Friday, September 6, 2013

Knots

Finishing each tie with a knot. Two km of string. 


Corseted, bound, connected, stitched. The trees became the bodies.


 Throughout the Day, depending on temperature and humidity, the strings tighten across the spans or slump down into soft hanging bundles, charting the ay through their movements. These soft forms below became taut and tight just two hours later.





Monday, September 2, 2013

Exhibition Opening


It was great to have friends join us on Saturday to see the work.






Kenesis

The quality of the work I enjoy the most is the fact that it is constantly moving. The site specific work is responsive to the environment. Not only the wind but to the temperature and moisture levels as well. Both Tam and I enjoyed the fact that work seemed to dialogue back to us. The lines form a visual and auditory experience for what is happening at a particular moment in time. The kenetic energy of the work engages the viewer in an increased sense of awareness of the landscape.




The first morning we discovered the lines drooping we were concerned that we hadn't tensioned the knots enough. Our hearts were deflated yet we decided to continue with our work and return to tie the loose threads again later.


Yet by 10am the lines had retracted to a tensioned position again. 
instead of being a fault in the work it became an added bonus because it meant that all of the threaded ties move. Not just the plastic tape which flutters in the wind the builders line also changes position throughout the day.




Wednesday, August 28, 2013

Light in the landscape


One of the most enjoyable aspects of the work is the play of light. 
The work is constantly in a state of flux.

It feels indulgent to muse over the part of the work that excites me most.
the fact that it reflects the Wabi Sabi principle of impermanency because 
of it's capacity to refract light. The action of the environment is a point of connection for me. As artists we have acted upon the environment. Our intervention has been a way to play with the actual viewing of the landscape.


In effect our artwork is an action in the environment. And in turn the environment is acting upon the work.







In the late afternoon gaps in the tape on the branches closer to the 
pathway above the work, provided opportunities for the light to be withheld 
in sections. Casting shadows with warm hues they appeared like abstract 
stripes/patterns in the landscape.





Layering and texture in themselves create a dialogue in the landscape. Yet the play of light is an entirely different order of intervention.

Tuesday, August 27, 2013

Installing day eight

Trusting and working with the process of making art is always interesting, and maybe more so when collaborating. The work has moved through multiple iterations over the last seven days. But in doing so, it has come to a new place of its own. 


The space has been wrapped and teased out. We have tied 2000m of string in neat double knots around tree trunks. We have wrapped long eucalypt limbs with careful threaded glowing colour,  Wrapped elements have been added in to the site and then taken away. Everyday we have worked for seven or more hours on an aspect of the work. Not everything works and parts we have spent many hours on have been discarded as the whole dictates its needs. The work evolves, and seems to need to take on its own life.


It is great when the parts that work for us, also work for other people passing by. This front section has become a colour field play ground.


The work is becoming immersive, which is making it interesting. 

Tomorrow is the final day for installation, a day to approach it with fresh eyes.



Sunday, August 25, 2013

Friendship ties

This afternoon two separate friends came by to help. It was a great support to Tamsin and I to have others engage in our work. 

Both Roya and Rose had offered help and today they joined us on the picnic rugs wrapping and and tying branches we had selected from the site. It was lovely to enjoy the dappled afternoon light and the conversations that arose. It was a first time meeting for Roya, Rose and Tamsin, I was the common link having made connections with them all in this last year, my first living in Sydney. What was only apparent to me as the conversations unfolded, was the link between us culturally which seemed to have some parallel. Both Tamsin and Roya were of Persian decent and Rose and I are of Irish decent. Just like the parallel threaded lines the working party sat working in tandem the Irish set at the rear in this picture and the Persian set at the front.

All coincidence perhaps, yet an amusing connection to what seemed like the random offer of help from kind friends. Even the fact that they arrived to help at the same time of day seemed to have some ordered alignment that happened of it's own accord.




  Roya's masterful branch, clearly a speedster she was a woman on a mission - a threading machine

  Rose with her magic wand, an intricate work of craftsmanship that was carefully tied with multiple knots 

Tamsin tying off ends



Three visitors




From left to right:  Bilal, Jihhad and Charlie


We had three visitors to the site today. 
Jihhad, Charlie and Bilal were hanging out
in the park when they spotted us working
on the installation. Charlie thought the work
 looked retro and Jihhad said it looked like
 a safety barrier. Bilal also liked it and thought
 it looked great. I asked Bilal if he enjoyed  doing any 
art and he told me that sport was his thing,
- not art. That made me think how good it 
was to have created interest in someone who normally 
might not have that much involvement with  art.

That seems to me to be the best part about
 working on site to create an artwork. The fact that
the making of the work in place creates  
connections that would not otherwise exist. 
So that the art itself is the point of exchange and a facilitator 
of new dialogues and a chance to talk to someone who 
would otherwise have no reason to engage. 

We never would have met these enthusiastic and energetic
boys had we not intervened in the trees. I'm glad for the 
experience, as they made me feel privileged to be an artist.