FLOOR SHOW

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Ready to hang

A$810

Artwork Details

Medium Acrylic, Canvas, Ready to hang
Dimensions 91cm (W) x 91cm (H) x 5cm (D)
Review Stars 21,262 Customer Reviews
Original Artwork
This artwork is one of a kind!
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Estimated Delivery Time from QLD

Monday, Jun 22 - Wednesday, Jun 24

Artwork Description

“Life is great in the sunshine State” Art Exhibition
Royal Qld Art Society Petrie Terrace Gallery March 2021

Do you remember the song, “Life is great in the sunshine state”? When I was casting about earlier this year (before Covid-19) for a new direction and theme for my paintings, I settled on the old 1959 Queensland Centennial Anthem written by Clyde Collins as a point of reflection. We are reminded everywhere as Queenslanders that life here is centred around the sun. As Ralph Waldo Emerson reminds us … “Live in the sunshine, swim in the sea, drink the wild air.”
And so … this new Show of mine represents a synthesis of both a whimsical and narrative interpretation of our unique Queensland lifestyle. Narrative art is art that tells a story as a sequence of events unfolding over time, a style of painting marked by openness of form, with shapes distinguished by variations of colour rather than by outline or contour. Whimsical art is a vibrant and playful style of art that is childlike and carefree. Here at the Gallery, you will find ladies and gents at the beach, sun baking or wading or observing …. or at the horse races … or dining out or gambling at the Casino.
When I draw, I mostly use a fine green bamboo stick as a pen and Indian Ink as the medium. The bamboo is an interesting tool. The bamboo does not have a reservoir and so all marks made on a surface are limited in length and this informs the image. The process is not forgiving so you are forced to make each mark count. The outcome is a sense of fluidity and spontaneity in a series of gestures that you do not get with graphite or paint (which can be more forgiving.)

When I paint, I use acrylic … the paint dries quickly, and the pigmentation today is excellent…. my paintings on canvas encompass both spontaneous marks and gestures characteristic of the bamboo stick and the impact of the colour laden brush …. and the final work becomes a sum of the parts. The meaning in each image changes with the density of the lines and the combination of colours. Colour has vitality… like life.

Artist Bio

Rod is an artist who works from his studio in Auchenflower, Brisbane. He has participated in Group and Solo exhibitions and early on in his career he was hung in the Archibald Prize 1978 Exhibition. Rod has won the Stanthorpe Art Festival Ceramics Prize and the Gatton Shire Art Award and he was heavily involved in the establishment of the Ipswich Art Gallery in the early 1980’s when he was the Head of Department Art at the Ipswich State High School. Rod became a State High School Principal and concentrated on developing Art Education Curriculum in Queensland. In more recent years he has developed gift and furniture designs for the Home and Decor Industry across Australia and has exhibited in numerous Trade Fairs in Brisbane, Sydney and Melbourne. Rod has travelled extensively. He works mostly with acrylics referencing a broad repertoire of experience and influences.
1978 Archibald Prize finalist
Solo Exhibitions:
June 2016 Graydon Gallery New Farm Brisbane "John Oxley - a man and his boat"
July 2017 Old Church Gallery Moore "Four Men Two Ox and a Dray"
August 2017 Graydon Gallery New Farm Brisbane "Explorer Triology - Oxley Cunningham and Logan"
June 2018 Graydon Gallery "Moreton Bay @ lowtide.net"
June 2019 I Graydon Gallery New Farm Brisbane "I Dreamed I saw St Augustine"
March 2021 RQAS Petrie Terrace Gallery "Life is Great in the Sunshine State"
November 2021 - the Series Matthew Flinders 1799 - interpreting his epic exploration and mapping of Moreton Bay in 1799
January 2024 Ongoing theme Postcards from Mudjimba Beach

Commissions

Rodney's studio is in Queensland