sculpture in the vineyards 2012 catalogue

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Sculpture in the Vineyards (SINV) offers a chance to explore beyond the scenic Great North Road and delve into hidden corners of this picturesque valley. The Wollombi region is rich in history, ranging from Aboriginal rock engravings to the convict built Great North Road and historic buildings of the Wollombi village.Over 300 artists have exhibited with us over the years including some highly distinguished practitioners as well as experimental and emerging artists. We encourage and celebrate diversity in practice while maintaining an ethical and environmentally sustainable exhibition and event giving artists the opportunity to share their work with the general public, and giving art and wine lovers the chance to experience something truly unique.

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Page 1: Sculpture in the Vineyards 2012 Catalogue

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2012

Page 2: Sculpture in the Vineyards 2012 Catalogue

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CONTENTS

3 Director’s Note

4 SINV Ambassadors

6 SINV Awards

9 What is Site Specific Art?

10 Exhibiting artists - alphabetical

39 Film & Photography

40 Host Venues

Photo credit: Michael Lynch /Artwork: Steve Croquett - Wollombi Wines, 2012 Cover Photo credit: John Harrison /Artwork: Akira Kamada- Undercliff Winery, 2012

Page 3: Sculpture in the Vineyards 2012 Catalogue

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Director’s Note Welcome to Sculpture in the Vineyards 2012.

Celebrating our tenth year this year is an exciting milestone. With over 60 finalists & such a huge variety of work, it is our biggest exhibition yet. Our vision to create a special event, which is engaging & informative for visitors, & a fabulous opportunity for artists at all stages of their careers, is what gives SINV such a unique place in the cultural calendar. The five wineries that support & sponsor the exhibition & awards are exceptionally generous with their time, finances & sometimes patience to make this exhibition possible. Their commitment to SINV is an exceptional example of community spirit... From slashing & mowing to baking & making us all feel welcome, dealing with hundreds of emails & phone calls & countless meetings while making beautiful wines, these art loving folk are truly wonderful. Over 130 artworks were considered for the event & we are now the only organization in Australia to offer a site-specific award. I do hope you enjoy the wonderful works, the pristine environment & the generous hospitality of this very special valley & thank you for visiting Sculpture in the Vine-yards.

Tara MorelosDirector

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Provenance wood, metal, metallic gilt, discarded plastic, 200 x 300 x 25cm - $8000

Jane Gillings... Another artist once posed this question to me, “Aren’t all our works just trying to say the same thing? Differently?” I realised that at least for myself, this was true. My work is always about over-consumption, waste, and being sur-rounded by seemingly endless stuff. I’m drawn to it, but am overwhelmed by it and its possibilities.

In response to this mass consumerism, I primarily use discarded waste for making my artwork. This could be anything, but is mostly plastic waste. I like plastic for its colour, diversity, durability & abundance. I also like the inherent politics of plastic. Our reliance & addiction to plastic as well as its effect on our natural environment makes it a mate-rial heavy with metaphor. The idea for this work began with an idle flip through the real estate pages of the Wentworth Courier.

jane.gillings.com.au

Courtesy of NG Art Gallery, Sydney

2012 SINV AmbassadorsSculpture in the Vineyards 2012 saw the launch of the inaugural ambassadors program. The program was designed to acknowledge the work of sculptors who have made a significant contribution to the industry through their innovation and leadership. These prominent sculptors have been present in Wollombi since July, acting as beacons of the Sculpture in the Vineyards festival and a year long reminder of the importance of sculpture to Wollombi. Sculpture in the vineyards would like to take this opportunity to credit and celebrate the works and achievements of its four ambassadors: Col Henry, Jane Gillings and Gary Deirmendjian.

Featured in the main street of Wollombi, Col Henry is a prominent figure in the Central Coast Sculpture community who is now the driving force behind Sculpture on the Green. He has been a long term supporter and exhibiting artist in Sculpture in the Vineyards and is a technical master of a myriad of materials. Meanwhie at Stonehurst Cedar Creek we find the imaginative photo opportunity of Jane Gillings. Through quirky assemblages of found objects she utilises detritus materials to create colourful creatures of reality, the imagination and beyond. As a pioneer of reinterpreted materials she continues to remind us of our the potential of the every-day object and even the easily discardable. Similarly Geoff Harvey, featured at Undercliff Winery, is the master of Australian iconography using our k9 companions in a way which is unmistakably Geoff Harvey. His creatures, both laser cut and assembled are playfully charged with personality through unexpected collaborations and juxtapositions of object as well as a well refined linear quality. Wollombi Wines features a well respected SINV artist. Lastly Gary Deirmendjians piece, proudly exhibited at Stonehurst Cedar Creek, is a testament to the artists witt and sophistication. Utilising scale and responding to his surrounds while fluidly moving across materials, Deirmendjians international acclaim clearly reflects the strength of his artistic practice. Todd Fuller 2012

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Totem, stainless steel, 600 x 120 x 120cm - $15000

Col Henry’s new work is part of a new series, exploring line, form & sensuous movement, using minimal positive space to create enigmatic imagery that conjures thought from deep within the viewers subconscious.

colhenry.com

Pierre the French Bulldog, steel - 108 x 73cm - $3300 Buster, steel 96 x 142cm - $3300 Rover, steel 92 x 142cm - $3300

Geoff Harvey is best known for his whimsical depictions of dogs Harvey has exhibited widely & he is well represented in many State & regional Galleries including the National Gallery of Australia as well as important corporate & private collections throughout the world.

Some artists take themselves far too seriously & in so doing often miss what Picasso referred to as the “ joy & pleasure of making art.” But this has never been the case with Harvey, who insists that for him “a strong work of art should reveal the artists joy of creation in the finished work.”

geoffharvey.com.au

Courtesy of Robin Gibson Gallery, Sydney

Do Not… mixed media, 2m x 2m x 2.4m - NFS

Gary Deirmendjian was selected as am ambas-sador for Sculpture in the Vineyards 2012 for his provocative work which was conceived to invite debate. “As an artist and citizen, as a partner and father, as a human being … I object to your ways, you regulating priests of caution and conformity.”

Superficially speaking the work takes its form & language directly from the actual warning signage developed & used extensively by Sculpture by the Sea. However to the artist it represents not only a site & event specific proposition but more significantly, a personal protest against what is quite simply a “sign of the times”. How is one able to do anything anymore?garo.com.auCourtesy of the Yuri Humeniuk CollectionCourtesy of Artereal Gallery, Sydney

Page 6: Sculpture in the Vineyards 2012 Catalogue

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JUDGES COMMENTSDani Marti

As an Artist judging the exhibition, it was exciting for me to witness the variety of work, materials and concepts at play. Some of the works showed an incredible finesse in their execution, some of the ideas and narratives were very engaging and others fostered s real magic. For example:

≈ Rae Bolotin’s exciting use of material and its potential, I am excited to see what’s coming next.

≈ The playfulness of Ro Murray’s work, and the use of every day objects and materials

≈ The mysterious and ghostly narrative behind Flossie Peitsch’s work

≈ Narja Williams installation of ‘quasi’ tribal figures walking up the hill has a strong presence.

≈ Felicity Yorston and Cassandra Daw’s engaging installations, with a sense of play and fun, and how it extentds its content into the digital domain.

≈ Dianne Gerlach’s experiment is powerful and I am excited by its potential

≈ Stevie Fieldsend’s exquisite finish and sensuality brings many poetic readings to the work

≈ Emma Wise’s subtle and poetic interventions in the environment

≈ Jenny Herbert-Smith’s excercises of drawing red in space

≈ James McCallum’s brutal strength and presence and how the steel and wood work together.

Dani is a multidisciplinary artist working in a variety of media. He has an international reputation, and is the subject of numerous publications and recipient of many awards and residencies. He has exhibited widely and is collected by many national and international institutions. Dani is a great ambassador for the region’s local talent as a resident of Cessnock.

Represented in Sydney by BREENSPACE.

2012 SINV Awards2012 is a landmark year, not only our 10th anniversary, but it also the launch of Australia’s only site-specific award.

Artists at all stages of their careers were invited to submit large scale works (over 1m in any direction) which are suitable for long term outdoor survival or designed to be ephemeral and site specific.

Donated by our generous hosts, these awards are designed to promote excellence and innovation, experimentation and discussion while celebrating the unique local environment.

• Undercliff Award for Site-Specific Art $2500

• Noyce Brothers Award Innovation in methods and /or materials $2500

• Wollombi Wines Artist Residency Award $1500 value Selected by Allyson Hoft, Vigneron

• Stonehurst Cedar Creek People’s Choice Award $1,000 value

• Kid’s Choice $250 value

• Cessnock Regional Art Gallery Exhibition Award Group exhibition at Cessnock Regional Art Gallery 2013 Artists selected by John Barnes, Director CRAG

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Sarah Johnson

I enjoyed the great range of material presented in this year’s exhibition. Many artworks successfully refabricate and re-imagine the materials used; credit should be given to the curatorial team for their imaginative of use of outdoor space - this evidenced the strong relationship built between the artists and the team.

It ‘s very important for artists to push the parameters of what sculpture is, thereby lead-ing the public to rethink the concept of sculpture and public space.

Stevie Fieldsend’s artwork shows complex thinking and a technical process which deserves a high level of merit. The tree trunk and glass fabrication is well balanced and fuses beautifully organic and non-organic forms to achieve a surface that’s both sensual and tactile.

Installations by Emma Wise and Felicity Yorston and Cassandra Daw thoughtfully con-sidered embedding art into parts of our lives that could just as easily have been passed by. However, once the audiences are captured by them, they discovered many levels of intellectual responses. Emma’s subtle excursion is elegant and beautiful while Felicity and Cassandra’s environmental consciousness is infused with a great sense of humour.

Melissa Laird’s work takes viewers on a personal journey through the history of women in Wollombi. Melissa’s artwork demonstrates a diligent level of research and sophisti-cation. It successfully produces a high level hybrid of art and artefact, uncovering the untold and hidden stories.

Sarah is a senior curator of contemporary art at the Newcastle Art Gallery. With over 15 years experience in the museum and gallery sector in NSW, ranging from federal level museums to local government museums and galleries. Sarah has broad networks in the regional arts sector and in the visual arts, design and museum sectors.

You can judge too! Pick up a peoples choice voting card at any of the venues and have your say. Kids can also vote! Vote on our facebook page with a photo of your favourite work and you could also win a super prize!

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Alyson Hoft

The generous sponsor of the Wollombi Wines Residency, Allyson Hoft states “Melissa’s effort to relate to history is touching and Nardja’s work is beautiful and graceful, both artists have shown great potential.”

Jane Hamshere

Undercliff Site Specific Award co-judge Jane Hamshere enjoyed Emma Wise’s aquatic installa-tion at Wollombi Wines for its thought provoking and meditative qualities.

She was also impressed with Penny Philpott’s ce-ramic chain installation at Undercliff. Her reference to the local history of the site and its proximity to the convict brick pits, as well as the subtelty of the work is to be highly commended.

“The quirky ‘road signs’, foot prints and interac-tive QR code component of Felicity Yorston & Cassandra Daw’s Ichonotraces is a standout Site Specific entry giving a history lesson on the extinct megafauna of Australia and in particular a local giant goanna.’

John Barnes

I have chosen six artists as the recipients of the Cessnock Regional Art Gallery exhibition award whose work I believe will support and compliment each other I look forward to working with them in creating a truly memorable exhibition in twelve months time.

The works have to be worthy within themselves and also be able to support and complement the sculptures of the other artists in order to create an exhibition that will be both engaging and perhaps confronting.

The artists I have chosen are Flossie Peitsch for her Arc of the Covenant, Nardja Williams for Custodians, her procession of charred timber figures which quietly echo Stevie Fieldsend’s Solve et Coagula whose slumped glass globules surmount their burnt and blackened poles. In a great example of material transfor-mation Penny Philpott’s Chained gives us piles of heavy duty forged metal chains that reveal themselves to be light and delicate ceramics while there is no deception in the muscular physicality of James McCallum’s Kicking the cat. To complete the group I have selected Jenny Herbert-Smith for Figuratively Speaking and In Search of Common Ground, whose formal, red metal abstract ‘lines in space’ will perfectly compliment the other works.

These are all young and emerging artists whose individual practice is well advanced and who have dem-onstrated the ability to transform abstract conceptual thinking into fully resolved concrete expression. While all the artists are coming from different technical, material, conceptual and aesthetic positions I believe the individual qualities of their work will tie together to form a robust exhibition of strength and subtelty.

Recently appointed Director of Cessnock Regional Art Gallery, Dr John Barnes is dedicated to leading his gallery with a keen eye on representing his region and it’s artists. John is the former director of Newcastle Art Space and in 2011 completed a PHD in Fine Art. John’s history as a farmer provided the inspiration for his PHD works, which focused on the Australian landscape since British colonisation.

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What is Site-Specific Art ?

In its largest sense, the term Site-Specific Art applies to a work made by an artist in the landscape either by radically altering the terrain to produce an “earthwork” or by creating ephemeral or removable tableaux along particular pathways so the terrain is not permanently altered. No matter which approach an artist takes, site-specific art becomes part of its locale restructuring the viewer’s conceptual and perceptual experience through the artist’s intervention.

After hosting Sculpture in the Vineyards over the past 9 years, Jane and Peter Hamshere of Undercliff Wines have developed a keen eye for works which are sensitive to the environ-ment. The couple have donated the $2500 prize money for this year’s award, the only prize of its kind in Australia.≈

2008 SINV Artist: Sue Callanan - Water x Air Site specific installation at Undercliff Winery

Sue has a history of creating site specific installations, using minimal interventions to point to and enlarge the span of the viewer’s gaze. In this instance she uses the wine bottle to suggest an interface between human activity and natural elements. She configures bottles in such a way as to zipper up the lake at Undercliff defining the body of water and the island contained within it. This zipper, or stripe, which merges colours of the bottles with those of the surrounding terrain, is intended to prompt the viewer to move along its path, taking in details of the landscape through which it courses.

Photo credit: John Harrison /Artwork: Sue Callanan - Undercliff Winery, 2008

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Wool Sheds wool, corrugated iron,found objects, dimensions variable NFS

1. Betsi Beem

The advent of European settlers & their livestock has transformed the Australian landscape & inspired vernacular architecture with tin sheds ubiquitous in agricultural Australia. This work draws on how the social & economic context alters & is altered by the environment.

Something Fishycarved limestone, steel base, 130 x 40 x 70cm - $15500

3. Senden Blackwood

We conveniently ignore that our daily lives affect the oceans. Our lifestyle choices, whether we eat seafood or not, impact countless birds, fish & other marine life. The chemical run off from industrial farming practices destroys aquatic habitat & creates large swathes of uninhabitable ocean areas.There is definitely something fishy going on.

sendenblackwood.com

Courtesy of Brenda May Gallery, Sydney

Wool Sheds Prototype wool (felted, knitted, crocheted), corrugated iron, 80 x 80 cm NFS

2. Betsi Beem

Through time the iron oxide from the rusted cor-roguation seeps through, discoloring & damaging the wool. The installation like the Australian land-scape will be transformed through time & exposure to the elements with both the wool & the objects it covers co-evolving to an unknown final state.

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Seed Formstainless steel 316, 120 x 80 x 63 cm - $25 000

4. Rae Bolotin

This work was inspired by tiny seeds I found near my studio on the edge of Wollemi National Park, & photographs taken with microscopes I found in botanical books. The colour is a chemical modifica-tion of the surface of stainless steel. It is done in a vacuum chamber with the use of a variety of gases pumped in at different time intervals. This technol-ogy was first invented by Russian spaceship engi-neers. It is this juxtaposition between art & science, organic & steel, where I tease out the meaning of the static forms bringing them to life.

raebolotin.com

Courtesy of Stella Downer Fine Art, Sydney & Gaffer Gallery Hong Kong

Imaginemetal, 120 x 105 cm - $850

6. Lea Bullock Imagine developed from my love of good music & the arts. I have thoroughly enjoyed working with metal due to its versatility. Having finally found myself in ART, I realise I spent too many years looking & not realising my dream.

Descending the Mountaincorten/high weathering steel, 300 x 230 x 200 cm - $45000

5. Linda Bowden

The creative process is much like a spiritual act of ritual. Like Moses descending from Mt Sinai, the artist returns from the peaks after a consultation with a higher power undertaken in isolation. They return to the masses with the fruit of this process.

Since graduating from the National Art School, Darlinghurst, NSW, Australia, in 1999 Linda has been actively pursuing a career in teaching & making sculpture. She has exhibited in various group shows, solo shows & has been awarded a number of prizes including a UNESCO residential fellowship at the atelier Four-Winds in Provence, France in 2005.

lindabowdensculpture.com

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Incy Wincy ‘THIS’ steel, found objects, 240 x 60 x 450 cm - $1500

7. Craig Burrell

Craig Burrell’s sculptures embody his imagination & highlight his artistic flare. His works are prime ex-amples of putting recycled & discarded steel to good use, not only benefiting the environment, but also the public. This particular sculpture was my wife’s idea. We spent some time throwing ideas around &came up with a free standing 2.5 metre high spider web, based on the theory that a spider’s web is as ‘strong as steel’.

Scarce Flightsteel rod, timber, 90 x 80 x 155 cm - $1800 9. Rhonda Castle

Scarce Flight symbolising the eagles power & inner strength, not that of physical beauty but that of faith & the spirit of tenacity. It is the gift of clear vision.

Mr Proud, Mr Ponder, Mr Percival ‘THIS’ steel, 70 x 85 x 50 cm - set of 3 $800, individualy $250 each

8. Craig Burrell

Thanks to his visually stimulating entries in exhibi-tons: Waste As Art, SINV & Waste Not Want Not, Craig’s works are beginning to speak for them-selves.

Storm Boy - a timeless story bringing together two cultures, a heartwarming Australian classic. Everyone knows the story & has seen the movie at some point in their lives, either as a small child or an adult. As a tribute to my childhood memories &the story which I intend to pass onto my son Tavyon, I bring Mr Percival & his two famous brothers to life in the form of these recycled steel sculptures.

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Fancifulstainless steel sheet & rods, metal anchors & weights, 150 x 160 x 60 cm - $3200

10. Rhonda Castle

Fanciful - unrestrained, made of stainless steel & polished reflective surfaces plays with light yet melds into its surrounds. The form of wings repre-sents freedom of movement with its central body looking towards the sky.

Shesteel, 143 x 86 x 134 cm - $2500

12. Janine Clark

She is a comment on the female role in the modern world. An abstract figurative sculpture that is reflec-tive of the modern-day woman who attempts to have it all. Purposely striding forward on tiptoes – She is reminiscent of the elegance of the high-heeled trot-ting corporate type, but jodhpur-like leg coverings harken to her nature-nurturing desires.

Who Are We? ( In Between-ness) ceramics, glazes 115 x 60 x 45 cm - $1800

11. Kazuko Chalker

My heritage & life comes from a cultural durability- in between-ness in my work & I constantly pose the question: “Who are we?”. Often what we are is not what we appear. The clothing we wear represents the way we live & our likes & dislikes, but the real self is veiled.

Japanese Haiku text represents the base of my heritage & describes the different qualities of the outer & inner self. It is close to the skin & expresses my deep Japanese roots, yet my assimilation into Australian culture.

kazukoandceramics.blogspot.com

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Minutiaresin, scale models, nylon rope, 25 x 24 x 10 cm each plus rope $550 each or $1350 for three

13. Belinda Clarke “Minutia explores what lies within, inside a drop of water or inside a pool, it reflects a personal journey of how we see. As I am ageing I find for the first time my eyesight is altering & this caused me to examine the world more closely via new glasses, enabling me to see details again. I began to think of our concept of scale & what dramas we don’t see within our shrinking world.”

Sushi Fish cast white cement (5 pieces), 19 x 82.5 x 37.5cm - $200 each

15. Will Coles I made a larger version three metres long & installed it hanging from a crane on Cockatoo Island in the middle of Sydney harbour.

As I stood on the ferry ramp I realised that in amongst all the driftwood & rubbish there were lots of little plastic soy-sauce fish bottles washing up around my feet. So many of these are being thrown away into the harbour & sea we pretend is so pre-cious to us forming little shoals of artificial fish that beach & unbeach themselves with the tides.

willcoles.com

Courtesy of Brenda May Gallery, Sydney

An Unsustainable way of Lifecold cast iron, 160 x 68 x 63cm - $2500

14. Will Coles

Stating the painfully obvious yet saying something that doesn’t seem to percolate down. Society is so thoroughly brainwashed & addicted to consumerism that it can’t see that it’s destroying the environment & therefore itself.

Our current way of life requires infinite resources yet ours are very finite.

willcoles.com

Courtesy of Brenda May Gallery, Sydney

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Victimcold cast iron, 51 x 134 x 131cm - $1500

16. Will Coles

We’re used to seeing the casual display of limb-less, often decapitated mannequins, essentially sexualised clothes-horses. These are our physical realisations of a sexual ideal, thin like we want to be, shaped how we wish we were, wearing what we can’t afford - idols of our lifestyle. That serial killers & fetishised sexual violence are a by-product of modern life has been explored in the etchings of George Grosz & the dolls of Hans Bellmer. This sculpture is merely the modern continuation of a theme, taking in the violence of 20th century art as well as acknowledging the classical art ‘porn’ of several centuries of rich male art patronage.

willcoles.comCourtesy of Brenda May Gallery, Sydney

Unearthed round steel bar, 130 x 80 x 80 cm - $3300 each

18. Steve Croquett

Emerging from their ancient past to reveal their happy disposition, these works are inspired by the mysterious giant carved monoliths of the Moai on Easter Island.

The Edgetimber, steel & bronze 147 x 53 x 89 cm - $1100

17. Leasha Craig

I believe one of the roles of contemporary art-ists is to engage with the audience & open up a visual communication in an effort to instigate social change, development & understanding.

Within my work I am depicting my perception of the feelings that depression & anxiety induce, which I share with the audience to encourage sympathy. The Edge is my interpretation of the fragility of life.

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In Between fabric, rope, sticks, tent pegs, paint, & wire 200 x 300 x 550 cm - NFS

19. Suzanne Davey

A site specific response to the landscape of the Hunter Valley & the delicate balance between its natural surroundings & the activities of cultivation & the wine industry.

In Between explores the tensions between contain-ment & the wild, settlement & nature, agriculture & the bush. Referencing man made structures, created from natural materials, it moves in response to its environment.

suzannedavey.com.au

Shadow Dancing steel, recycled polystyrene, newspaper, paint, glue 300 x 150 x 300 cm - $2500

20. Suzanne Davey

Shadow Dancing examines the tensions between the economic importance of the coal industry to the Hunter region & nostalgia for its natural beauty. A large black glistening form hovers ominously, casting a shadow on the earth below. The form references the sedimentary nature of the geology in the Hunter & its coal. The work was developed in response to ‘solastalgia’, which is widely used to describe the effects of the hunter valley’s coal industry infrastructure on the human psyche when returning to the region. ‘Solastalgia’ describes the feeling of homesickness one gets when one is still home but the environment is changing.

suzannedavey.com.au

Eugene cement, phonebooks, stocking, cotton, 170 x 70 x 30 cm - $16000

Mystro expanding foam, styrofoam, stockings, cement, wood, steel, 180 x 90 x 40 cm - $18000

21. Stefano Di Lorenzo No comment.

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It’s all about the light IIIglass, 137 x 35 x 35 cm - $3500

23. Julie Donnelly My current work involves the use of glass objects, vases, bowls, decanters, etc. I’m exploring the themes of light in all its many interpretations & meta-phors. These “candlesticks” are a beacon of light & represent new beginnings. They have taken on a completely new identity, going from the mundane to the extraordinary.

Urban Nature timber, sticks, stones, twine, wire, lacquer, 250 x 25 x 550 cm POA

22. DoGsWooD

In this piece, frames become windows, windows create a wall, the wall becomes a representation of a built urban landscape. Within these windows indi-vidual sculpture pieces reside, covered with twines, sticks & stones represent the individual & collec-tive groupings that dwell within. Form, structure & external expression are explored.

Head in the Clouds: Stormy Weathersteel rod, wire & plinth, ceramics, 120x 150x 80cm - $3200

24. Harrie Fasher

Head in the Clouds is a narrative about losing your way. It describes the contemporary human condition of people seeking direction by juxtaposing the manipulation of the weighted, static qualities of ceramics with the tensile qualities of steel & the energy created through using drawn line to create physical form. This tension is mirrored in the sculp-ture’s narrative.

harriefasher.com.au

Harrie would like to acknowledge the sponsorship of Buttsworth Industrial Supplies, Sth Windsor.

Courtesy of Maunsell Wickes Gallery, Sydney

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Solve et Coagula series glass, wood, dimensions variable - $1900 - $9000 each depend-ing on size (8 pieces)

27. Stevie Fieldsend

In working with materials that embody the process of transmutation, such as molten glass & charred wood, a type of performance takes place close to the furnace, & inside my body. A ritual that leaves more than a trace, it leaves a place of where there is a possibility of transformation. Solve et Coagula, slumps thick biomorphic molten glass over & inside a series of dark, truncated vertical forms. The hot glass itself assumes & picks up an imprint memory of the wood grain, is separated,& then when cooled is laid back down over the standing forms.

steviefieldsend.com.au

Courtesy of Artereal Gallery, Sydney.

A Sculptor’s Portrait: Horseman.salvaged steel, enamel paint, 230x 78x 68cm - $ 9500

26. Harrie Fasher

This line drawn steel figure wearing a horse’s head & neck stands quietly waiting with a second mask. It invities dialogue, raising the possibility of a larger unseen tale. The work has a distinct energy with attention to both anatomical accuracy & whimsical narrative. Harrie is an emerging artist, a National Art School graduate who won numerous prizes during her studies & has recently returned form a residency in Iceland.

harriefasher.com.au

Harrie would like to acknowledge the sponsorship of Buttsworth Industrial Supplies, Sth Windsor.

Courtesy of Maunsell Wickes Gallery, Sydney

Defined Space commercial graded acrylic sheets, 110 x 150 x 150 cm - $6800 25. Neil Douglas Laredo

Defined Space is a two dimensional line drawing taken from the drawing board & given form that defies gravity as the line is suspended in mid-air. It maybe the analytical Right or the abstract Left, but as you move around the sculpture the line defining edges move & create form within the changing plains. Solid surface areas appear to become open & transparent, while empty spaces appear to be solid, an optical illusion maybe, but challenging what is real & what is not. Which space do we live in?

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Obsession 316 polished stainless steel, 230 x 150 x 200 cm - $24000

28. John Fitzmaurice

High heels, everyone loves them, some more than others. A twisted look of the female ‘slavery to fashion’ attitude & the high heel stiletto.

johnfitzmaurice.com.au

You Wish 304 stainless steel, 100 x 180 x 24 cm - $19000

29. John Fitzmaurice

You Wish is a monocoque sculpture inspired by the natural shape & sensual lines of a wishbone.

Through the use of polished stainless steel, & the over scaling of the piece it is transformed into a modern abstract interpretation of an organic form.

johnfitzmaurice.com.au

The sky is falling welded steel rod & sheet metal, 120 x 120 x 20 cm - $1000 each

30. Margo Gabsi & Gianni Galluzzi

Margo Gabsi: I like the quirkiness of using a familiar phrase from children’s nursery tales & adapting that to a visual & spatial work. Imagination & image work together to create a story. Gianni Galluzzi: When I use my hands to create or repair objects it is most typically for a functional purpose, whether tools for the garden, chopping firewood or repairing cars. Putting these skills to work in an artistic context is refreshing & creates a space separate where my mind can be freed from everyday concerns to focus on the abstract & beautiful.

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Lets face the music & dance recycled plastic wine glasses, wire, acrylic rope & mesh, speakers, sound, mp3 player, 80 x 120 x 200 cm - $2000

32. Pamela Lee BrennerJohannes Muljana - Frolic & Gambol

Strung like a glittering contemporary necklace or a spider’s web glistening with dew, these disposable vessels clink & jangle in the wind. Cloud-like structures of repurposed plastic wine glasses gather in the meeting place where historically & currently people join in celebration & relaxation.

They dance the night away, visible either still or in motion by the light of decorative phosphor. The soft sounds of glasses clinking may be heard as they nestle each other. Listen closely as they ring like bells sharing stories of festivities past, present & future.

Chairs of Jakarta recycled chairs, steel poles, wood, electroluminescent wire 190 x 50 x 50 cm - $600 each

33. Pamela Lee BrennerJohannes Muljana - Frolic & Gambol

Chairs of Jakarta seeks to look at the contrast between the raw & the manufactured, the wild & the civilised. The chair is a recognised symbol of civilised society with embedded connotations such as; position in society & hierarchical importance.

Originally inspired by the scandal of Indonesian government officials who spent millions in public money on imported chairs, when their own country has many fine artisans & forests of beautiful timber.

Frolic & Gambol would like to acknowledge the sponsorship of Electroluminescent Wires.

Beautopia painted galvanised steel, 105 x 70 x 225 cm $39000 pair or $22000 each

31. Jenny Green

Today we are bombarded with the quest for beauty – perfect body, agelessness & intensity of experi-ence. Beautopia subverts this idea of manufactured beauty. I collect discarded steel & bring it back to life. That ‘junk’ can be transformed into objects of beauty is for me, a compelling passion.

jennygreen.net

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Is that all there is? recycled plastic, metal, wood, wire, dimensions variable - $750

34. Dianne Gerlach There are microscopic organisms inextricably involved in the growing of grapes & the making of wine. Some are for the good, such as botrytis, but some are not so good, such as downy mildew.

This work responds to the mostly unseen appear-ance at a microscopic level of these organisms, which can be at once strangely beautiful, chaotic & threatening. The materials used are deliberately ephemeral & recycled reflecting my desire to create something of value however transient, from what is perceived as junk.

Walking in your Footsteps recycled steel, plastic bags, tyre, concrete, epoxy - $3000

35. Jesse Graham

Everything in the work is recycled (the steel that makes up the frame & rest of the work is all found/recycled.) except the epoxy resin that holds the plastic bags together.

The closer we come to depleting earths oil resources (represented by plastic bags), the closer the tipping point comes. Have we reached the environmental pinnacle that could see us falling into extinction?

Evolution steel, 220 x 50 x 500 cm - $7500 (three pieces)

36. Jesse Graham

This series of dinosaurs shows the construction method of the work itself in stages as well as 3 different forms of welding from brazing to arc weld-ing & then finishing with the final completed work that used the more modern mig welding approach.

Jesse; frequently seen wearing his undies on the outside of his pants & as a result often mistaken for a superhero. However currently sculpts full time in the bush at Eden NSW surrounded by the constant song of bellbirds!

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Donut Selection ceramic - 4 x large at $450 each, 7 x medium at $300 each 14 x small at $80 each & 14 x tiny at $40 each

38. Madeleine Hayes

“I am an artist who draws upon many influences; my own life, gentle humour & the transient & ephemeral nature of all things. My hope is to continue to make work with an open mind & heart.”

Madeleine regularly conducts creative art work-shops in the Sydney & Hawkesbury regions, including working successfully with at-risk youth.

madeleinehayes.blogspot.com

Courtesy King Street Gallery on William

Dream Catcher Trilogy stainless steel, copper, 240 x 240 x 240cm - $15000

39. Col Henry

By working with stainless steel in a fluid & intuitive way, Col has created this suite of kinetic wind driven works. Drawing on his metallurgical knowledge, skills & imagination, he plays by literally sketching in three dimensions. These whimsical & ambiguous works encourage audiences to draw meaning from their own experiences. The concept of taking up space, without taking up space, has fascinated the him for many years. Negative space is as important as the positive & these drawings exist as a testi-mony to the technique. Col believes drawing to be the highest art-form an artist can pursue & drawing in three dimension raises the bar.

colhenry.com

Kelly’s Wardrobe steel stone, soral, wood, plastic, tin copper, shell 140 x 50 x 700 cm - $12000 or $1000 each

37. Jesse Graham

You can never have enough variety.

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Figuratively Speaking painted steel, 180 x 108 x 87cm - $2500In Search of Common Ground painted steel, 176 x 136 x 79cm - $2600

40. Jenny Herbert-Smith

My work is intrinsically about shapes in space, defin-ing & activating space through forms made of steel. Although my work is non representational, l am of-ten surprised at the unintentional figurative elements within the work. Figuratively Speaking evolved as a series of shapes which, at its life-size form, refers to the abstract figure without any formal represen-tation. My aim is ultimately to engage the viewer without any narrative but purely on the visual form maintaining a sense of playful spontaneity which is in contrast to the industrial material of its form.I am constantly drawn to creating works which fof its form.

Rhythms of the Wind wire, timber, marble, found materials, 110 x 70 x 70cm - $7500

41. Scott Ingram

Accompaniment: spring rhythm section, backbeats flow, swing grass harp pirouette, arabesque winds blow, rhythm section, backbeat! Piano harmonies shuffle, colour dissolving into light! Ensemble! Patterns move & change forever tickled with delight.

Scott is known for both his organic & figurative forms as well as for creating interactive & con-nected sculptures where craft & ideas matter. As an independent artist continuing to explore different mediums & concepts, he creates a relationship with his audience that has an equal, intuitive & endearing capability.

Seven Gods of Good Fortune – From the Bottom of Memory wood, 150 x 100 x 350cm - NFS

42. Akira Kamada

Through the traditional shichi fukujin gods, I pray for the people who suffered from the disasters of Japan, remembering the stars in the Northern Hemisphere that I looked at as a child.

akirakamada.com

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Sky, Land and..., bamboo, vine, 150 x 300 x 200 - NFS commissions available

43. Akira Kamada Akira Kamada has studied widely in photography, painting, ceramics & sculpture in Tokyo & Sydney. In 2006 he first entered Sculpture by the Sea, receiving the Clitheroe Foundation Emerging Artists Mentor Program in 2008. He has since exhibited regularly in Sculpture by the Sea, UWS Sculpture Award, Woollahra Small Sculpture Prize & Sculpture in the Vineyards.

akirakamada.com

Hira-Hiracane, cloth, resin, rope, dimensions variable - NFS

44. Akira Kamada Take a breath, take your time & turn with the wind...

Hira Hira is a Japanese onomatopoeia for the way something turns with & flutters in the wind. In society it can be a metaphor for being free. In the end though, the wind will outlast everyone. This is a statement about the temporal or ephemeral nature of things.

akirakamada.com

The Timeless Clocktower timber, stainless steel, 100 x 100 x 100 cm - $1500 45. Jiri Kripac

On arrival to Australia in 1969 I spoke my first English sentence which I learnt on my journey over. I announced to the immigration officer, “Time & Tide Waits for no Man!” I am still following this quote!

As a professional jazz musician & visual artist, Jiri has a passion for classic jazz & sculpture created with found objects; in particular pianos. Having played Jazz from the early 60’s & developing his drawing skills since the 70’s, Jiri has been fasci-nated since the 90’s by the metamorphosis of one beautiful object – the piano & its visual sounds.

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Symbiosisresin, copper, 200 x 300 cm - $4800

46. Emilia Krumm

Symbiosis: The association of two living organisms living attached to each other or one within the other to their mutual advantage.

In nature we find plants & animals living on or off each other amicably without doing harm to each other. In this trio of sculptures, there is a natural flow of movement from one to the other, nurturing one shape & yet allowing it to take from the other.

emiliarisikrumm.blogspot.com.au

Breath timber, wrought iron, sandstone, perspex 400 x 200 x 200 cm $2000

47. Melissa Laird

Breath is a celebration of mortality, framed on the historical significance of the local cemetery - Wollombi community ís a quiet landscape of death. A memorial to the women of the district, the installation evokes Victorian stylistic ideals, church windows & funerary architecture; a contemporary vanitas designed for a unique rural township.

melissa-laird.com

Music Box - Anti Music Box mechanical music box, electronics, electric motor, photovoltaics plywood, 240 x 90 x 60 cm - $8250

48. Michael Lewarne This work draws inspiration from physics & is the continuation of a body of site-specific projects. Further, it is an examination of the boundary condition - a black hole; the Event Horizon. Music Box – Anti-Music Box generates a soundscape in response to the site as aural/spatial experience & receiver of sunlight & sound.

Five solar armatures are dispersed across a site. As the audience move through the field they are surprised by an illusive musical refrain, a brief tune which escapes easy identification.& leaves the briefest of impressions.

Courtesy - Desert Equinox

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Kicking the Cat steel & wood, 72 x 182 x 61cm - $2500

50. James McCallum

Born in Sydney 1989, James McCallum finished a fine Arts Honours degree in 2011 at the National Art School in sculpture. During the same year he was awarded the Clitheroe foundation mentorship program for Sculpture by the Sea, Bondi.

He has been inspired by jazz with such artists as Thelonious Monk & Jimmy Smith influencing him to improvise in unique ways. He has shown work in a number of group shows at the Defiance Sculpture Park, Mills Gallery & the Armory Gallery.

Fossil (Fuel) concrete, steel, scrap metal, 20 x 200 x 160 cm - $9000

51. David McGuinness

When the last drop of oil on earth is consumed, hydrocarbon-fuelled vehicles everywhere will rest forever where they lie, rusting monuments to a bygone age. Population explosions based on a superabundance of resource must collapse when that resource is depleted. Mass extinctions follow, along with rapid changes in conditions that only the most adaptable species survive. Ironically, such events in geological history have created the oil deposits that have allowed the human race to usher forward its own mass extinction. Cars are dinosaurs. Hydrocarbon based civilisation is a dinosaur. & if, as seems likely, we are unable to change our ways, humans will become dinosaurs.

Skinny Dipper forged steel, 315 x 12 x 205cm - $20000

49. William Maquire

A tribute to the individual.

willblacksmith.com.au

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Moon Flower found cast iron, corks, steel, water, 60 x 240 cm dia circle - $7000

53. Ro Murray Moon Flower is inspired by the circular moon gates in Chinese gardens. This flower is horizontal & has florets at random spaces, either tangential or radial. These pods reflect the Moon which revolves around the Earth & whose pull of gravity affects water from ocean tides to menstrual cycles.

The Moon marks the months of our yearly calendar, & was a guide for those that lived with the land: for the best time to fish, to plants seeds or to harvest.

romurray.com.au

Chrysalid irrigation piping, variable installation - $3000 (30 pieces)

52. Ro Murray

This work represents pupae of butterflies ready to emerge with favourable climate conditions. They are optimistic symbols for transformation & imagined transient beauty for what they will emerge into in a world without pesticides & toxins.

Chrysalid is a made up word & notably The Chrysa-lids being the title of a science fiction novel by John Wyndham in 1955 which is also called ‘Re Birth’.

romurray.com.au

Harvest garden piping, steel, variable height $1000 each (3 pieces)

54. Ro Murray

These bundles represent sheaths of wheat, tradi-tionally symbols of plenty, prosperity & blessing. Ironically the international seed & agrochemical company Monsanto Corporation has patented genetically modified sterile seeds (potentially for all cultivated crops) to aggressively consolidate the world seed market. Genetically engineered plants are dubbed “terminator technology.” These new seeds have diverse implications, including the altering of the earth’s biodiversity & have possible impacts on human health & native flora. Farmers will no longer be able to save seeds from year to year, or cross breed to adapt crops for local condi-tions. Crop uniformity increases vulnerability to pests & disease & heightens potential mass famine.

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Ark of the Covenant recycled fence palings, marine rope 100 x 300 x 600 cm - $6000

56. Flossie Peitsch

Finding Noah’s Ark in Australia would be unlikely, still this miniature hut suggests the washed up rem-nants of a ship. Made of recycled fence palings & coffin-sized with ‘hanging noose’ rope travel handles it represents the weighty problem of over-popula-tion, material possessions & environmental survival. Like our hoarded belongings, it’s impossible for a person to carry. The wooden bundles of the ‘ship shape’ make a small shelters if constructed. Many early immigrants to this area imported their homes as ‘kits’ from overseas. What have we done to keep God’s covenant after emerging from the ark? God promised the world would not be destroyed again. Have we selflessly served & cared for the world we live in? Maybe it’s time ONCE AGAIN to look for higher ground.

flossiepeitsch.com

Left Behind ceramic, dimensions & price variable

57. Penny Philpott

As we wander the vines spirits speak to us of the past & tell us their stories, stories of industry & of strength. They speak to us through the chains that link us to their lives, links that remain & connect us.

As a ceramic sculptor my work affords me the op-portunity to manipulate the tactile qualities of clay & be inspired by nature to create a presence in the landscape.

Polymorphs plastics, steel, 180 x 120 x 120 cm - $10000 each (3 pieces)

55. Mike Patton

This work follows a developmental line that began for me 3 years ago & presents a variety of imagined plant/ animal forms derived from existing natural form, yet are evolved through an imagined narrative of a potential future beyond the time of man. In this future the planetary forces have transformed the industrialized waste materials of our time into new creative life forms.

The materials in these works are partially recog-nisable as the original industrial products, yet are transformed in purpose & invoke new associations & relationships.

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This Olympic Marking Configuraion bio degradeable safe lawn paint, size variable

59. Mandy Pyrse-Jones & Simon Savage This is a site specific marking that merges the familiar with the unfamiliar to create a juxtaposition of two & three dimensional form. What is taken to have urban or sport connotations, for instance the running tracks or swimming pool lines of the London Olympics has been removed & manipulated into a remote setting.This ‘Olympic’ line work subdivides & orders time old grape vines. Mandy Pryse-Jones & Simon Savage have been working together for the past five years as lecturers & creators within the design industry. This collaboration was born out of a mutual fascination of the interplay of two & three dimensional structures & design elements, in this case within a rural setting.

O Deerpaper maché - egg cartons, joint compound, pva glue, clove oil, sticks, micaceous paint, glass, wood, 100 x 15 - 30 cm $400 - $600 each

58. Hildreth Potts

I always wanted to learn how to weld metal & after raising 3 children I went to the National Art School to study sculpture for 4 years.

Afterwards, however, finding myself without a welding bay, I turned to the wonderful, non-toxic & amazingly strong medium of paper mache. Because there is a dialogue between all the materials one uses, the paper often looks like metal.

hildrethpottsart.blogspot.com

Ghost Netbamboo, rope, nylon, cork, plastic, 900 x 250 x 350 cm - $1750

60. Phillip Relf

A Cargo Cult inspired structure rises from the ground. An abandoned section of fishing net hangs from a massive bamboo pole adorned with found items, Sacred Objects, fashioned into sea creatures. Intended to bring back the fish & birds, now so few in number, the builders have unwittingly chosen the very items that are responsible for destroying the natural world around them. Ghost Net explores modern society’s impact on the natural world. Ghost Nets; are sections of fishing nets cut loose or lost at sea. Near invisible, they can drift for years through the world’s oceans, entangling & killing fish, marine animals & sea birds (ghostnets.com.au). Marine Plastics or marine debris is a major environmental issue. Each year millions of tons of plastic find its way into the oceans. Digested by large marine animals & birds or entering the food chain as micro-scopic particles, plastic threatens the entire marine ecosystem. (plasticfreeocean.org)

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Framed powder coated aluminium, 195 x 370 x 220 cm - $9500 62. Sue Roberts By creating a series of square & triangular frames, Roberts seeks to alter the perception of the vista each frame exposes. The frames provide a mental shortcut or schema to invite the viewer to interpret the message contained within them & to focus the eye on the altered visual image the frames expose. We do not look at “nature” & apply a frame to it. Rather we only do so when we see nature in the form of a picture presented to us.

suerobertssculpture.com

Mega Fauna steel, foam, concrete, render, 100 x 80 x 120 cm - $3500 each

63. Dóra Á. Rögnvaldsdóttir

Evolution is a process that we look at as tracks of development through time. In this period of human domination we are manipulating this path in order to expand productivity for short term gains. It has been theorised that dinosaurs evolved into birds. Are we playing the architects of time, further designing the dinosaurs to the ultimate size & shape?

Rainbow Noose rope, paint, 200 x 50 x 10 cm - $1200

61. Alun Rhys Jones

According to a recent report, suicide is now the ”leading cause of death by injury in Australia”. For Australian men suicide is now the greatest cause of death. The Australian Bureau of Statistics reports that the greatest increase of death from suicide was men aged 15 to 24 years.

In rural areas male youth suicide is double that of metropolitan figures, & same-sex attracted youth are six times more likely to attempt suicide than the population as a whole. This sculpture is designed to reflect upon these facts & enable communication, change & acceptance.

alunrhysjones.com

Courtesy of Iain Dawson Projects

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Worlds Apart biodegradable grass paint, 3.5 x 3.5 m - $700 installed

65. Anthony Sawrey

These works are made using organic grass paints similar to those used for creating logos at football matches to be broadcast on television. They do not harm wooded vegetation or grass & leave no residual toxins in the soil. Once dry, they will not stain clothing or sluice into waterways.

The work will eventually grow out & grass clippings can be composted as normal. The design can be reasonably expected to last for four to six weeks even with mowing & relies on this temporary & ephemeral quality for its impact.

sawrey.com.au

Hopscotch biodegradable grass paint, 10 m x 10 m - $2000 installed

64. Anthony Sawrey

Hopscotch is named after the child’s game en-countered on footpaths every where & evokes the generally suppressed impulse to jump in & follow the squares. The work is similar to the eponymous pastime only in name, but is intended to instil a simi-lar pleasure to what one experiences when coming across its traces in urban environments. Hopscotch invites the viewer to enact a performative response to the work by stepping or hopping from square to square, creating their own paths, & immersing themselves in the installation. Environment paintings take colour & line & arrange them in response to the surrounding countryside. The landscape becomes a canvas but each design. The artistic process & the final result an unpredict-able & ephemral pleasure.

Transitory Dwelling aluminium armature, anodised aluminium pressed metal 110 x 50 x 120cm - $5000

66. Kathryn Sherer My art practice encompasses the making of both objects & painting. My formal training has been inJewellery & Object Design & in Sculpture, all areas informing & enriching each other. The smallerwork often acts as a maquette for the larger, al-lowing for a development of understanding of the concept.

There is a meditative aspect in my work which has its starting point in the work process itself thatlies somewhere between the meditative & the obsessive & which I feel permeates the work.

kathrynsherer.com.au

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Timothy and Thomas horseshoes, rio bars, steel, 60 x 53 x 95 cm Large turtle - $3000 / Small turtle - $2000

69. Kenneth Smith

Kenneth Smith has lived his whole life in the Yar-ramalong Valley working as a log cutter & saw-miller. Kenneth is a Central Coast based artist who specialises in welding metal & steel. His most recent work is a series of turtles a&a replica horse made from horse shoes.

Converge Traced mild steel, enamel, 120 x 180 x 280cm - $5000

68. Morgan Shimeld

...I then observe these objects & recreate them in wire, sometimes altering them or inverting some of the shapes during the process. This work challenges the viewer to see the solidity of the shape through its emptiness. If it is viewed from one angle the lines can appear to flatten causing the shape to collapse. However viewed in the round, the multi-faceted sur-faces begin to emerge. Consequently the perception of form is read in terms of their positive & negative spaces, differing from solid unambiguous form.

morganshimeld.com

Converge corten, steel frame, 120 x 180 x 280 cm - $10000 67. Morgan Shimeld

These objects are like architectural forms or a series of abstract still life studies. They are strong & grounded monolithic shapes, using perspective & precisely angled planes. Across my practice I have worked to take away & add segments, creating channels, tunnels & facets that have a quiet & still presence to them. These geometric elements act to draw the viewer into the work & often opposite sides of the one work will have quite a different sense of balance & perspective...

morganshimeld.com

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Kite horseshoes, copper wire, steel, leather saddle, bridle, stirrups, 185 x 60 x 220cm - $20000

70. Kenneth Smith

I began welding steel at an early age & have developed an extensive knowledge of this medium. The artwork I create is inspired by day to day life & a vision to reclaim recycled metal & steel. This has led to the construction of my life-size animals & figures that are formed by welding together everyday metal objects.

This is my passion & I hope others will enjoy it too.

Whirlybirdsteel, found objects, 280 x 140 X 1,20cm - $3500

71. Roz Stampfli, Kathy Rosenmeyer & Jan Shaw

Roz Stampfli, Kathy Rosenmeyer & Jan Shaw are independent sculptors who met at the Workshop Arts Centre, Willoughby about 10 years ago.

A scavenged exhaust extractor found in a council clean up initated a joint project culminating in Whirlybird. The work reflects the increasing inter-connectivity of the Australian wildlife with the urban environment. Birds in particular have become intergrated into the urban environment by roosting in any nook & cranny - a suburban house, high rise building or industrial zone. They have not only colo-nised the built environment but often feed from human generated refuse.

Spun Out zincalume steel sheet metal, concrete, 150 x 120 x 70 cm - $4000

72. Ella Szpindler & Pam Dunne Defiance – represents the strength & resiliance of Australian trees. They fight to grow & survive in our harsh environment on rocks, sand, grass &in both wet & dry, hot and cold conditions. The energy & strength needed to survive is represented by the steel in the structure.

Ella was born & educated in Poland where she studied sculpture at the Kenar Art School before moving to Australia & completing the Art Certificate course at East Sydney Tech. Pam was born & edu-cated in Wales & studied art at Furzedown College London UK whilst doing teacher training. Pam later completed a Diploma of Fine Arts at Seaforth TAFE in Sydney & now calls the mid north coast home.

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Ridge Line ceramic, timber, 100 x 40c x 120 cm - $1650

75. Sharon Taylor

Ridge Line is a piece inspired by another typically Australian view where the hills give way to moun-tains & the rugged ridge lines form a silhouetted barrier to anything that lies beyond. The shapes, colours & textures mirror the intriguing lines of the ranges.

The collection of ceramic pieces ties together to form a unified landscape, just as the elements of the bush blend & meld into the panorama that sur-rounds us.

Distant Hills ceramic, timber, 100 x 68 x 68 cm - $1170

74. Sharon Taylor

Distant Hills is not a replication of a particular place, it’s more of an impression, reproduced from the snapshots of breathtaking views held in my memory. The landscape is divided into blocks & then as-sembled again to confirm the unity & strength of the Australian landscape.

The pieces are hand built from recycled earthen-ware clay body, oxides & glazes have been used for colour.

Spun Out zincalume steel sheet metal, concrete, 150 x 120 x 70 cm - $4000

73. Ella Szpindler & Pam Dunne Living in our much faster, spinning, dynamic world of today, Spun Out represents a whirling force of energy, which is releasing a build up of tension al-lowing a thrusting force of energy to escape.

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Favourable opportunity cast iron, corten steel, 155 x 40 x 28 cm - $12000

76. Peter Tilly

The androgynous figure is my every person; it is reluctant to let go, yearning for a past just gone, apprehensive of an uncertain future. Just as life is uncertain so too is the endeavour the figure is about to embark upon. There are issues of doubt when confronting the unknown. I try to achieve a simplic-ity in these still life tableaux that is incisive and intuitively accepted yet capable of complex layers of meaning. There are many possible interpretations depending on the viewer’s own journey through life.

Courtesy of Brenda May Gallery, Sydney

Rift 1 hot-dip galvanised mild steel ,weathered corten steel, 200 x 150 x 250 cm - $6500 (inc plinth), $11,500 for both (inc plinths)

78. Jacek Wankowski

Rift1 & 2 pursue a moment between balance & flight where the precise distribution of mass, form & space activate the sculpture. Inspired by observa-tion of the natural marine world, it is intended to embody complexity, movement & a sense of thrust & violence - all reduced to their simplest elements. Jacek exhibits with the Espacio Gallery in Bethnal Green, London, is an Associate Member of the Royal British Society of Sculptors & The Sculptors Society (NSW).

straylightstudio.com

Courtesy of Brenda May Gallery, Sydney

Emerge clay, 55 x 33 x 65 cm - $950

77. Hidemi Tokutake

My work has been influenced by the Australian natu-ral landscape, in particular by the forms of plants & seed pods. I believe that the delicate & brittle nature of my work viually sympathises with someThis point has been a fundamental principle in my practice but it is now clear to me.

hidemitokutake.com.au

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Water Birds acer, camphor laurel, jacaranda, rio bar (10 pieces)dimensions variable - $6250

80. Nardja Williams

Since moving to the Yarramalong Valley, I have been given the opportunity to learn how to carve timber using a chainsaw. This has opened up a whole new world for me & now when I look at pieces of timber, I see its subtle beauty & character. This is what I try to highlight in the artwork that I make. I am influenced by nature & the environment I live in & my aim is to encourage people to see this beauty too.

Custodians charred camphor laurel, dimensions variable - $11500 (10 pieces)

81. Nardja Williams

Nardja is a Central Coast based sculptor. She travelled Australia & was inspired by the diversity of its landscapes. Nardja has a BA in Creative Arts & a BA in Art Education & whilst living & teaching in Katherine NT, she was once again overwhelmed by the beauty of the bountiful environment & its people. These experiences have influenced her work & led her to create her first sculpted series ‘Custodians’, which are a group of figures carved from Camphor Laurel & some are then charred over a fire drum.

Rift 2 hot-dip galvanised mild steel ,weathered corten steel, 200 x 150 x 250 cm - $6500 (inc plinth), $11,500 for both (inc plinths)

79. Jacek Wankowski

Jacek shares his time between the Hunter Valley & London & originally trained & worked internationally as a marine biologist. Since graduating in 2006 from the National Art School in Sydney, he has exhibited his sculptures internationally & nationally in over 50 group exhibitions.

straylightstudio.com

Courtesy of Brenda May Gallery, Sydney

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Occupation #2 fishing floats found along the coast of Japan, synthetic line, dimen-sions variable - NFS

82. Emma Wise

All over the world there are instances of man farm-ing the ocean in distressing ways. As I write, we are still fighting over our rivers, as fishing boats the size of tanker close in on our fragile fisheries. We fight over water. We fight over land. We claim our territory. We occupy.

I collected these floats & more from one beach on the west coast of Japan over three days. There, typhoons fight back, destroying nets & lives. In this work, these fishing floats will subtly occupy the wa-ters of Wollombi. A single float here, a line there – a small statement about big things. Perhaps they are beautiful. But do they belong?

Blossom bronze & steel, 210 x 60 x 70 cm - $8000

83. Efat Yahyaoglu

I try to find connection between myself & nature through sculpture .

Blossom is a transition al growth from physical to metaphysical dimension which implies perpetual change & endurance.

ICHNOTRACES: Tree Climbing Crocodile, Marsupial Lion, Road sign, lawn paint dimensions variable

84. Felicity Yorston & Cassandra Daw

Ichnotraces is a response to the concerns of habitat fragmentation & destruction. Over the last 200 years, more than 100 species of Australian animals & plants have become extinct. This artwork pays homage to the creatures that once inhabited this vast continent & are remembered through the oral histories of indigenous people & more recently through fossil records.

Use the QR code reader on your mobile phone to scan the codes on the works. Discover the story behind the extinction of these animals - especially the Giant Goanna from the Watagans! Sponsored by Roads & Maritime Services Ichnotraces & Jim Russell. Special Thanks to Cameron.

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Viewpoint recycled items, found objects, steel. 200 x 60 x 50 cm $200 - $250 each

86. Felicity Yorston & Cassandra Daw

Every person has a unique viewpoint. As children a small house seems huge, as adults the same house cramped & minscule. As we grow & are exposed to a greater world view, our perceptions & perspectives change & develop. The decoration of each frame references a different culture. This artwork explores different viewpoints influenced by both physical & cultural perspectives of the viewer.

Thank you Will !

Trojan Car FJ Holden recycled packing pallets (donated by EDI Downer) steel, paint - NFS

87. Newcastle TAFE

Using packing crates, the students of Newcastle Tafe have constructed a replica FJ Holden.

The replica includes a pedal mechanism & has been a regular feature around the Hunter St Campus in Newcastle.

ICHNOTRACES: Giant Wombat; Demon Duck of Doom & Giant GoannaRoad sign, lawn paint dimensions variable.

85. Felicity Yorston & Cassandra Daw Giant Goannas called the Mungoon Galli feature in an Aboriginal Creation Myth. The Aboriginal people believe that the Giant Goanna is not extinct, & sight-ings by farmers in the local area are as recent as the mid 1970’s. To this day the Aboriginal people & some local farmers maintain that these reptiles still inhabit the dense forests of the nearby Watagans mountain range, & periodically stray from their mountain habitat into Cessnock &the surrounding areas.

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Silent CommunionJulia Burns

2010, HD Video, 1:38mins Screening throughout

November at Noyce Bros Wines cellar door in Wollombi.

Special Thanks:Evan Papageorgiou - cinematographerMira Mansell - choreographerCharlie Mallie and Trent Slabb - dancers

Filmed at the site of the first Catholic Church in Wollombi, one of the earliest sites of Christian worship in Eastern Australia, this lyrical work depicts an unconventional scene of Aboriginal spirituality and male intimacy within a traditional Christian context.

It refers to the adaptability of believers to find spirituality in religions that may not have originally been their own and asks the viewer to consider their own ability to adapt.

juliaburns.com

Michael Lynch - PHOTOGRAPHY

We are also pleased to launch a new initiative giving photographers the chance to strut their stuff as part of Sculpture in the Vineyards. Each year, a new photographer will be selected to use innovative techniques and the sculpture in the exhibition as their inspiration to produce a work for the back cover of our catalogue. An edition of postcards of five works will be printed and avail-

able throughout our cellar doors all year round. As well, there’s the opportunity to exhibit editioned prints. If you would like to take a shot at next year’s spot, email [email protected] or drop a link to your portfolio on our facebook page.

Michael Lynch is our poster child this year and we are delighted to have him on board. Check our venues for super postcards of his nocturnal visions. [email protected]

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Undercliff Winery

Undercliff Winery was built in 1993 is nestled in a tranquil valley only 1.5 kilometres from Historic Wollombi Village. The cellar door was constructed to compliment the existing heritage values of the Undercliff Estate, where the external slab walls superbly set off a cedar cathedral ceiling. The wine making equipment was built specifically for the winery, as was the impressive 6 metre table used for vintage lunches and other functions.

Proclaimed and settled as a farm in 1846 the property still retains the original timber slab sheds and homestead, the latter is now unique accommo-dation for guests named Settlers Cottage. The clay quarry for the 19th century Wollombi brickworks is adjacent to the vineyards and is now a billabong fed by a subterranean water table providing irriga-tion for the vineyard.

The cellar door is open daily 10 am to 5pm

Undercliff are the generous sponsors of the Undercliff Site-Specific Art Award, Australia’s only award for site-specific art.

Undercliff Winery and Gallery, 152 Yango Creek Road, Wollombi, NSW, 2325Ph: +61 2 4998 3322undercliff.com.au

Stonehurst Cedar Creek

Our vineyard is located on the land originally granted to Napoleonic War Veterans in the 1820’s and which become renowned for its horticultural produce. The Heslop family farmed deer and cattle on the property for many years before establishing the vineyard in 1995. Our vision for the vineyard is to produce premium quality wines through sustainable viticulture – no insecticides and only organically approved fungicides are used.

The family homestead, Cellar Door and wine cellar are all built of sandstone quarried on the farm and old convict stone. Our cedar creek cottages, which are self–contained with all modern amenities, are built from old timber slabs and convict brick to the rich heritage of Wollombi. Now in our 7th genera-tion of farming here, we continue to maintain a very healthy environment in this wonderful part of the world.

We welcome you for a tasting at the Cellar Door, 7 days a week 10 am to 5pm

Stonehurst Cedar Creek generously provide the annual People’s Choice Awards of $1000 to the most popular work.

1840 Wollombi Road Cedar Creek NSW 2325Phone: +61 2 4998 1576cedarcreekcottages.com.au

Noyce Bros Wines

The Noyce family have been farming in the Wollombi Valley for 40 years, and our wines are cultivated on land first settled in 1823. Our aim at Noyce Brothers is to explore ways in which technol-ogy and tradition can push the boundaries of taste. Our cellar door is in the magnificent old sandstone Grays Inn (where we also offer stunning accom-modation), next to the General Store in the heart of Wollombi Village, with lovely restaurants close by and our variety of outstanding wines at great prices, we know you will enjoy Noyce Brothers Wines.

Opening Hours: Wed - Mon 10.30am to 5pm

Noyce Bros Wines provides the $2500 Award for Innovation. Artists using materials in a new and innovative way, or pushing the boundaries of sculptural medium and conception are eligible for this award.

2884 Wollombi Road, Wollombi NSW 232502 4998 3483noycebros.com.au

Gray’s Inngraysinnwollombi.com.au

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Wollombi Wines Vineyard

Wollombi Wines Vineyard is situated adjacent to the historic village of Wollombi and bordered by the beautiful Wollombi Brook. Family owned and operated by proprietors Allyson and Peter Hoft, the vineyard produces quality wines with typical Hunter flavor and characteristics, including three delicious lower alcohol wines. Self catering accommodation is available at the super Ironbark Cottage. Come and enjoy the beautiful views, picnic facilities available.

Wine tasting: 7 days a week 10am to 5pm

Alyson and Peter are the generous sponsors of an artist residency award, which provides encour-agement and inspiration to one of the talented Sculpture in the Vineyards artists who can spend a relaxing and productive time at the Ironbark Cot-tage on this pristine property.

25 Charlton Street (entrance off Wollombi Road) Wollombi NSW 2325PH: +61 2 4998 3427www.wollombiwines.com.au

Wollombi Village Vineyard

Located only 200 metres from the centre of the vil-lage for easy access & lots of main road frontage, Wollombi Village Wines may only be 5 acres in to-tal, but is very fertile as it is creek flats, so produces abundant crops of chardonnay, shiraz & now lovely table grapes available from our cellar door.Originally this land, as part of the original Wollombi village, was apparently used as the ‘Governor Gipps Inn’ back in 1841, as well as ‘Sloan’s Bak-ery’, the Cricket grounds as well as the Wesleyan School grounds – so quite a historical, central location. When purchased in 1988, owner’s Alan & Maria Roe remember the block was simply open vacant land. Their first vines were planted in 1996 & were completed in 2000. The cellar door was opened in September 1996, following the owners’ Alan & Maria’s retirement after 32 years in the plumbing supplies stores.

Wollombi Village Vineyard cellar door is open weekends, not just for wine tasting & sales, but also for the well known liqueurs Maria hand makes (Limoncielo & Passione especially sought after).Fridays (10 am - 4pm) Saturdays (9am - 6pm) Sundays (9am - 4pm) and long weekends.

2971 Payne’s Crossing Road Wollombi NSW 2325Ph 0419 997 434wollombivillagevineyard.com.au

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Discover the Noyce Brothers Wine cellar door in the historic Grays Inn in the heart of Wollombi village.

The Wollombi Valley, with its intense summer heat and crisp winter mornings, produces the beautiful grapes used to create Noyce Brothers Wine’s award winning flavours.

All Noyce Brothers wines are available for tasting and purchase including semillon, verdelho, chardonnay, semillon/sauvignon blanc, sparkling chardonnay, shiraz, sparkling moscato and a wonderful late harvest semillon.

Grays Inn is a lovely two storey 19th century sandstone Georgian building with beautiful ensuite accommodation on the first floor.

While staying at Grays Inn you can relax in the recently landscaped and private back garden or take it all in from the front balcony.

Contact us Noyce Brothers Wines Grays Inn accommodationCellar Door 02 4998 3483Mobile 0416 245 655Open 10-30am to 4-30pm every day Web www.noycebros.com.auEmail [email protected] www.graysinnwollombi.com.au

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Acknowledgements:

Sculpture in the Vineyards is a not for profit organisation which relies upon volunteers, professional pro bono support and the blood sweat and tears of many as well as the much needed financial and in kind support from sponsors and partners.

Special thanks to...The organisers:Tara Morelos - Director for the past 6 years who holds it all togetherTodd Fuller - who does it all with such grace, amazing energy and initiativeCash Brown - whose hard work is matched by her humourArthur Chan - our colourful curatorOliver Tanner and Joanna O’Toole’s - invaluable hands on help and support Trudy and the team at Vim and Zest for a super PR campaignAnd their partners and friends who have supported them in supporting us.

Photography: cover image/front - Harrisons Photography, cover image/back - Michael Lynch. All other photo credits: Todd Fuller, Cash Brown, Peter Hamshere

Sculpture in the Vineyards is a regional flagship event funded by Destination NSW

gallery

Robin Gibson Gallery

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sculptureinthevineyards.com.au Photo credit: Michael Lynch /Artwork: Ro Murray - Wollombi Wines, 2012