TY - ADVS
T1 - Permutations
T2 - Plant + Human
A2 - Seccombe, Erica
N1 - Exhibited:
2019, Baldessin Press - The Story, curated by Baldessin Press, Monsalvat, Victoria, 25 July - 15 September
2019 - Plant + Human, curated by Allison Holland, Australian Centre for Photography, 15 Feb - 27 April.
PY - 2019/2/15
Y1 - 2019/2/15
N2 - This series Permutations has developed from my interest in how artists respond to nature, the way nature is formalised and perfected through aesthetic explorations, and how we seek order and structure in nature to give meaning to existence through repetition, symmetry, rhythm and geometry.Inspired by forms and patterns in nature, Victorian designer William Morris wrote on artistic interpretations, that ‘when it does not remind you of life beyond itself,’ then the image is futile. Morris was wary of human intervention in selective gardening, he appreciated the allure of double sunflowers and abundantly petaled roses, but viewed them as artificial aberrations of their wild and native originals. However, for the artist Paul Klee, gardens cultivated by human hands represented the ultimate connection to creation, both in the life-giving sense, and in the act of creating art. He viewed the garden as neither nature nor art, but an intersection between human intention and natural life. Through my practice I have been responding to how natural forms are represented through a subjective experiences of it. The titles of each work are drawn from the ceremonial traditions of Ikebana, evoking intimate ‘intersections’ between humans and plants. In their permutations they work as an act of reordering the experience between myself, the camera and the plant I am observing. Through my own aesthetic interpretations via a technological lens and the process of making, each work represents a form of life that now exists beyond its original meaning.
AB - This series Permutations has developed from my interest in how artists respond to nature, the way nature is formalised and perfected through aesthetic explorations, and how we seek order and structure in nature to give meaning to existence through repetition, symmetry, rhythm and geometry.Inspired by forms and patterns in nature, Victorian designer William Morris wrote on artistic interpretations, that ‘when it does not remind you of life beyond itself,’ then the image is futile. Morris was wary of human intervention in selective gardening, he appreciated the allure of double sunflowers and abundantly petaled roses, but viewed them as artificial aberrations of their wild and native originals. However, for the artist Paul Klee, gardens cultivated by human hands represented the ultimate connection to creation, both in the life-giving sense, and in the act of creating art. He viewed the garden as neither nature nor art, but an intersection between human intention and natural life. Through my practice I have been responding to how natural forms are represented through a subjective experiences of it. The titles of each work are drawn from the ceremonial traditions of Ikebana, evoking intimate ‘intersections’ between humans and plants. In their permutations they work as an act of reordering the experience between myself, the camera and the plant I am observing. Through my own aesthetic interpretations via a technological lens and the process of making, each work represents a form of life that now exists beyond its original meaning.
M3 - Hosted Exhibition or Event
PB - Australian Centre for Photography
Y2 - 15 February 2019 through 27 April 2019
ER -