Gallery Walk Through | Jo Lankester & Paula Payne
Event description
When: 12 April, 11am - 1pm
Where: Onespace | 25A Bouquet Street South Brisbane Q 4101
Cost: $15.00 | 30 tickets available
Morning tea provided
Schedule:
11am - 12pm: Morning tea with the artists
12pm - 12:30pm: Jo Lankester gallery walk through
12:30pm - 1pm: Paula Payne gallery walk through
Onespace invites you to an exclusive gallery walk through with the artists for Topographia: harmonies of place, an exhibition by Jo Lankester in the Main gallery and Shiftings Sands of Land and Memory, an exhibition by Paula Payne in the Lounge gallery.
In Topographia: harmonies of place, Jo Lankester's richly layered prints evoke the texture of Queensland’s north. A recent move onto the foreshore of Townsville’s North Ward, an established beachside suburb which overlooks the sea toward Magnetic Island, has ushered birds into the foreground of her imagery, along with the trees, undergrowth and lichens that attract them. Behind the abstracted layers of her prints is an ambient tropical light exuding local heat, warmth and fecundity.In this exhibition she includes the black and white cockatoos which frequent the local Beach Almond trees between September and March (when they produce seeds). She describes these birds as ‘curious and confident characters’, overlaying their images on surfaces constructed like the lichens Lankester finds so compelling—thick, deep and full of mysterious organic layers. This background shines through the images of the birds, the texture and tenor of their form denoting their sensitivity and longevity—as avian creatures (the great survivors of the dinosaur age)—within the global ecosystem.
Shifting Sands of Land and Memory features a new series of acrylic paintings by Magan-djin/Brisbane-based artist Paula Payne. Drawing inspiration from recent time spent as Artist in Residence at the Broken Hill Art Exchange—located on Wilyakali Country in far-west New South Wales—this new series captures the emotive resonance of the surrounding landscapes. Payne’s abstracted recollections reflect her travels through the Menindee Lakes in Kinchega National Park and the long drive through the desert from Mildura to Adelaide. Essay writer Demi Conrad states, “Undoubtedly, the notion of time is posited through multiple lenses within this body of work through subtle nuances of colour, incongruous structures and abstracted forms. These elements provide a framework that reflect Payne’s ongoing exploration of the land’s essence and its relationship to time within an historical, colonial, and archaeological context.”
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