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Artist in Residence

Applications for the 2025-2026 Georges River Artist in Residence closed on Friday 31 May 2024. We are currently processing applications. Please check this website for future updates of the process. 

The Georges River Artist in Residence program allows artists time and space to explore new ideas and create new works, to experiment with their art forms and to interact with the local community through public programs. This residency aims to provide opportunities for artists to develop their work, while also contributing to Georges River Council’s cultural programs.
 
The Carss Park Artist’s Cottage is located in a beautiful park setting on the Georges River and provides a studio and accommodation for one artist, who can stay for up to three months. The program is suitable for a wide range of art forms and artists can be local, regional, or international. This is a self-funded residency program, artists are not paid for the program, but accommodation is free of charge.

Join our mailing list to hear the latest information about residencies, upcoming exhibitions, events and opportunities. 
      

 

Current Artist in Residence

Maureen Flynn

9 October – 1 December 2024
Maureen Flynn smiling at the camera in a beautiful floral dress
Maureen is a writer based on the East Coast of NSW on Dharawal country. She loves writing speculative (science fiction/fantasy and horror) and crime fiction short stories and novels, though has also dabbled in poetry. She has written since her early twenties but began taking her art practice seriously in 2018 after being accepted into the 2018 Hardcopy program for emerging writers (funded by the Australia Council for the Arts). Her short stories have been featured in A Hand of KnavesTemporal Fractures [mis]adventures in TimeBeginnings: Australian Speculative Fiction Anthology Volume 1, and Stories of Hope. She has also published A Study in Time and most recently Child of Ash & Flame as well as a collection of poetry.

Maureen will spend her time at the Carss Park residency researching, planning and drafting a psychological crime novel. The novel will be a stand alone about a young woman who cares for her disabled mother whilst working for the Department of Social Services as a political staffer supporting an inquiry into NDIS provider rorts. This novel will deal with a range of timely and sensitive issues around the rights of people with disability and their carers, the failures to protect people with disabilities and their families from abuse and the complex relationships that develop between families in an environment where additional care is given and received.

Image above: Artist Maureen Flynn Image courtesy of the Artist’s website.
Image belowChild of Ash & Flame by Maureen FlynnImage courtesy of the Artist's website.

Instagram: @maureenflynnauthor.
Visit the author's website.
 

Building YOUR writing community talk and Book Launch of Maureen’s latest fantasy, Island of SpiritsBook cover illustration of a castle on a cliff with a lady holding a blue flame on a beach below. With white text that reads Island of Spirits.

Gather knowledge on how to build a writing community to strengthen your practice with writer, Maureen Flynn, followed by book launch of ‘Island of Spirits’. 

During this one-hour talk, you will hear about real life strategies and examples so you can connect with the right communities for your writing goals. You will also have the opportunity to ask questions at the end of the session.

After her talk, Maureen will launch her latest Young Adult fantasy novel, Island of Spirits. She will share with the audience how she conceived this story, her writing process, and give a reading from the book. Copies of her book will be on sale and Maureen will be available for book signings.

Book and find out more on Building YOUR Writing Community Talk

Image credit: Island of Spirits, by Maureen Flynn. Author photo by Tegan Ivison and Cover Art by Timothy Dunnett.
 

Upcoming Artists in Residence

  • Julie Bradley

    Artist seated on a red chair wearing green scarf and black hat with large framed artwork in the background.10 March – 6 April 2025

    Julie Bradley works with the techniques of collage and drawing to create mixed media works on paper. Her artwork investigates ideas of connectedness and expresses aspects of the emotional landscape and states of being.

    Originally training as a printmaker at the Australian National University, Julie later undertook postgraduate studies at the University of New South Wales in Sydney. Julie is an established artist practising in Ngunnawal country /Canberra and has also worked as a visual arts educator lecturing across many disciplines including drawing, design, illustration, life drawing and printmaking at both the Australian National University and the University of Canberra.

    Her work has been represented in numerous selected art prizes including the Adelaide Perry Drawing Prize, Jacaranda Acquisitive Drawing Award, the Sunshine Coast Art Award and the Rick Amor Drawing Prize. She won the Inner North Art prize in 2017, and the CAPO Fellowship for 2020. In 2019 and 2023, Julie was the international visiting fellow at the Ballinglen Art Foundation in Ireland and in 2020 received the City News Artist of the Year Award and the Canberra Critics Circle award for her “sophisticated and eloquently transmitted works on the powerful effects of place and weather”.

    Work by Julie Bradley is held in the collections of the National Gallery of Australia, the Australian National University, ACT Legislative Assembly, Canberra Museum and Gallery, the University of Canberra Collection, Bundanon Trust, Calvary Hospital Birth Centre, Lu Rees Archive, Canberra Hospital, Goulburn Regional Art Gallery and the Ballinglen Museum of Contemporary Art in Ireland.

    Photo credit: Art Atelier.

  • Marco Belli
    14 April - 13 July 2025
    Marco Belli wearing white shirt with red lanyard.
    Marco Belli (Milan, 1993) attended the LAS U.Boccioni school, Milan, obtaining a diploma in figurative arts, the Brera Academy of Fine Arts in Milan, painting section, and the Luchino Visconti Civic School in Milan.

    In 2021 he realised the animations for “Viaggio nel crepuscolo”, coordinating a team of animators to create over 90 minutes of animation. The film was invited to the Official Selection Out of Competition at the Venice Film Festival in 2021, as well as Rotterdam, Trieste and other festivals. Between 2022 and 2024, he directed a team of animators to create the animations for Cineparallax's next two feature films: “Strade nella Malerba” and "Uno Spazio Bianco". 
     
  • Johanna Ellersdorfer

    21 July – 21 September 2025Artist with short brown hair wearing grey jumper with brick wall background.

    Johanna Ellersdorfer is an emerging writer with an interest in material culture.

    She mostly writes essays and also makes artists books drawing on object-based research in archives and museum collections. Using drawing and photography as research tools, she sometimes integrates images into her written work.

    Currently, she is completing a PhD in creative writing at the University of Sydney and has an academic background in materials conservation, literary studies and art theory. For ten years, she worked as a painting conservator.

  • Nicola Moss

    29 September – 26 October 2025

    Nicola Moss is an Australian artist engaging people in considering the value of a healthy environNicola Moss standing in front of an artwork in her studioment. Her collaged works highlight the importance of green spaces amid congested urban environments. Relying on an archive of papers coloured using paint, graphite, printmaking and various stains, Moss' materials travel with her as she explores the physical landscape. Framing nature as a source rather than a resource, the artist highlights how intrinsic sustainable green spaces are to our well-being, both physical and mental.

    Nicola Moss has exhibited throughout Australia; in Japan, Sweden and the USA since beginning her professional practice in 2006. Moss was awarded the Moreton Bay Region Art Award (2012) and HOTA Gallery Commission (2020); and has completed major public commissions for the Gold Coast University Hospital and Nepean Hospital Sydney. 

    She has been a finalist in numerous awards including the Len Fox Painting Prize, John Leslie Art Prize, Fisher’s Ghost Art Award, the STILL: National Still Life Award, Gold Coast Art Prize, Geelong Contemporary Art Award, Waterhouse Natural History Art Prize, Libris Awards and the Sunshine Coast Art Prize. Her work is held in several collections including that of HOTA Gallery Gold Coast, Bathurst Regional Art Gallery, Moreton Bay Region Art Collection and Redland Art Gallery.

    During her time in the residency Nicola intends to engage with the Georges River Community through Bushcare events, having conversations and engaging with projects being undertaken. This will enable her to make observations of how communities influence, shape and interact with the local environment.

    Image: Nicola Moss in the studio (courtesy of the Artist).

  • Anna Fargo

    2 – 23 November 2025Artist with blond shoulder length hair wearing blue apron and red and pink shirt.

    Anna Farago is an artist and educator living on Wurundjeri Country in Naarm/Melbourne.

    Frequently collaborating with fellow artists and local communities, Farago’s investigations are animated by feminist art histories, craft traditions, the intergenerational transmission of knowledge and experience of place.  

    Farago embraces a fluid and preformative approach to making that incorporates craft, works on paper, painting and photography. She’s interested in the formal language of textile design and its orientation to colour, geometric shape, and line. Her work utilises femmage, a way of making with a centuries long history in which the artist incorporates scraps and leftovers and combines materials in collage.

    Central to her practice is an exploration of ecosystems. Her work poses questions around ways in which we sustain material traditions, the intersection of personal and collective memory, and processes of constructing and reconstructing belonging. 
     

  • Meredith Connie

    5 – 25 January 2026Artist with red hair and wearing grey blouse standing outside next to tree and river.

    Meredith Connie is a composer and performer.

    Her aesthetic has grown from her profound and early connection to the nylon string guitar and a love of a sound world without traffic noise.

    Meredith loves collaborating, prioritising chamber compositions and working with other artists across different mediums and platforms.

  • Shelley Watters
    2 February - 25 April 2026

    Shelley Watters (she/her) (b 1981) is an emerging artist who resides and creates on the unceded lands of theImage of artist with curly hair standing against brick wall Gadigal and Wangal peoples. She explores modes of repair to further social and environmental justice through an interdisciplinary practice spanning sculpture, installation, performance, photo media, textiles, sound, and video.

    In November 2023 she presented Safe Space, a solo installation exploring gender-based violence at 107, Redfern, assisted by the City of Sydney and 107, in 2024 she presented a solo show COMPOST IS SO HOT at Airspace Projects. Her work has been included in group shows at Articulate Project Space, George Paton Gallery, and Herland at the Women’s Library, Newtown. In 2024, she was a finalist in the 2024 Mullins Conceptual Photography Prize and was Shortlisted for the Incinerator Art Award: Art for Social Change.
    Watters is a mother to three children, recently identified as autistic, and will graduate from Sydney College of the Arts in 2024. She holds a Permaculture Design Certificate from CERES, Brunswick. Alongside her art practice, her career in marketing and communications spans more than 20 years with roles in the arts and non-profit sectors.

    She intends to undertake the following place-based activities during her Carss Park Residency in early 2026: Engaging, listening and feeling the environment by swimming, walking and kayaking. While doing this she will collect rubbish and fallen flora and natural materials and print these on paper using ink; and darkroom-less photographic printing and reuse the waste in sculptures.

    Much of her practice is relational, and she intends to interact with the human and non-human visitors to Carss Bush Park through both spoken and unspoken dialogue and community open-studio sessions on Saturdays while in residence. She makes field recordings and interviews using specialised audio equipment – these sound recordings will form an aural print of Carss Bush Park, encompassing snippets of the social interactions, the water and environment.

    She will be led by the community in research about the local native flora, cultivate local plants and return these seedlings to the community at the conclusion of the residency.
  • Tahlia Henderson

    4 May - 5 July 2026
     Artist with brown hair wearing brown T-shirt and jeans seated beside framed artworks of trees and plant life.
    Tahlia Henderson is a landscape painter working from bushland found on Gadigal Country and surrounds, and currently lives and works on Wangal Country/Inner West Sydney. 

    In the years since finishing her Visual Arts Degree (Sydney College of Arts, 2012-2014), she has experimented and developed her own style of painting using watercolour. She is interested in capturing the variety of ecosystems found within the different areas of bushland she explores and walks through. She uses her phone to capture the parts she finds most beautiful and works from the images in studio to construct the composition for the scene specific landscapes.

    All the intricate detail within the work is always dominated by a stark black background. When painting the land, she is conscious that as a descendant of Scottish immigrants, she is foreign and untethered to it. The Connection to this place will always belong to Aboriginal and Tores Strait Islander Communities, Elders and Culture.

    In the last couple of years, she has excitingly been selected as a finalist in the Paddington Art Prize 2022 and The Blacktown Art Prize 2024. This year she completed her first Residency at Big CI, Bilpin and just wrapped up her first solo exhibition at Ironbark Gallery “Scenes from Gadigal and Surrounds”.

    She is very much looking forward to her time in studio during her Georges River Residency in 2026. She looks forward to studying and painting the surrounding natural spaces and will host an Open Studio during her stay.

  • Lada Dedić

    13 July – 30 August 2026
    Lada smiling at the camera while holding a paintbrush
    Lada Dedić is a rambler in thought, speech and practice, known for straying off the path in both life and work. A full-time travelling artist and maker, she divides her time between Australia, the South Pacific and South East Asia.

    Her multi-disciplinary investigative approach explores themes of meditative contemplation, the interplay of science & art, and playful cartography. Having a peculiar relationship with direction has led her to make unconventional maps, sure to send even the most seasoned navigator on an unexpected adventure.

    During the residency, Lada intends to incorporate local cartographic map work with a focus on public interaction and participation. There is further potential for her hosting a series of interactive workshops throughout the residency, with the outcome being a local contemplative map community art-piece made in segments, during the community workshops, and throughout the residency.

    Image: Lada Dedić in the studio (courtesy of the Artist). 
     

  • Benice Hopper

    7 September – 2 October 2026
    Artist with blonde short hair wearing blue blouse and with brick wall background.
    Bernice is a textile and mixed media artist based in the West Midlands of England. Her textile pieces predominantly feature hand-dyed and printed fabrics or papers, combined through both hand and machine stitching. She integrates a variety of techniques and processes, reflecting her diverse knowledge and capabilities.

    Bernice's work often explores themes connected to specific locations, such as Venice, Florida, and the canals of the West Midlands. These themes have inspired her to create Artists Books and striking textile Wall Hangings. A distinctive feature of her work is the consistent use of breakdown printed fabric, which adds a unique textural quality and depth to her pieces.

    A visit to the "Dancing in Fetters" exhibition at Fremantle Prison, Western Australia inspired her current textile work on captivity, freedom and identity. Integrating her own creative writing into these pieces adds a personal dimension to her exploration. During the residency, Bernice wants to develop these themes further through writing and experimenting with different techniques.

    Given the residency's proximity to Botany Bay, it is natural to consider the historical context of the First Fleet's arrival and the experiences of convicts sent from the UK.  However, she aims to broaden this exploration to encompass other forms of captivity, particularly depression, and freedom examining their impact on identity.

    During the residency Bernice will facilitate two art journalling workshops based on Identity. Both are suitable for adults of any ability. In order to make the workshops accessible for a wide audience Bernice proposes to limit the materials and equipment needed so that participants can complete the project at home with very little expenditure. She will demonstrate other media and techniques that participants could use if they wish to take a more in-depth approach to art journalling.

  • Macon Reed
    12 October – 12 December 2026

    Macon Reed is an artist working in sculpture, installation, video, painting, and social practice. Their work has shown at venues such as the National Art School (Sydney), San Francisco Museum of Craft and Design,Macon Reed smiling at the camera in a colourful floral shirt. Transmediale Vorspiel (Berlin), La Patinoire Royale (Brussels), the University of New South Wales Gallery (Sydney), Columbia University, Brown University, Royal Academy of Arts Schools (London), Wattis Institute for Contemporary Arts, and Museum of Art and Design NYC. They received First Prize at the 2023 Louisiana Contemporary exhibition at the Ogden Museum of Southern Art.

    Reed completed their MFA at University of Illinois at Chicago (2013) and BFA from Virginia Commonwealth University (2007). They studied Physical Theater at Dah International Theatre School (Belgrade), Radio Documentary at Salt Institute for Documentary Studies (Maine), and Socially-Engaged Arts at The Kitchen (NYC). They attended residencies and fellowship programs at Royal Academy of Arts (London), Eyebeam Center for Art+Technology, Amherst College, Lower Manhattan Cultural Council, and Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture.

    Press includes: The New York Times, Hyperallergic, Artnet News, ArteTV France, ArteTV Germany, CityTV: Santa Monica, The Guardian, Whitewall, Vice, Huffington Post, Confederezione Nazionale, Art F City, The Washington Post, The Village Voice, New City Art, The Observer, Australian Broadcasting Corporation, and Time Out Sydney.

    Image: Macon Reed (courtesy of the Artist). 

 

Past Artist in Residence

2024

  • Rochelle Summerfield

    22 January – 3 March 2024
    Image showing long paper artwork hanging from wall onto floor.

    ‘Confluence’ installation, Water: presence & absence, curator Rilka Oakley, Blue Mountains City Art Gallery, Dec 2022 – Jan 2023. Artists Rochelle Summerfield large-scale drawing and wall painting, with Tracy Pateman small metals and Will Rodgers sound, Silversalt photography.

    Rochelle Summerfield is a multidisciplinary artist working with drawing, paint, collage, print media and installation. Her practice is deeply influenced by her connections and experiences with her local rivers and habitat in Northern NSW. In the field she makes large scale ‘tree portraits’ that are imbued with the waters and sediments of the River. 

    Summerfield received her Master of Research and Bachelor (First Class Hons) of Visual Arts from Southern Cross University, Lismore, where she trained in contemporary printmaking and drawing.  Her work has been acquired by numerous public and private collections, including the Print Council of Australia and State Library of Victoria. She has exhibited in notable exhibitions including Water: Presence & Absence, curator Rilka Oakley, Blue Mountains City Art Gallery (2022), in Irreverent Matter at Hazelhurst Arts Centre (2021), the Windmill Trust Scholarship 20th Anniversary Retrospective, Murray Art Museum, Albury (2017), and solo shows including Crossroads, Western Plains Cultural Centre, Dubbo (2019) and Penrith Regional Gallery (2017). Rochelle was awarded overall winner in the 2017 Moreton Bay Region Art Awards and has toured nationally in ‘As Far As The Eye Can See’, with Rilka Oakley curator of Blue Mountains City Art Gallery. She has completed several residences such as Penrith Regional Gallery (2017), Hazelhurst Arts Centre NSW and Freemantle Arts Centre (2019), WA.  She has received several grants including the NSW Artists’ Grant in 2019 for her multimedia video project, ‘Crossroads’ through NAVA. 

    Artist's Instagram: @rochelleartist.
    Visit Rochelle Summerfield's website.
    Artist sits at desk painting. The artwork shows blue and purple tones on a large piece of paper.

    Right: Rochelle in her studio surrounded by her tests and drawings of the trees she loves for an upcoming solo show ‘On the River’s edge we meet’ at Grafton Regional Gallery, 2023. Image courtesy of the Artist.

    Rochelle used her time at Carss Park to further explore the relationship between rivers and trees in riparian landscapes (relating to or situated on the banks of a river). Through initial sketches, studies, and tests of river sediment from the Georges River, Rochelle then created large scale Tree drawings. 

    Early in the residency, Rochelle engaged with the community and local Bushcare groups, allowing her to get to know the local environment, to assist with weed eradication, and to see the work they have achieved. This gave her the opportunity to share her experience as an artist who works in and with the environment, and to learn about significant trees and other native vegetation in the area.

    Rochelle also hosted a pop-up exhibition and meet and greet at the Carss Park Lifesaving Hall, where she shared and discussed what she has achieved during this residency. Participants perused materials such as sketches, river sediment tests as well as her large scale work in progress ‘Tree portrait’ work in progress, demonstrating Rochelle’s approach to these two key elements in the riparian environment. Rochelle found that participants loved to share their stories about favourite or life-changing experiences of place as well. 

  • Annabel Butler

    18 March – 30 June 2024

    Annabel Butler is primarily a figurative artist who works across drawing, painting and collage. Subject matter that she has explored over her career includes interiors, landscape, the urban environment and vehicles as substitutes for figures in the landscape. In recent years her practice has taken the form of working in series on location in the tradition of en plein air painting. Her aim has been to hone observations and direct gestural marks to delineate the essential aspects of a specific place over a period of time.
     
    Butler holds a BFA (Hons) in Painting from the National Art School and a BA/LLB from the Australian National University. She has been a practising artist for over 20 years and is currently a Painting Lecturer, National Art School Short Courses. She is represented in Sydney by Stella Downer Fine Art. A regular finalist in state and national prizes, locally Butler has won the Waverley 9x5 Landscape Prize and the Glebe Art Prize (twice). Previous residencies include Bundanon Studios, NSW, the Vermont Studio Center, USA and the Moya Dyring Studio Residency, Cité Internationale, Paris, awarded by the Art Gallery of NSW. Her works are held in the Chau Chak Wing Museum, University of Sydney and Bundanon Trust as well as private collections in Australia, New Zealand, Singapore, USA, UK and Europe.
    Annabel Butler standing in front of a painting.Blue en plein air oil painting of a wharf











    Left: Annabel Butler with her work Barnacles by the Sea. Image credit: Andrew Treloar.
    Right: Annabel Butler, Darling Point Wharf, 2023.
    Visit Annabel Butler's website

    During her residency at Carss Park, Annabel's goal was to explore the relationship between man and the natural world, specifically how human presence (e.g. figures/architecture) in the landscape can dramatically affect the psychological impact of her depiction of place. The location of the Artist’s Cottage was an ideal backdrop for this exploration as there large numbers of people utilising the public space of Carss Park. Working en plein air, Annabel captured the local community enjoying Carss Park; walking, sitting, picnicking in the open spaces, swimming, relaxing and playing on the beach foreshore of Kogarah Bay. 

    Annabel also hosted two well-attended outdoor painting workshops at Carss Park during her residency, where attendees to capture the location's spirit by using natural light, colour and movement in their paintings.
    Annabel Butler instructing a group of artistsA woman painting on a canvas outside, water in background











    Left: Annabel Butler instructing an en plein air workshop group at Carss Park.
    Right: One of the attendees at the workshop, painting a view of the bay. 
     

  • Beric Henderson

    22 July – 25 August 2024

    Beric Henderson began his career in science, having completed a PhD in biology (University of Sydney, 1990) and is now a full-time practising artist. His work is naturally influenced by his background in science, with a strong emphasis on the essence of life and our connection with nature. He is currently working on two main series of works examining the beauty and fragility of the oceans and the transformative processes behind natural biodiversity. 

    Henderson received some formal art training at Southern Sydney Technical College (St George TAFE), and has work held in private collections throughout the world, as well as multiple corporate collections throughout Australia. His work has featured in numerous group and solo exhibitions, alongside a selection of prizes including the Adelaide Perry Drawing Prize (four times), Korea Australia Art Foundation (KAAF) Art prize, Fisher’s Ghost Art Award, St George Art Prize and winner of the Port Macquarie Art Prize (open category) in 2014. He recently completed a residency in Hobart where he did research preparing for an ocean-related exhibition at Manning Regional Gallery (Taree) late in 2024.

    Image above: Transcendence (2022). ink and acrylic on Perspex. Image courtesy of the Artist’s website
    Image below: The Artist in front of his 3D artwork Transcendence, ink and acrylic on Perspex. Image courtesy of the Artists’ website.Beric Henderson looking at one of his Perspex and ink artworks

    Henderson used his residency at Carss Park to consolidate an understanding of the area and his prior reading of the Landscape Heritage Study of Carss Bush Park. As an artist he has an interest in how the local community interacts with the site. Henderson visually explored the historical aspect of the Park’s development, alongside the changing face of the grounds surrounding the Carss Park cottage through photos, sketches and painting studies. During his time as at Carss Park, Beric created a small 3D Perspex of the original Carss Park cottage building as it looked a century past.

    The Georges River community had the opportunity to gain more insight into Beric’s practice through a planned artist talk and open studio, which was followed by a tour and morning tea at Carss Cottage Museum.

    Instagram: @berichenderson.
    Visit Beric Henderson's website.

  • Marielle Gonier

    2 September - 29 September 2024The artist, Marielle Gonier, lunging away from the camera with arms raised, textured blue background

    Marielle Gonier is a dance and mixed media artist who creates by offering a singular vision where arts and movements mix; she defines this as “conceiving a sensitive path between the internal world and the tangible in movement.” Her reflections often refer to socio-philosophical questions such as the human condition, the place of the sensitive in modern society, and the environment.

    Gonier built her classical dance and music training at the conservatory and went on to continue further study in New York at the Russian Ballet School in Broadway, alongside the Jennifer Goubé Ballet School and at the International Dance Academy in Paris. She also obtained a Master in Performing Arts at the University of Paris VIII. Marielle is currently the founder of Un jour / Une performance, where she devotes herself to multidisciplinary artistic creations, performances, and artwork in collaboration across a range of artistic, literary and health areas.

    Image above: Catharsis - Study 1 Performance, at BigCi, (Blue Mountains). Image courtesy of the Artist’s website.
    Image below: Image courtesy of the Artists’ website.The artist, Marielle Gonier, posed in centre of a white room with brown cloths hanging from ceiling

    Marielle’s dance and performance-based practice has been inspired by nature. She used her residency at Carss Park to draw inspiration from the natural surroundings in and around the park. Having responded to her previous international contexts, Gonier was interested in seeing her practice respond directly to the Australian environment. 

    Marielle hosted a well-received body expression workshop, open to all ages and all dance levels, where participants were introduced to various ways in which to express something abstract with their bodies. The workshop invited participants to engage with the environment and their internal world in a meaningful way.

    Instagram: @mariellemadly.
    Portfolio: Marielle Gonier.

2023

  • Lissa-Jane de Sailles

    6 February - 2 April 2023Manequin in a dark room wearing a red woven dress and hat

    Lissa-Jane de Sailles is a basket maker and fibre sculptor based in Nowra, NSW. Her inspiration comes from the patterns and repetitive cycles of the natural world. She has completed a Bachelor of Arts in History and English Literature at the University of Wollongong and discovered a passion for traditional and contemporary basketry. Lissa-Jane now divides her time by teaching, making and furthering her skills with a number of internationally renowned master basket makers. Over the past five years she has been awarded several scholarships which have enabled her to continue her practice and fibre art studies overseas. 
     
    Red waratah girl, paper on Skin 2022 runner up.
    Image (right): Grant Wells model: Kelsey Bos.

    Lisa further developed her basketry practice within the beautiful and natural setting of the Carss Park cottage and surroundings. Alongside her practice she delivered a comprehensive range of public programs which included a weekend ‘Weaving with weeds’ workshop and a 4-week course covering a variety of basketry techniques. As part of her mapping project, participants were given the opportunity to join her in a walk around Carss Park to learn about caring for wild places as well as discuss the uses of native and exotic plants for making baskets and fibre art. 

    Hands showing different woven shapes Hands weaving an oval shape   
    Weaving with weeds workshop (left) and basketry making workshop (right).
    Images courtesy of Hurstville Museum & Gallery.Two baskets of weaving and red thread by artist

    During her residency Lissa-Jane offered two workshops. 

    • Weaving workshop: Weaving with Weeds: two consecutive informative sessions where participants had hands on experience working in nature using found and foraged natural materials that can be used in basketry construction and decorative art for the home. Participants learnt the basics of age-old basketry skills and how to make cordage as well as how to identify, harvest and prepare plant materials for weaving and stitching small baskets. 

    • Four Week Basketry Course: In this four-week course participants learnt various basketry techniques such as random weave, twining, coiling, plaiting, braiding, and looping. Each week classes began by discussing how to harvest and prepare locally foraged plant materials and how to use them in basketry construction. The course aimed to familiarise participants with basic basketry techniques so that you can practice your skills at home independently.

    Image (right): example of basket weaving (detail) 2021, Image courtesy of the Artist.

  • Karl Logge & Marta Romani

    17 April – 11 June 2023

    A person standing on one leg in a forest. A person in front of a building in a forest wearing a woven hat.
    A weird entanglement, 2021.
    Multi format performance, crafted artifacts, video and live-art presentation. Image courtesy of the Artists’ website

    Marta and Karl are a collaborative artist-research team that specialize in the creation of community driven projects that engage landscape, nature, memory, and future sustainment.

    In response to emerging conditions of crisis, transition and instability from Northern Italy and Australia, they decided to relocate to the small island of Sant’Antioco in Sardinia to absorb the knowledge maintained by a 'maistu the pannu' — a master weaver that conserves the original techniques of spinning with the 'fuso', natural dyeing, ancient designs, patterns and stitches. This ongoing process of learning and reflection has opened up a new relationship with nature, landscape and art. Here weaving becomes a powerful tool of meditation and connection with the self, others, and the land.

    Marta completed studies at the school of ancient weaving of Maestro Chiara Vigo, attended the National Film School in Sardinia and Centro Sperimentale di Cinematografia, Animation and has an Honours Degree in Fine Arts. Karl has an (Hons) Bachelor’s Degree of Design from COFA and in 2020 completed a PhD at Charles Sturt University, School of Design. They have work in and have been commission by major institutions such as the Museum of Contemporary Art in Sydney, the Brisbane Museum, the Royal Botanic Gardens in Melbourne and the Auckland Triennial. 

    They have completed numerous residences and won a variety of awards, some of which include Nature, Art & Habitat Residency, An ECO-Laboratory of Multidisciplinary Practice, Taleggio Valley, Bergamo, Italy, Viadellafucina – Twinning Residency, winner of Concorso FABER,Turin, Australia Council for the Arts Skills and Arts Development Visual Arts Residency (Tokyo, Japan).

    Hands weaving on a loom.   Two people weaving an artwork between them
    Weaving with Marta Romani (left), Marta and Karl weaving at Hurstville Museum & Gallery (right).
    Images courtesy of Hurstville Museum & Gallery

    As part of their residency project, both first time weavers, alongside more experienced hands were encouraged to join the artists as they shared their story and work-research in progress. Hurstville Museum & Gallery facilitated two encounters, one at Carss Park, the second at the Museum & Gallery where Karl and Marta created a participatory installation that mixes loom, landscape tapestry, gathering and mapping. Through experimenting with forms that act as an interface of exchange and co-creation, participants experienced an original approach to the ancient art of weaving as a means of connecting past and future, gesture and memory and exploring craft as a radical material heritage that joins personal expression with the natural environment and the spirit that unites them.

    Visit Karl Logge & Marta Romani's website.

    During their residency Karl and Marta facilitated the following events:  

    Weaving encounters Participants were invited to meet Karl and Marta, who introduced themselves and their research/work so far. They discussed their practice and approach as it relates to the landscape and showcase some of their techniques, as they host a participatory workshop.

    Saturday 6 May 2023, 10.00am – 12.00pm - this event has now passed. 

    Address: Carss Park Lifesaving Hall
    Cost: Free
    Artist talk and installation Participants were invited to meet  Karl and Marta who discussed their work and provided a viewing of a site-specific installation that they have completed during their residency.
     
    Saturday 10 June 2023, 2.00pm – 3.30pm - this event has now passed. 

    Address: Hurstville Museum & Gallery, 14 MacMahon Street, Hurstville
    Cost: Free
  • Bernadette Bayley Smith

    26 June - 20 August 2023
    A large cylinder decorated with an blue, green, yellow and brown swirling artwork
    Newtown Art Seat in Sydney, commissioned by Marrickville Council.
    Image courtesy of the Artist’s website.

    Bernadette is a Sydney-based, cross disciplinary artist who uses art to raise awareness of the nonhuman world and environmental sustainability, particularly water. Blending fine art and documentary approaches, her practice encompasses photomedia, video, painting, sculpture, and installation. Her works have delved into endangered waterways, wetlands and coastal hinterlands of Greater Sydney which are under threat from extractive industries and inappropriate development. Smith has exhibited in multiple prizes, as part of festivals, had solo and group exhibitions throughout NSW and has completed a residency at Bundanoon Trust.

    Smith completed a Master of Fine Arts by Research at Sydney College of the Arts, a Multimedia Certificate IV TAFE, Newcastle, a Graduate Diploma Professional Art Studies and a Bachelor of Education in Art. Her works are currently held at ARCO Experimental Cinema Library, Madrid, Spain; Kodak Photography Collection, Sydney; Bibliotheque Nationale, Paris, France; Fotogalerie Kommunale Friedrichshain, Berlin; State Library of New South Wales, Mitchell Archive, Australia; and the Australian National Film Archive.

    Website: Visit Bernadette Bayley Smith's Blogspot

    A group of people looking at a sculpture in a park  Two people walking close to some water   
    Photo safari, Carss Park. 
    Images courtesy Hurstville Museum & Gallery

    Smith utilised her residency time to research, observe and visually interpret the historical and recreational nexus of the marine eco-system of the Georges River. She explored some of the physical changes wrought upon the seascape by colonial and post-colonial disruption. In a series of sketches, diaristic notes, photographs and video vignettes she investigated how these places not only sustain historical, social and recreational connections for the community but are also vital for the conservation of nature and the biodiversity of our marine ecosystems. 

    Photo Safari for children & their guardians consisted of a two-hour walking tour where participants learnt tips on how to compose and expose good photos under natural lighting. The basics of camera controls such as ISO sensitivity, aperture, shutter speed, selective focus and composition were also shared. While taking photos around Carss Point Baths, Carss Park Channel and Foreshore habitats including its intertidal rock platform we looked for unusual viewpoints and studied the effect of sunlight and shadow.

    In addition, Bernadette opened her studio space and facilitated an artist talk where she discussed her visual research and experimentation at the residency. Bernadette has expanded and developed her art practice by working in nature and exploring both the environmental and social context of the Georges River. Her latest art project using video, photography and expanded drawing, reflects on the environs of Kogarah Bay as a constantly modified coastal landscape embodying ongoing colonial impact.

    During her residency Bernadette facilitated the following events:  

    Two hour photography safari 

    You will learn tips on how to compose and expose good photos under natural lighting. We will cover the basics of camera controls such as ISO sensitivity, aperture, shutter speed, selective focus, and composition. While taking photos around Carss Point Baths and Carss Park Channel and Foreshore habitats including its intertidal rock platform, we will look for unusual viewpoints and study the effect of sunlight and shadow.  

    Saturday 29 July 2023, 2.00pm - 4.00pm - this event has now passed. 

    Artist in Residence studio talk Join Bernadette Smith for a one-hour artist talk and presentation where she will discuss her visual research and experimentation at the residency. During the presentation and studio tour there will be question time and discussion of work-in-progress including how art could assist post-colonial reconciliation and climate justice. Bookings are limited to 10 adults. 

    Saturday 19 August 2023, 2.30pm - 3.30pm - this event has now passed. 
  • Liz Walker

    3 October  – 31 October 2023

    Liz Walker, previously based in Melbourne and now residing in Red Hill, investigates contemporary social and environmental concerns by collecting, repurposing and extBracelet made of found natural items showing shells and leaves.ending the material possibilities of natural ephemera, found detritus and recycled domestic. Walker uses an extensive range of resources gathered from around the inner city and rural sites to construct sculpture, assemblage, installations and ephemeral site-specific responses to people, time and place. 

    Liz has exhibited widely in both solo and group exhibitions, undertaken public artworks, received awards, grants and residencies and her work is held in public and private collections in Australia, Japan, Malaysia and Ireland.

    Visit Liz Walker's website.
    Image: If the future fits wear it, 2017Image courtesy of the Artist.

    During her Carss Park residency, Liz produced a sculptural work called Salt of the earth in response to the stunning scenery and natural qualities of the Georges River region. Salt of the earth is an oversized charm bracelet comprised of dozens of amulets hand-made from vintage brass, copper, roofing iron and pressed tin. The individual amulets, which are to-scale replicas of natural fragments (leaves, shells, bark, etc) that Walker found at Carss Park, are suspended on vintage chain. Upon the work's completion, it was immersed in the Georges River for a few hours to shroud it with a sense of place.
    Liz walker showing another woman a bracelet at a workshop
    While exploring her environmentally-focused practice within the Carss Park cottage setting, Liz hosted a workshop inviting the public to contribute to a communal artwork to be donated to Georges River Council for public display. The public was invited to contribute a piece of writing focused on an environmental pledge and accompany this with a small drawing and collage. It was then rolled, folded, or manipulated in any way they determined, before being attached to a communal bracelet.

    The finished bracelet acts as a constant reminder about the communal need to look after and preserve our precious environment. 

    "This residency has provided time and space to respond to the location on a deep level - each day something new has unfolded and all have contributed to the work I've made here." - Liz Walker.

    Image from workshop hosted by Liz Walker at Carss Park2023Image supplied by Georges River Council.

  • Manfred Krautschneider

    Art of a portrait of the artist, Manfred Krautschneider, in a strange land6 November – 17 December 2023
    Manfred Krautschneider, aka Manfred, is a painter, photographer and new media artist, whose work responds to the fluidity of space and light. His works observe reality as seen in reflection, from outside, or tangentially, in order to acquire something essential and surprising about the subject. His work is most commonly depicting streetscapes as reflected on imperfect surfaces.

    Manfred has a Diploma of Visual Art from Box Hill Institute and a B.A. M.Sc. Ph.D from Monash University. He has exhibited in numerous solo and group exhibitions and has been a finalist in the Gosford Art Prize, Wyndham Art Prize, Fisher’s Ghost Art Award, and Tweed Regional Gallery, Border Prize.

    ​Visit Manfred Krautschneider's website.

    Image (top right): Portrait of the artist in a strange land, 2017, mixed media. Image courtesy of the artist's website.
    Image (bottom): Terrible Beauty, 2015, Photograph, Edition of 5. Image courtesy of the artist's website.

    During his residency at Carss Park, Manfred set out to capture and explore the Georges River and surrounds from the lens of an observer using photography. Manfred’s residency focused on viewing and capturing the Georges River as seen from the edges, from outside, tangentially, in order to acquire something essential but new and surprising.

    As part of his residence, Manfred hosted a Surreal Streetscape Photography workshop at Carss Park. Led by Manfred’s goal of eliciting an exploration of and responses to the Georges River’s natural and built environments, participants spent a sunny Spring afternoon observing and capturing the local streetscape in new and surreal ways.
    A distorted photograph showing reflections of shop fronts and an aeroplane in a glass window













     

2022

  • Emma Varga

    1 - 28 February 2022

    Emma Varga was first introduced to glass in her birthplace of Yugoslavia during her time as a worker in a glass factory. Varga’s practice is an ode to her enduring focus on the fine details of colour, pattern and repetition, combined with complex and laborious processes which she has spent the last 20 years honing. Her work focuses on flora and landscape which she has captured from the many places she has travelled and lived. Today, Varga’s work is represented across both Australia and the world, having extensively exhibited in over 80 major international exhibitions and over 30 solo exhibitions.

    Instagram: @emmavarga.glass.
    She is represented by Sabbia Gallery.
    Colorful sculptures made out of glass
    Image: Forces of Nature- Rage & Revival, glass, 52 x 64cm, 2021. Courtesy of the Artist’s website.

    Varga conducted a public engagement event as part of her residency in late February 2022. It was an opportunity for the public to not only visit the Carss Park Residency site, but also get a more in depth understanding into the artist’s practice. The presentation covered the artists experience as Artist in Residence, provided information on the glass making process, and touched on the inspiration she drew from the site and her current workings.

    Artist demonstrating to a group of people how to work with glass
    Image: Public engagement with Emma Varga at Carss Park. Image courtesy of Hurstville Museum & Gallery.

  • Kathy Mackey

    2 March – 24 April 2022

    Kathy Mackay is a Queensland based photographer, painter and installation artist who explores the complexity of space and light within art and architecture. She completed her PhD in 2011, and works across photography, painting and installation to explore her interest in public leisure activities and cultural tourism. Kathy, throughout her career has been the recipient of several awards and fellowships.

    Visit Kathy Mackay's website.
    Instagram: @klm186.

    Colorful foam sticks creating an sculpture by the sea
    Image: The Jetty, Kathy Mackey 2022

    Kathy undertook her Residency at Carss Park to create a new body of work to reflect her engagement with the Georges River area through still and moving images. The artist created an online resource pack which came in the form of a seven-week blog that referenced her practice within the context of the NSW Syllabus Stage 6 Visual Arts Curriculum Frames: Subjective, Cultural, Structural and Postmodern. Mackay reflects on the residency as having “significantly impacting my professional development and artist practice” and the “Artists Cottage is a fabulous and very unique setting’.

    Click on the thumbnail below to view the educational resource:
    Artist in residence Kathy Mackey Educational pack image
  • Sarah MacEwan

    9 – 29 May 2022
    gray, yellow and black artwork
    Sarah McEwan is an artist, musician and an artist-curator whose work focuses on feminism and social change. Her practice encompasses multiple disciplines including painting, textile, installation, text, music and video which she uses to create solo installation works. She is passionate about 'onto-ethics'; how to make the present world different from the past. In 2016, Sarah was awarded a Create NSW Regional Fellowship where she undertook residencies at Duke University USA (2017), Women’s Centre for Creative Work USA (2018) and Bundanon Trust (2018).

    Visit Sarah MacEwan's website.                  
    Instagram: @sssarahmcewan.

    ImageA portrait from the Frozen in Time Project, 2022Image courtesy of the Artist

    Sarah’s Frozen in Time project invited the Georges River community to sit for her. The sitting process involved a 45-minute discussion with the artist, who in turn produced a non-representation portrait of sitter and their interaction. These artworks are looking at the limits of portraiture which, like place and lives too, change over time. She goes on to say, “Within these portraits I am responding to the thoughts, sounds or words that come from people’s mouths or through written text, not their physical shape or form”. Sarah also held an artist talk at the Cottage in late May to share the developing artworks from the project and to hear the stories behind the portraits.

    Artist giving a talk to a group of adults

    Image: Artists talk with Sarah McEwan. Image courtesy of Hurstville Museum & Gallery

  • Barbara Wheeler

    31 May – 24 July 2022

    eucaliptus leaves and textiles treated by eculiptus

    Image: Eucalypt dye research. Image courtesy of the Artist.

    Barbara Wheeler is an Australian artist, living in both Australia and New Zealand, who works with natural fibres and fabrics, botanic prints and dyes in a practice that spans clothing design, stitching, basketry, and fabric piecing. Barbara’s artworks reconnect us to nature.  She immerses herself in the local landscape, observing the systems and connections found there. Her works speak of country and our environment through the physical connections to plants, soil, water and air.

    Website: Everythreadcounts
    Instagram: @every_thread_counts

    Artist giving a talk to a group of women

    ImageBarbara Wheeler and participants at her botanical dying workshop. Image courtesy of Hurstville Museum & Gallery.

    During the residency at Carss Park Barbara investigated the Georges River eucalypts for their botanical dye properties and in doing so, this deepened her understanding of the Georges River as an entity of the region. Barbara Wheeler shared her experience as an Artist in Residence at Carss Park with our community through a workshop. Participants explored the plants and foliage of Carss Park that Barbara had been experimenting with during her stay. Participants were then encouraged to bundle, and print using the foliage found on the ground. Giving an invaluable insight into the delicate unpredictable nature that is creating art with the natural environment. When talking about her experience during this residency, “I am grateful for the support to extend my understanding of river… My aim for the residency is to create new fibre and textile works about the Georges River and to share my eucalyptus botanical dye research.”

  • Hilde A Danielsen

    5 September – 27 November 2022 
    Wooden sculpture painted yellow and black on grassy field.
    Hilde A Danielsen is an artist, art communicator and art consultant, working in Norway and internationally. Her work delves into light, shadow, perceptual displacements and optical instruments. Her works are strikingly geometric and play with paradox and impossibility. She has shown and built larger spatial works of art at several sculpture biennials, sculpture events, art exhibitions and interdisciplinary arenas both indoors and outdoors in Norway, Denmark, Sweden, Finland, UK, Poland, Estonia, the Netherlands, USA, South Korea, Japan and Australia.

    Website: Hilde Angel Danielsen

    Image: CoV 2 Corridors by Hilde A Danielsen at Sculptures by the Sea Bondi 2022, photographed by Ellen Dahl.

    Artist working on a metal sculpture outside on a green garden  Artist working on a metal sculpture outside on a green garden
    Image: Hilde A Danielsen at artist in residence at Sculpture Space, Utica, NY, USA 2018. Photographer Ana Cvoroic. Image courtesy of the artist.

    Hilde took part in Sculpture by the Sea 2022 while conducting her residency at Carss Park. Her objective throughout her 3-month residency was to continue developing her pavilion style structure, otherwise known as Gazebo Uno which she describes as a place of contemplation and reflection on ones life; past, present and future. 

    In Hilde’s words: "I work within the theme, the Boat, in dialog with Nils Aas Kunstnerverksted, a Norwegian artist also eager to let children and youngsters have access to crafting tools and workshops, learning how to make their own arts. I aim to do research for upcoming spatial art, to be exhibited in my two solo exhibitions in Norway next year, indoors and outdoors at Sami Centre of Contemporary Arts, Karasjok and outdoors at Muustrøparken, Inderøy, Trøndelag. Beside this I look for future potential for Transparent brick walls installations for permanent sites."

    View Hilde's blog post to read about her artistic process.

  • Tara Gilbee

    30 November 2022 - 13 January 2023
    Artwork with a dark background and white dots and patches
    Solograph, 2021.
    Image courtesy of the Artist 

    Tara Gilbee’s practice moves between individual studio work to the exploration of interesting sites and context for making and presenting work, with a focus on the interstices of site and practice. Tara has a keen sense of experimentation within her methods of art practice, drawing on her medical and scientific understanding she applies a range of approaches and knowledge systems. Tara has received a Bachelor of Fine Arts in Sculpture at The University of Melbourne VCA in 1996, has completed a Masters of Contemporary Art at VCA in 2019 and is a sessional lecturer at Deakin University.

    Visit Tara Gilbee's website.

     People sitting on chairs in a circle around a room
    Tara Gilbee & participants at her floor talk facilitated at the residency.
    Image courtesy of Hurstville Museum & Gallery.

    During the residency at Carss Park, Tara explored the fluctuation of water and time. Having previously explored this theme in other residencies Tara focused on the Georges River as a prime location in which water and urban spaces intersect. Looking specifically at the shimmery reflective light of the river she captured the ways in which it intersects with the ecologies of natural and urban forms. She held an artist's talk about her photographic practice and site specific explorations at the residency. 

2021

  • Lauren McCartney

    9 – 28 February 2021
     light brown foam sculture
    Lauren McCartney is a multidisciplinary feminist artist who lives and works on Dharawal Country/Wollongong, New South Wales. Her work parodies objectification and conventions of appropriate female behaviour. McCartney holds a PhD (2018) through Curtin University and a Bachelor of Creative Arts (2010) (Honours Class I) from the University of Wollongong. Her work has been collected by the Art Gallery of Western Australia. She has exhibited her work, participated in art prizes and residences, and presented on her practice both nationally and internationally.

    Instagram: @laurenmccartneyartist

    Image: Drip, 2021, framed archival pigment print, edition of 10, 62cm x 78.5cm. Image courtesy of the Artist.

    During her residency, Lauren McCartney explored women’s subjective guilt and the absurd pressure put on women to spend their supposed ‘free’ time in lockdown to not only survive the current pandemic but to refine our physical bodies as we do so. She created a series of still life photographs of undisturbed and unacknowledged domestic objects stuffed with dough which, throughout the COVID-19 pandemic, became an item of inflated value. For the artist, “being able to look out over the river helped my creative process, as did being completely alone for days at a time.”

    model on the beach wearing a pink costume made out of balloons
    Image: Here with a Bang (I), 2019. Image courtesy of the Artist.

  • Keila Terencio De Paula

    2 – 28 March 2021
    artist setting up a projector on the beach
    Keila Terencio De Paula is a Sydney based artist, born and raised in Brazil. Her work explores storytelling through physical theatre, aerial dance, puppetry and movement, with a particular interest in subjects related to culture, languages and identity that unite people and societies. Keila holds a Performing Arts degree with UFPR (Brazil) and has been constantly training and researching new approaches of artistic expression. She has collaborated in performances with emerging and renowned artists presenting works at MCA ArtBar, This is Not Art Festival, Melbourne Festival, Art & About Sydney, Integral Aerial Arts, Sydney Fringe Festival.

    Website: Keila Terencio De Paula.
    Instagram: @keilaterencio.    

    Image: End of a River, Keila Terencio De Paula 2021. Photo taken at Carss Park Bay by Emilio Cresciani.

    Terencio, throughout her 3-week residency  invested her time in researching and developing 3 different creative projects, alongside a collaborative video artwork with photographer Emilio Cresciani. Their collaborative artwork End of a River in which Keila performed a free-form aerial dance six meters in the air was shown as part of the June 2021 Un[contained] Festival at Kogarah. The Carss Park residency was an invaluable experience for Terencio, “at the Carss Park Artist Cottage, my project had a “home” and so many other creative seeds were planted from this time spent there. I am leaving the space with my mind and heart full of ideas, and with opportunities to exhibit the work created here.”

    aerial performance dressed up as a space woman
    Image: Curated aerial project for Un[contained] Festival 2021. Image courtesy of Elder.

  • Louisa Chircop

    1 – 26 April 2021
    painted landscape of a riverside
    Born in Sydney, Louisa Chircop’s work investigates the human condition and the subconscious. Her work has been acquired from the Kedumba Drawing Award for the Kedumba Collection of Australian Drawings which is considered one of the most significant and important collections in Australia. She has won the James Gleeson Prize for Surrealism at Campbelltown Arts Centre twice, the FOH Hazelhurst Art on Paper Award, the John Copes Portrait Prize, The Paddington Art Prize Highly Commended Prize and twice been the Critics’ Choice of Guardian Art Critic and ABC Arts Presenter Andrew Frost.

    Chircop holds an Associate Diploma in Fine Arts from St George TAFE and was awarded the NSW State Commission medal for fine arts. She has won the Basil Muriel and Hooper Scholarship AGNSW. Chircop has a Bachelor of Fine Arts Honours Class1 and a Master of Fine Arts Research degree in painting both from the College of Fine Arts UNSW.

    Website: Louisa Chircop
    Instagram: @louisachircop
    Louisa is represented by Galerieheimat (France).artist talk to a group of adults

    Image (right): 'Some displaced wake', 2022, mixed media and photomontage on Yupo paper (Private Collection). Image courtesy of the Artist’s website.

    During her residency, Chircop explored the distance between the Carss Park Artist’s Cottage and her old home, revisiting her past from a distance. Chircop, throughout her residency period, took the time to revisit her experience of growing up in the area and develop that through a new series of artworks. She goes on to explain, “I was able to tap into the well of my memory, recall my experiences, and record my history as a local artist through time/autobiography in a very existential surreal way.”

    As part of her residency Louisa facilitated the Make your mark at Carss Park workshop which was held as part of the Georges River Council’s Youth Festival Month ‘It’s a Mood’. Attendees were introduced to the practices and processes of Van Gogh before creating their own painted landscape. The precious opportunity the residency provided Chircop enabled her to revisit her childhood is encompassed in her reflections of her time, “the general ambiance (all the emotional, physical and psychological residue) from the residency will leave a lasting and invaluable impact on my work and will last into the future.”

    Image (right): Make your mark at Carss Park workshop. Image courtesy of Hurstville Museum & Gallery.

  • Sandra Winkworth

    1 May – 20 June 2021
    portrait photograph of the artist with paper butterflies all over her face
    Sandra Winkworth is a Sydney based visual artist, she layers hand-painted and printed images of the everyday alongside an assortment of found materials. What results are playful installations. Sandra studied at Meadowbank TAFE; Canberra School of Art, ANU and at the Prague Academy of Fine Arts, and has participated in numerous solo and group exhibitions both in Australia and internationally.  Her artist books, prints and watercolours can be found in private and public collections including Sydney’s Artspace and State Library of NSW, the National Library of Australia and the Print Council of Australia.

    Website: Sandra Winkworth
    Instagram:  @bimblebox153

    Image: Portrait of Artist during her residency. Image courtesy of the Artist.

    Sandra, as part of her residency, held a series of free art making classes at Carss Bush Park. This special opportunity allowed the Georges River community to meet, create and share with Winkworth’s creative processes. Over the course of 6 weeks participants developed an individual project, sharing stories and creating new skills by exploring, in a medium of their choice, the mask and home-garden, connecting us to nature. The location of the Carss Park residency allowed Sandra to “relish in the opportunity to paint and draw en plein air, initially, collecting fresh imagery for a new major piece. This mode of working outdoors and directly, unlike my usual studio practice, I would like to develop further as I record what I see and experience which this particular residency can offer.”

    set up with balloons and pink fabric

    Image: Preoccupations and explorations made during my residency, Carss Park, 2021. Image courtesy of the Artist.

  • Katika Schultz

    2 November 2021 – 23 January 2022
    Painting of a little girl on a pink swimsuit on a blue background
    Sydney based artist Katika Schultz is a multidisciplinary artist whose interests lie in psychology, mythology and art’s role as a catalyst. Katika’s portraiture and figurative works lend a thought to magic and the unseen, working from life and memories, slowly layering the complex human image.

    Instagram: @skillzbykat
    Image: Work in progress, image courtesy of Katika Schultz Instagram.

    In her time as Artist in Residence Katika completed a series of watercolours which were displayed at Hurstville Library in March 2022. The collection of works features life drawings and sketches from historical and current photographs, depicting both her own family, as well as others in the Georges River community.

    She comments on her time at Carss Park as an experience that “changed my practice for the better. The space is divine and surreal.”

    Artist Katika painting in a studio
    Image: Katika working at Carss Park, Image courtesy of Katika Schultz Instagram.

2020

  • Sofie Dieu

    4 February – 1 March 2020
     white and black photo of artist Sophie Lieu working on her studio while cutting up some materials
    Born in France, Sofie Dieu engages with underrepresented communities to develop her multimedia projects. Her art lies at the intersection of womanhood, healing and spirituality. Through textile and poetry workshops, Sofie gathers Australians' narratives. In the bush, she performs these personal stories and records them through photography and video. She later edits and paints these digital works in her Melbourne studio. Sofie is an award finalist having been included in John Leslie Art Prize, Hornsby Art Prize, Sydney North Art Prize and Ravenswood Australian Women’s Art Prize, among others.
     
    Website: Sofie Dieu.
    Instagram: @sofiedieu.

    Image: Sofie Dieu at work during her residency, Carss Park. Image courtesy of Hurstville Museum & Gallery.

    During her residency, Sofie facilitated an ink workshop where participants were introduced to the to the main principles of ink painting and learnt the central role of water to compose a balanced abstract artwork. Under her expert guidance, participants explored a series of techniques to represent water and interpret its movement, reflection and energy flow; and experimented with layering effects to create light and darkness.

    group of adults doing a program with the artist where they are coloring in black ink
    Image: Participants taking part in the Abstract ink workshop with Sofie Dieu. Image courtesy of Hurstville Museum & Gallery.

    Museum at Home: Get inspired by Sofie’s work by doing your own ink painting at home. You can view Sofie's how-to video here.

    Sofie took some time to answer some questions about her residency and her artistic practice:

    Is this the first residency you have undertaken? 

    It is indeed, in New South Wales, though in total it is the fifth one I have been invited to. I have been to residencies in Victoria and France otherwise.

    Why did you decide to apply for this Carss Park residency?

    I was immediately drawn by the location of the residency. For the last year and a half, I have been exploring water in my art. Being able to work for a month by the Georges River was very appealing as I was able to observe its different states, at different moments of the day, under various weather conditions. In the morning, I would wake up just before sunrise and would cross Carss Park, sit on a rock and look at the river waking up. I also documented it throughout the day, and evening at sunset.

    What also convinced me to apply to the residency was to be able to live and work from the same place. Having everything provided, receiving the amazing support from the fabulous Council team was a blessing and financially relieving. 

    As I am Community driven, being able to share my practice with local residents at Hurstville Museum & Gallery was also attractive. Sharing my work from conception to exhibition is a big part of what I do.

    Would you recommend this or other residencies to other artists?

    I would definitely recommend this residency to other artists (and I already have!). Each residency has its own qualities and as far as I am concerned, it is good to mix it up a little. It opens up your horizon, in some cases you work with other artists and get to form friendship. With the Carss Park residency, as I was on my own, I used this opportunity to dive in my work and solely focus on it, with no distraction at all. This is a rare privilege, I made the most out of it.

    What did you see as being one of the highlights of this residency?

    Carss Park residency has the perfect balance between natural environment, city facility ease of reach, the sea shore close by. The cottage is well set up and very comfortable. I’d love to have the same amount of studio space back in Melbourne, with the same quality of light and view on the river! 

    The highlight for me was being by the river and going on long walks at any time of the day and night. These were special moments. I would load up with inspiration and creativity and go straight back to the studio and pour it all on paper… how precious!

  • Tess Mehonoshen

    3 March – 18 April 2020
    artist setting up her artwork of sand inside a room with wood floor
    Tess Mehonoshen is an emerging visual artist, currently based in Melbourne. Mehonoshen's practice is concerned with generating a sense of defiance, focusing on adjusting to loss of place, and a subsequent untethered sense of belonging. Working primarily in sculpture and installation on site specific responses, her work aims to intrude within spaces, subtly disrupting the functionality of domestic sites. Using locally sourced fabrics, and locally sourced natural materials. Mehonoshen has a Master of Fine Art from Victoria College of Art, is an award finalist, has completed numerous residencies and her work is held in a number of public and private collections.
     
    Instagram: @tessmehonoshenart
    Image: Tess installing her work in the Carss Park Life Savers Hall. Photo by Elderlad Courtesy of Hurstville Museum & Gallery.

    During her residency Mehonoshen created large scale floor installations using locally sourced beach sand and found fabric. These installations took place outside, in the parkland itself, and in local buildings which included the Carss Park Life Savers Hall and Kogarah School of Arts. Tess reflects on her residency in the following statement, “The residency has a major role in continuing my current body of work and has been vital in pushing the work into new, more expansive territory. The peaceful time to reflect, write and create in such a unique natural setting cannot be understated, and has been critical in developing new works post-residency.” As part of her contribution to the Carss Park residency program, Tess generously donated two photographs of installation images of her work produced during this residency.

    Museum at Home: Get inspired by Mehonoshen’s work with this fun family activity or learn more about Mehonoshen’s process from the artist herself.

    sand artwork on a wooden floor
    Image: Installation of her work in the Carss Park Life Savers Hall (detail). Photo by Elderlad Courtesy of Hurstville Museum & Gallery.

    Tess took some time to answer some questions about her residency and her artistic practice:

    Is this the first residency you have undertaken? 

    I’ve previously undertaken residencies at House Conspiracy (QLD, 2017), Hill End (NSW, 2018) and Fremantle Arts Centre (WA, 2020).

    Why did you decide to apply for this Carss Park residency?

    As an emerging artist all the residencies I’ve undertaken have been self funded, so applying for council run/supported programs is really important as there aren’t additional fees attached which would make the opportunity unobtainable. They are also generally well structured and organised, with helpful and friendly staff that are willing to support the artist, and the Carss Park Residency was no exception. The Carss Park program really appealed to me as it had such a unique natural location, being in a bush parkland but also located close to a major city, so you could experience both worlds within the one residency period.

    Would you recommend this or other residencies to other artists?

    I’d absolutely recommend this residency- it really exceeded my expectations in so many ways. I completely fell in love with the peaceful and beautiful park surrounds, and the staff at the council were beyond supportive to my practice and creative intentions. It was a really crucial time where I could connect to the environment and really focus on making. 

    I feel very fortunate that all the residencies I’ve done so far have proved to be amazing opportunities and have really furthered my practice in so many different ways, so I’d recommend them all, particularly Hill End. 

    What did you see as being one of the highlights of this residency?

    I really enjoyed being allowed the opportunity to work in the local community buildings – Carss Cottage, Carss Lifesavers Hall and Kogarah School of Arts to create larger scale works. Access to these kinds of facilities can be very difficult to arrange for time consuming works such as mine, so having the option to create installations on such a large scale was a new and really rewarding experience. It was an avenue I hadn’t considered prior to my time at Carss Park. 

  • Becky Gibson

    2 June – 23 August 2020
    artist in her own studio, sitting down on a red stall surrounded by landscape paintings
    Based in Canberra and currently completing a Master of Visual Arts at ANU, Gibson experiments with the mediums of painting, drawing and printmaking. The cross over and flow of these various art forms help inform her practice and create new paths for future work. As a painter, she is mainly drawn to the Australian landscape and the visible changes that occur within it; manmade or natural. Gibson received her Cert 4 Fine Arts from St George TAFE, completed Bachelor of Fine Arts (Painting) from National Art School and has completed her Master of Visual Arts at Australian National University, Canberra. Gibson has been a finalist and winner of several art awards and showcased her work in numerous solo and group exhibitions.

    Website: Becky Gibson
    Instagram: @bettygibsoid.

    Image: Artist in studio Image courtesy of Hurstville Museum & Gallery 

    Carss park cottage studio with landscape paintings on process

    Image: Becky’s developing works in studio space in Carss Park Cottage. Image courtesy of the Artist.

  • Venessa Possum

    29 September – 20 December 2020

    Venessa is a Dharug, Dharawal Muringal-Baragal woman with Irish descent, born in Sydney. As an artist and archivist, her site-specific research leads to a diverse oeuvre of gestural painting, drawing, collage, frottage, documentary photography, video art and installations as artefacts. She is also involved in repatriations of Aboriginal material culture, Dharug language as philosophical knowledges and in testing ways to exhibit her creative research in context. She is currently a confirmed as a candidate in the Doctor of Philosophy in Fine Art at the Queensland College of Art Griffith University. Her previous studies include a Bachelor of Contemporary Indigenous Art (CAIA) / Fine Art with honours and a university medal in 2017.

    clay pot with a fine eucalyptus branch on top of the base
    Image: Yanada banga (moons – binding time) 2020Image courtesy of the artist

    Upon reflection, Venessa shared her thoughts in undertaking this residency. “This residency was an amazing opportunity to be able to fully immerse myself in my art practice for a length of time. My time spent walking on Ngurra (Country) as a Dharug Custodian and returning to the studio provided lasting inspirations into the future.

    eucalyptus leaves
    Image: Ngun bayala (us speaking) 2020. Image courtesy of the artist.
     

2019

  • Kassandra Bossell

    27 November 2018 –group of kids looking at a textile butterfly sculpture on the park 3 February 2019

    Kassandra Bossell works in sculpture and installation. Working with materiality and scale, she explores the interconnection of life forms through processes of transformation and cycles of life and death. She engages interactive perspectives by connecting with science, imagination and memory. Kassandra completed a Master of Fine Arts, UNSW Art and Design in 2018, a Bachelor of Visual Arts, Sydney College of the Arts in 1990 and a Bachelor of Arts, Sydney University in 1986.

    Instagram: @kassandrabossel.
    Image: Richmond Birdwing Butterfly, 2018, fabric steel aluminium, 4.5 x 3.6 x 3.6m. Image courtesy of Hurstville Museum & Gallery

    As a part of her residency, Kassandra’s contribution to the Georges River community was a wind sculpture of the Richmond Birdwing butterfly. The sculpture aims to bring attention to the interconnected relationships between humans and animals, and the idea of endangerment and extinction. She also facilitated a drop in kite making session as part of Council's 2019 Australia Day celebrations.

    two little girls holding banners for Australia Day with a message saying happy Australian Dayon the park
    Image: Participants holding up their artworks made in the Australia Day community workshop. Image courtesy of Hurstville Gallery & Museum

  • Jill Samera
    19 February – 3 March 2019
    pastel colour painting of a park
    Jill Samera is a Sydney based visual artist and writer, heavily involved in community art. She is part of the creative team at Georges River Life Church and regularly paints live at gatherings and events. She also writes and performs short spoken word, story and poetry. She loves to experiment with colour and texture, and paints using acrylics, mixed media and more recently, watercolours. Jill has a Diploma in Expressive and Performing Arts: UNSW (Majors: Visual Art, Drama, Dance. Independent Study: Playwriting), and has Graduate Certificate in Writing (Advance Narrative, Screenwriting, Writing for the Camera) from University of Technology Sydney.
     
    Website: Jill Samera.
    Instagram: @jillsamera.art.

    Image: Artwork Carss Park (in progress). Courtesy of the artist.

    Of her experience residing at the Artists’ Cottage at Carss Park, Jill says ‘I am so thankful to have been given the opportunity to create art in the stunning surrounds of Carss Park…I am developing an artist’s trail highlighting great spots to do art in, or to simply stop and breathe in the view. Staying at the Artists' Cottage by the beach was a dream come true.'  Jill's contribution to the local area was a Sketching Trail, for people to see Carss Park from another point of view.
  • Elder

    5 March – 5 May 2019
    Elder posing on a photo with his hands up in the air
    Elder is a professional videographer, photographer, music video creator and resident of Carss Park. His practice explores a modern take on romanticism; using light to replace paint on a canvas, his work seeks to disrupt the internet persona. Having studied Photography post High School, he was directed towards a freelance Photography career which began in 2007. In 2011 the passion for video was revived when given the opportunity to shoot a music video. In 2013 he completed a Graduate Certificate in Cinematography Fundamentals at AFTRS and has since gone on to work on over 100 music videos, and an array of other digital/online content.

    Visit: vimeo.com/hausparty to view his videos.
    Instagram: @elderlad.

    Elder's portrait. Image courtesy of the artist.

    As a lifetime resident of Carss Park, Elder felt compelled to tell the story of this location, through a combination of photography, video, writing, and other mixed media. Despite having spent 32 years living in Carss Park he goes onto explain that doing the residency was an enlightening experience, “It was startling to experience a complete shift of perspective in familiar territory - the new context enabled me to feel like I was on holiday within my own neighbourhood, as I found myself wandering the streets wide eyed, and receptive to new stories. Only now I realise how little I know about this place I call home.”

    picture of Carss Park at night time only illuminated by one light
    Image: 55 days. Image courtesy of the artist.

  • Susan McInerney

    7 May 2019 - 2 June 2019
    The artist, Susan, working on a mosaic artwork on Carss Park artist studio
    Susan McInerney is a mixed media artist working across many forms including but not limited to writing, installation, performance and works on paper. Through her work she explores her identity, role and thoughts on society. She generates playful personal narratives using quirky humorous symbolism inspired by advertising, history and politics.

    Website: Susan McInerney.
    Instagram: @soupsuemc.

    Image: Artist Susan McInerney working on her Waterways series at the Carrs Park cottage. Image courtesy of Hurstville Museum & Gallery

    McInerney was one of Hurstville Museum & Gallery’s earliest Artists in Residence. Throughout her one month stay she worked all day and night producing several series of works- Waterways, Who Stood Here, Botany Bay mud oysters and Modern Midden. “For the first time in twenty years I was able to dedicate a large chunk of thought, time and energy solely in the action of researching, experimenting and making art… The surrounding landscape provided great stimulus for ideas and reflection.” Susan’s community contribution involved a day at Carss Park with local High School students, introducing them to the local history and environment. Students participated in a native flora art making activity, which resulted in small clay tablets depicting the local plants. They were then fired in the school kiln and donated to Georges River Council.

    Kids doing an art program on Carss Park
    Image: Susan conducting her Clay Tablet workshop with local High School students. Image courtesy of Hurstville Museum & Gallery

    Susan took time to respond to her residency at Carss Park.

    Can you give us an insight into your artistic process? Is your work pre-planned or created intuitively? How long does each work take to complete?
    My work is heavily researched and planned but of course there is always room for a little experimentation and play. I am very interested in history and the environment, so I often draw upon these to help guide my creative process.

    Usually, I work with collage in the more traditional sense, i.e cutting up and incorporating found imagery to create a new image, story or meaning. These can take a few days to make. But for Water Ways, the large, embossed collages which will feature in the exhibition, I was influenced by my research into the Australian smallpox epidemic of 1789 and the publication of the massacre maps by Newcastle University. The maps used in the artwork are from Watkin Tench’s ‘1792 Account of the Settlement at Port Jackson’ and the embossing’s take their inspiration from a 1720 Japanese smallpox illustration. Each embossed collage in the exhibition has taken many months to complete and they are very labour intensive.

    Can you explain your technique; how you manipulate the medium?
    The large collages are all hand embossed. To make them I push damp paper into lino cut outs. My tools were spray bottles, towels, elbow grease, lino printing tools and surprisingly crotchet needles, they are perfect for pressing into thick paper. After the embossing I usually ponder the image for a while and once I have found the correct colours and paper I start to collage, using the coloured paper like paint. I often have to leave a work for weeks at a time so I can get a better understanding of what I want to do next.

    My digital images are usually pre-planned or in response to something I have already photographed. I love using Photoshop to make quirky advertising-like images. They are often cheesy and tongue in cheek. I find digital art a great way to play with messages and present them like the mass-produced images I use in my traditional collages.

    Invasive Species uses a mishmash of popular culture quotes combined with images of plastic waste photographed along the Kogarah Bay shoreline. For Who Stood Here I wanted to explore the millions of undocumented experiences people have had in the local area especially in and around Carss Park. I photographed rocks, the keepers or voyeurs of the experiences and created faux postcards to capture the memories.

    Do you keep some kind of ongoing drawing book or diary? Or a collection of images or photographs for inspiration?
    I have a visual arts diary where I write notes and ideas for inspiration. I also have a massive collection of magazines, paper clippings and of course lots of National Geographic magazines.

    When I’m on the internet or looking at social media, I am always bookmarking an interesting web page or emailing web links to myself. A local librarian pointed me towards TROVE an Australian online library database hosted by the National Library of Australia and it is a brilliant place to find primary resources. You can spend hours discovering local or ancestral Australian history.

    There are many books I have found useful for this body of work such as ‘The Colony’ by G. Karskens, ‘The Sydney Wars’ by S. Gapps and ‘A complete Account of the Settlement at Port Jackson’ by Watkin Tench. I have also relied heavily on local publications especially those of the Kogarah and Hurstville Historical Societies, these have been an excellent way to get an insight into the local area and its people.

  • Michael Ambriano

    4 - 30 June 2019

    Having grown up in the Sutherland and St George area, Michael has fond memories of Carss Park. Having grown up both next to the sea and in close proximity to the Royal National Park, Michael's love of the outdoors and nature grew tremendously; with a preference to draw and paint en plein air.  Michael’s art explores the microcosms and beauty of the Australian Landscape with all its harshness and beauty. His paintings reflect the connections between emotions and the landscape through the expression of colour and mass. Michael trained as a commercial printer and undertook further training with a fine art printer – Duck Print - to further develop & refine his skills and practice for works in print media. Michael has been selected as a finalist in the Paddington Art Prize & Georges River Art Prize.
     
    Instagram: @ambrianoart.

    painting of a landscape with a lake, mountain and trees
    Image: “Approaching storm, Carss Bush Park” oil on canvas 2019. Image courtesy of Hurstville Gallery & Museum

    I spent a lot of my childhood exploring, having adventures & observing nature in and around the Carss Park bush land. I hope that my series of art works will allow former and current residents and visitors who grew up and visited the area to reconnect with the bushland and allow them to remember their own experiences with Carss Bush Park”.  Michael's contribution was the delivery of a plein air workshop for a local painting society. In addition to this, Hurstville Museum and Gallery accepted the donation of the painting

    group of ladies on the park drawing nature, park of Michael's workshop
    Image: Participants taking part in Michael’s plein air workshop. Image courtesy of the Artist

    Museum at Home: get inspired by Michael’s work in this fun family activity.

    Having grown up both next to the sea and in close proximity to the Royal National Park, Michael’s love of the outdoors and nature grew tremendously. Ever since he was a child he has had a fascination with the landscape and he has tried to harness this passion when producing his work.

    Can you give us an insight into your artistic process? Is your work pre-planned or created intuitively? How long does each work take to complete?

    Being a plein air painter, most of my works are created intuitively. When I work plein air I take my sketch book & art equipment and create works on what grabs my attention from the surrounding landscape. If I am looking at creating larger work, I create a study or a sketch in the landscape and then create the work in the studio, so that may involve some pre-planning.

    My day in the landscape also includes gathering of data such as colour, form, textures, mood and composition of the works. I then interpret that in my sketch book, small canvas or back in the studio.

    A small work can take around 3-4 hours. A larger work can take up to 2 weeks. The works are then left on display in my studio and I do go back to them over time and adjust or retouch the paintings. At times, once I have had a chance to look at the work over a few weeks, I may scrap a painting entirely and start again.

    Being confident in my medium allows me to work quickly and confidently on the art I am constructing at the time.

    Can you explain your technique; how you manipulate the medium?

    I work wet on wet – I apply a turps / oil paint wash as an under painting to the canvas and then build up the texture from there. Wiping back and adding as I go. I manipulate my tonal range and colours on the canvas as I paint. This enables the process to be instant and allows me to correct or adjust as I work. I use mainly my hands and range of different sized brushes to apply the paint to the canvas. I use my hands as I feel like there is more of a connection to the canvas using this method. If I don’t like what I have created this allows me to wipe it off the canvas and start again. “It feels like I am unveiling the image on the canvas not actually painting it.”

    Do you keep some kind of ongoing drawing book or diary? Or a collection of images or photographs for inspiration?

    I use a day to day visual diary to sketch out random sketches, ideas, forms and thought processes from the landscape. If I am working on a series of work I use as many sketch books as required to immerse myself in the series and to allow me the freedom to sketch and put down ideas, colours and images that may be useful for the series. When working plein air I may also take a series of photographs which I can then refer back to in the studio if required.

     Who are your favourite artists? Who do you draw inspiration from?

    The list of artists I draw inspiration from is long and diverse and ranges from classic European masters to Australian artists.

    My favourite artists include Cezanne, Van Gogh, De Kooning for their shapes, forms and colours. I also draw inspiration from Australian artists such as Sid Nolan, Clifton Pugh & John Olsen just to name a few. 

  • Dawei Xu

    2 – 28 July 2019
    trees on a park with shadows
    Dawei Xu was born in Nanchang, a small city in Southern China. He completed a Bachelor of Arts in 2002 and then went on to study further at the College of Fine Arts (UNSW), completing a Master of Design in 2005. Since graduating he has worked as a full time illustrator and also as an art tutor at institutions such as Western Sydney University and Shine Art Academy.
     
    Website: Home | Dawei Xu.
    Instagram: @dawei_xu

    Image: Untitled, drawing from Dawei’s sketchbook 2019. Image Courtesy of the artist.

    During his residency, Dawei took the time to draw daily to soak in his natural surroundings and capture this landscape, at all different times of the day. He conducted a family watercolour workshop at Hurstville Museum & Gallery as part of his contribution.

    artist Dawei Xu doing an art program with kids
    Image: Family watercolour workshop. Image courtesy of Hurstville Gallery & Museum.

  • Helen Amanatiadis

    2 September – 27 October 2019
    weaving wood machine on Carss park studio
    Helen Amanatiadis is a Sydney based artist whose practice encompasses textile, sculpture, installation and sometimes electronics. She explores the intersections between the spaces we inhabit – physical, virtual and spiritual. She holds a Bachelor of Fine Arts (1992), Bachelor of Art Education (1994) and a Master of Art (2016) from UNSW Art & Design. She is a current Master of Fine Arts (Research) candidate at UNSW Art & Design.
     
    Website: Helen Amanatiadis.
    Instagram: @helenamanatiadis.

    Image: Helen’s creative space in the Artist in Residence cottage. Image courtesy of the Artist.

    Helen’s time as Artist in Residence at Carss Park was instrumental in clarifying her thoughts around her practice. Whilst continuing to develop her practice in the cottage, she also took the time to engage with the local community through public programming sessions. She facilitated a weaving workshop for local high school students following her residency in November 2019 which was held at Hurstville Museum & Gallery.

    the artist, Helen, doing an adult workshop at the Main Gallery space of Hurstville Museum and Gallery
    Image: GRAP Artist lead weaving workshop, 2019. Image courtesy of Hurstville Museum & Gallery.

    Museum at Home: Get inspired by Helen’s work and create your own weaving loom.

    Helen took time to respond to her residency at Carss Park, click on the link below to learn more:

    Is this the first residency you have undertaken?

    No, this is my second residency. I did a residency at ‘Culture at Work’ in Pyrmont in 2016, with a focus on art, science and technology. It was also a three month residency, although it was more intense as I had an exhibition planned at the end of it. During that residency I created my works “Shifting into Consciousness 1 – 4”, which were a really important development in my practice. It was a great experience that gave me the opportunity to incorporate coding and electronics into my textile based work.

    Why did you decide to apply for this Carss Park residency?

    As my first residency was very beneficial to my practice, I had been on the lookout for other residency opportunities.  I heard about the Carss Park residency through my friend Glenn Locklee, who had previously stayed at the artist’s cottage. He highly recommended it, so I looked into it and decided to apply.  The benefits that the residency offered were very appealing, including the chance to stay in an amazing studio cottage in the Carss Park bush area overlooking the Georges River (which must be the only residency of its kind in the Sydney metropolitan area) and the unstructured time to focus on and develop my practice without the pressure of an outcome at the end of the residency.

    Would you recommend this or other residencies to other artists?

    I would highly recommend the Carss Park residency to both local and non-local artists. The cottage is a wonderful place stay with a great atmosphere that, for me, enabled fresh perspectives and clear thoughts to develop about my practice. Whilst my outcome was not as prolific as I would have liked, it gave me a lot of time to think alongside making and was instrumental in clarifying my thoughts about my practice. I would also recommend any residency for the same reasons, including the ‘Culture at Work’ residency for practices that engage with science and technology.

    What did you see as being one of the highlights of this residency?

    Definitely the location and working in the wonderful artists cottage! Also, importantly, the residency offered the opportunity to contribute to the artistic community and programs of my local area, having grown up in Hurstville and now living in Monterey. As part of my contribution to the community I gave a presentation about my practice and an introductory weaving workshop for local school students. Additionally, the chance to develop connections with the team at the Hurstville Museum & Gallery led to other valuable opportunities including creating designs for the Georges River Council signal box project through Art Pharmacy, developing new interactive work for the post covid lockdown group exhibition “Artbomb: connect + create”, and the opportunity to exhibit the outcomes of my residency with fellow residency artists in the “In the Park” exhibition.

  • Emma Davidson

    2purple upper and lower case letter stamps9 October – 22 December 2019

    Born in Sydney, Australia, Davidson utilises a variety of printing techniques such as Letraset, typewriter, stamps, stencils, woodblock prints, solvent transfers, and photocopying. Using this technology, they create collages and zines with found objects and texts. Influenced by the early Modernist Avant Garde (Russian Futurism, Dada); visual poetry and mail art movements (Fluxus); the Situationist International; zines and their associated subcultures; alongside the history of printmaking and typography. Davidson has a Master of Fine Arts (Painting), Sydney College of the Arts, 2010 and a Bachelor of Visual Arts (Hons. 1st Class), Sydney College of the Arts, 2004.

    Website: Emma Davidson.
    Instagram: @eternalproject.

    Image: Untitled, work in progress, 2019. Image courtesy of the artist.

    Emma, as detailed on her website was productive throughout her residency period, which included an impromptu exhibition of Davidson’s residency artworks. Open the window; open the door was installed on the walls of Kogarah Library exhibition space. Emma spoke about their time in Carss Park to The Leader saying the programart studio with three wooden tables and paper work offered artists two very important things: time and space. "My residency was productive but also deeply relaxing - I felt in the flow and able to explore the possibilities of my practise without deadlines, interruptions or pressure…I was able to explore new media and techniques and came up with countless ideas for new projects.”

    Image: Emma Davidson’s residency studio setup. Image courtesy of the artist.

    Museum at Home, get inspired by Emma’s work in this fun family activity.
     
    Emma took time to respond to her time at Carss Park, to read further click on the link below:

    Is this the first residency you have undertaken? 

    This is the first fully residential residency I’ve undertaken. I had a short residency in 2018 at Frontyard Projects, in Marrickville, who run an excellent open residency program.

    Why did you decide to apply for this Carss Park residency?

    I have wanted to undertake a long residency for a long time. The terms of the Carss Park AIR were really appealing: I liked that it was very open to experimentation and that it was positioned as an opportunity for artists to explore and experiment with their practice without pressure to produce anything too defined. It’s really important for artists to have time and space to purposelessly explore their practice. It may seem ‘unproductive’ or directionless from the outside, but it is in free play and exploration that interesting ideas are formed.

    Would you recommend this or other residencies to other artists?

    I would, unhesitatingly. For the reasons above, but also because of the location of the residency. It is a good combination of being close to the city but near nature and cafes and shops, and being on the water is a rare luxury. The facilities at the residency are also excellent.

    What did you see as being one of the highlights of this residency?

    The highlight of the residency for me was simply being able to spend undistracted time alone with my work, in a space large enough for me to work in. Living in Sydney, time and space are at a premium – this is something I feel keenly, in regards to my practice. It affects the type of work you are able to make, its scale for example. At Carss Park I was able to experiment with much larger works on paper than I usually do.



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