The STA BOX Gallery @ Bowral Library
Bowral Library is the home of the STA Box Gallery in Wingecaribee. Enjoy the online gallery below and visit the STA Box Gallery at 16-24 Bendooley St, Bowral.
BOX Gallery exhibitions are available to STA Members on application. Members can apply for an exhibition in one or more BOX Galleries. If you would like to register an interest in a BOX Gallery exhibition email us for more information.
Find out more about the STA Box Gallery Project
Artemis Anthropocene by J A Cornish, Autumn 25
Plastic Mannequin, Papier Mache – telephone books, newspaper, PVA Glue; Eucalyptus Scoparia Branches, Eucalypt Angophora Costata Bark; Woodchips from Pine and Cypress; Charcoal; Magpie Nest – natural materials & plastic waste; Fairy Wren’s Nest – natural materials; Paper Wasp Nest – natural materials.
‘Artemis …’ is an obvious comment on waste and the overuse and destruction of natural resources, also the proliferation of plastic waste in our environment and the affect it has on our health and the health of the natural world. She’s made from a plastic mannequin covered in papier-mâché from telephone books and newspaper, specifically, the Sydney Morning Herald’s Good Weekend and News Review, the sections I read. I’ve got a love-hate relationship with paper, especially newspaper and magazines; I love to read, I hate that often what I’m reading was once a tree. The newspaper is mostly cut into leaves, and layered on the mannequin like they were drawn to her, almost in an effort to remake themselves as trees again.
There are also butterflies, a bee (made from multiple cut out bees), a dragonfly, and two crescent Moons cut from the newspaper – I actually wanted to do more and create a fresco across her upper chest, but cutting tiny exact insects ran into time I didn’t have (for now). Bees were chosen because they were sacred to Artemis and have been identified as the single most important species on earth. The butterflies and dragonfly are a nod to my Welsh ancestors and sister (who loves dragonflies), and Artemis wore a crescent moon as a crown. The leaves are also like shoals of fish, and I like this Homeric Hymn to Artemis traveling across the land: “The tops of the high mountains tremble and the tangled wood echoes awesomely with the outcry of beasts: earth quakes and the sea also where fishes shoal.” One of the 12 Olympian Gods, Artemis is Goddess of waters and rivers, her twin is the sun God Apollo, and Poseidon God of the ocean was her uncle.
As a nerdy child reading Greek Myths and Legends, Artemis was a favourite “…the first nymph, a goddess of free nature. She is an independent free woman, and she doesn’t need any partner…” Amongst other things, she’s the Goddess of the wilderness, wild animals, nature, vegetation: “…In bucolic (pastoral) songs the image of [Artemis] was discovered in bundles of leaves or dry sticks” – hence my sticks and branches.
The single most important piece in the sculpture is the magpies’ nest. Finding it and seeing that it was created by these brilliant birds from so much plastic waste broke my heart. I found the nest, which had blown down from a huge eucalypt in a storm, in 2018. Eight or so years of drought had denuded the local gardens and wild grasses and I suspect the Magpies had to scavenge far and wide to find any nesting materials, including the plastic packing tape, the spines of a plastic fence, the plastic netting and even the very large wood and wire mobile I’d created which they stole from my garden, a block from where I’d found the nest. The wire was unwound from some of the props in the mobile and wound thorough the nest. The thin fencing wire remains in the nest, but I had to remove the rest of the mobile as it was too heavy for my Artemis’ branches – quite the circle of creation.
And as for plastic and how it relates to Artemis, Goddess of the hunt, wilderness, reproduction, and women’s health? “Microplastics (MPs) and nanoplastics (NPs) are emergent pollutants, which have sparked widespread concern. They can infiltrate the body via ingestion, inhalation, and cutaneous contact (they can rub off by touch). As such, there is a general worry that MPs/NPs may have an impact on human health in addition to the environmental issues they engender… With the detection of MPs/NPs in fetal [sic.] compartment and the prevalence of infertility, an increasing number of studies have put an emphasis on their reproductive toxicity in female[s]. Moreover, MPs/NPs have the potential to interact with other contaminants, thus enhancing or diminishing the combined toxicity.” ** Plastic weakens Magpie nests too.
In some First Nations Lore, the Magpie is a messenger and guide.
*All quotes from Wikipedia, except: **Toxicity of microplastics and nanoplastics: invisible killers of female fertility and offspring health – National Library of Medicine. America. Published 2023 Aug 28. Yuli Geng, 1 Zhuo Liu, et al.
Previous Exhibitions
Sculptures by Walter Brecely, Summer 24-25
Artist Walter Brecely’s diverse education, spanning Fine Arts at Illawarra Institute of Technology (1993-95) and a Bachelor of Creative Arts majoring in Sculpture from University of Wollongong (2000), complements his proficiency in engraving, stone setting, and metal casting.
His work has earned acclaim including the 2008 Goulburn Regional Art Award, and finalist positions in several art prizes including the Woollahra Small Sculpture Prize and the Deakin University Contemporary Small Sculpture Prize. His latest accolade is the 2023 BOCCA Sculpture Prize. Walter was also the Lead Illustrator for the VR project Inanimate Alice: Perpetual Nomads from 2016 to 2018, a coproduction funded by Screen Australia and the Canada Media Fund. The project secured the 2020 Reader’s Choice Prize at Woollahra Digital Literary Awards and an Honourable Mention in 2017’s Turn On Digital Literature Prize.
Contact Walter directly through his website to chat about any of the works. All are for sale. walterbrecely.com Facebook:@BrecelyStudios and Instagram:@walterbrecely
Trembler, 2014.
Wood (elm), stainless steel, recycled diesel engine filters.
Enquiries
Organically Challenged, 2013.
Recycled lawn bowls, copper, recycled goblets.
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Lawn Weeds, 2013.
Recycled lawn bowls, copper.
Enquiries
Saplings, 2018.
Copper, stainless steel, sterling silver, recycled glass.
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The Walkers, 2012.
Recycled cutlery, stainless steel, sterling silver.
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The Gift of Despair by Corinne Dany Spring 2024
As artists we are always asked ‘where do you get your ideas from’ or ‘what made you make this piece?’
Well, it’s rare that I can recall the exact moment an idea forms in my head. I have a funny example of one, and I have a not so funny one to tell you about.
The funny one involves nudity and a hot shower and a cranky daughter. One evening I was washing my hair, scrubbing and splashing along to my singing (coz the acoustics are brilliant in that room). Anyway, after the rinse and repeat ritual, I blinked my eyes open and low and behold I saw a shape on the shower screen door! It was a sort of seahorse but not quite kind of shape! Well I leant over and with my trusty water pencil, and drew two huge ears on that shape and voila! It became a seahare! I screamed out to my daughter to get my phone, frozen still in case another movement would splash away my sketch. She obliged very unwillingly, eyes firmly shut and arms outstretched! But we got the shot!
My sketch became the piece called The Seahare, which became one of my favourite watercolours in the exhibition I was working on at the time.
Fast forward to July 21st of this year, I returned from a fabulous day at the Bowral Long Lunch where I managed to raise 3k for the wonderful charity Bowral District Children’s Foundation. I was proud as punch as I had never created something that raised that amount before! And I met my beautiful collector who bought the painting, Rebecca from Bowral Fine Jewellery.
I came home on a high only to find my beautiful Shilo Shepherd, Honey, collapsing in the back yard. She was almost 13 and was my constant companion. I called her my shadow and anyone who has a German Shepherd knows what I mean. They follow you when you have food, when you’re ready to go out, when you are happy or sad. Even when you are peeing!!
We lost Honey that night. I lost my shadow and a beautiful soul. I have not been able to shake this one off. We have had beautiful pets in the past but sometimes one stands out and when they leave, it cuts out a massive hole right in the middle of your house…. and heart.
But now that the Bowral Long Lunch event was over it was time for me to create something for The STA Box Gallery. I was in bed for day 2 with a bad cold that overcame me while I was grieving, listening to Nick Cave in conversation with Richard Fidler as my eyes were too puffy to watch any YouTube! While I was listening, I had a clear as day vision splash before me, just like in the shower! The vision was of a sculpture of me wrapped in grief letting go of my beautiful Honey as she was taken away from me by Mother Nature… and it brought me to tears. I second guessed whether I should create this sculpture for the box gallery.. it’s not the happiest of themes.. but the vision stayed with me and drove me to the studio… I wanted to create something that would honour our Honey. Making anything else would feel so trivial.
The Gift of Despair by Corinne Dany
$2100 sales inqueries directly to the artist [email protected]
This unique work was created especially for the STA Box Gallery. Books used as plinth are for display only and not for sale.
Connect to the Artist corinnedany.com
Worth a follow @corinnedanyartist
As I was making this piece my heart remained heavy but my spirits were lifting. It was coming together beautifully and I began to get a real sense of why so many artists produce wonderful work despite the tragedies in their life. I’m not entirely sure how it happens.. but I felt the gift of inspiration and it came to me in this form. I miss you terribly, I wish you were still here, but thank you Honey for sending me The Gift of Despair.
The STA Box Gallery is supported by our partner venue Bowral Library a cultural service of Wingecaribee Shire Council.
Vist the Wingecaribee Library website for more information.
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