Friday, 31 August 2018

VICTORIA HOWLETT, CON BRIO - SEPTEMBER 2018










The work in WINDOWSPACE is from an upcoming exhibition at QDOS Gallery, Lorne
4-25 Nov 2018




Genesis of the Con Brio oeuvre.





Each morning Victoria Howlett walks her small dog along the tide-lines of the Marengo and Otway bays, absorbing the colour, life and movement of the rock pools. At times dark and mysterious, at times clear and vibrant, the pools and eddies reflect a world of lush aqueous nature. Some pools are deep, dark and still, enclosing a microcosm of habitat. Others, shallow, sand- filled and brightly lit with reflected sun.



As the paintings evolved over several months - from the wave-washed pearl-grey   foreshore rocks into a high key colour register - these works expanded into a surge of colour and movement, where shapes and juxtapositions assumed an imaginary underwater landscape filled with light and colour. A spirited celebration of landscape. Con Brio.



The land holds us and grounds us. We belong to the land with such intimate and powerful ties, that displacement can disrupt our sense of belonging.



For many years Howlett has played with this connection between such landscapes (seascapes), memory and an evocation of place – shared country, joyful celebration. From the early Apollo Bay landscape paintings, to her more abstract collages and enigmatic three-dimensional ceramic configurations, a visual lexicon of forms has developed that gathers the motifs and memory of sites as varied as the Otway coast, Flinders Ranges, Lake Mungo and Mutawintji.



Landscape was also central to Howlett’s recent PhD research from Monash University. That studio work and Exegesis, ‘In Pursuit of Desire Lines: A Woman in the Landscape’, documented the experiences of the bush and coastal painting camps she organised, where women temporarily discarded their roles as ‘wife, mother, carer’, and worked ‘en plein air’ in their creative field at these diverse camp sites. These ‘bush-camp’ locations, where we shared women’s stories around the campfire, ranged from the lushness of ‘Bundanon’ and Broome to the dry plains of Silverton or Noonkanbah in the Kimberley.



Howlett’s arts practice reflects a concern with a contextualisation of landscape imagery and the perception of identity, place and celebration, especially in response to current issues regarding continuing colonial exploitation, environmental carnage, and feminist theory.



Drawing on her wide international and national exhibition history, and her experience of several decades as a lecturer in arts practice, her oeuvre continues its re-invention in her Marengo/Apollo Bay studio.




Howlett in her studio (2018)





Some Selected Collections: NGV, National Gallery Canberra, Art Gallery SA & 



WA, Parliament House Canberra, Australian Embassy Iran, Powerhouse Museum Sydney, Regional Galleries Manly, Newcastle, Ballarat, Shepparton, Bathurst, Bendigo, Geelong, New England, State Craft Collection, Australia Craft Council, Art Bank, Victoria Ministry for the Arts, Latrobe University, University of Melbourne. 


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Join Victoria on Sunday 9th September, 2-4pm and hear her talk about The Process, Inspiration - How we get it and what we do with it     


This visual presentation illustrates a variety of on-site source material & some studies that evolved from that material, gradually developing into the final resolved works. The process of documenting a sense of place ‘en plein air’, and translating those gleanings into imagery, will be discussed, along with such tools as notebooks, visual diaries, photographs and the written word. 

Free, all welcome - could please let us know if you are coming windowspacebeeac@gmail.com

WINDOWSPACE-BEEAC  
79 Main Street, BEEAC


Upcoming exhibition at QDOS Gallery, Lorne 4-25 Nov qdosarts.com

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