the more we need to be mesmerised by what we do. The extent that we are transfixed by that distraction is useful.
Often though, we are disabled by troubles, and worries dry us out and exhaust us. The artist, we all, must muster strength as circumstance saps us. COVID though, has woken us from our immobility, our stupefied comfort, our sense of entitlement. I believe it is timely, terrible, and sad for many, but important to make us ask again, ‘what are our values’?
We are more awake, which must be a good thing.

What does HOPE look like to you?

By HOPE, in caps? HOPE is a rock we cling to, that stops us going down the creek. Better down the creek, so much stuff to see. HOPE serves to keep the dishes done and the bills paid.

As a local of 40+ years, what is Balmain today?

Balmain is what it has always been. A peninsula somewhat removed even with all the transport and road opportunities provided to join with a broader community. We are consequently peninsular in our thinking and responses. Thankfully, we speak the same language as the mainlanders. Balmain has been spared the general abandonment of the village and the community.

The middle class has invaded Balmain but not changed it. Balmain changes all those who come to it. Balmainers generally do not care for their appearance as others might, people from Chatswood, or Punchbowl or Woollahra. In the seventies we used to go up the shops in our pyjamas. It’s less relaxed now, but still generally anything goes.

Balmainers ultimately intuit left while advocating Howard, Abbott and Morrison.

Strangely, while advocating locality and community, Balmain people tend to be solitary, philosophical, and melancholy. They have cerebral inclinations, literary rather than artistic and have not noticed, with some exceptions, the removal of my ‘Balmain Traffic Song’!

Thanks Michael. We look forward to the re-instalment of the ‘Balmain Traffic Song’, with ever-more traffic closing us into the peninsula. Most of all, we look forward to Michael joining the HarbourSculpture committee to critique the entries and judge this year’s exhibition.

Boot turning

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The sole of the boot provides another turn on the wooden leg of the table that a lathe cannot achieve. The profile of the lathe turned leg always remains the same.

Working from the figure

Working from the human figure is a betrayal of abstraction. 

Working from the figure is a betrayal of ‘conception’. (‘Conceptual art’ was such a terrible name for an art movement.)

Working from the figure can only be defended when it can’t be helped, when the artist can’t help themselves. 

Working from the figure is working from oneself. When you speak and the figure comes out, there’s no hiding it. It’s like burping yawning crying, too bad if it’s impolite. Let it out!

Let it all hang out!

Working from the figure doesn’t belong to this time, but it belongs everywhere else!  It belongs to the past and the future, but not the present.

Working from the figure provides pleasure that overrides these obstacles. 

Still outside art

All the work here at Wamboin is outside. As remarked in an earlier blog post, all sculpture is in a queue to come inside, out of the wind and rain.
The art that is already inside, is the art that has been demure, vulnerable, sweet. Oh. Please don’t leave me outside. It’s cold out there.
That art has not stood the test of real heat, let alone time.
All art has to serve its time outside to be strong enough to survive.
‘We’re strong’, the sculptures declare, ‘but we’re not that strong we can wait outside forever’.
it is fairly safe to say that the art that got in(side) early will be the first art to be decommissioned.
Mark my words, outside!

Steel makes no claim on the viewer to be loved as other materials and media are loveable, with their various attributes. Steel is not tactile. It is hard. Human flesh is repelled by steel, whether it’s cold or hot. It is tech-deficient, seamful, heavy and expensive to move.

So. Stay outside sculpture and you, steel sculpture, you stand at the very back of the queue.