Showing posts with label Ross Laurie. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ross Laurie. Show all posts

Thursday, August 23, 2012

Ross Laurie - New Paintings and Works on Paper 2012 catalogue essay


Ross Laurie, Near the bridge III, 2012, oil on Board, 400 x 510 mm

For the Ross Laurie exhibition, New Paintings and Works on Paper 2012, we commissioned journalist and writer James Compton to contribute this essay:

"In the electric action of Ross Laurie’s painting you can see the marks of progress. These steps are important to the artist in documenting the creative journey, while also giving the wider audience clues to the structure and sequence behind the total view. Laurie likes to examine, or read, a painting – whether one of his own making or that of another painter. He looks closely at the combination of gesture, abrasion, colour, form and flow. Through the textures of the paint’s physical application, the artwork becomes a landscape in itself. These contours have to hang together in a composite tension, or it simply isn’t working.

Laurie sits outside the mainstream. A whitefella painter schooled in the European tradition, yet intensely drawn to the lexicon of indigenous artists, particularly the desert painters, that has emerged from Australia into the global consciousness since the 1970s. In this context, he is a vital representative of Australian art’s contemporary collision between old and new – and it is fair to say that many see the close affinity with indigenous painting in some of Laurie’s works before they get fixated by any abstraction. He takes on, whether subconsciously or overtly, the exploration of where the DNA of an ancient but very much alive Aboriginal culture recombines with a transplanted Western art sensibility. 

He is not afraid to acknowledge his antecedents.  Laurie’s painting is clearly informed by the great leaps made in the 1940s and 50s through the abstract expressionism of De Kooning and Pollock, while not ignoring their Australian contemporaries such as Tony Tuckson and Ian Fairweather.  This era of experimentation is the starting point, a lineage and context to which Laurie often returns; in essence he is competing with himself to produce something he would value as much as a great work done by one of his artistic influences. He calls himself an ‘old artist’, but what he is forging should be regarded as an emergent push into new territory, boldly venturing further into the unknown.

From his bush-bound isolation on the New England plateau, he often buries himself in art tomes, absorbing ideas, spaces, and experiences that will be turned into riffs played out on canvas, paper or board in the studio. He paints from the inside out, and the outside in: landscapes as much of the soul as of the physical reality that makes up the country around him. His output resonates with an often brutal honesty; rather than a precise delineation, it is nomadic, cycling through fertile ground in a meandering songline. As abstract as they may appear at first blush, Laurie’s works are ultimately rooted in the trees, the hills, the clouds and the quality of light that makes up his milieu.

A single work might involve a stretch of 7-8 hours until he is finished, content that the act has reached some sort of resolution. Picture the crucible of creation: it is a cold winter’s night, wind scouring from the south-west, rain sleeting across the corrugated iron roof. A rusted pot belly stove gives off a good heat, chock full of brushbox and ironbark harvested from deadfall around the studio, warm enough to take the chill out of the air but not quite enough to melt the oilstick debris piled up around the workbench. His collection of CDs lies scattered, a range of aural cues ready to assist in shutting out the chattering of conscious thought and loose forth his own dreamtime.

The studio resounds to a newly found live recording of Miles Davis in his prime of electric experimentation, trumpet at full blow as he gets his Bitches Brew band into the groove. A kettle steams in the foreground, seemingly on continuous reboil as the session unfolds. Fuelled by endless cups of tea, straight black (no chaser), Laurie flares into action as he attacks the canvas. He deftly manipulates brush and paint, a trance-like series of movements focused on capturing that definitive pulse of inspiration. It is an outpouring, a process of envisioning  that persists into the wee hours, striving to keep up the momentum as he backs himself from one step to the next, wary of too much of a pause lest he interrupt that precariously dancing muse.

Each painting is wrought from elements intermingled in that particular time and space. He feels the subject matter through a series of filters, devising colour combinations that make the works sing in a way that expresses his unique feel for the expanses in front of (and behind) his eyes. Random routines are introduced into the process as he tries to break the mould. If he reaches a blockage, he might rotate the canvas through 180 degrees, or paint with eyes wide shut, in order to see new permutations within a complex algebra. His urgency is driven by trepidation that if he stops, he might not be able to get back ‘out there’ again into the same headspace. At the same time, he is not scared to scrape back and start again if a particular passage is not working. It is a wild ride, holding on bare-knuckled until the right combination reveals itself and points the direction of the painting.

This collection – in its synthesis of oils, oilstick on paper and charcoal drawings – is one of consolidation. Ross Laurie has taken his technique, his composition, his style to a new place.  He articulates his experience in a conglomerate tongue that takes some time to get your head around. Not that it is impossible but perhaps it is beyond rational thought. It is fundamentally spiritual, and therefore difficult to articulate. There is an emotional resonance from each of these works that speaks to your inner being and asks: ‘do you feel me’?

The works are also inspired, much like his passionate verbal discourse, by a quest to cut through the mundane and extract a kernel of truth. There is no deliberately grand theme, save that of a further investigation of the human condition. With every completed work comes a new discovery, and as Laurie says upon reflection: “I can then look back and find out what I was doing, and that knowledge enables me to move on.” 

James Compton, August, 2012


New Paintings + Works on Paper 2012
Tuesday 4th - Saturday 29th September, 2012
Wednesday - Saturday, 11-6

View a selection of the work here

Wednesday, June 20, 2012

Ross Laurie gets the thumbs up... again!


Ross Laurie, From Ochre Hut - Fowlers Gap IV, 2011, oil on board, 590 x 590 mm


Art critic John McDonald, in reviewing the exhibition 'Not the Way Home: 13 Artists Paint the Desert' at the S.H Ervin Gallery, has written:



"the standout performer is Ross Laurie, who has produced an impressive variety of images, from small charcoal sketches to densely worked studies in oil stick, to large oils on canvas.

In Laurie's work one sees the complete cycle from straightforward observation to transformation in the studio. His two large paintings, Ridge and Creek, Fowlers Gap I and II, are very far from being snapshots of the desert landscape. Laurie has taken huge liberties with the colour, using swaths of white-ish paint to reproduce the effect of bright sunlight. This is reminiscent of Ian Fairweather, who would often finish a painting with a final tracery of white. The other Fairweatheresque aspect is the creation of an internal rhythm that holds the composition together, even though each component seems to be bulging and sliding."
Sydney Morning Herald Spectrum, 16-17 June, 2012

View the full article here
View more images of the Fowlers Gap suite here on facebook

Some Ross Laurie dates to remember:
1 July, 2012 - Last day of 'Not the Way Home' exhibition at S.H. Ervin Gallery
1-5 August, 2012 - Melbourne Art Fair - we will be presenting a new suite of Ross Laurie works at our stand, A51, upstairs in the Exhibition Centre.
14 August - 8 September - Group show 'The Bigger Picture', at King Street Gallery
4- 29 September - Solo exhibition 'Paintings and Works on Paper 2012' at the Damien Minton Gallery

Thursday, May 31, 2012

Ross Laurie in Not the Way Home

Ross Laurie is in the group exhibition NOT THE WAY HOME at the S.H. Ervin Gallery until 1st July. The show was forged through a two week residency in Fowlers Gap, an outback research station. Read the feature in last Sunday's Telegraph.


Click to enlarge


Wednesday, May 2, 2012

Carment, Laurie and Gardiner get the thumbs up from John McDonald in the Salon des Refuses

In last weekend's SMH Spectrum, John McDonald called this year's Archibald a "generally acknowledged [...] dud show". He at least has some kind words for Tom Carment, Ross Laurie and Peter Gardiner in his review of the Salon des Refuses, the "breakaway" exhibition curated from the unselected entrants in the Art Gallery of New South Wales' Wynne and Archibald prizes.

Tax laywer and poet Geoffrey Lehmann by Tom Carment


“If I had to choose a favourite portrait, I’d fall back on stalwart performer Tom Carment, who has given us a typically sensitive depiction of Geoffrey Lehmann…” – John McDonald, Spectrum, SMH, 28 April, 2012

Peter Gardiner, Swamp I (Burrumbeet), 2012

One of two “... original, confident works [...is] Peter Gardiner’s hypnotic Swamp I (Burrumbeet)” John McDonald, Spectrum review: Salon des Refuses, SMH, 28 April, 2012

Ross Laurie, Ridge and Creek - Fowlers Gap, 2011, oil on canvas, 1200 x 1500 mm 
“The two most impressive Wynne rejects are Ross Laurie’s Ridge and Creek – Fowlers Gap and Gladdy Kemarre’s Anwekety (Bush Plum). One wonders what Laurie has to do to be selected for the Wynne, as he is arguably one of Australia’s most dynamic landscape painters, albeit in a semi-abstract idiom. Although it is no easy matter to identify the specific features if a landscape in Laurie’s work – let alone swaggies, jumbucks and other standard bush items – he conveys a powerful sense of the heat and light of the Australian environment – in this instance, the arid regions near Broken Hill. – John McDonald, Spectrum review: Salon des Refuses, SMH, 28 April, 2012

Considered prestigous in its own right, we heartilty congratulate Tom, Peter and Ross for being selected into the Salon des Refuses, at the S.H. Ervin Gallery until May 20. 

Thursday, March 8, 2012

Ross Laurie Artist Profile Feature

A Journey to desert country

Artist Profile invited 13 prominent Australian artists on an expedition to a research station at Fowlers Gap, Broken Hill. In this interview Ross Laurie reflects upon his experience of the 'Not The Way Home' prjoect and the relationship with landscape in his painting.

GET THE ARTICLE HERE

2012 will be a big year for Ross, with the 'Not The Way Home' exhibition on at the S.H. Ervin Gallery 25 May-21 July, and then touring nationally.
1-4 August, Ross Laurie's work will be on display at the Melbourne Art Fair.
4-29 September, Ross' first solo show in two years at the Damien Minton Gallery, Redfern.

Thursday, August 26, 2010

ROSS LAURIE WINS THE KING'S SCHOOL 2010 ART PRIZE

We are delighted to announce Ross Laurie was awarded the $15,000 Acquisitive King's School Art Prize, which was judged by Glenn Barkley, Curator at the MCA, Sydney.

Some of the other invited finalists included Idris Murphy, John R. Walker, Brett McMahon and indigenous artists Eileen Napaltjarri and Gladdy Kenmarre.

The art prize was established in 1994, and previous winners include Aida Tomescu, John Olsen, Nicholas Harding, Ben Quilty and Gloria Petyarre.

When announcing the award last night, Glenn Barkley quoted from the late great Nick Waterlow OAM:

'There is something magical at the core of Ross Laurie’s art. That his work relates intimately to the landscape around Walcha, indeed is inspired by it, we know. Yet it is the language he has developed to express a special place that elicits a unique understanding of this natural order in all its guises.

'His art hovers between the visible world and the unseen rhythms of a land that only deep acquaintance and affection can capture. The strength and vibrancy of his use and choice of colour, and his creation of the contours and complex interweaving of undulating terrain, with the presence of tree, shrub and other forms, punctuate the picture plane to produce dynamic, earthily constructed and felicitously choreographed images that I believe are of lasting significance.'

Ross will be exhibiting a new series of work at the Damien Minton Gallery, commencing Wednesday 20th October, 2010.















Ram's Gully - Butt Up

Oil on canvas
1370mm x 1520mm

Thursday, July 29, 2010

Damien Minton Gallery at Melbourne Art Fair

Damien Minton Gallery is exhibiting at Melbourne Art Fair 2010. We invite you to come visit us at Stand A50 Upstairs, where we are pleased to present new work by Ross Laurie, Peter Gardiner and Tom Carment. 






We will also be showing selected sculptural works by artists Michael Callaghan, Myfanwy Gullifer, China De La Vega, Martin Sharp, Luke Temby (CUPCO) and Tony Twigg. 


Melbourne Art Fair 
Royal Exhibition Building 
5-8 August 2010


Image: Ross Laurie, Tree and Shadow - Ram's Gully, 2010. Oil on canvas, 2200mm x 4000mm (diptych).