Wednesday, April 29, 2009

a domani

Groundtruthing Project December 2007 to April 2009 has ended.
A new project will start elsewhere, before too long. Ci vediamo.

Thursday, April 16, 2009

Yellow patch

porcelain
The seasonal stream of Yellow-faced Honeyeaters heading north north-east began three weeks ago. In the last few days, as it was this morning, the aerial passage has increased to large liquid flocks of up to 50 and more moving through all day. By mid morning, many hundreds have passed overhead, a visual and aural procession of tiny birds calling in ephemeral, fluttering lines.
In the past few days, Golden Whistlers have also moved into the farm area's remnant patches and corridors of cover. Males, in crisp bright yellow, black and white plumage, lay out full vocal repertoires from high branches in the still-warm mid-April sun. It is likely this is another seasonal movement from higher altitudes and more southerly areas as the autumnal chill descends. I listen to them, a surround-sound of complex vocal confidence and subtlety, through an open studio door.
The upland air is still and cloudless this morning, but an overlay of avian fluidity draws shifting lines across all dimensions, physical and temporal, like the higher altitude jet contrails of white against the upper deep-blue chamber of atmosphere.
porcelain

Friday, April 10, 2009

En route to London

One porcelain vessel en route from the old Woonjeegaribay Highlands to the old city of London. The gathering called Collect 2009: The International Art Fair for Contemporary Objects, is taking place at Saatchi Gallery, London from May 15 to 17.

Wednesday, April 1, 2009

Accumulating light again, approaching rain

March 21, before 10 am, before

Saturday, March 28, 2009

From Frederic Wood Jones

Porcelain, bone china, glaze 2007
From Fred Wood Jones 1923 -1925, Adelaide, South Australia, and a side note: Wood Jones, an Englishman, was appointed to the Chair of Anatomy at the University of Adelaide in 1919,
"Only a few years ago this animal was extremely common over the greater part of South Australia. Twenty years ago the dealers in Adelaide did a great trade in selling them at about ninepence a head for coursing on Sunday afternoons. It may surprise people who remember those days to know that there is not a preserved specimen, of even a skin of the animal, available ... in South Australia today.
They were wonderfully nimble animals, and Krefft records seeing one get over a close palisade fence 8 ft. in height; but they were not very fast, and were easily caught, even by "common dogs".
Heads, 2009

Monday, March 16, 2009

monday morning

Sunday, March 8, 2009

Atherton, Queensland, June 

Thursday, February 26, 2009

Ceramics and carbon dioxide 1

Carbon accounting and accountability: a rolling theme for a ceramicist making the 'non essential' and 'more than the essential'. Not a new consideration for a maker by any stretch, but one that might now be regarded as integral to making as any other material use in 2009. What one does each year - those reduction and offset actions, local, immediate and geographically removed - needs refining and enhancing. At the minimum, can one's total studio practice, integrated with the rest of daily life, be truly carbon neutral?
. Emissions calculation: one assessment amongst many: Greenfleet
. One of the most erudite pieces of recent Australian writing on the broader subject, with much useful background explanation: Tim Flannery

Tuesday, February 24, 2009

Copperhead and ash

Highlands Copperhead, crossing lane, Feb 23, mid-afternoon
Porcelain beaker, Woonjeegaribay, January, photographed February