Showing posts with label Hand Held Gallery. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hand Held Gallery. Show all posts

Saturday, June 15, 2013

Tall Tales: the installation


Tall Tales, 2013, artist's books installation, Hand Held Gallery. Click on image to enlarge.
I'm still finding it hard to believe that the opening night of Tall Tales has come and gone. It meant a very great deal that so many of you came along, especially on such a cold and rainy night, and helped make the evening so memorable.

It's a very strange feeling to see the work I’ve done little else but live, breath, fret and generally obsess over for several months finally come to fruition. As the books in this series evolved countless ideas were embraced, then discarded. I can’t remember when the project began to assume its present shape and form. Although I was making vertical concertina books from the outset, starting with A Tall Tale, I had not necessarily intended for all the books to be formatted like this. Several concertina books with horizontal compositions were also planned. (These will still be made, but that’s another project for another day).

For a very long time my idea was to hand paint and letter the front covers of the books in Tall Tales; the boards had even been cut and prepared. It was only when I came to a final decision about how to exhibit the work, namely as a wall-based installation, that I started to question this. I realised that if the books were displayed in this way the front and back covers would not actually be visible. (By comparison, when landscape format concertina books are displayed open, the covers and inside pages can be viewed simultaneously). Moreover, unless it was going to extend the narrative in some manner, it seemed that additional imagery would merely be extraneous.

It was only as I completed the last books in the series (at least to date) that I began to consider the idea of simple cloth binding along with relevant text. Even then, it was quite difficult to let go of the idea of hand-painted covers; I’d lived with it for so long. Whites Law Bindery bound the books. They did a beautiful job and were genuinely enthusiastic about the project. Now I can’t imagine the books presented in any other way. 

I'm delighted that The State Library of Queensland, the State Library of Victoria and the Baillieu Library at the University of Melbourne have respectively acquired Eve's Apple, The Maiden Flight and Tree House for their permanent collections. The SLV and the Baillieu Library also acquired the limited zine Card Sharps (see previous post).

Warmest thanks to Megan Herring and Adrian Lawson of Hand Held Gallery for their support, hard work and considerable creative input. The attention to detail and extra care that Megan takes has become her hallmark. Pictured left is the folded catalogue she designed. It's a potential collector's item in its own right.

Mine will be the last show at Hand Held. To put it mildly, I'm not the only one to be very sad about this. But Megan has some exciting plans for the future, which I will share with you in future posts.

Tuesday, May 28, 2013

Lucky Thirteen

Four of my most recent books are featured here. In fact, Sea Horsewoman was the last work completed for the show at Hand Held Gallery. There are thirteen books in the series. It has just occurred to me that there were also thirteen fairy tales in Moth Woman Press's very first book There was once... The collected fairy tales (2009). And the Tall Tales exhibition opens on June 13. An interesting coincidence. Fortunately, I'm not superstitious!

Pictured below, from top:
Left to right: Bats in the Belfry and Pescatrice; and
Fishwife and Sea Horsewoman
All 2013, unique artist's books, ink and acrylic on Khadi paper, 80 x 15 cm (open)
Photography by Tim Gresham.

To see the books in their bound state, click HERE.



Monday, May 27, 2013

Homarsupial and Lyrebird

Two more passengers for my Noah's Ark of mythical creatures. Pictured below, from left:

Homarsupial, 2013, unique artist's book, ink and acrylic on Khadi paper, 80 x 15 cm (open). For more about Homarsupial, see blog post May 21, directly below.

Lyrebird, 2013, unique artist's book, ink and acrylic on Khadi paper, 80 x 15 cm (open). An extremely rare bird, whose legendary dance is always performed in secret.

Photograph by Tim Gresham.


Wednesday, March 21, 2012

Moth Woman Vigilantes at Maria Costa DRAWN


Last weekend I received an email from Miranda Costa, author of the Blog Miranda Costa DRAWN, requesting permission to reproduce some images of the Moth Woman Vigilantes to accompany an article she has written about Hand Held Gallery. Miranda’s post also features an exquisite paper sculpture by Hand Held artist Sheridan Jones.

In April 2013 the Moth Woman Vigilantes will fly solo in their first exhibition at Hand Held Gallery. Works for the show, including further MWV zines, are very much in embryonic stages of development, so Miranda’s words of encouragement are particularly meaningful at this early stage. To visit the post, click HERE. To explore Miranda’s excellent Blog and her fine artwork, click HERE.

Friday, October 28, 2011

In Suspense at Hand Held Gallery, Melbourne



I'm still in London, and will be in Berlin by November 3, so won't be able to attend the opening of this exhibition. But you can be certain I'll be there in spirit and will look forward to seeing the installation views on the Hand Held Gallery blog once the show is up and running. To see the two zines I made especially for In Suspense, scroll down to Girls in High Places, my September 29 Blog Post. Directly below are full details of the exhibition: