I have a new exhibition on show at the Toowong Library. The Art of the Book is a collection of my paintings on books and altered books. The works share an emphasis on narrative and as books, they come with an inherent connection to storytelling. Thematically, they are a microcosm of an actual library, because their subject matter varies wildly from politics to landscape, history and Dr Who.
Here are some images from the show. Please come along and see the works while they are at Toowong. The show runs until the end of August 2015.
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Carousel.
Acrylic paint on book. $200
Images
of circus and fairground recur in Nicole's work, the places where our
imaginations run wild and where our dreams live.
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The
Magical Cloud Crown.
Collage, acrylic paint and metallic leaf on book. $200
This
evocative occult image, with it's intimations of magic spells, comes
from a collection of occultism found in a remainders bookshop called
“Book Off”, in Tokyo.
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Weeping
Angel. Polymer
clay, collage and mixed media on book. $200
We
are as culturally bound together in contemporary society by shared
televisual fictions as we once were by literature. Weeping Angel is
an expression of one of our most surprisingly resilient stories.
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Weird
Fish. Shellac,
acrylics and oil paints on book. $200
The
idea that water creatures might worship the moon came from Maleny
painter Peter Hudson. These water creatures evolved from pictures in
a mediaeval manuscript.
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Twa
Corbies. Acrylic
paint and charcoal on book. $200
The
ancient Scottish ballad, Twa Corbies, tells of two crows in a field,
surveying the abandoned body of a knight in a ditch, and deciding
which part to choose for dinner (his bonny blue e'en, or eyes) and
which part to line their nest with (his gowden hair).
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The
Dragonflies.
Acrylic paint on book. $200
Some
artworks are a direct response to the book at hand, and the book's
original title sparked an exploration of winged cut-outs and the use
of book pages for paper art.
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The
Whitlams. Collage
and acrylic paint on book. $200
The
imagery of orthodox saints has been appropriated to depict two giants
of Australian social and political history.
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