Industrial Cathedral

Industrial Cathedral
"Industrial Cathedral" charcoal on paper 131 x 131 cm Jane Bennett. Finalist in 1998 Dobell Drawing Prize Art Gallery of NSW Finalist 1998 Blake Prize Winner 1998 Hunter's Hill Open Art Prize

About Me

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Sydney, NSW, Australia
I'm an Industrial Heritage Artist who paints "en plein air".If it's damaged, derelict, doomed and about to disappear, I'll be there to paint it.
Showing posts with label Sydney. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sydney. Show all posts

Monday 27 September 2010

Marine Art Exhibition at the Australian National Maritime Museum

 Australian National Maritime Museum

I will be exhibiting these paintings at the  Australian Society of Marine Artists exhibition at the "Wooden Boat Festival"
WHEN: From 10 am - 4pm Saturday 16th October and Sunday 17th October 2010
WHERE: at the Australian National Maritime Museum
EVENT: Wooden Boat Festival
These are some of the paintings which I will be exhibiting on the October 16-17 weekend with the Australian Society of Marine Artists exhibition at the "Wooden Boat Festival"
The Australian Society of Marine Artists are a group of artists and others interested in marine and maritime art : painters, lithographers and printmakers, sculptors, model-makers and historians. Every painting style from traditional to contemporary, realist to abstract is represented : ships, seascapes, maritime history and heritage.
Plein air painting of the final departure of the 'Spirit of Tasmania 3" from the East Darling Harbour Wharves in October 2006.painted by industrial heritage artist Jane Bennett
'The 'Spirit of Tasmania' departs for the last time
from Darling Harbour' 2006
oil painting on canvas 25 x 31 cm
Sold
This painting is of a landmark in the history of Sydney Harbour - the final departure of the 'Spirit of Tasmania 3" from the East Darling Harbour Wharves in October 2006.
The 'Spirit of Tasmania 3" , (nicknamed 'Spot' by all the wharfies) was later sold to an overseas shipping line and I have heard that she has been renamed and is in use as a ferry in the North Sea.
The 'Spirit of Tasmania" numbers 1 and 2, are still in Australian waters, but their journeys are between Melbourne and Devonport. Occasionally they come to Garden Island, Sydney Harbour dry dock for repairs and maintenance.
The Sydney Heritage Fleet's tall ship, the 'James Craig' and Wharf 7, Pyrmont can be seen in the background.

The last journey of the 'Spirit of Tasmania 3'
It was an atmosphere reminiscent of the last day of school. People running around taking photos and swapping addresses. Manic excitement, regret, and a strange undercurrent of foreboding about what the future may bring.
To add to the sense of occasion was a touch of glamour. Added to the usual queue of cars and bikes waiting in the sun was a line of lovingly restored vintage cars, bound for a rally in Tasmania. In one of the many paintings that I started that day, I featured a green Rover and its patient driver in the foreground. I certainly had enough time to paint them as they were sitting in the queue from 9.30am to 2.30pm when they were finally allowed to drive on board. The Mitchell Library, State Library of NSW, later acquired this canvas.
Everything that wasn't nailed down was hauled off and dragged on board. I mean 'Everything that wasn't nailed down' absolutely literally and not as a lazy cliche. I had been storing some canvases and easels in a little shed and suddenly had to leap up from my wet painting and rescue them from making an unscheduled visit to Tasmania. I nearly lost my cup of coffee which I had left perched on a concrete barrier when forklifts started to load all of the concrete onto the ship.
Plein air painting of HMB Endeavour from the East Darling Harbour Wharves.painted by industrial heritage artist Jane Bennett
"'Endeavour ' Tall ship race -Australia Day"
oil painting on canvas 20 x 25cm
A close up of the 'HMB Endeavour', one of the 'Tall Ships' making its way back to its mooring after the Tall Ships Parade on Australia Day 2007.
This was painted from the East Darling Harbour Wharves (now called Barangaroo) while the area was still a working port.
Plein air painting of the tug 'Karoo' from the East Darling Harbour Wharves.painted by industrial heritage artist Jane Bennett
'The Tug 'Karoo' 2006
oil painting on canvas 28 x 36 cm
Available

For more information see My Pyrmont page in this blog

Related posts

Looking over the overlooked-Urban decay in Pyrmont
To the Point
Wrong side of the tracks - Darling Island Bond and Free
Pyrmont Paintings past and present My Exhibition in the Australian National Maritime Museum
Paintings of Pink pubs - Painting the Jolly Frog Part 2 

2012 Classic and Wooden Boat Show at the Australian National Maritime Museum

Sunday 8 August 2010

Terminal, End or Extremity

Paintings of the Arrivals Hall of the former cruise ship terminal Wharf 8 at Barangaroo.
These are unfinished oil paintings on canvas of the interior of the deserted former cruise ship terminal at Darling Harbour Wharf 8.
My first day of painting this canvas:
oil painting of interior of the now demolished  Wharf 8 cruise ship terminal at Barangaroo by industrial heritage artist Jane Bennett
'I saw the number '8' in red... '
oil painting on canvas 61 x 91cm
Sold 
Private Collection : Sydney
Enquiries about similar paintings 




















The title is my homage to the 1928 Charles Demuth painting "I saw the number 5 in gold..", an icon of American Modernism. Like Demuth, I never let go of reality.
Though not a physical likeness, Demuth used imagery from William Carlos Williams’ poem "The Great Figure," to create an abstract portrait of his friend. The intersecting lines, repeated "5," round forms of the numbers, lights, street lamp, and blaring sirens of the red fire engine speeding down the street infuse the painting with a vibrant, urban energy.

Among the rain
and lights
I saw the figure 5
in gold
on a red
firetruck
moving
tense
unheeded
to gong clangs
siren howls
and wheels rumbling
through the dark city
"The Great Figure" William Carlos Williams
oil painting of interior of the now demolished  Wharf 8 cruise ship terminal at Barangaroo by industrial heritage artist Jane Bennett
'I saw the number '8' in red... '
oil painting on canvas 61 x 91cm

Sold 
Private Collection : Sydney
Enquiries about similar paintings 
The 2nd day of this painting- nearly finished, but needs glazing to emphasize the reflections and the dramatic shafts of light from the doorways.
oil painting of interior of the now demolished  Wharf 8 cruise ship terminal at Barangaroo by industrial heritage artist Jane Bennett
The completed painting: "I saw the number '8' in red... "2010  
oil painting on canvas  61 x 91cm 
Sold 
Private Collection : Sydney
Enquiries about similar paintings 
Starting my 2nd painting of the interior of the Arrivals Hall:
Setting out a rough idea of the composition:
oil painting of interior of the now demolished  Wharf 8 cruise ship terminal at Barangaroo by industrial heritage artist Jane Bennett
"I saw the number '8' in red" 2010
oil painting on canvas  61 x 183cm

Sold 
Private Collection : Sydney
Enquiries about similar paintings 
Starting work on a large panoramic interior of the Arrivals Hall.
This is a Saturday, and apart from the bored security guards on the gate I have the whole place more or less to myself so it is eerily silent.
For a change I have managed to get here early.
I've been battling a killer bout of flu for over a month and I've had to push myself to keep working. My throat has been so sore that I can only eat jelly and chicken soup for the last week.
I've taken in a thermos of icecubes to numb my throat and they seem to help. Whinge, whinge. This is totally self inflicted- I've been painting outdoors in the middle of winter on a freezing cold wharf in a howling gale and to misquote Alice in Wonderland it is bound to disagree with you sooner or later. However I wouldn't swap what I do for anything; it keeps me endlessly fascinated.
I only wish that I wouldn't get ill just at this crucial point in the history of Sydney Harbour - this is the last wharf on the historic Hungry Mile, which has been the fountainhead of Australia's maritime industry since settlement over 200 years ago, and it will be demolished in less than a fortnight!
No other artist in Australia seems to have an MSIC or a greencard; so I am the only person permitted to paint any of this.
Half way through my 1st day of painting :
oil painting of interior of the now demolished  Wharf 8 cruise ship terminal at Barangaroo by industrial heritage artist Jane Bennett
"I saw the number '8' in red" 2010
 oil painting on canvas  61 x 183cm
Sold 
Private Collection : Sydney
Work in progress on the easel at the end of the first day.




oil painting of interior of the now demolished  Wharf 8 cruise ship terminal at Barangaroo by industrial heritage artist Jane Bennett
I saw the number '8' in red" 2010
oil painting on canvas 61 x 183cm
Sold
Private Collection : Sydney
Enquiries about similar paintings

I have used 'terminal' as part of the title of paintings in this series as a play on words. The following nuances of meaning I found particularly apt :

1.situated at or forming the end or extremity of something...
2. occuring at or forming the end of a series, succession, or the like; closing; concluding
7.pertaining to or placed at a boundary, as a landmark.
8. occuring at or causing the end of life: a terminal disease.
9.(Informal) utterly beyond hope, rescue or saving...
10. a terminal part of a structure; end or extremity.
13. a station on the line of a public carrier,as in a city centre ... where passengers embark or disembark...
(Courtesy of Dictionary.com)
Take your pick!

Related Posts





See more at my Hungry Mile page
See more at my Millers Point page

Out of Time

Painting inside the hall of the former cruise ship terminal at Wharf 8, South Barangaroo

plein air oil painting of demolished cruise ship terminal Wharf 8 on the Hungry mile, now Barangaroo painted by maritime heritage artist Jane Bennett
"Out of time " 2010
oil painting on canvas 31 x 31 cm

Available
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A poignant little genre painting. Stopped clocks; a security sign; an abandoned storeroom.
Industrial memento mori.
A memento mori, or "reminder of death" is a familiar motif from medieval art. Sometimes a gruesome skeleton clothed in tattered flesh holds a scroll bearing the Latin inscription, "I am what you will be. I was what you are. For every man is this so."
Other paintings have more subtle ways of implying the same message - a piece of rotting fruit or an overblown rose in a Dutch 17th century still life; an hourglass or a mirror may mark the passage of time in a portrait.
Every good still life painting should have at least a whiff of mortality about it; a slight sting in the tail; a spoonful of medicine to make the sugar go down.
I found a plaque commemorating the opening of this building - 1999. Not all that long ago, but already it seems like an eon has passed.
Sydney Ports Corporation has just arrived to take possession of this sign.
I found its inscription hilarious - it was about how passengers with cardiac pacemakers were not to go through the X ray machines, but had to be bodily searched by the security guards!
if they didn't have heart problems to start with they would when they finished; all the excitement might prove too much!
It is such an insecure security sign.

My Studio at Barangaroo

Works in progress
Unfinished oil paintings on canvas.
Painting inside the the former Cruise ship Terminal at Darling Harbour 8 painted in July-August 2010
plein air oil painting of the demolished Wharf 8 cruise ship terminal at South Barangaroo by industrial heritage and marine artist Jane Bennett
BAR7 'Empty Hall, Wharf 8' 2010
oil on canvas 61 x 183cm
Enquiries about these paintings
plein air oil painting of the demolished Wharf 8 cruise ship terminal at South Barangaroo by industrial heritage and marine artist Jane Bennett
My paintings of the soon to be demolished
Wharf 8 cruise ship terminal at South Barangaroo
Enquiries about these paintings 
I make the big move out of the terminal, as it is soon to be demolished.
plein air oil painting of the demolished Wharf 8 cruise ship terminal at South Barangaroo by industrial heritage and marine artist Jane Bennett
"Grabber, ripper,muncher"
2010 oil painting on canvas 31 x 31cm
Enquiries about these paintings 
Yes, they actually are the proper names of the attachments to the excavators! I'm not making them up. Truly.
The "Grabber" is in the centre, the "Ripper" is the wicked looking blade on the right, while the "Muncher" is the monster with the mad fluoro pink "eye" and the toothy jaws in front of the red door to the left. The workmen promised me that there is also a "Pulverizer" that will arrive later.
This I have to see!
plein air oil painting of the demolished Wharf 8 cruise ship terminal at South Barangaroo by industrial heritage and marine artist Jane Bennett
Left to right and top to bottom:
"Behind the red door"
2010 oil painting on canvas 31 x 31cm
"Grabber, ripper,muncher"
2010 oil painting on canvas 31 x 31cm
"Excavators at rest"
2010 oil painting on canvas 56 x 76cm
Enquiries about these paintings

A good day at the office! Three paintings completed before I was kicked out!
plein air oil painting of the demolished Wharf 8 cruise ship terminal at South Barangaroo by industrial heritage and marine artist Jane Bennett
Left to right and top to bottom:
"May open without warning"
2010 oil painting on canvas 56 x 76cm
"May close without warning"
2010 oil painting on canvas 56 x 76cm
Enquiries about these paintings
Everything must go!
This was the very last day that I was able to leave my easels and canvases inside the terminal.
I've been kicked out of Wharf 8 and now have moved my stuff into a room in the loading dock of the old Sydney Ports Corporation Maintenance Depot that has been recently used to display the designs for Barangaroo.
Not for long, apparently - Bovis LendLease has already moved the entrance twice and I've noticed construction of new site offices starting in the north-west corner.
This building will obviously be the next to go after the DH8 terminal.
Exactly when is anyone's guess.

Behind the Red Door

Barangaroo : Terminal - Loading Dock
Plein air oil paintings on canvas of the former Cruise ship Terminal at Darling Harbour 8  painted in July 2010
plein air oil painting of now demolished cruise ship terminal at Barangaroo by industrial heritage and marine artist Jane Bennett
"Behind the red door " 2010
oil on canvas 31 x 31cm
Enquiries about this painting
A tantalizing glimpse of Jones Bay Wharf, Pyrmont behind the door within a door.
Painted inside the loading dock of the former Cruise ship Terminal at Darling Harbour Wharf 8, which will be demolished in a few weeks time.