| Description: Digital print series on canvas and paper |
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These wall works are large scale high resolution digital prints on canvas and paper of found objects.
They are a limited edition series of digital prints on canvas and 310 gsm paper.
Each image being an environmental art digital print, of an installation assemblage of various collected and sorted, found objects - plastics, gathered from Australian beaches. Photographed by using a number of large format transparencies, which were drum scanned then stiched together, to form a
super high resolution print for each image.
Edition of 9: 1 m x 3 m On canvas (Image size)
Edition of 9: 50 cm x 1.5 m On canvas (Image size)
Edition of 14: 50cm x 150 cm (Image size) On 310 gsm paper |
1m x 3m (canvas)
50cm x 1.5m (canvas)
50cm x 150 cm
(on paper) |
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The other focus of my environmental artistic activity over the past few years, is in the area of large-scale prints and paintings on canvas and paper. This exploration into prints was first initiated in 1999 and developed into my incorporating both screen print, digital print technology and painting in my work. It satisfied my concerns with advances in technology where I could begin to incorporate various images of the found plastics.
In 1999 I developed a series of Cibachrome photographs taken from above - a birds eye view of the found plastics, I then developed these into complex high resolution large scale works on canvas, utilising contemporary computer and screen printing advances. The development of these works immediately followed the construction of my web site, during which I was to also learn the scope of possibilities within digital media. As well as embracing the digital and screen-printing arena, it also heralded my return to painting which was my main chosen medium for many years.
The central concerns of my work are with contemporary environmental art practice. I have for many years been working with found and recycled objects, most hand-picked by myself from somewhere along the Australian Coastline. In fact it literally amazes me to think how many times I have bent over to pick up the many thousands of pieces of plastic debris that made up that aspect of my art, each piece jostled around for who knows how long by sand, sun and ocean, their form faded and rounded by the elements.
The unabated dumping of thousands of tonnes of plastics has been expressed in my assemblages, installations, totems, digital prints and public artworks. And yet, despite my outrage at this environmental vandalism, I returned to the beach daily to find more pieces for my artist's palette. In an uncanny way, these plastics, as I sorted them and arranged them in my studio took on an unspeakable, indefinable and quite a magical beauty, which always fascinated me. |