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Posts by Leonie Andrews

I am an artist of the landscape of common objects. Discarded items and suburban life fuel my art practice.

Drawing the exhibition: Painter in Paradise

(Warning a very long, rambling post follows)
Away from my usual home turf you can often find me checking out the local art galleries. My home town of Newcastle (NSW) has always been a bit of an arty place and its favourite son for most of the 20th century was Bill Dobell, (or Sir William if you want to be formal). Of course he’s more correctly a Lake Macquarie artist, having lived at Wangi for a fair bit of his life. So its fitting that the Lake Macquarie City Art Gallery has been hosting Painter in Paradise: William Dobell in New Guinea. (For the geographically challenged Lake Macquarie, now a city in its own right, is on the southern outskirts of Newcastle, part of the greater Newcastle area).
I was having a hard time deciding whether to see this show or not. It would be fair to say that while Dobell remains a significant Australian artist of the 20th century, he’s no longer as popular these days as other artists of his era. Dobell certainly figured in my earliest art memories.

Apart from the ubiquitous portrait of HM the Queen, (by William Dargie, the only other portrait I recall hanging in our primary school was Dobell’s 1957 portrait of the poet Dame Mary Gilmore. In high school our teacher took our art class to Sydney on excursion. Two things about that day stick in my mind – the ‘shock’ of recognition when I saw one of Henry Moore’s Helmet Head sculptures in the flesh, (so to speak) at the Art Gallery of NSW and my first visit to a commercial art gallery. At Rudy Komon’s gallery in Paddington I saw, casually leant against the wall, the recently rediscovered Wangi Boy (aka Boy on the Beach). The intense gaze of the boy made quite an impact on me. So I was pre-disposed to visit this exhibition.

The show covers work inspired by Dobell’s two visits to Papua New Guinea in 1949 and 1950. This is a large body of work, covering everything from photographs and sketches to studies and finished paintings. The gallery was full. Dobell is best known for his many strong portraits, thick with gesture and paint, so the delicate miniatures that formed a significant portion of the initial work coming out of these PNG visits came as a surprise to me. They are exquisite. Coming in at 16 x 20 cms their almost enamelled surface and delicately painted lines are a revelation.

image

Another thing that stood out for me was Dobell’s conflation of mythological themes with local culture. He takes a subject, such as local men thatching a roof and transforms it into a mythic undertaking.image

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See my work over summer

To those of you living on the east coast of Australia, there are two opportunities to see my work during December and January.

Firstly I am exhibiting my textile work at the Gosford Regional Gallery, along with two artists from my home town of Newcastle (NSW) Eleanor Jane Robinson and Mandy Robinson. If you can make it to the opening on Friday 4 December at 6.00pm I may see you there.

Well Worn
4 December 2015 – 13 January 2016

Leonie Andrews, Eleanor Jane Robinson
and Mandy Robinson

GOSFORD REGIONAL GALLERY, FOYER

36 Webb St, East Gosford NSW

Otherwise you can see one of my textile works that was selected into the Gold Coast Art Prize. The opening is on 5 December also at 6.00pm, but sadly I won’t be able to make the event.

Gold Coast Art Prize
5 December 2015 – 31 January 2016

THE ARTS CENTRE GOLD COAST

135 Bundall Road, Surfers Paradise

An imagination of Nasturtiums

Some weeks back I was chatting with Drawing Connections about nasturtiums. We were talking about memories of seeing these plants in the Himalayas. I have since pulled out my photos that I took of the nasturtiums twining up wires at the Kumbun in Gyantse, in Tibet.

Nasturtiums in Gyantse

Nasturtiums in Gyantse

Now I haven’t quite got around to making a painting of that scene, but I did get inspired to drag out my Japanese paints, which sit in their box from year to year – too good to use, you know – and make this picture of nasturtiums, using all the colours in my paint box.

Spoiler alert, nasturtiums don’t naturally occur in all these colours.

Nasturtiums, Japanese watercolour paints

Nasturtiums, Japanese watercolour paints

Fun, fun, fun

I was at the Beach Boys concert Friday night, I’ve turned into such a rabid sketcher that I even took my small sketchbook along. Before the show started I drew some backgrounds in so I only had to add the figures when the time came.

I managed this sketch, from the side of the theatre. The watercolour was added afterwards.

The Beach Boys on stage, pen and ink and added watercolour,13 November 2015

The Beach Boys on stage, pen and ink and added watercolour,13 November 2015

I even managed a second drawing of two of the band, Jeffrey Foskett a band regular and Bruce Johnson, who joined the Beach Boys in 1965.

Beach Boys concert, pen and ink and added watercolour, 13 November 2015

Beach Boys concert, pen and ink and added watercolour, 13 November 2015

So my figures are turned out more ‘stick’ than realistic but hey its hard to dance and draw at the same time.

My biggest regret was that this version of the band doesn’t include Brian Wilson or Alan Jardine – but we had fun nonetheless. The music was great and the musicians were all really good. John Cowsill (of the ’60’s pop group, yes those Cowsills) was a total crazy man on the drums and he’s nearly 60! No time for further drawing I just had to dance for the rest of the concert!

Coffee Wednesday – new grounds

It’s been quite wet over the past few days so rather than go to our usual coffee shop, which has largely outdoor seating, we opted for a drier setting.

From Chris’s cafe in Weston Creek you get a view of the carpark and rear entrance to the Cooleman Court shopping centre. Nothing shattering, but something to draw at least. All the drawing was done on site, the colour was added later.

Cooleman Court, brush pen and watercolour, 11 November 2015

Cooleman Court, brush pen and watercolour, 11 November 2015