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Showing posts with label #colour. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #colour. Show all posts

Thursday 3 December 2020

ARTHOUSE HOTEL EXHIBITION 2021


 

ARTHOUSE EXHIBITION
2021
'LAYERS OF LIFE IN PAINT'
16th January to 27th March
Group Exhibition


'The Grey Divide of the Brumby' 

(refer to statement 'The problem with Prometheus')
Oil on cotton Canvas 81.5x132.5cm
 

ARTIST STATEMENT
This body of works began with investigations of the everyday life relating to my research of the unfamiliar and to identity. Experiences of life, relating to family, cultural background and day to day life conditioning compacted with childhood memories.
As fires, storms and Covid 19 hit the Aussie shores in this past year, the familiar of everyday life is visited by the unfamiliar and questions regarding the human condition towards nature is visited. Relating the layers of life not only through paint but through familiar scenes that uncover the 'unfamiliar' underneath, once you relate the experience of life in the works and tell a story of what is behind. Things are not always what they seem.  For a smile may hide a pain, as a sea may hide a storm beneath its waves.



'The unfamiliar swell of North Steyne' (Sold)

Oil on cotton Canvas 81.5x132.5cm
 1200.00
(refer below to the unfamiliar)


           'The problem with Prometheus'

                Oil on cotton Canvas  122 x 91.8 cm
                               Not for sale
'THE PROBLEM WITH PROMETHEUS'    

 Prometheus is to bring to light the plight of all   Brumbies in Australia and all wild Equine animal   that has been culled and or trapped dividing mobs or   herds. Resulting in the break-up of equine families,   to be trapped then slaughtered or rehomed. Or killed   by culling.  In Australia, they are blamed for   damaging the environment as Brumbies are not   native to their birth land. They were brought here by   colonisation in 1778.

  'The problem with Prometheus' is an investigation   on the human condition regarding his   mismanagement of nature which is against nature   itself,  resulting in catastrophic environmental   factors and resulting in cruelty towards sentient   beings such as Brumbies.  Horses belong to the   environment and the only thing destroying nature is   'The Human Condition'.

 Prometheus  is to give Brumbies a voice and make us aware of our modern condition, that is working against nature.  Brumbies need to be recognised as sentient beings and be deemed as an Australian Animal,  as we Humans can call ourselves Australian.  With a voice, eventually  Brumbies can be free of culling and trapping and roam free as they should in their place, called nature. Please help spread the word and save the Brumbies.

The painting 'The problem with Prometheus'   can be viewed in the Graffiti lounge between 16th January to 27th March. 

* the equine paintings will have some of the proceeds (1/3) donated to help brumbies in their time of need.  Refer to end of Post.

  'The grey divide of the Brumby'

  Oil on cotton Canvas 81.5x132.5cm
 



The Unfamiliar 

'Art is the air we breathe in everyday life'

'The unfamiliar swell of North Steyne' (Sold)

Oil on cotton Canvas 81.5 x 132.5 cm
$1200.00

The unfamiliar swell was the beginning of  the 'underneath scene of  the familiar'
It relates stories to the everyday life of what we see but what is unseen by the vision.
On this day the swell reached record sizes as the sea was in a raging storm under, related also by 'The Whitewater Surfer' a scene from North Curl Curl Beach.  It started an investigation of what lies under the everyday life once we attach to the visions, colours, cultural experiences and memories of childhood.  Finally developing on investigations of nature and the human condition towards nature that led to the Prometheus above.

'The Whitewater Surfer'

Oil on cotton canvas 122 x 91.8 cm
$1100.00


'Cyan, She's a beauty Mate'

Oil on cotton canvas 81.5 x 132.5 cm
$1100.00


Cyan relates to my love of colours and my investigation on colour for my Honours year. 
As a child colour was always a special part of my life,  as I found that at one stage I was drawing only in pencil and had no colour in my drawings at all.  Resulting in the importance of colour not only for visual affect but feelings that are expressed through colour.  Debussy was one who could relate to this as he felt that colour related to music as well.  (refer to links below)

We all see colour differently and some days are more pastels and other days more vibrant.  The two sea paintings relate different days of my everyday life, of scenes even though familiar to me are unfamiliar as I cannot swim well and could never surf  for the life of me.  Not to mention my fear of deep water.  But I love the sea, I relate to it and it calms me and ground me in my thoughts. 
The colour Cyan is an ancient colour deriving from Greek.  As colour theory is rather complex and much research is involved,  I found this last link, that seems to give a short uncomplicated idea of what colour theory may entail.



 'Who's that Girl' 

 Oil on cotton Canvas 122 x 91.8 cm
 $1500.00

 With water dripping down her arm and down her left l   leg, 'Who's that Girl' to me,  is the icon of the   everyday  life of our Australian coastline.  Surfing   was introduced in Australia in 1915 by Hawaiian   Duke Kahanamoku.

  As I view my everyday life I see 'familiar' scenes that   the reality are unfamiliar to me. I have watched   groups of friends or solitaire persons of all ages,   running down the beach to take the surf on their   beloved surfboards.  I have watched fathers with sons   or daughters sharing their time, watching the surf   before they dived into the waves to take a swell and   ride it. 

 These are familiar scenes that I will never physically   experience. But they are also childhood memories of   my mum's Godsons sucking their boards to take out   water or waxing them to stabilize their grip when  surfing.  Then being told  I was not allowed to surf as I was not a good swimmer. 
Who's that girl is all this and more as she reminds me of the iconic song 'the girl from Ipanema'.  But this girl is not strolling down the beach, she is Aussie and sports a surfboard under her arm running home after catching a wave at North Steyne, Manly Beach.  


PRICES ARE NEGOTIABLE

DISCOUNTS FOR MULTIPLE PURCHASES
*Works marked with an asterisks will have a 1/3 of the payment donated to one or
 more brumby organisations listed below.
If you wish other paintings not marked with the asterisks to have money donated to the cause please express your wish. 
For commissions of works email syndyartist@optsnet.com.au
 

* EQUINE ORGANISATIONS






*



*




                         
 SKETCHES DONATED 
TO BARMAH BRUMBY PRESERVATION GROUP
For  Raffles  (to be advised)



'AMONGST THE DANDELION'S'
Dark Days for Barmah Brumbies
Pastel Pitt Pencil on
A3 Black Canson Paper 140gm.



'DARK DAYS FOR BARMAH BRUMBY'
Derwent Colour Pencil 
on
A3 Black Canson Paper 140gm


Visit Barmah Brumby Preservation Group 
For details of raffles




                                                     







 

Wednesday 19 June 2019

'MNEMONIC CHRONICLES'  

ART EXHIBITION

 'As images run through my head
  I find myself watching me watching you and I cannot help but smile.'

  'Painting you drawing me' Oil on mdf panel

Dates: 26th June2019 to 13th July 2019   Wed to Fri. 10am to 4pm Sat. 10am to 4pm
Opening night 5th July 2019 6pm to 8pm   & Artist Talk 13th July 2019 10am to 2 pm.

THE TEDDY CHRONICLES
"My Alter Ego is a Teddy Bear"

As I watch you watching me 
I see a light in your eye and the reflection of myself,
me watching you.
As I stand with my arm reaching out for you,
I find you no more,  you are an image in my head,  an image past 
You are the desire I have to find a little of you within me 
And a little of me within you
but I am lost in the field and I cannot help but think if you are with me still. 
And at every brush stroke I bring you to me, thinking:
If I  find myself lost, lost in the field, 
I have the image to remind me of what was and what is, 
 For there may be none no more.

TRUST LOST
  The memory I have of my mother playing with a whole group of teddies in her old age remains a vivid memory.   After her passing, the white teddy bear  that was her favourite was the only one I kept. It became a mnemonic object for me and every time I look at it I remember mum. It made sense then, that in my research  regarding family and the mnemonic,  the sweet adorable cuddly not so white 'transitional object' became the alter ego, something that one can refer to as ‘ that happy place.’

   As memories detach from themselves and repeated images run inside your head the visions take their own persona and thus the sentimental objects that remind you of your past experiences come alive and manifest within a world of their own.  Imagining and recreating the past that was that is that is no more. For that is all there is but images that run in your head and say ‘hey you remember me!’  
    The teddy bear chronicles relate how we use mnemonic objects to trigger memories, weather we consciously are aware or not. It investigates through a series of painted panels, how memories are formed and triggered.  

    The panels show a series of childhood images that by using mnemonic objects, were brought to my conscious self and in sketching i related my love of art to these memories.  In using film ideologies and ethereal landscapes I related the feeling I felt as each memory was triggered via the images that popped in my head  through my imagination. I thus imaged myself watching me as we all relive our memories by such means.  The series has a sketch book with 80 or so sketches, in which 22 were realised in paintings to create 'the teddy chronicles.'

                                                
 THE GREAT DOG                                                                                                                  I AM WHAT I KNOW

WHITE HORSE SPEAKS
Palettes investigated  were related to the artists of the time but childhood  colours  also became a major part of the palette and as yellow, green and blue were favourites at that time, they became 'the colour stage' for the works, in relating colour to mood once again, as per the 'Mnemonic Panels' 2017-2018. 

   This was a continuation of  research regarding the mnemonic. The previous works, 'The mnemonic panels' relate memories not only to  facts but also to a state of 'self' . When we attach our sentiments to these memories the memories become subjective  due to our feelings  attached to our experiences.    The works are similar only in that these use photographs  as the mnemonic object and thus solidifies a truth in some way.    
  
                    
DON'T CALL ME KITTY
Oil on mdf panel
   Another photograph related to the previous panels where the family dog 'Minou' is centre stage and the feet in the background related to a previous photograph that became the painting called  'the lecture' painted in 2017,  the dog  Minou' had to be painted.  I have  a record of the palettes previously used but  decided not to use it and to paint the new panel, regarding the subjective feelings that are attached to when thinking of my family dog.   The thing is I do not feel so sombre about my dog. The panel resulted in  a similar but  brighter palette than the previous works.  I just used a different blue to my restricted palette. Replaced Prussian blue for manganese blue hue and ultramarine blue hue.  For rest of works scroll down to 2018 entry of the MNEMONIC PANELS.

THE UNFAMILIAR FAMILY PORTRAITS 
This series is the beginning of a new investigation for a future exhibition.  It continues with the unfamiliar and asks  how the effects of family breakups marks each of us differently or similarly as we are all individuals.   
    The investigation centres on how family portraits may be painted today by the attachment of experiences,  cultural aspects, and societal influences.  I have designed a 3 page questionnaire asking specific questions of how the past experiences of divorce or separation may affect individuals. This investigation takes it out to the public, and with it I ask each person to answer the questions as comfortable as they feel to, and then give me a selfie of themselves and their family.  

        I ask anyone that is interested in partaking in this investigation to contact me by email. syndyispaint@gmail.com .The participant must have experienced a break up, either they separated or divorced or lived through a family break up. This is not limited to gender and any individual from any background .


PORTRAIT  OF A CHILD AT 7 ; 'LOOKING FOR TEDDY'
Oil on 12mm cotton canvas 
PORTRAIT OF A CHILD AT 7: Looking for teddy. In starting  a portfolio I begin with myself . 
   With my experience the alter ego became a fixture of the self, as once my teddy was taken, and I found myself by the age of 7 separated from my father, my birth surroundings and also seeing my mother for a few times a month (for a while at least). It imprinted the fact that my imagination had devised imaginary friends, which is normal for a child. 
    One of  my imaginary  friend was a mnemonic memory. The imaginary friend was a boy that lived down the road from where I had previously lived. I  have many good real memories  and imaginary ones that i made up in play.   In my creative self, I re-imagined my friend to savour the sense of what was that now was missing in my life per se.  The other imaginary friend was Jesus Christ.  
   By seven years of age the experiences  of  morality  and  attachment were founded very strongly . My  virtues  and ethics had begun  to question the experiences and the self. It goes deeper but that remains with me. My alter ego is thus developed at the age of 7, hence, my portrait shows me at 7.

 MNEMONIC TEARS
Letters 1to5

There is a box full of written letters that mark the mnemonic of a period of 5 years, documenting the time my mother and I lived in Europe.  The letters were written by my mother and addressed to my father, with some notes from me to my father as well.
This artwork challenges authorship, possession, sentiment, truth, ethics and morals, and the theoretical term of what it means to keep a memory ‘hot’.

THE HOT MEMORY
‘Get over it will you; and move forward.’
 ‘you can ignore me all you want, but I still exist.’
‘I Was, I Am, I Will be’ 


This work was with the collaboration of Mark Elliot.  Without Mark’s glass artistry I would not have been able to make this idea into a reality. In challenging the author, as I see myself as the sole author, of this project I cannot deny that the collective influences as often happens in art were a part of this project.  I asked Mark for a statement regarding the artwork, and thus included his email correspondence and added a link to his site.

Mark Eliott
Instagram: Mark Eliott Glass
Website: markeliottglass.com
Facebook: Mark Eliott
Email: mark@markeliottglass.com for info
on upcoming glassblowing workshops etc.

Statement on my participation in Cinzia’s work

I first encountered Cinzia’s work in 2018 during her group exhibition at 107 Projects in Redfern, Sydney. I was touched by a series of intimate yet strangely uncomfortable paintings, which held my gaze while passing from my studio each day.  A kind of still life theatre, they clearly spoke of episodes in a teenager’s autobiographical story. I was therefore enthusiastic when Cinzia later hired me to fabricate glass vessels to accommodate old family letter grams from a traumatic period in her childhood.   I was also honoured when she offered to include my name and words in the exhibition.

Together with her partner Daniel, Cinzia and I discussed technical concerns such as how to avoid burning paper whilst heat-sealing it inside glass vessels and the attributes of possible shapes such as round Christmas tree ornaments, cocoons or pendulous breast shapes.  After considering the symbolic implications of each, Cinzia settled on an approximation of the teardrop. So here are the letters - open yet sealed as they will probably remain – visible yet safely untouchable in their scientific-glass ‘time capsules’, for thousands of years into the future.
https://www.markeliottglass.com/    









Sunday 20 May 2018


Cinzia (Syndy) Esteves   Visual Artist



Cinzia  lives in Sydney and has recently completed a Fine Art (Honours) degree at UNSW Art & Design and exhibited in the 2017 spring festival in 107 Gallery,  the annual at UNSW Oxford Street Gallery in 2017 ; exhibited at Gaffa Gallery and at  107 in February 2018.

Cinzia’s (Syndy) artwork is aspired by human expressions through experienced ethereal feelings and societal conditions. They investigate ideologies of our everyday social conditions and environments and currently the muse is via the 'childhood' stage that conditions our identities, reflected through mnemonic and cinematic influences.

 Cinzia’s mediums are oil painting and drawing with various mediums such as pencil, colour pencil,  charcoal, pastel and ink.  She mixes her own colours and retains experimenting with palettes crucial in her works.
syndyartist.blogspot.com
www.facebook.com/syndy.artist
syndyispaint@gmail.com

THE MNEMONIC PANELS

 "Mnemonic visions of life and spoken thoughts, run like a cinema inside my head, in silent images and whispers. The painted images of the mnemonic scenes solidify the affects of what was and what was no more.”

The Lecture
The Family


panels investigate the past conditions of Syndy’s childhood. They reflect a ‘filmed storyboard’ of a singular event, consolidated by the mnemonic influences of the self.  It relates the subjective that replaced the objective, developing from the collective that unifies a family being disrupted to the individualism that took place because of broken relations and dysfunctional external influences.  Thus, relating the affects to identity and self-worth.

The works also investigates the psychological association of colour to mood and relating filmic influences on the mnemonic.  A restricted palette emerged, consolidating the historical colour ‘Cyan’ as a major visual impact that somehow relates the sombre and the melancholic to The Mnemonic Panels.  

The Celebration

The Birthday Party    



Self Portrait


Mother
Father