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© Bett Gallery Hobart
    Tasmania
No image on this site may be reproduced in any way without prior permission from the artist.  Please contact Bett Gallery Hobart on +61 3 6231 6511.
Bett Gallery Hobart

369 Elizabeth Street
North Hobart Tasmania 7000
Telephone: +61 3 6231 6511
Email: dick@bettgallery.com.au
Web: www.bettgallery.com.au

gallery news 09 | june 2010

> news archive
Philip Wolfhagen The Extended Journey

Opening: Friday 11 June 2010 at 6pm
Exhibition continues to: Tuesday 6 July 2010


Ornamental Landscape II 2010
oil & beeswax on linen, 214 x 80 cm

The Extended Journey

“The introduction of more developed foregrounds in my paintings began in the spring of 2008. The impetus for this was twofold; a desire for more compositional complexity in my paintings, and a renewed clarity of vision following the removal of a cataract in my right eye. The joy of seeing with both eyes again, and the marvel of stereoscopic vision, brought renewed vigour to my paint handling and its textural, three dimensional quality. The first source material I embraced was the garden, particularly the tracery of bare winter branches and it was not difficult for me then to engage with the straggly native – half dead but still beautiful – remnant scrubby bush on the hill overlooking our house. The paintings in this exhibition are all derived from this place. I like the way eclipsing a view with trees has a way of intensifying the view beyond. It is the same when you are driving the car and can only glimpse fleetingly at a cloud formation, it seems more poignant – you stop the car, get out, and find it is just an ordinary, meaningless cloud! It was the obscurity that made it compelling.

For a long time I had wanted to tackle the problems of figuration introduced into the landscape by tree-forms – I had begun to feel constrained by old preoccupations with space and light alone; I needed to introduce new characters to my ‘story’. In the process of this I found I had to go back to the past and really look at those old paintings, particularly Claude Lorrain, the most often cited source of our conventions of landscape composition. It
seemed a natural undertaking for me, as much of the painting I love, Constable in particular, celebrated the influence of Claude. John Glover is the obvious segue to the Tasmanian context, and therefore any subsequent representations of this landscape that I make.

So I committed myself to this painterly pilgrimage; this metaphorical ‘journey to the source’, to the wellspring of the landscape painting genre. Or am I just rummaging through the rubbish of the past; scouring the ‘great midden’ of cultural tradition, to see if I can find anything worth re-using?

Setting aside these historical matters, the core impetus for me to paint is the need to order and synthesize the forms I observe in nature into the abstract field of a painting stretcher– it is an extension of my need to practice horticulture. The love of plants; the enjoyment of their visual texture, the pleasure of tonal contrasts, of leaf size and character, of line and form, of horizontal growth opposed to vertical… all these considerations that come before colour. So as I am painting these foreground spaces I am in the same zone I am when planting, I am thinking about the past but trying to link it to the present through my action; through the very practice of the tradition.”

Philip Wolfhagen, 2010

> view exhibition online

 
Gallery news
Available for purchase at Bett Gallery:

Philip Wolfhagen: Surface Tensions
A Tasmanian Monograph
by Peter Timms
224 x 204mm, hardcover, 64 pp
$39.95 rrp (plus postage)

> more information or order

Pack of 4 Philip Wolfhagen
greeting cards and envelopes
per pack - $20 rrp
set 10 packs - $100 rrp
(plus postage)

> more information or order

   

 

Catch the Idris Murphy exhibition continuing until June 8 2010
> view exhibition

Watch for Tiffany Winterbottom showing in the Backspace
from 15 June. New digital photography and drawing from London.

Visit Scot Cotterell at bettgallery@raincheck to view
TORRENT – A Suite of New Digital Photographic Prints
14 May to 14 July 2010
> view exhibitiion

 

Congratulations:

Raymond Arnold, winner of the 2010 Gallipoli Prize with an acrylic on linen diptych titled The Dead March Here Today.

Wynne Prize, Art Gallery NSW, finalists, David Keeling and Philip Wolfhagen.

Philip Wolfhagen, for a new auction record of $69,000 (including buyers premium) set at Deutcher and Hackett in April for: Eighth Passage 1994, oil & beeswax on linen, 142 x 231 cm.

Irene Briant who was Artist in Residence and exhibited at the Victorian Tapestry Workshop during May.

 

Join an art collecting group:

Iron Pot Hobart for Gen Y and X

Sydney Group — Information Session scheduled for mid-June or start a group your own with friends. See website for more information.

 

Plan to visit the 2010 Melbourne Art Fair, Bett Gallery Stand B72 (Balcony), Royal Exhibition Building, Carlton Gardens, Melbourne from 4 to 8 August. See artwork from seventy of the best selected galleries from Australia and Asia. Bett Gallery Hobart is Tasmania’s only participating gallery.

 

Welcome back to Emma (Tuesday, Friday and Saturday) and welcome to Sabina Bickley, who joins us part time.

 

Note the changes to our Saturday opening hours: 11.00am to 6.00pm.

 

 

Find in the stockroom:


Helen Wright
One tree on the island 2010
oil, pastel, collage on paper, framed, 119 x 89.5 cm
$4,400


Michael Schlitz
Water bearers 2005
relief woodblock print on Japanese Kozo paper
four sheets, approx overall sheet size: 138 x 125 cm (deckle edge)
limited edition of 8
unframed: $1,850 framed: $2,450