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Victoria Lynagh, Artworks

Bud #26

A$125.00

VICTORIA LYNAGH
Bud #26, 2024

burnished Keane’s mid-fire red earth, terra sigillata, saggar fired with eucalyptus woodchips
7 x 7 x 6 cm
$ 125

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Additional Info

Victoria Lynagh

'Regeneration'

Climate change is one of the most profound and challenging issues facinghumanity. My work has developed from concerns surrounding the changing landscape and the increased prevalence of naturally occurring bushfires in Australia. Further influence comes from the debate on the historical use of controlled burns by Indigenous peoples to manage the natural environment in a way that benefits humans and wildlife.
Many ecosystems have evolved with fire as an essential contributor to habitat vitality and renewal, with plant species regenerating in the fire-affected environments when the resultant ash is used as a source of nutrients to germinate, establish or reproduce.

The importance of the effects of fire on the ecological landscape is represented in my work.
The blackened debris caused by fires, and the re-growth in the landscape that can follow, is illustrated in the partly carbonised sculptural forms that bleed into the natural colours of the land.

Taking inspiration from the ancient and simple approaches used for land regeneration, I employ traditional hand-building ceramic methods in my practice.

The works are made from a range of different clay bodies illustrating the array of colours that occur naturally in the Australian landscape. All pieces are pinched, paddled, altered and refined before the surfaces are enhanced by the introduction of an earthy-toned palette of refined slips and terra sigillata.
This enables the use of clay in solid and liquid forms within each piece. They are then burnished, to create a glossy patina, which reflects the light and creates shadowed areas.
Through their form and finish, the sculptural objects invite touch through their tactile and flawless surfaces and subtle, earthy beauty. Lowfiring the pieces in a saggar with range of organic combustible materials results in the works retaining the marks of the making process and reinforces theconnection between the raw materials used and the earth they are taken from.

In a world where the pace of life is constantly increasing, I find the simple handbuilding techniques used in creating these pieces meditative. The simplicity and

apparent effortlessness of the objects is born out of a labour-intensive method, where the repetitive and rhythmic nature of making imbues the surface with a sense of time. It is a process that cannot be rushed. The ‘smoking’ effect on the object surface cannot be pre-determined. In a way it reflects a wildfire – a process that cannot be controlled, but can result in an exquisite landscape

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