Sunday, 15 March 2015

Humble rumblings of the week

Plans for the future: recycling clay for tomorrow or the next day



Slurping up inspiration from the likes of Arkley and Oldenburg! 




Slab life. Loving accessible photo editing via my dumb phone.




Framing up Ancient future modern history. 




Angular spectangular construction method. Cutting out the triangles for the roof of my next power pole in the "Switch" series.

Saturday, 7 March 2015

New thangs, from the hand, the pen and the lense


Thanks instagram for pimping my photos. I'm back on the smart phone bandwagon with images to show for it. This is my latest sculpture, during construction in the home studio.


 Old inspiration shot from Charlottes Pass, NSW, Noonan family holiday 2013. Such a great spot, this was an old ski lift, rusting away on the hill.



 Another vintage bit of inspiration, from the trip home to the Sunny Coast from teaching in Toowoomba late 2013. Beautiful forms have been incubating in my head for a few years now. Just starting o manifest into something tangible now.



 Notebook musing on power poles/lines




 New forms. Thinking about a Swell entry. Unfired, underglazed....


 Aerial view. Studio shot.



New work, inspired by a Belgian railway station design from 2004. Took much more work than the earlier shape due to it having 21 individual slabs, each with 4 sides to join. More negative space and randomness than the earlier forms too.

Saturday, 28 February 2015

Studio tid bits

Process shot of  a new slab form. Inspired by an award winning Belgian train station. 21 slabs in total. This will be the third power pole sculpture. It's also the most modified or least based on an actual power pole, and so far has been the most work owing to the sheer number of slabs and therefore large amount of joining which it has required. On the up side its interior width is 80mm so it is wide enough to get my hand inside and work the joints properly which is a huge improvement. The first two works have featured fairly regular cross patterns whereas this one will have more randomness and increased negative space (hopefully).

 Yay for camera phone owning again, and the subsequent low quality night photos it captures. Two unfired, underglazed slab forms.



 Various stages of slab!



Inspiration for third sculpture, taken from the book "Atmosphere", an award winning design for a Belgian train station. Such rad line work in this image.



Final stage of this drawing. Sitting in its frame, getting ready for the Byron Arts Classic 2015, entries due on Monday!

Monday, 2 February 2015

Aquarian happenings


Sketches, sculptures and a recycled frame!



A new sketch on an old duplo box. A still life from the kitchen, bit of a nod to Gwyn Hansen Piggot's still lives. A bit brighter than many which have gone before it, thanks NT for showing me the tropical inspired colours that pulse with life. Simple things, appreciated.



Patching up the shadow box, to keep the moisture out. Hopefully his will be the first of many frames, to really do justice the huge pile of drawings I have stashed away. I have been thinking about sanding back through some layers of paint. Getting inspired by layers of paint on old boats at the Ballina slipway. Something which has always grabbed me, sanded back layers of colour, organic shapes and natural wear.


The image for the frame. This drawing has been ongoing over the past 6 plus months, but is finally finished, just needs to be flattened and framed now. 

As yet untitled, this work is roughly 85x55cm. It is based on a sketch of Darwin waterfront as seen from the jetty. The main part of the ground was a foam core box I rescued from Bachelor College. It features some paint pens which I started experimenting with while teaching there, all the dark blue line work, the red in the rock wall and the yellow windows are paint pen. There is some blue acrylic underpainting and the rest below the skyline is pastel and collage. In the sky, the top bit, the blue is pastel and the pink is spot marking aerosol sourced from highway construction. The sky is made up of food boxes, chocolate and muesli boxes sewn together.

The work captures a nice memory of the Darwin waterfront, a pretty vibrant place. Yet it also captures the new urban construction that is defining the cbd, and I tried to offset these modular building shapes with organic rocks and water, symbolising the meeting of ancient and modern worlds in this city. And also the clash of mining and resource industries clashing with traditional custodianship of the land. This was an ever present theme in Darwin and subsequently in my drawings made about the area.




This is a drawing/painting that currently lives in the frame. I did it shortly after making the frame, and watching a documentary on Basquait. It was a bit of an exorcism. It's a homage to Basquait, and to Tony abbots silly coal quote, and to the general state of the world, especially Australia with our coal mining obsessions. I'm going to sand over this to house the above drawing.



Sandon river. Experiment with a sharpie.


Sandon river. Beach shacks, tinnies and the summer sea breeze.



New power line sculpture starting to take shape. Recycled clay. Approximately 50cm high.

Tuesday, 13 January 2015

New and newish drawings and sculptures

 New slab house process shot, recycled clay


The vault of recycled clay I have been delving into lately




  New slab house process shot, recycled clay



  New slab house process shot, recycled clay



 Sketches, unfinished, Sandon river January 2015



 Full moon beach sketch, the island, Sandon river



  Beach sketch, Sandon river



  Beach sketch, Sandon river



 Beach sketch, Sandon river



 Still life silk painting, from Bachelor.



 Power lines series, aerosol, pastel and paint pen on cereal boxes











Power line greenware about 70cm high

Monday, 15 December 2014

Summer Shows

I have three sculptures, a bunch of badges and a couple of zines for sale in Moonrise gallery this month. View the great images online or drop in to the gallery if your in the area, at 105 Stuart St Mullumbimby. New artist profile, images and blurb on the Moonrise Studio site.
http://www.moonrisestudios.com.au/artists/ceramics/tim-fry

A trio of houses now hanging out in the window of Moonrise Studio and Gallery



Ceramic badges, everyday inspiration, perfect for styling up this summer.






There are also two sculptures and a panel in "Small works" at Kulchjam 1 Acacia St Byron Bay, on show now until January sometime ( date to be confirmed).


Eco Villa


Old Foundry


Monday, 17 November 2014

New work bench studio and some recycled pallet tables


New work bench out the back is now home to all my tools and junk... very happy to have a place to play again



 Pallet size soft wood coffee table







 Small coffee table with rad shapes