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From Casey Temby new artwork April 09 |
Tuesday, April 28, 2009
Tuesday, April 14, 2009
feathering the nest
Here is my piece hanging in the garage for feathering the nest group exhibition
You can see more pics here http://garageopenings.blogspot.com/
Monday, April 6, 2009
feathering the nest - group exhibition

Melody Ellis' group mail art exhibition: feathering the nest
I sent in 'playback' - a hanging mobile I made from found objects (or junk) I found on my street.
I was walking home one day and found an unwound dictaphone cassette tape. I thought I would do the right neighbourhood thing and pick it up so I started winding it up, wrapping it around my hand again and again and again and as I was winding, I was thinking of uses for the cassette film instead of just throwing it in the bin.
I decided to put it in my anorak pocket and happened to stumble upon a few more things that I usually wouldn't have even noticed.
GARAGE OPENINGS PRESENTS:
feathering the nest (a group mail art exhibition)
Opening Saturday 4 April 2009
6:00 - 8:00pm
66 Hopetoun Circuit Yarralumla ACT
Featuring...
Marc Alperstein
Jonathan Baskett
Zanny Begg
Lauren Brown
Kate Carr
Monica Carroll
Melody Ellis
Marc Freeman
Somaya Langley & Christian Malejka
Sarah Logan
Annette Marie
Paul McGee
Brendon McKinley
Sarah Mosca
Vedanta Nicholson
Kalina Pilat
Francesca Rendle-Short
Spyridon Simotas
Peta Sirec
Richard Spellman
Alison Spence
Sarah St Vincent Welch
Casey Temby
Nella Themelios
Amy Thompson
Stedman Watts
Zuza Zochowski
My first exhibition - shades of lightness
DETAILS http://www.caseytemby.com/shadesoflightnessinfo.html
What: shades of lightness - my first solo art exhibition
Where: ourmishmash, 11 Curlewis Street, Bondi.
Hosted by the lovely Jac and Ellice
When: November - December 2008
About:
A series of portrait-style charcoal drawings and mixed media paintings, manipulated through the use of shading in an attempt to create a feeling of reflection and contemplation.
The pieces have a romantic feel, this could be due to my love of writers such as D.H. Lawrence, Flaubert and Thomas Hardy. Similarly like the characters D.H. Lawrence portrays, the female figures in ‘shades of lightness’ have the feeling they are by no means fully under their own control, but impelled by forces within them below the level of their conscious will or choice.
Quote taken from the Introduction, page xiv, written by Mark Kinkead-Weekes of D.H. Lawrence’s “Women In Love”:
“Instead of portraying human beings as consciously analysable personalities, as nineteenth-century novels had done, he wanted to get at what we have learned to call the subconscious, the four-fifths of the iceberg hidden below the ego and the surface of our knowing. That deeper ‘being’ had somehow to be made visible, like the patterns produced acoustically in fine sand by invisible sound, patterns which moreover change as soon as the note does. So Lawrence wanted also to get rid of the idea of a stable ego, the belief that personality is constant, and find ways, instead, of showing human beings as fluctuating and changeable – like water, which can be ice, steam or liquid, and yet is always the same substance…”
I wanted to convey a sense of purity, rawness and truthfulness through the use of basic materials such as un-primed canvas and natural charcoal to the found pre-loved recycled frames.
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