Friday, 31 May 2019

PETER DAY - June




PETER DAY


Lake Country (2019)



WINDOWSPACE
June 2019



Peter Day, Lake Country (2019)


Full or empty the local lakes are joy – Corangamite, Colac and Beeac, each lake has its distinct character. Lake Colac is the largest natural freshwater lake in Victoria, blue and alluring on a sky-blue day. Lake Beeac is extremely moody and saline, yet beside it to the south west is the freshwater Beeac Swamp which has been known to host families of swans. Lake Corangamite is complex, the largest permanent saltwater lake in Australia with an area of 23 000 hectares. These waters, saline and fresh, form part of the RAMSAR wetlands, an area known as Kanawinka that stretches into South Australia, and as such they are vital to many flora and fauna and local and migratory birds.

These are the stamping grounds of the multi-disciplinary 'environmental artist' Peter Day, who  has recently worked with the Beeac Primary School on an award-winning project devoted to the brolga. This association will continue into 2019 as Day again joins the school to develop a six-season native garden project, Knowledge Garden.

Roaming and gleaning as he does, it is no surprise that Day names John Wolsley and Rosalie Gascoigne among favourite visual muses. Wolsey’s work is somehow a useful tandem to the writing of Bruce Pascoe (Dark Emu, 2014) – each man seeking the crucial elements that tell the story of the natural world so we may learn how to rejoin it, respect it and rejoice in it.

In 2010 Wolsey turned his attention from desert to wetlands, his present focus, as he puts it is to “enact a re-enchantment that mends the broken relationship between nature and humankind”. Wolsley arrived in Australia from the UK in 1976 and Australia’s landscape enthralled him, immediately. His passion is infectious and crucial and very much fired by the example of the First Australians and the natural micro and macro of this rugged ancient land. As he recently put it:
My work … has been a search to discover how we dwell and move within landscape. I have lived and worked all over the continent from the mountains of Tasmania to the floodplains of Arnhem land.  I see myself as a hybrid mix of artist and scientist; one who tries to relate the minutiae of the natural world - leaf, feather and beetle wing - to the abstract dimensions of the earth's dynamic systems.  Using techniques of watercolour, collage, frottage, nature printing and other methods of direct physical or kinetic contact I am finding ways of collaborating with the actual plants, birds, trees, rocks and earth of a particular place.

John Wolseley, field notes (2018)

Rosalie Gascoigne, (1917 – 1999), was an unashamed gleaner – she roamed the hills of her adopted Monaro countryside, (she was born in New Zealand), and gathered what caught her eye to create powerful yet simple sculptural assemblages – the response to what she described as her untutored apprenticeship of ‘50 years of looking’ (she did not begin exhibiting until she was 57). Gascoigne’s focus on line and form had developed in the practice of Sogetsu ikebana: ‘Its general principles of valuing immediate response, the experience of materials, process and experiment with variations can be seen as underpinning all of her later work’ (AGNSW notes, https://www.artgallery.nsw.gov.au/collection/artists/gascoigne-rosalie/).

Rosalie Gascoigne, photo Greg Weig
The found materials she selected always bore the ‘imprint of time in the land’ and this predilection links her creative urge with that of Wolsey, and in turn Day. No material was too humble, all had character.

Day appears fascinated by the most fundamental of materials, natural grit, and its surprising range of colour, undoubtedly a result of his background in horticulture and landscape design – practices close to the earth in which he involves ‘collaboration with communities discussing environmental themes and conservation’. 

“Over the years a plethora of ocean washed finds have been transformed into art materials. I spend a lot of time on Victoria’s wild south coast which is basically a catchment for the southern ocean currents.

Peter Day, Windblown, found wood, 2008
“I have watched ocean refuse turn from mainly natural flotsam and wood to flotsam, wood, plastics and nylons. I continue to make sculpture from what I find washed up and inadvertently map the ocean’s unwanted refuse through my artworks.”*

Peter Day, Vessel, found mixed media, 2018
While studying, lecturers Hank Swann, John Patrick and Meredith Drew 'influenced me profoundly' Day observed. It was they who: 'set me on a course of conservation through making'. Out on the landface Day developed his ‘art meets ecology programs in the Otway Ranges Victoria and the Kimberley WA, while working as an education officer between 2004 and 2011 out of a need to connect people with nature'.*  To that he has added a sculptural practice bridging land and art. WINDOWSPACE welcomes Day's focus on the local colour and form of the Lake Country.

AS



*Artist's notes

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