'The title of this exhibition - And colour is their flesh -comes from some remarks from Nicolas Poussin about art; where he likens drawing to the skeleton of what an artist does and colour to its flesh'.
The title of this exhibition - And colour is their flesh -comes from some remarks from Nicolas Poussin about art; where he likens
drawing to the skeleton of what an artist does and colour to its flesh. This idea rings true to me on many levels. Drawing has always been at the core of my practice and these drawings often become something very fleshy. I would say that flesh
is very much central to what I do also.
I have wanted for a long time to do an
exhibition of drawings and to focus on the process of drawing as a way to
explore ideas further. There is a very personal investment in a drawing, an
amount of time that cannot be rushed and a real physicality between the
artist
and the paper.
These drawings are a series of explorations
of ideas and aesthetics that currently excite me. They are a space in which
I
can think about Surrealism, for example, which is as central to my broader
practice as realism is. These works are emotional, and funny, free and
perhaps
a bit obsessive.
There are a number of tropes that I have
returned to again and again in my work. The body, obviously; this thing
that we
all have in common but which also makes us all different to a greater or
less
degree. This fleshiness also joins us to other animals and to the rest of
the
world. There is also my love of botanical and zoological illustration. I am
very interested in hummingbirds, those avian pollinators whose incredible
variety symbolises evolution as much their relationship with plants
expresses
the omnipresence and variety of sexual reproduction.
Hair is a big part of these works, as it
has been a big part of my practice forever. There is wild unruly hair.
There is
elaborately styled hair. There is hair that forms into something else.
There is
stuff that just looks like hair but isn’t. For me, hair is one of the
great
symbols because it is so amorphous and can be so many things at once. It is
ambiguous but emotive and beautiful. Hair is living but it is not alive. It
is
sensuous but it has no feelings. Hair is never fixed, we can transform our
hair
into whatever we choose but at the same time it will always try to return
to a
tangle.
What we do to our hair expresses both our interiority and our
relationship to social pressures. Hair is one of these things that is used
to
divide us but it is also what unites us with all other mammals.
For me, hair in all its manifestations is
beautiful to draw. It is the clothes for the amorphous characters I am
creating, sometimes it is all there is to give them form. And sometimes
that is
more than enough.
Image: Patricia Piccinini. 'Doubting Thomas' 2008 .
Opening: Thursday 9 April 2015 6 - 8 pm
Tolarno Galleries
Melbourne Australia
Level 4, 104 Exhibition Street