nonsense, make-believe and wishful thinking

Welcome to our sketchbook and photo-blog!
You can find our main site here.

Tuesday, 27 July 2010

How to host a tea party in a tree


“The tea-masters held that real appreciation of art is only possible to those who make of it a living influence. ” (Okakura, 1906, 71)
Life imitates art far more than art imitates life. (Wilde, 1905, 10)

Last Sunday we tested our long-overdue tea-party-in-a-tree, with incredible success!
I had wondered if i could persuade a fit photographer friend to document the event, and he replied immediately asking if his friend could as well. Two tree-climbing photographers, both keen to give up their Sunday for a mad morning tea! So thanks to Richard and Ben, we have some wicked pictures to share.



All were keen to follow the style of my original illustration and scrambled for some op-shop gold. Ben's sister even made for him a last-minute top-hat and bow tie that morning.

"Our insight does not penetrate your culture deeply, but at least we are willing to learn. Some of my compatriots have adopted too much of your customs and too much of your etiquette, in the delusion that the acquisition of stiff collars and tall silk hats comprised the attainment of your civilisation." (Okakura, 1906, 4)









I had been scouting trees around the city for a while and was set on a very interesting row of trees with branches that spread out like a mezzanine. We circled the park and fell in love with the huge Morton Bay Fig at the other end. The lowest branch was only just within reach and the vast, dense foliage provided a surprising level of privacy.


Our equipment is under continual revision and the latest edition is a hanging basket prototype for a miniature stove and windbreak. Tea is not as simple when you're perched in a tree, and one begins to appreciate the process. It became much more of a tea ceremony. By the time we had negotiated the passing of cups, the last to be poured was the fruitiest, most bitter cup of Irish Breakfast I have ever dared to enjoy.

At one point a couple of noisy Galahs raced beneath us..
With fresh tea in-hand, I was high on the novelty of it all. I could get used to this.



















(Kakuzo Okakura, 1906, The Book of Tea)
(Oscar Wilde. 1905, The Decay of Lying)

Monday, 5 July 2010

nintendo DS sketchbook


Waiting for the market response to the Ipad (specifically new developments in stylus compatibility).
In the meantime, i heard about some artists hijacking the nintendoDS as a crappy tablet pc substitute, and it works. I can now make full colour-studies in under 4 minutes standing on the platform waiting for the train.
Here is some spam:



No pressure sensitivity, no undo, but huge novelty value. Introducing: my cup of tea that went cold, my long-suffering brother, some other nonsense, inside the Perth Artifactory, Leederville train station at night (in under 3 minutes) and a plushy frog that i dissected/reassembled.


The following week: the honeymoon was over and the absence of pressure sensitivity started getting to me. Fancy tools do not make you a better artist. However, i'm getting faster at composing my tones, and the lack of an undo function is good discipline. 
Above are a few more train stations, a hilarious collaboration (the squiggly one is a snippet) and some special requests.


After a few weeks i got over the lack of pressure sensitivity and started to have some fun.
More train stations! (including an icy sunrise), some robofun, a nebuliser in a kitchen sink.. and a persistent aquatic theme.. Most of these took less than 10 minutes.

Saturday, 26 June 2010

Tea on the Frontier

New title, new design, new pages!


It's been a bumpy ride over at the institution. Make things that look like art, and you'll be criticised for being shallow. Make multi-faceted art that looks like anthropological spaghetti, and they'll tell you not to bite off more than you can chew, and by the way it's meant to be an art degree. BUT I think i'm finally getting the hang of it.


Anyway, the art-looking things have been suffering due to much fiddling-around in definitions and justifications. After a little despair and a lot of soul-searching, my project as a whole is looking remarkably like it did when i first imagined it. So.. ONWARD!
Tea on the Frontier




Thursday, 13 May 2010

story panel updates & website construction

It's a new chapter! And it's keeping me very busy.
For the Love of Tea is just beginning, and there are FOUR panels up so far!
Some of these were printed for the Mythology exhibition, and now they are here especially for you.
Also, the website is undergoing major renovations since the recent discovery of fancy software that allows me to be really fussy and make stuff exactly how i want it without having to write the code from scratch (which often involves a lot of guesswork)
Back to the drawing board!



Friday, 2 April 2010

If you're in Perth mid-April..


Mythology Art Exhibition

Six local, emerging artists interpret the theme ‘Mythology’ for this exhibition, opening 2-7pm on Saturday 17th April in KURB Gallery’s new space at 214 William St.
The artists participating cross multiple disciplines including oil painting, digital painting, drawing and photography.

The exhibition showcases new works from Richard Healy, Simon Boxer, David Charles Collins, Tanya De Souza-Meally, Jeffrey Phillips, and Jenna Downing.

Artworks are available for sale.
Light refreshments will be provided at the opening.
More details: >>http://facepocalypse.com/mythology
Location: KURB Gallery, 214 William St, Northbridge

Opening Day: 2pm - 7pm, Saturday 17th April 2010

Exhibition Dates: 17th - 22nd April 2010
12-5pm, Sunday 18th April
11am-4pm, Monday 19th - Thursday 22nd April
Price: Free

For futher information, interviews or high resolution images please contact Simon Boxer: m: 0401 660 286 e: sb@simonboxer.com

About the Artists:

Richard Healy - >>http://richardhealyart.com/
Richard is a young artist working in Perth, his work is primarily based around the figure and alluding to the sinister. Painting scenes in which something is about to happen or has just happened, the moment of consideration before, or after an action. Unlike a comic or a film in which the structure is controlled tightly so to create one reading of an image, he aims to create images which allow for multiple interpretations. The works are intended to have a sense of ambiguity, and allow for enough space so the viewer can
draw their own narratives and conclusions.
His paintings combine a wide range of techniques and mediums - acrylic, pencil, charcoal, oil, aerosol and ink. bringing together aspects of street art, comic imagery and drama, and traditional figurative art together onto one canvas.

Simon Boxer - >>http://simonboxer.com
Simon is a self-taught, emerging artist and digital painter based in Perth. His work has a rawness akin to Impressionism, with the graphic influence of his background as a designer and concept artist. His work is based on the idea that creation is more valuable than recreation, as he presents new interpretations of typical mythological archetypes.
The Mythology exhibition sees Simon exhibiting original oil/acrylic paintings for the first and last time before heading overseas to an intensive art course in San Francisco.

David Charles Collins - >>http://www.davidcharlescollins.com
David is an up and coming perth artist who specializes in photography and video media. Based in the Swan Valley his work is reminiscent of a Baroque decadence that will seduce with young bodies in lavish settings emerging from velvet darkness. Graduating with a BA in Art from Curtin University in 2008 his commercial client base includes jewelry designer Sophie Kyron and fashion label Ericaanerica. David’s work has been displayed in several exhibitions including a solo show at Perth Centre of Photography in 2009.

Jeffrey Phillips - >>http://jeffreyphillips.com.au
Jeffrey is a Perth-based freelance graphic designer and illustrator. Two years ago he left his full-time job in the finance sector and began an earnest personal campaign to re-invent himself.
Presently his work spans everything from caricatures, illustrations, t-shirts, posters and logos to storyboarding local films and TV commercials. He is also studying full-time for his Diploma in Graphic Design.

Jenna Downing - >>http://evilgeniusinresidence.com
Jenna is fascinated with just about everything. This causes alternating phases of utter distraction and intense, obsessive concentration. For the last couple of years she has been focusing on fairytales and culture, and the influences of each upon the other. Storytelling is one of the most important skills we can learn, for the uses of enchantment really are endless.

Thursday, 11 March 2010

People-watching and RSI

The WA Museum is becoming a favourite haunt for those times when I get the itch to sink my teeth (pencils) into some complicated subjects. >>Simon Boxer was my sketch-buddy for two consecutive mornings. After putting up some work for the Laneway Art & Lattes exhibition (part of the >>Eat Drink Perth festival) we plonked ourselves outside the state gallery for some old-fashioned people-watching.















The next day we got up bright and not-so-early for some more serious practice at the museum. I tend to forget what my muscles are doing while I’m concentrating on a piece (for way too long) and almost killed my shoulder drawing mr Antelope with its fiendishly complex shiny black horns. I left Simon at the Dinosaurs Alive exhibit and he rocked on into the afternoon with another friend.













































After all that I still haven’t made it past the bison.

Sunday, 21 February 2010

Gingin Day-trip


After Brett showed my >>hilariously misguided narrative to the Head honcho, I received an invitation to poke around the Gingin observatory (Australian International Gravitational Observatory: AIGO)! A few days of bunny-hopping the scheduled departure ended in a very long car-trip. So on the very last day of my brother's scholarship-internship-thing, i finally got to visit him and see what they actually get up to out there.

Here are some things i learned that day (in some kind of order):

- Gingin is far away (but not as far as India)
- Aircon is so good.
- Ticks are hard to kill.
- Redback web is incredibly strong and light.
- Ferro-fluid is fascinating.
- 40 metres is an impressive drop.
- I cannot understand skype lectures on parametric instability after a long car-trip.
- Skype lectures are more fun to draw than listen to.
- Medical-grade-clean is not clean enough for AIGO; when AGIO says clean, they mean as-few-particles-as-physically-possible-clean.
- Dark matter/energy is a neat way of saying "we don't know what it is, but we know it's there." Also, it is heavy.
- Pysicists write terrible poetry.
- Cretaceous chalk is made of plankton.
- Trilobites could grow to the size of an umbrella.
- $10,000 seismometers make running left and then right infinitely more entertaining.
- The words "the inverse pendulum is causing problems" lead to a terrible, awkward silence.
- Physicists named the first really massive telescope that was bigger than any other telescope at the time The VLT (Very Large Telescope).
- The Leaning Tower of Gingin would make a wicked set for a STOMP performance, especially if someone dropped a drumstick.
- There is very little private research into pure physics because there is no direct link to industry and therefore very limited opportunity for funding outside govt research grants.
- Exception: new vibration-isolation technologies that can be sold to mining companies for aerial gravitational surveys.
- AIGO's vacuum has less in it than Space.
- Niobium would make the purest xylophone you would ever hear.


And now, please enjoy this non-automated slide-show:



















^ The Absentees



















^ "you can come in, just don't touch or breathe on anything."



















^ Looking for suspension? Check this action out!



















^ not for baking potatoes



^ "Pre-cleaned springs: clean enough to eat off, clean enough to sew inside someone, not clean enough for AIGO"



















^ "It's not clean unless it's AIGO-clean!"



















^ ultrasonic and acid baths.. i think.. and lots of latex.















^ for the discerning physicist















^ full of nothing






























































^ actually shut away from the world



















^ the seismometer!















^ what comes out of the seismometer















^ skype presentation



















^ very clean drinking water















^ good job, guys.















^ a place for everything



















^ nicely air-conditioned at ground-level only.















^ not joking















^ "Try some eccentric orbits!"















^ giant pendulum



















^ I am the Stair Master.

















































^ not-so-clean water







































































^ balloon goes here















^ and you have a very long time to wave goodbye

















































^ everybody is tired from making moon-craters.



















^ THE END

*All likenesses published with permission from the people they resemble.

Are you still here? Perhaps you would like to see an official presentation, >>Einsteins Messengers, from the american observatory, LIGO.