My new artwork for design competition

The competition was ran by a building company and an NT newspaper.
The winning work would be displayed on four 8x35m metal panels on the ends of two apartment towers in Darwin. 
The theme was loose but had to reflect the Territory in one way or another.
 The judges were to select 5 finalists and then the public vote for the winner, with the winner receiving $10,000.

I incorporated the building's name, Spirit & Soul into my concept: 

To me the strongest impression of Darwin that I first noticed when I moved here and will stay with me, is the contrast in weather and the feelings that the weather evokes - the red hot sunsets of orange, violet and pink hues; the stormy turbulent blue, grey skies that threaten to explode.  My atmospheric paintings show the varying skies that present themselves daily to Territorians.  I have attempted to express the colours of the skies and the feelings these colours evoke.
I believe the NT weather is part of Territorians' daily lives thus encompassing the spirit and soul of the Territory.
When the NT is discussed I find that we always, in some point of the conversation talk about the weather.  To me, this shows that it is an important and powerful theme, forming the spirit and soul of place and should be celebrated.
The four below represent the exciting constantly changing NT skies - vibrant sunsets and storm. I created them as diptychs.

I designed these to be in in 4 panels. 



Supporting concept photographs




I did not get through unfortunately. Here were the finalists..
 and the winner is....

 

Sidsel Becker

Photographs taken at nightfall in Copenhagen by Danish artist,director and scenographer Sidesl Becker



Katharina Grosse

I stumbled across Katharina Grosse when I was given a book about her.
She is a Berlin based artist.
Grosse seems to airbrush anythign she can get her hands on.
The intensity, uniqueness, limitless quality and exuberance of her work fascinates me.







Building underground for urban density - future cities by Casey Temby

Could subterranean spaces for human occupation be a better solution than building up to tackle the problem of urban sprawl, and create urban density?
It would certainly free up land above ground for important purposes such as agriculture and parklands.

If you believe the reports that we are to expect more natural disasters in the future due to climate change, perhaps building underground is an attractive alternative.

When I first heard about this I was immediately intrigued and wanted to find out more.  I am always fascinated at how planners keep on creating suburbs on the outskirts of cities.  Think of the McMansions in the new 'burbs such as the Western suburbs of Sydney like Harrington Park.

This is an exciting yet challenging future for architects and especially interior designers.
How do you make these spaces habitable?
I would think the priority would be how to get natural light into the spaces and how to reduce the feeling of claustrophobia.

This idea seems to be permeating with city planners for example Helsinki's Masterplan in which to underground industrial facilities and data centres are stored underground  http://www.dailymotion.com/video/xh165b_helsinki-s-underground-master-plan_news

The Helsinki project puts industrial facilities and data centers below the surface in order to improve the quality of life above ground and maintain a nice cityscape. Data Centres are cooled by seawater and the heat created from the data centres is then pumped through pipes to warm cities above ground.

I see many positives with the underground model primarily being:
  • Reducing our carbon footprint and energy use
  • Freeing up space on the surface and conserving existing natural areas or restoring damaged areas which provides habitat and promotes biodiversity.
  • Reduction in the devastation to buildings from natural disasters.
  • Controlling erosion and stormwater runoff; often, this is done by covering much of the site with vegetation.

Could it be an ideal model for hot climatic areas such as the Northern Territory?
Understandably it would be a major shift in ideologies of living however is it achievable?

German street artist EVOl small scale model of an underground city
 http://www.architizer.com/en_us/blog/dyn/26677/an-underground-city-in-the-fields-of-hamburg/#.UKmTDGfbWUM

Further reading:
http://www.subsurfacebuildings.com/DiggingfortheGreen.html





lovely threads

wanting..
Alexander Wang trousers
Amen shirt
Ann Demeulemeester transparent dress

Dries Van Noten embroidered top
Dries Van Noten belt
La Maison Du Couturier dress
Erro dress
Ann Demeulemeester sandal
Christopher Kane tshirt

WON AWARDS + COMPETITIONS

Design Institute of Australia and The University of Canberra Interior Architecture Academic Excellence Award 2011

   
The University of Canberra Interior Architecture Award 2011 for contribution
The University of Canberra Faculty of Arts + Design, Dean's Excellence Award Semester 1, 2011


 


Winner of Musique Art Visual Arts Competition MAY 2009


I am very excited about winning this art competition for painting for the Art Musique magazine, in May 2009 http://www.artsconnect.com.au/callforartists/0409_musiquearts.htm
Here is the interview
Musique Art interview

Constance - the winning painting:


Pierre Paulin 1927-2009


Admirable quote from an elegant, modest designer whom called himself un marginal or an outsider.
"It’s extremely dangerous to give too much importance and status to people who are only doing their job. Working for the enjoyment of the greatest number is very gratifying, much more so than any official honour.”
Paulin's iconic chairs often resembled tulips, tongues and mushrooms - how fantastique!

My latest Interior Architecture project December 2011

A place to waste useful time
Garema Place - Canberra, ACT, Australia
site

tracing + analysis - disconnection, loneliness, grey, sensory deprivation, sunken, encroachment

Precedence
Concept- engage, elevate, interrupt man's circadian rhythm, enhance sensory, nature, voids, ruins, eliminating barriers: out-in-out, romance

'Self Storage' Design


My site model of Garema Place showing drabness, history of site such as a protest site, disconnection of people, transience of space.
Section model of my in-out-in space- blurring the interior and exterior - a public ruins-like space to waste useful time

Hand-drawn plans, section and elevations

interior perspective of passageway with push doors into Garema Place and ceiling openings giving views to the walkway above and letting light in.

Architecture and design


A place to waste useful time

Garema Place - Canberra, ACT, Australia


site


tracing + analysis - disconnection, loneliness, grey, sensory deprivation, sunken, encroachment

Precedence

Concept - engage, elevate, interrupt man's circadian rhythm, enhance sensory, nature, voids, ruins, eliminating barriers: out-in-out, romance


'Self Storage' Design


 

Hand-drawn plans, section and elevations 


 


Gallery Design

I thought I would add my latest Interior Architecture project in which the brief was to design a silversmith/ jewellery workshop, gallery and residence in a pre-exisiting building designed by the wonderful architect Enrico Taglietti (whom I had the privilege to interview in his studio!)
Copyright: my photo of Enrico Taglietti taken in May 2011

I will not include all of the boring intricacies of my design however I thought the photos of the model turned out quite interesting...

Themes of intrigue, mystery and drama are created through the use of light and lack of light and semi-transparent spaces. Once entering the space at the base of the stairs, the visitor is invited to travel down three dark meandering paths- left, right or straight. At the end of each path is an intriguing feature such as a glowing box or a hint of light, enticing the visitor to travel down the path to find out what is at the end, upon which they stumble upon something new and are invited to travel through another space.

The intent was to fuse public and semi-public spaces.






Jewellery intrigues.

Jewellery enhances.

Jewellery can be subtle or it can overpower.


The approach taken to this gallery design was one of a quiet, subtle, intriguing enhancement to the already existing building, without being overpowering.

The existing structure remains apparent. It lives and breathes. It is celebrated andadorned with glowing, wrapping, ornamentation.


"Everyone likes to own a jewel, but almost nobody talks about it. Natural modesty is one cause of this discretion, one may like to enhance oneself, to show off a precious stone or a design, but one waits for people to see it..."

Graham Hughes from "Jewelry' 1966



thewaywewearvintage albert hall 2010


I love the scalloped edge on this flapper dress
This jacket was so deliciously heavy
I wanted these shoes but they were too small, if only...



These slinky transparent chiffon dresses were gorgeous





Brooches heaven

Beautiful greens on this whimsy



There was fur everywhere
Buttons like lollipops


'Swallow' by Claire Potter - Poetry book launch Sunday 24 October 2010, 4pm at Brett Whiteley Studio, Surry Hills, Sydney




The wonderful Bob Adamson opened the launch in the amazing awe-inspiring Brett Whiteley gallery. I am reading his autobiography "Inside Out" and cannot put it down. I wish I had finished it before I heard him at the launch, although it is probably a good thing because I would have stalked him and bombarded him with 10 billion questions, or maybe would have just been shy..

Claire's softly spoken reading conjured many different feelings including love, love-lost, sadness, passion and sensuality and visual imagery including that of daffodils and birds...one would think the phallic and uber erotic Whiteley artwork as a backdrop with a 'look at me' attitude would be a distraction but for me it added to the complexity filled with double meanings and beautiful images that were already forming in my head.


A little bit about Claire Potter

http://www.poetsunion.com/node/884

Claire and Lucas Ihlein from big fag press preparing the broadsides



What others are saying:


In Swallow, Claire Potter offers a dramatic synergy between observation and feeling; literary vignettes, glasshouse musings, mythical characters and desire interweave within the haunting shadow of the swallow’s migratory absence/presence.
This debut collection is composed of four sections, beginning with the persona of a mythical sea-diver clutching seaweed in her hands, it culminates in the wing-beat of a giant kinetic bird. The poems hum with an incantatory quality; they are bites of empty sky brimming with the tension of a lightning storm. Swallow has all the sensuousness of Potter’s earlier work; her poems are beautifully wrought, resounding.

Swallow is a beautiful book. These vital poems lead the reader on from the first page to the last. Claire Potter is a born poet, expressing passion along with ideas in the ‘open field’ of her work. Her forms dance with the intelligence of her choice of imagery. Her lines, laced with flight and song, double back through the poems, then unfold extra meanings on second or third readings. Potter has drawn on Mallarmé’s idea of a book as a ‘living composition’—where each page becomes a stanza in the poem of the whole book…This is all carried off with style…vibrant sensuality moves under the controlled surfaces.
Robert Adamson

Swallow reminds us that poetry’s magic is inseparable from its risks. Potter constantly sets lyric against innovation, formal and aesthetic performance against the net of the page. These poems are highly finessed, sensate, intelligent and their alliances between strangeness and beauty, the way they yield their perceptions so keenly and with such virtuosity can only impress. Claire Potter’s work is both charged and charming.
Judith Beveridge

In Swallow Claire Potter presents us with poems that exquisitely describe not the ten thousand things of the world but her experience of those things, which is an entirely different matter. The result is that we see the world freshly because we see it as it becomes manifest to her. Experience here, though, is not the passive registration of sensual impressions; for Claire Potter it is the risk of opening oneself to danger: the danger of seeing the world differently, the danger of becoming a new person by virtue of what one writes. Here are lyrics that are at once tender and tough, careful and bold.
Kevin Hart

Title: Swallow
Author: Claire Potter

ISBN: 978-0-7340-4159-3
Format: A5 Paper Back, 82 pages
Price: $21.95
Publication Date: October 2010
Contact: Susan Fealy, susan@ramp.net.au

17th Biennale of Sydney - Cockatoo Island

I was lucky enough to work with the Sydney Biennale team for a day on Cockatoo Island, Sydney harbour, a few weeks ago. The last time I was there was for the pretty awesome Nick Cave curated festival 'All Tomorrow's Parties' in Jan 09. Cockatoo Island was the perfect venue.

Cockatoo Island






Beaches












Joel Silbersher












Nick Cave's collection of cats




The theme for the Biennale is (it is on until August) ''The Beauty of Distance: Songs of Survival in a Precarious Age''.
Among the prominent artists to exhibit are the French-American sculptor Louise Bourgeois, Paul McCarthy of the US, John Bock from Germany, Cai Guo-Qiang from New York, Isaac Julien from Britain, and Australian Fiona Hall.

Here are some photos of Berlin-based French artist Kader Attia's 'Kasbah' - an installation representing a shanty town, filling the Turbine Hall with a patchwork of corrugated iron and scrap materials.

It invites the audience to walk on the roofs, making it a somewhat interactive experience and reflects the conditions in which the majority of the population lives. In my opinion, it was a strong and effective statement by the artist.

I 'manned' this installation for a couple of hours and it was interesting to observe the reactions and behaviour of different people (children and adults). Some people just tromped and plodded along as if it was just another floor to walk on and others, mainly children, seemed to tread carefully and cautiously with a sense of contemplation...




The Biennale is worth checking out and you have to love those free ferry rides across the harbour. It is also taking place at the MCA and the Botanic Gardens.

Inspiration


I saw the documentary, VINCENT: THE LIFE AND DEATH OF VINCENT VAN GOGH, at ARC at the National Film and Sound Archive last weekend. It is a part of the NFSA's special Australian cinema screenings. It's directed by the Dutch/Australian filmmaker Paul Cox back in 1987.

I was very excited to see this as I had just finished reading 'The Yellow House' which is about the tumultuous time that Paul Gauguin and van Gogh spent together in the 'studio of the south' (the yellow house), in Arles, Southern France, in 1888.

During this time it is said that van Gogh produced his most prolific work such as the sunflowers, the chair etc..

According to the letters he wrote to his brother Theo, he was in love with the light in Arles and you can see this reflected in his work
This was a truly inspirational documentary, just to see his passion for painting and how this was enough to carry him through life, he didn't need anything else and also his love of nature and the colours - the intense chrome yellows, malachite greens, royal blues. It inspired me to capture the autumnal colours of Canberra. A bit different from southern France but still beautiful in it's own right.

Here is a quick drawing I did in my backyard to try and capture some colours and create a painting from this.

New work


This is oils on board 50 x 40 cm and is available for purchase. You can contact me at caseytemby@hotmail.com if you are interested in this or any other work. Thanks x