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Showing posts with label Exhibitions. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Exhibitions. Show all posts

Saturday, 12 May 2012

A Poetry of Infinite Possibilities- recent works by Lezlie Tilley


An exhibition of Lezlie Tilleys recent work opens Thursday night 17th of May  6- 8 pm at POD Space gallery in Newcastle. 

Artist Statement:

The grid in all its forms continues to seduce me after almost 40 years. Each time I return to it within my work there is something new to discover. The hypnotic power of the grid resonates because it goes beyond the edges  of infinity. The infallibility and dogmatism of any grid system is rich in metaphor.

Installation view of Lezlie Tilleys exhibition at Brenda May earlier this year


A constant image that has followed me throughout my career has been the telephone doodle in all its simplicity and complexity. My recent connection with Euclids geometry has fired my interest to explore other forms of that universal image. In this instance, my drawings are dragged between the extremes of sketchy and finished, spontaneous and measured. The linear images can be viewed as maps, pathways, or a system of writing time itself.




Monday, 19 March 2012

The Abstract Wall @ Hot House: the staff exhibition 2012 at The Front Room Gallery



Better late than not posted at all, I apologise for the delay. It was a good exhibition and wonderful work was seen from many of the staff who exhibited this year. However I felt that the abstract wall was the most relevant to this blog.

From Left: Laura Wilson's Layers and Barrier, Assemblage,  Lezlie Tilleys, Pages 20 and 10 from an A-less novel, laser cut acrylic, Matthew Tomes, Nixie, Oil on canvas and Linda Swinfield's, Belly series 1,2,3,4 and 6, Relief print, rubbing on rice papers and laser cut plywood.




Linda Swinfields Belly Series 6: The gift  2012 Relief print, rubbing on rice papers and tissue, bookbinding glue and Laser cut plywood.




Lezlie Tilleys works photographed by Laura Wilson.



Sunday, 15 January 2012

NEVER A DAY WITHOUT A LINE by Patricia Wilson- Adams



Lezlie Tilley

Exhibition at Brenda May Gallery Sydney- Pages from an a-less novel, 2012

14 February to 3 March
Nulla dies sine linea = never a day without a line


 
7. page one. pages from an a - less novel Lezlie Tilley



To view the new work of Lezlie Tilley is to enter into a Euclidian world, where we become conscious of an order that not only respects a geometry with which we think we are familiar, but at another level we are dealing with the aftermath of a process that is almost cabalistic in nature.  Tilley has begun with a simple and playful idea where she deconstructs a novel by eliminating for example all the letter “a”s from a page by punching a set of cards to represent these vacancies, thus setting up a randomness that fights to be controlled – a choice has been made without the consequences having been previously known. 

This serendipitous event becomes for Tilley synonymous with her ever present attention to the demands of drawing and it is here that she speaks of “a world of line that describes pathways, meeting places and a documenting of time.”  Her clarity of thinking is ever present, the aesthetic is “tight” while the materiality of the works describes a space that becomes architectural in its command of our visual field.  Her use of media forces one to acknowledge its linear crispness and clarity, thus reinforcing a way of thinking about drawing.  Here no time is wasted on flamboyance or the unnecessary gestural mark.

As in previous works Tilley recognises the great debt that must be paid to the work of countless unknown craftswomen who made lace, patchwork and weavings.  Tilley has always drawn inspiration from these predecessors.  It is therefore not unprecedented to learn that she has also looked at some of the earliest forms of punchcard weaving where industrial weaving was simplified when the Jacquard loom was invented.  These looms are controlled by a series of punched cards  with each card representing a corresponding row in the design.  There is also a link to our earliest forms of computer programming and Tilley recounts some of her early employment experiences using punched tape, then used for type setting.

Tilley’s works are generative, beginning as a series of punched templates and resulting in a matrix which is notable for being both complex and simple at the one viewing.  A matrix affords one the ability to have many views at once and it is therefore no accident that these works fuse both figure and ground providing the viewer with a complex range of responses to lines, shapes and spaces that seem to shift, describing a slightly disorienting, ephemeral space.  Here one experiences a unity of vision, or in the words of Eckhart Tolle, the Canadian writer, “a great silent space (that ) holds all of nature in its embrace.  It also holds you.”[1]

Patricia Wilson-Adams/ Jan 2012
Conjoint Senior Lecturer
The University of Newcastle

All work shown courtesy of Brenda May Gallery

http://www.brendamaygallery.com.au/pages/exhibitions_view.php?ex_typeID=2


[1] Eckhart Tolle  Stillness Speaks: meditative thoughts New World Library, Novato Ca and Namaste Publishing Vancouver, 2003

Tuesday, 3 January 2012

Fathom exhibition images 2009


Patricia Wilson- Adams, Dead trees, like dead women dont write much poetry, callistemon timber and depressed letterpress.
 


Sally Bourke, Bitmap Diptych, oil and beeswax on canvas, 2400 x 1200. 
  

   

Linda Swinfield Carpet series, detail of the womens cell installation, recycled glass louvers, Duratran, plywood and electrical components, dimensions variable.
 

Installation view Lezlie Tilley and Helen Dunkerley






Helen Dunkerleys, On Island, clay excavated from St Thomas Virgin Islands.


  
















Installation view Annemarie Murland