Archives for category: Animals

These are photos of a recent piece in progress.

Three elephants carry a cross on their backs with with the help of a tiny little bird.

Finally, photos of the final work are here.

An early fish mobile I made was recently included in ‘Inside the mind of…’ segment of Monument magazine.

Refer pages 15-16.

This piece was short-listed for the BSG Prize 09 and was also exhibited at the Sydney Opera House as a part of the Avant CardWe love 3D‘ program.

Blanketed in their endorsed skins this odd couple are united as members of one tribe; an odd-ball gang; a strange aquatic squad. Instead of individual details of claws, fins, lips, wheels and heads one sees amorphous colour and pattern.

… extra, imported be .. from mexic, .5% alc/vo, empaque, 4 x new 330 ml, distil 48 using onsumer,   lder of bottle, importa….

I share a house with a lot of fish and a turtle called Spencer.

A while ago Spencer was run over after she’d escaped from the pond. It was summer, it was hot and our turtle was looking for love. Luckily she was found and taken to the vet who wired togther her shell. Spencer then had to spend 8 months recovering in a hospital tank in our lounge room. This gave me plenty of time to model her.

The end of year show for 24hr art 2009 was a celebration of 20 years of exhibitions (175,200 hrs).  They asked for postcards from members and I sent them this:

These fish are a little larger than the metcard ones. Not so constrained by the size of the cardboard. Am still working on how to exhibit the mobiles.

From a tissue box, some metcards and alfoil packaging.

A work in progress photographed at Lee Point Beach, Darwin.

Thought I might have a go at a couple of stencils for the Melbourne stencil festival.

So I started with an old piece:

And cut some layers. (I used my current favourite beer packaging for each of the stencils – maybe not the best idea I have ever had.)

And because really the part I like most is cutting out, I decided to try 2 stencils:

And decided I needed a mega-sized met card top layer:

And, well the results are mixed. Decided not to enter them in the festival. Will have another go when I get some spare time. Did quite a bit of air-brushing at school and so feel determined to master this… later.

Stickers made from the cardboard Quadrapod works.

I sent them to Spain in response to a flickr call to artists.

Metcard reliefs.

Exhibited in the Tag Tree Exhibition Group show, Hampshire, UK, 2009.

This exhibition aimed to amass 1000 tags from across the world and  the call for entries was posted through flickr.  The works were to be exhibited in two shows: an indoor, gallery show Hampshire, UK, and an outdoor exhibition to be held in a tree.

Had to have a few tree hanging prectices before sending them off.

For images of the indoor exhibiton see the photos in flickr. I do not think they have been stuck in a tree yet.

These are part of a series of cartoonish relief works.

They follow on from the flying pig and the cranky deer.

In this small collage the tram trundles from side to side, the hands wave goodbye and the plane zooms into the sky.

My sister left Melbourne and returned home to Darwin to live with her crocodile framing boyfriend and open a show shop. She is enjoying herself, but it is hard being in different cities. Her shop, Me and My Llama, has been open for just over a year.

Everyone should be able to fly…

In progress:

And from lois stavsk’s flickr site:

This is one of the first of a series of reliefs I have made out of and mounted on a metcard / tram ticket.

The photo is a bit blurry so it is hard to see just how cranky the deer is loooking. Not sure why.

Based on the knitted quadrapods, this is one of a series of quad metronomes I’ve made.

The figure rocks back and forth on top of the blue box.

Exhibited at in a group show at Artholes, Melbourne, 2007.

Another similar mobile was included in the CERES charity art auction, 2007: http://www.ceres.org.au/

I have made a number of these fish mobiles. The first ones (including this one) are made out of tram tickets / metcards. The fish are suspended on salvaged street-sweeper blades found on the side of the street.

If you look along the edge of most major city streets you will find these long thin snapped of steel blades. Took us a long while to work out that they are from street-sweepers. Once you notice them it is hard to stop seeing them.

I have also made some elephant mobiles but I do not have any photos of these.

Just a few of the many, many, knitted 4-legged beasts I have made for friends’ kids. I am really only including them here as they have spawned a few cardboard projects and I am currently adapting the form for a number of cat sculptures i am working on.

Exhibited in the Human Rights Art Award, Darwin, 2006.

I have knitted a lot of woolen ‘quadrapods’ for friends’ kids. They started life as a horse type creature but ended up as a uncategorised 4-legged thing. The main criteria was for it to have many limbs to be carried by or to put in one’s mouth.

This piece is knitted from plastic bags and bits of flyscreen. The texture is similar to the effect you find along some fences where plastic shopping bags have accrewed and matted into a thick. lumpy, faded fabric.

A series of Matryoshka Animals, the mouse fits inside the chicken, inside the rabbit, inside the elephant.

Made out of cardboard, Japanese paper and glitter contact.

Made in 2003.