Tuesday 14 December 2021

Merry Christmas and Happy New Year from 2 Dogs Art Space Akashi

 


Akashi looking to Awaji 
with super ships behind the seaweed farms 

Merry Christmas 

to

 All


I hope all the supporters of 2 Dogs Art Space Akashi have a safe and happy Christmas and a wonderful start to the New Year.

 

Unfortunately, the space will remain closed to the public into the foreseeable future due to the new Omicron Virus but digital exhibition will be put on regularly.

Thank you 


Tuesday 2 November 2021

2021 Digital survey from recent exhibitions at 2 Dogs Art Space and The Wild Swan Art Group by Western Australian artists

 このアートスペースは、西オーストラリアのアーティストの日本での展示をサポートしています。

以下に、最近の展示のをまとめました。

西オーストラリア ワイルドスワンアートグループ

ぜひご覧ください。
ありがとうございます。

This artspace supports exhibiting Western Australian Artists in Japan here is a small survey of what has been shown from recent exhibitions at 2 Dogs Art Space and

 The Wild Swan Art Group from Western Australia 

please enjoy  thankyou.


Peter Davidson
Morning study of Awaji Rainy Season
pencil/gouache on 300 g water colour paper
148 mm h x 100 mm w




Melissa Nolan McDougall - Untitled
oil on oil paper, 210 x 290 mm






Connie Petrillo - Pemberton Forest

Digital Image







Sally Douglas - Robin
35 cm w x 25 cm h
watercolour on paper







John Cullinane - The Panel
oil on board
21 cm h x 31 cm w







Pippa Tandy - Caroline Pastoral
Mezzotint and digital photograph. 2020.





Michael Doherty
‘Industrial Seascape’
300 x 300 cm
oil canvas









Kevin Robertson Morning Sun Rays 2021
oil on canvas 75 x 102.5 cm







Monique Tippett - Earth Cycle 2019 140 cm Jarrah and Marri Veneers, Ink, lacquers, gold and silver leaf on board
Fluorescent glow in the dark lacquers










Cynthia Ellis

Yellow Day 2020
Oil paint on wood board
60 cm x 60 cm







Linda fardoe

‘In The Clearing” Acrylic on canvas
102cm x 102cm







Lia Mcknight 
Deep in the dark, 2020, glazed ceramic, synthetic hair, tinsel, wool, tassel fringe,
82 x 32 x 12 cm.








Shelley Cowper
From the Boatyard
Etching with relief







Michelle Bourne - Textural Study
Mixed media








Jurek Wybraniec - Title BR_on_G_A1. Year, 2021.
Pigmented acrylic ink on 638gsm WC paper. 56 x 76cm.









Caspar Fairhall - Study for Projection, 2021, iPad drawing







Diokno Pasilan - Distancia Amigo Oil on canvas 40x50cm 2021





Duncan McKay from his exhibition Crux

 all Images courtesy of the artists 


Wednesday 6 October 2021

Works on paper of the Hyogo Landscape Japan



The art space will remained closed due to the ongoing covid pandemic
but please enjoy this smallish exhibition of drawings and watercolours
of the Hyogo landscape
  at 
2 Dogs Art Space, Akashi 
by 
Peter Davidson 
Thankyou  


All vertical artworks are 18 cm h x 14 cm w
landscape artwork below is 14 cm h x 18 cm w 



























 

Friday 6 August 2021

The late summer show

Currently in Japan and in other places around the world the corona virus has worsened this gallery will remain closed but will continue to hold small digital exhibitions of Western Australian artists (even though some have now shifted interstate or overseas)  for some time to come and please take care of yourselves in this pandemic, thank you.


Michael Doherty

Behind the City, the Desert knew the Sky

oil on canvas

100 x 100 cm, 2021


Shelley Cowper
From the Boatyard
Etching with relief




Lia Mcknight 
Deep in the dark, 2020, glazed ceramic, synthetic hair, tinsel, wool, tassel fringe,
82 x 32 x 12 cm.




Melissa Nolan McDougal
Water colour pencil on paper A 4 -210 x 297 mm


Chelle Bourne 
You Promised Acrylic on Acrylic Paper 15 x 16cm



Sally Douglas 
Dingo 
watercolour and ink, 37 cm wide & 55 cm high.


Peter Davidson 
Sunflower study
pen and ink on 300 g water colour paper
148 mm h x 100 mm w






Peter Davidson
Sunflower
Pencil on paper


Caspar Fairhall

Asteroid, 2021, oil and acrylic on wood, 30 x 30 cm.


 

 

 

Diokno Pasilan

Over Board, oil on canvas

40 cm h x 50 cm w 2021



 

Friday 9 July 2021

Mid Summer Rainy Season Show Akashi Japan


Rainy Season Japan


Morning study of Awaji Rainy Season
pencil/gouache on 300 g water colour paper
148 mm h x 100 mm w



Ships fleeing sudden squall at Awaji
pencil/gouache on 300 g water colour paper
148 mm h x 100 mm w


Sally Douglas - Robin
35 cm w x 25 cm h
watercolour on paper


Lia McKnight, Gold fall # 3, 2020 , ink, pencil, graphite, archival pen, thread and found object on 638gsm Saunders Waterford paper, 38 x 28.5 cm.



Jurek Wybraniec - Title BR_on_G_A1. Year, 2021.
Pigmented acrylic ink on 638gsm WC paper. 56 x 76cm.



Michelle Bourne - Textural Study
Mixed media



John Cullinane - The Panel
oil on board
21 cm h x 31 cm w





Diokno Pasilan - Distancia Amigo Oil on canvas 40x50cm 2021


Pippa Tandy - Caroline Pastoral
Mezzotint and digital photograph. 2020.


Caspar Fairhall - Study for Projection, 2021, iPad drawing





Melissa Nolan McDougall - Untitled
oil on oil paper, 210 x 290 mm


 

Sunday 23 May 2021

Beautiful Oceans of Physics


North Beach Jetty 2002
Indian Ocean
oil on wooden board
60 cm h x 29 .5 w
Indian Ocean

Recently in viewing, via the internet, artworks of an old school friend who I consider one of Western Australia’s most interesting artists, a beautiful restful sensation manifested itself through the way he had applied acrylic inks onto watercolour paper. This sensation prompted me to research the concept of beauty.  


Pacific Ocean - Late evening North Sydney Head 2007 - 15 
 acrylic on board 
38 cm h x 45.5 cm


The research was conducted via the internet and soon after I came across a review in The Guardian newspaper by Graham Farmelo on the Nobel prizewinning American theoretical physicist’s book titled: In A Beautiful Question: Finding Nature’s Deep Design by Frank Wilczek (please see link at the bottom of page.)

In the book Wilzcek asks “Is the world a work of art?” It’s a very interesting question indeed and, as I know very little about physics, I followed  Wilzeck,s video  on YouTube. Entitled: A Beautiful Question | Frank Wilczek | Talks at Google, in very understandable plain speak, he presents some amazing examples of beauty with its associations with symmetry.

During my career as a painter over four decades and in painting across three different seas in the northern and southern hemispheres (being the Indian/Pacific oceans and the inland Seto Sea of Japan) whilst observing their natural states along with physics in action and painting these memories in studio praxis, I can say yes, they’re beautiful.  

 


Pacific ocean - View from Okinnawa Bridge
oil on wooden board 
9 cm h x 45 cm w

Beauty within  fine arts and crafts and its association with physics is the future of art and has been so for many epochs as witnessed in our aesthetic histories and what is so wonderful is its apparent universal application and appreciation by all races and creeds of peoples

But there are some who don’t like beauty as in the case of Pablo Picasso as Graham Farmelo points out in his review;

I am not sure that Wilczek’s line of argument in this book would have been appreciated, for example, by Picasso, who remarked in the late 1940s: “I hate that aesthetic game of the eye and the mind, played by these connoisseurs, these mandarins who ‘appreciate’ beauty.” There is “no such thing” as beauty, he added, apparently not knowing that the world’s leading theoretical physicists had long perceived it in abundance. And, as this book demonstrates, they still do

 

On this blog is a small selection of my paintings over twenty years in various weathers across three seas - please enjoy.




Pacific ocean - Mie Prefecture 
pastel on black paper 
22 cm h x 32 cm w




Insland Seto Sea - Awaji rainy season from Akashi finished
studio praxis
oil on MDF
11 cm h x 25 cm w

Note: The concept behind these paintings from one of my catalogues

 In 1996, whilst painting with William Coldstream’s dogmatic creed of measured exactitude, essentially related to getting things in their right place according to the traditions of objective painting, a significant problem emerged. This involved the realisation that the light shifted across the motif. Hence the shadows grew longer and the hue and tones darker with the setting of the sun, thus casting doubt on the theory. I decided to test objectivity by deliberately painting across time by chasing the light, weathers and seasons as they occurred from memory (vision). For instance, one trace of oil paint could exhibit morning, another midday or evening in order to capture the traces of time on the canvas.

In the aforementioned artworks, within this blog,  I have used the above painting concepts with differing painting systems in acrylic or oil on wood/canvas and the resultant images contain the poetry of light/the colour of time.  

 

Peter Davidson

Links
 
YouTube in video titled: A Beautiful Question | Frank Wilczek | Talks at Google

https://www.theguardian.com/books/2015/aug/01/a-beautiful-question-natures-deep-design-frank-wilczek-review