The Comfort of Being Solid 2009
Posted on April 8, 2013 by Tania Virgona Edit
This body of work explores the concept of the known and of the solid in a period of social, economic and environmental uncertainty. These works look to explore the inner reality of being as a solid and an accountable experience. Here the inner and outer meet in the world of solid forms, a step into the world of recognizable matter.

Red is the colour of flesh and the forms – sometimes symbolic, sometimes graphic – show the contemplation of the interconnectedness of things; of sexuality and nature, of the cerebral and the earthly, of solidity and the ephemeral. This is a blurring of flesh and plant. The red blanket we associate with earthly comfort, warmth and security and red – blood, or the body.

The womb and phallice , suspended in space and at times in abstract relationship, are reminiscent of pagan symbology and have elements of the iconic and ornate. Placed dramatically in the midst of empty space, they are at once cerebral (unearthed) and yet refer to the actuality of physical ecstasy and the burgeoning of life above ground and under water.

Symmetry and asymmetry co-exist and suspended animation freezes the passing moment for the purpose of contemplation and a sense of the known. Human forms are contorted and dwarfed but inseparable from forces of natural growth. We have a place here,but are reminded of our size in relation to the power of natural forces in us and beyond us.

The feminine and masculine forces and strengths reside within us waiting to be awakening and partnered to fulfill the natural process of creativity. The uniformity of the red blanket used to create the artworks enable the images to be read as silhouettes; a projection which allows the relationship of forms to become the focus of tension. In the world of objects, duality is an inescapable truth. Here the iconic forms become the objects with definite boundaries that are in relationship with the interchangeable positive and negative space.

The comfort of being solid alludes to the satisfaction and the acceptance of the physical body and self as part of a whole. It is the comfort of bringing opposing or fragmented aspects together to site alongside one another willingly. It is the acceptance of all aspects of self.

Virgona’s artistic enquiry explores the dynamics of the inner world, articulating in a visual language the unseen elements that affect and surround our experience.

Bodytide 2006
Posted on April 8, 2013 by Tania Virgona Edit
These drawings are associated with the sensation of water and by using watercolour a direct experience of its fluidity translates into the image and becomes a metaphor.

Each drawing is discovered rather than projected and in this manner the weightless space that is created is intuitive. A narrative of contradictions and distorted possibilities begin to form.

The objects and element are from a personal vocabulary of images that I have carried from past artworks and the introduction of new elements comes from using colour symbolically.

Shadow Lands 2003
Posted on April 8, 2013 by Tania Virgona Edit
These drawings give a view into a subconscious world that seems foreign yet strangely familiar; where there is no divide between inner and outer, between the vast and the miniscule, or between the body and the earth. The forms are taken from the Australian landscape and are interspersed with the human body.

Their fleshy, seductive, sensual and at times erotic qualities stir the soul and have an organic and metaphoric language of their own. Just as nature constantly changes so do the forms: they swirl, undulate and contract with each gradation and line of the grey lead. They move and unfold over the paper, where one form evolves into another creating a soft and supple ebb or a tension of polarities.

Meredith 2003
Posted on April 8, 2013 by Tania Virgona Edit
Thank you to Mike and Beth Palmer for letting me have the opportunity to make this artwork on their property in Meredith.

Timber and native grasses

2m x 2m

Stoney Creek 2003
Posted on April 8, 2013 by Tania Virgona Edit
Stony Creek Reserve is located within a highly industrial precinct of Port Melbourne. The land is contaminated by industrial waste products and as part of an open day, 10 Artist were invited to created artworks that made comment on this land, its history and location. This activated awareness where people interacted with the site. This installation is about nurturing and healing. By creating a space to BE in or go to, to heal our humanity, we can inevitably have greater awareness of our intensions and actions. I wanted to use materials that would also physically help replenish and revegetate the site. By using hay as my medium the Friends of Stoney Creek group could use it as mulch once the exhibition had concluded.

Hay, leaves & wire

2m x 2m

The Voice 2002
Posted on April 8, 2013 by Tania Virgona Edit
The Terra Firma exhibtion asked us to respond to the natural landscape and the built environment. With this piece I wanted to treat the land we stand on as an entity and if it could speak, what it would say?

The Voice, Terra Firma Melbourne Fringe
City of Boorandarra
Slate and earth
3m diameter

 

“I feel it is our greatest need to heal the dichotomy between the natural and built environment, and I aim to initiate this bridge with my work”

 

Undera 2008
Posted on June 5, 2013 by Tania Virgona Edit
Undera Artist in Schools Project

Working with the school children, teachers and the farming community exposed me to the reality of country living, the delights and hardships. The water wheel is a familiar feature to the farming community of Undrea. It is representative of the ongoing cycle of life and the challenges faced when working with the environment and the elements. The children’s drawings depict the various aspects of their home and community life and the ever present issue of water significantly influences the farming community of Undrea.

Final Artwork
The Water Wheel
Reclaimed steel
2.5m high x 1.5m wide

 

Other Residences:

Newcombe Secondary Collage
Artist in Schools 2003
Inward Journey Out prgram

Aulburen Kindergarten
Artist in Residence 2007
Environmental Humpies

Kew East Primary School
Artist in Residence 2008
Grade 6 Final project

Transformative Process of Nature: A Visual Articulation of Swan Bay
Queenscliff Artist in Residence 2007

For four intensive weeks in the Queenscliff-Point Lonsdale Yacht Club, I observed and recorded the transformative and cyclic phases of Swan Bay.

These artworks document the retreating tide revealing submerged landforms and cast shadows on the mudflats. The incoming tide mirrors the wild life and distance landscapes that sit upon the waters surface. The fluctuating shore line collect the remains of life once lived in this fragile ecosystem. I interpreted Swan Bay by using photo and paper collage, thread, watercolour, charcoal and graphite to capture water patterns, native flora and man made landmarks. The experience of this ever changing and ephemeral landscape has rendered me speechless with its quiet beauty.

Special thank you to Christine Jones and Leanne Stein.

 

Artist In Residence @ The Geelong Botanic Gardens

This residency allowed me to create and explore a body of work within the space of the Geelong Botanical Gardens. These ephemeral installations took on the concept of ‘Earth as Clay’, which is about going beneath the surface and making the dark unseen aspects part of the human periphery. This enabled the earth to be shaped above and below the surface taking on a process of construction and deconstruction, evolving over a period of time by weathering, decay and growth, which can create a new variation if not a completely different piece of artwork. It is a process that is about working in collaboration with mother earth. The out comes of this residence broadened the perceptions of the way the Geelong Botanic Gardens was used and seen, creating greater scope for diversity.

 

 

Artist in Residence @ The Geelong Botanic Gardens

Tania Virgona’s position as Artist in Residence at the Geelong Botanic Gardens has offered an opportunity to view this historic place in new and remarkable ways.   The science of botany together with the practice of horticulture have been the principle concerns directing activity at the GBG throughout its150 year history.  Visitors anticipate an experience informed by the age of the garden, their knowledge of plant collections and seasonal change.   The works presented in this exhibition reflect an alternative view of the gardens and the materials contained within.   Of particular importance are the recording of earthworks and organic insertions that challenge the notion of the garden bed and plant arrangement normally associated with the nurture of abotanic garden.

Tania’s introduction to the GBG was brought about through her involvement in the locally inspired Walk West project.   During her time spent sculpting timber in the works depot at the GBG Tania recognised an opportunity to explore the gardens and with this a chance to transform its varying qualities into art form.   The design process and development of the installations commenced in September 2003 and became a public event that included community participation and weekend workshops.

The exploration of place and space and the evolvement of the works within an important public garden invited a verbal and visual dialogue with gardens Staff, Friends and Visitors to the GBG.   The impact of the works in progress was extremely varied.   Statements expressed as excitement at the temporary change to these ‘still’ spaces contrasted with alarm at the incisions cut into normally pristine lawns.   Tania observed that the weekend visitor was often more able to grasp the concepts being explored than those involved in the gardens on a daily basis.   This may be explained by the strong emotional attachment that inhabits those working with gardens.   The disturbance of lawn areas and the digging and mounding of earth for non horticultural purposes was at odds with the regular activity of garden making.

The concept of manipulating the landscape for the purpose of expression is not a new phenomenon.   Earthworks dating to previous centuries that are expressed as scrapings, mounding and excavation were primarily made for cultural and religious purposes.   These works continue to engage and fascinate the viewer and are recognised as places that intensify the connection of the human intellect with the landscape.   They are the mark of human ideas measured though time.

During the late 1960’s and early 1970’s the environmental art movement gained momentum.   These works paralleled political and social unrest though the western world and mirrored a questioning of accepted values.   Environmental works created by Michael Heizer and others since this period have challenged the notion of art as a collectable item.   Works created on a monumental scale were directed at the viewer with the intention of magnifying the landscape experience.   The ‘owners’ of these works were those who undertook site visits to remote locations to engage with the installations.   This was a radical move away from studio based art and forged a new direction in interpreting environment.   In this current era environmental art moves in and out of gallery spaces.   This exhibition is a melding of the two forms with landscape material as the palette and the record of events as the story of experience.

The principle purpose for Tania’s residency in the gardens was for “Professional Development”, funded through Arts Victoria and supported through the City of Greater Geelong.   The activity of investigation normally cloistered in the artist’s studio became a public event and the dynamic thought process, where doubt and questioning result in design resolution, were viewed by all.   When viewing images presented in this exhibition we need to consider the artist experience of incorporating a private practice within a public realm.   Visitors witnessed the thought process and experienced the journey of nature becoming art and art becoming nature. This made the art subject to considerable question, which intensified and broadened the collaboration beyond the garden.

The traditional view of the Artist in Residence at a Botanic Garden equates with the botanical exercise, the recording of plant material to precise measurement and in exact detail accompanied by scientific language that clearly categorises the specimen studied.   The Virgona residency has challenged this notion.   From its beginning it has questioned our preconceived ideas of the historic space and by utilising the ground surface and plant material as artistic palette has forced a new view of the continued capacity of these gardens to inspire the visitor.

The challenge of cutting into the ground for purposes other than horticulture was perhaps made easier by the recent implementation of the 21 st Century Garden, however this event was specifically for horticultural and botanical purposes.   Tania’s installations have disturbed historic spaces and opened the ground for viewing as an aesthetic experience.   The works have explored the silent heart of the gardens transforming the earth and its
grassy surface into art.   The exploration of strength and stillness on and below the ground surface raises questions about the usually unexplored static values within gardens.   Do these factors unknowingly emanate upward into place intensifying the sense that is  associated with being in a garden?

The GBG are Australia’s fourth oldest public garden and form an important historic  reference in the City of Geelong.   The importance of the gardens is reflected in the depth  of the plant collection, the age of individual specimens and the dynamic design and  plantings contained within the new 21 st Century Garden extension.   The unique opportunity offered to the City of Greater Geelong to host an Artist in Residence to investigate the unexplored medium of ground plane, earth form and plant material has opened the minds of those usually visiting the gardens.

Works on paper and digital images contained within this exhibition are a visual expression of subliminal feelings not often articulated about gardens spaces.   The works successfully investigate and challenge our preconceived ideas of the values contained within historic gardens and help us redefine the spacial statements and unique qualities that make the Geelong Botanic Gardens a special place to visit.

Helena Buxton
Landscape Architect

Further reading

‘Designing The Earth -The Human Impulse to Shape Nature’, David Bourbon

‘Earthworks and Beyond’, John Beardsley

‘Michael Heizer, EFFICY TUMULI’, Douglas C. McGill

‘Silent Spaces’, Chris Drury

“When you make a sculpture by digging out dirt, you’re negating all of these materialist concepts.   You change the definition of material and material usage, and you redefine what an object is”…Michael Heizer   EFFICY TUMULI

Walk West 2002
Posted on June 5, 2013 by Tania Virgona Edit
The Walk West Project is a program that was developed in response to a community request to reinstate cultural links between Geelong West and Western Beach on the shores of Corio Bay.

The expansion of Melbourne Road and removal of pedestrian access via the Madden Avenue rail crossing in the last 1970’s placed a major barrier between West Geelong and its favourite pleasure groups. Only the brave would use the pedestrian overpass and negotiate the busy arterial roads that separate suburb from sea.

During the mid 1990’s Greening Geelong West, a local community group, lobbied with a proposal to develop links that would define a safe walking route and an opportunity to re-establish the traditional recreational and cultural connects to the bay.

The Walk West urban trail reflects the intention of the Community proposal. O’Connell Street tree planting and the establishment of small parkland areas along the route have offered a greening opportunity to this highly urbanized area of the city. Fabulous sculptures that lead walkers along the trail tell a story of growth and change and relate directly to the production and sale of food, which is fundamental to the character of Geelong West.

The Walk West Project was jointly funded by the State Government of Victoria and the City of Greater Geelong. The project outcome is an example of what is possible when communities identify opportunities and work with State Government to achieve positive outcomes.

Sculptures Define the Walking Trail.

Sculptures developed as part of the Walk West urban trail are the result of a creative collaboration between artist Tania Virgona and Mark Trinham. Giant metal blades that feature along the walking trail were created by Tania Virgona and make direct reference to the grass plant family. The important group of plants has provide all cultures with a basic food source, grain since the earliest of times.

The sculpture cluster on Ripley Lane was created by Mark Trinham and is an artistic interpretation the change from the natural state, represented by the seed, to the cultural condition where the natural environment and the human state are combined into one outcome.

At end of the trail Tania and Mark have contributed to collaborative installations of mixed timber and metal. The organic forms directly refer to growth and the emergence of change. Each piece is sited to encourage the public as they walk along Western Beach or Packington Street. The walking trail is intended to encourage the wider Geelong community at key points along the route and the sculptures at either end are an invitation to take the Walk West trail that links Packington Street to Corio Bay

Helena Buxton
Landscape Architect and Special Projects