Helen Mueller— Forest Stories
Published 14 October 2024
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Clifford How ― Luminous State
Published 14 October 2024
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Linda van Niekerk ― Reflections: 20 Years On
Published 14 October 2024
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tom samek ― original artwork release
Published 26 September 2024
image details: Tom Samek, Clean Skin, gouache, 26 x 21.5 cm
Almost three years after his passing, the legacy and quirky humour of Tom Samek lives on. Original artworks by the celebrated Tasmanian artist – some never publicly seen before – are available to purchase on line, or come into the Gallery to view.
Most, like Opening of the Concert Season, are well-known and much-loved having been reproduced as giclee prints.
However, two of Tom’s original watercolours never made it into print and are being unveiled for the first time: “To see these Tom Samek artworks, just to see that fantastic humour again… Oh wow!” In Chef’s Pants and Knife Tom chops up the black and white checks of a cook’s uniform, and he presents the perfect diet for gluttons in Food and Wine Pyramid.
“Tom’s brilliance was incomparable,” Handmark Director Allanah Dopson says. “He exuded life and art!”
“Tom is always remembered by many clients coming into the gallery and telling their stories of how much they loved him and his wonderful sense of humour.” Why not pop into Handmark Gallery where Tom’s unframed artworks can be viewed.
luke wagner — Time Slows at Night
Published 26 September 2024
image details: Luke Wagner, Fugitive Light of Dusk, 2024, oil on linen, 76 x 41 cm
Luke Wagner is one of Tasmania’s most popular painters, and his upcoming exhibition of new works is eagerly awaited. Once more Luke brings us glorious landscapes set in the bucolic Northern Midlands, but in Time Slows at Night he also brings a new dream-like quality.
That magical low light as the sun rises, but also as the day ends, casts it’s glow over Luke’s latest offerings. “These paintings have a dream-like quality. They convey a feeling of both being asleep and awake at the time.” But they also have “more sky” drawing the eye to dramatic swirling clouds, further adding to that transcendent feel.
Again, Luke finds inspiration in the countryside around Longford, “which is embedded with a rich and complex history.” He spent last summer in the area “waking up at first light and spending my days walking through the landscape. Somehow this allowed me to absorb the landscape and take it back to the studio.”
Luke will be unveiling 30 new paintings in Time Slows at Night. It’s a large body of work, and as we speak to Luke, he is frantically adding the finishing touches. We wait with eager anticipation.
Luke Wagner’s Time Slows at Night exhibition runs from September 27 until October 14.
bruce thurrowgood ― the line
Published 26 September 2024
Tasmania’s stunning coastline is still his guiding light. But Bruce Thurrowgood delves further beneath the crystal-clear waters in his latest works, plumbing new emotional depths as he explores internal landscapes.
Living at Bicheno, Bruce’s last exhibition examined the interplay of light and water. But this time around, ocean reflections “seek to illuminate layers of reality lying just beneath the surface of everyday experience.” Stunning, multi-dimensional works, where geometric forms and patterns float across the canvas, produce “an inner veiled landscape depicted through layering.”
Bruce has aptly named his solo exhibition, The Line, because the connection between sea and sky is key. “Living by the ocean, I often look out at the horizon. This line serves as a threshold or anchor, inviting the viewer to observe the binding of symbols and patterning.”
We are treated to beautifully delicate paintings where patterns sing in harmonious rhythm: “I set out to create an image that gives awareness of an internal landscape – like visual music. Dots as heartbeats, patterns or lines as rhythms of repetition, colours and tones invoking surrender of thought.”
Bruce Thurrowgood’s The Line exhibition runs until September 23.
susan simonini ― vivid carnival
Published 2 September 2024
When Susan Simonini was invited to exhibit in Vivid, there was no hesitation. “It’s right up my alley.” No surprise perhaps, as Susan’s joyful abstracts pulsate with a riot of bright hues. “Colours excite me. They bring me joy.”
Susan recently made a big splash with her first Handmark show, Glimmer. “However, the colours in this exhibition are sweeter – a palette of pinks, reds and oranges that remind me of candy-coloured lollipops and carnivals.”
Take Higher Place, one of the paintings especially created for Vivid. It evokes nostalgia as we revisit the fairs of our childhood and “all the things they have to offer – colour, light, noise, movement, pattern and joy. I hope to harness the revelry of these events.” She does this beautifully.
Image credit: Susan Simonini, Higher place, 2024, Acrylic on polycotton, 100 x 120 cm
hilton owen ― vivid success
Published 2 September 2024
As an emerging artist, his first sell-out show was with Handmark. Now 35 years-old – and with 16 solo exhibitions under his belt – Hilton Owen is back home in Hobart with stunning paintings for Vivid, and a unique take on portraiture: “They are what they are!”
Hilton’s compelling mixed media offerings may look like collage, but “everything is hand drawn”. Turquoise for example, is a multi-layered composition of acrylics, oils, and spray paint: A woman’s face is splintered by vibrant blocks of colour. “There’s a lot going on in this one.”
Flash is simpler and starker. A vivid purple slash dominates. But our eyes are drawn to shards of a woman’s face with yellow glasses, red lips and tawny hair. “I just love these colours.”
Image credit: Hilton Owen, Turquoise, 2024, Mixed media on linen, 76 x 66 cm
jeewan suwal ― vivid joy
Published 2 September 2024
When Jeewan Suwal left Nepal four years ago to set up home in Hobart, his colourful abstracts were tinged by the gloom of homesickness. But there is no darkness in his latest paintings.
Jeewan has produced a stunning series of landscapes for Vivid inspired by “the beautiful rainbows in Tasmania.” As he moves through the spectrum of rainbow colours, he transports us “to the wonderful world of our imagination.”
In Winterfeast, Jeewan’s joy is palpable as the colours of DarkMofo explode on the canvas. “It may be cold, but the city is alive.” Since his first exhibition as an emerging artist with Handmark in 2022, Jeewan has gone from success to success. Watch this space.
cameron haas ― vivid debut
Published 2 September 2024
New to Handmark, prepared to be thrilled by the geometric abstractions of Cameron Haas in his debut showing. He unveils colourful paintings in Vivid that he describes as “visual art for your eyes.”
Cameron’s organic forms are seemingly simple. But every brushstroke is carefully composed. Every mark, shape and form carefully considered. Colour is key. “My paintings are non-narrative, but I am always looking for an emotional response. My colours are vivid, and I use different combinations to elicit strong emotions.”
Handmark Director Allanah Dopson discovered Cameron’s work at Sydney Contemporary, and immediately bought one of his paintings. He began his artistic journey at the School of Creative Arts, University of Tasmania, “I just knew Cameron had to join Handmark’s stable of wonderfully talented artists.”
Image credit: Cameron Haas, Untitled #98, 2023, Acrylic on linen, 117 x 117 cm