Coming Down the Creek in Good Time
Coming Down the Creek In Good Time
is about what I imagine it
was like
before.
It is like this still and
It will be like this in the future.
Thoughts
This work is a scene from the past, from the present and from
the future.
I am alluding to an earlier life of Australians, to different
life conditions.
There are places still that do not make this work historical or
fictional.
There are places and times ahead of us which this work seeks to
represent.
These figures come out
of memory which
is compiled
of stuff from life as seen. It comes from representations from
art, from
the best and worst of all art and artifact. It comes from my
sense of
what is appropriate and also the limits of my understanding. It
comes
from propoganda, correctness, hype. It comes from my
coniderations. Above
all else however, the figures emerge from drawing. With drawing,
you cannot
design. Drawing extracts that which the mind conceals. You
accept, to
a large extent what the drawing delivers once the programme has
been set.
The figure is not widely applied to contemporary art. It is my
belief
that there is life in the figure still without re-coursing to
history’s
models. The figure can be used to refer to a contemporary
condition. It
is in combination with other figures, that the potential of the
figure
is particularly evident and relevant here. We exist in relation
to one
another. We become more complete in our relations with others.
We become
part of the movement and rhythm of humanity. Often
representations of
groups of figures in art refer to conditions of violence,
disease, revolution,
angst. This group of people is at peace. They are walking down
the creek
to go fishing, "In good time". There is an absence of haste
and anxiety. There is a sense of communion, and an accidental or
spontaneous
dance. The figure and its relationship with architecture needs
to be meaningfuly
reawakened. These figures can occupy that idealised space.
We are imagining. We are remembering. We are wishfully thinking.
We are
getting it right and wrong more often. We are putting all the
bits together,
fragments of what was here. We are presenting it here as the
place which
is as far as we have got which is further than before but not
far enough.
It is a celebration and an apology; it may be a 'romancing'.
It may be naive. This sculpture documents the contemporary view
for what
it is.

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