Showing posts with label Queenstown. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Queenstown. Show all posts

Monday, May 6, 2013

In Memoriam Projection – Mt. Lyell Mine Disaster 1912 Painting


Nothing demonstrates the fragility of life more than the unexpected loss of it. When lives are interrupted, the human capacity for sympathising with tragedy reaches across the ages as generations remember and retell the histories of those affected by sudden and devastating disasters. These events fracture families and communities changing them forever. The lives no longer lived continue to be sustained through the narratives of those who recount what a life stood for, who a person was, how they died. In a death is a lesson, is a purpose, and a place. A combination of elements that construct a history peppered with prosperity and hardship, spoils and irreversible misfortune, Queenstown in Tasmania’s west is one place that yields a tinderbox of excesses that make and break, leaving behind scars that are both symbolic of its future and of its past.

Sunday, November 4, 2012

The Unconformity Project - LARQ Combined Openings - Queenstown Heritage & Arts Festival


By Lucy Wilson

Walking to the Opening of The Unconformity Project at LARQ (Landscape Art Research Queenstown) run by Raymond Arnold, I caught sight of Mount Mother Lyell in the late afternoon light. Spectacular. The sun was illuminating the bare rocky surface, which glowed through its weather washed patina. I soon learnt in the exhibition speeches about ‘the Western Feeling’.

It was in The Unconformity Project that geology and art came together. Where the movement of human endeavour above and below the surface of the earth encountered the natural and mysterious movement of rocks below. Vivid connections were made by artists Tim Chatwin, Julian Cooper, Ruth Johnstone and Jan Senbergs in a four part exhibition.