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

My photo
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 shipyard. Show all posts
Showing posts with label shipyard. Show all posts

Sunday, 2 August 2020

Painting the industrial past on Cockatoo Island - Before and After

Cockatoo Island, the largest island in Sydney Harbour, is located at the intersection of the Parramatta and Lane Cove rivers. It is the last vestige of the era of the Industrial Revolution remaining in Sydney.
Plein air industrial painting of cranes at Cockatoo Island by industrial artist Jane Bennett
CK8B & CK52 Crane & slipway from the Officers headquarters
1989 & 2007 oil on canvas 61 x 46cm
Between 1839 -1869 Cockatoo Island was a prison colony.
The inmates not only excavated the 2 tunnels and 2 graving docks that nearly bisect the island, but to add insult to injury they even had to build their own gaol using the excavated sandstone of the island! The only successful escapee was bushranger Captain Thunderbolt (his more prosaic real name was Fred Ward), who escaped on 19th September 1863.
After its stint as Sydney's 'Alcatraz' the island was used as a graving dock,  reformatory and industrial schools, and a major shipbuilding site.
In the early twentieth century Cockatoo Island became one of Australia’s most important industrial sites where ships were built, repaired and modified. Thousands were trained and employed there. I still meet people who did their apprenticeship as a boilermaker or fitter and turner on Cockatoo Island.
As the progressive removal of tariffs, regressive government policies, the high dollar and the pressures of globalization helped kill off Australian manufacturing, the focus of employment has turned increasingly to tourism, entertainment and service industries.
Most of Sydney’s former sites of industrial and maritime activity have now been gobbled up by developers for monolithic dormitories of beige apartment blocks. After many political battles, some remaining industrial structures of Cockatoo Island have been retained, against all odds. Although some large workshops, slipways, wharves, residences and other buildings remain, such as the Turbine Shop and the Mould Loft, many major buildings were demolished after Cockatoo Island closed as a dockyard in 1991.
Now it's a UNESCO world heritage site and its industrial ambience has been exploited for many cultural events. It was the site for the filming of X Men Origins -Wolverine and several 'reality' programs. Since 2008 it has been the flagship venue of Sydney’s Biennale. However, its original function as part of Sydney’s rapidly disappearing Working Harbour, has gone forever.
When I was 'Artist in Residence' there in the mid-late 1980s and then again in the early 2000s, I was the only artist on the island.
For the last decade, the public has been allowed to visit the island, but when I painted the 2nd canvas in 2007, it was still off limits. The Sydney Harbour Federation Trust was frantically fixing up the infrastructure to be able to open it to tourists. I would travel by barge at the crack of dawn from Mort's Dock with the other workmen.
Plein air industrial painting of cranes at Cockatoo Island by industrial artist Jane Bennett
CK8B 2 Cranes on the North-West Slipway
1989 oil on canvas 61 x 46cm
Enquiries

I started painting on Cockatoo Island in the mid 1980s when it was still operational and submarines were still being refitted there.
I'd have to sign the Official Secrets Act and promise faithfully not to paint any submarines or sell any of my paintings to the Russians. I'd leave my easel, paints and table in the office of the Ship Painters and Dockers building between Fitzroy and Sutherland docks.
There was a sign "Pro Painter Foreman" on the door, which always made me laugh. I was so naive that I didn't know anything about the reputation of this notorious union!
These two canvases were painted at the same location,the north - western slipway, at the same time of day, at the same time of year and on the same format canvas - but 18 years apart.
Plein air industrial painting of cranes at Cockatoo Island by industrial artist Jane Bennett
CK52 Crane & slipway from the Officers headquarters
2007 oil on canvas 61 x 46cm
Enquiries

The most obvious difference between the 1989 and 2007 paintings is the omission of the pale green crane, a casualty of a storm not long after the 1989 canvas was painted.
This was the Butters crane, purchased from the Whyalla Shipyards in 1979, when Cockatoo Island was trying to adopt more innovative strategies,for the construction of HMAS Success in 1983-4. The rather forlorn looking crane left on its own in the 2007 painting, was the ex- West Wall crane, also a comparatively recent addition to the island, as it was relocated from Garden Island in the 1970s.
This partial modernization was a false dawn, however, as HMAS Success would be last ever ship built and launched at Cockatoo Island. Less than 8 years later, the island was closed.     

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Article written by Steve Meacham in the Sydney Morning Herald

Thursday, 20 June 2013

Painters and dockers - Artist in Residence on the tall ship 'James Craig' Part 2


Plein air oil painting of tall ship James Craig in Garden Island Drydock painted by industrial heritage artist Jane Bennett
Starting my plein air painting of
"Painters with 'James Craig ' in Garden Island dry dock"
I had originally stored my paints, brushes, canvases, table, chair and easel in the deckhouse of the James Craig, but I realised that the ritual of unlocking and sorting through all my stuff wasted too much time. Now I keep the half-finished canvases on the 'tween deck of the James Craig, and leave the table and easel in a corner on the floor of the dry dock.

Plein air oil painting of tall ship James Craig in Garden Island Drydock painted by industrial heritage artist Jane Bennett
unfinished plein air painting of
"Painters with 'James Craig ' in Garden Island dry dock"

It's quite a hike down from the ship to the floor of the dry dock.

Plein air oil painting of tall ship James Craig in Garden Island Drydock painted by industrial heritage artist Jane Bennett
unfinished plein air painting of "Painters with 'James Craig '
in Garden Island dry dock"

I choose a position where the ship looms toward me between the walls of the dry dock.
Plein air oil painting of tall ship James Craig in Garden Island Drydock painted by industrial heritage artist Jane Bennett
Unfinished plein air painting of "Painters with 'James Craig '
in Garden Island dry dock"

I try to make sure that I have enough room for the mast, rigging and the dockyard crane overhead.

Plein air oil painting of tall ship James Craig in Garden Island Drydock painted by industrial heritage artist Jane Bennett
unfinished plein air painting of
'James Craig in drydock being painted'
2013 oil on canvas 100 x 75cm

I knew that it would be overcast and so prepared a few canvases with a black imprimatura (underpainting). I find that this gives the clouds a more 3 dimensional quality.

Plein air oil painting of tall ship James Craig in Garden Island Drydock painted by industrial heritage artist Jane Bennett
Artist Jane Bennett with her unfinished plein air painting
of 'James Craig in drydock being painted'
2013 oil on canvas 100 x 75cm
Available

Portrait of the artist in full PPE (personal protective equipment) regalia.


Plein air oil painting of tall ship James Craig in Garden Island Drydock painted by industrial heritage artist Jane Bennett
Artist Jane Bennett with her unfinished plein air painting
of 'James Craig in drydock being painted'
2013 oil on canvas 100 x 75cm
Available

Hard hat, hi res jacket, tinted safety glasses, earmuffs and metal capped boots.

Plein air oil painting of tall ship James Craig in Garden Island Drydock painted by industrial heritage artist Jane Bennett
Unfinished plein air painting of
'James Craig in drydock being painted'
2013 oil on canvas 100 x 75cm
Available

There is another tall ship, the HMB Endeavour, in the dry dock, but I can't get too close to her as she is being sandblasted back to her original wood and can barely be seen in the dust haze.

Plein air oil painting of tall ship James Craig in Garden Island Drydock painted by industrial heritage artist Jane Bennett
Unfinished plein air painting of
'James Craig in drydock being painted'
2013 oil on canvas 100 x 75cm
Available

The dark bulk of the 'James Craig' stands out dramatically in front of the threatening clouds.


Plein air oil painting of tall ship James Craig in Garden Island Drydock painted by industrial heritage artist Jane Bennett
Unfinished plein air painting of
'James Craig in drydock being painted'
2013 oil on canvas 100 x 75cm
Available

I was worried that it was going to rain. It's risky starting such a large canvas as it takes so many trips back up to the top. The dockyard steps are narrow and a wet canvas has to be carried on its own without other luggage.

Plein air oil painting of tall ship James Craig in Garden Island Drydock painted by industrial heritage artist Jane Bennett.
Unfinished plein air painting of
'James Craig in drydock being painted'
2013 oil on canvas 100 x 75cm
Available
Suddenly I realized that I wasn't the only painter on the dock floor, as 2 white clad men started to haphazardly spray patches of red on the prow of James Craig.

Plein air oil painting of tall ship James Craig in Garden Island Drydock painted by industrial heritage artist Jane Bennett
Unfinished plein air painting of
'James Craig in drydock being painted'
2013 oil on canvas 100 x 75cm
Available  

They cheekily "offer" to pose for me. They don't actually mean it, but I paint them in anyway.
Their figures provide a useful gauge to judge scale. This painterly device is known as "staffage" - the size of the figures can be compared and contrasted with the size of the ship
Tim Drinkwater, the dockyard manager of the Sydney Heritage Fleet, told me that the painters would only be there for 8 minutes, but that was long enough for me to block in the basic shapes.
The painters came up later to take photos of my painting of them.
They will be back to finish their painting on Tuesday.
I like the patchy 'work in progress' look of the hull, so I'll try to finish my painting before theirs.

Plein air oil painting of tall ship James Craig in Garden Island Drydock painted by industrial heritage artist Jane Bennett
My half - finished painting of
'James Craig in drydock being painted'
2013 oil on canvas 100 x 75cm
Available 
This canvas is in a 'portrait' format - vertical rather than the more usual horizontal one, which is unusual for a painting of a ship.

Plein air oil painting of tall ship James Craig in Garden Island Drydock painted by industrial heritage artist Jane Bennett
My half - finished painting of
'James Craig in drydock being painted'
2013 oil on canvas 100 x 75cm
Available 

I wanted the ship to dominate the canvas and used the extreme perspective to make it feel as though it is towering over the onlooker, and the prow almost poke you in the eye.

Plein air oil painting of tall ship James Craig in Garden Island Drydock painted by industrial heritage artist Jane Bennett
My half - finished painting of
'James Craig in drydock being painted'
2013 oil on canvas 100 x 75cm
Available 

I am quite short, so I have to fold the legs of the easel up and set it on the ground as I'm not tall enough to paint the masts and rigging with it in the ordinary position.

Plein air oil painting of tall ship James Craig in Garden Island Drydock painted by industrial heritage artist Jane Bennett
My half - finished painting of
'James Craig in drydock being painted'
Available 

At least this way it won't fall over in the wind.

Plein air oil painting of tall ship James Craig in Garden Island Drydock painted by industrial heritage artist Jane Bennett
My half - finished painting of 'James Craig in drydock being painted'
2013 oil on canvas 100 x 75cm
Available 
They keep moving the dockyard crane. Any further to the left and it will be out of the picture. I can only just manage to squeeze it in without it looking too cramped.


Plein air oil painting of tall ship James Craig in Garden Island Drydock painted by industrial heritage artist Jane Bennett
My half - finished painting of
"Painters with 'James Craig ' in Garden Island dry dock" 2013
oil on canvas 75 x 100cm
Available 

I like the final position of the crane, though, as it won't be obscured by the masts and rigging. It gives the composition a little more drama, as it looks as though it could topple into the dock with a gust of wind.

Plein air oil painting of tall ship James Craig in Garden Island Drydock painted by industrial heritage artist Jane Bennett
My half - finished painting of
"Painters with 'James Craig ' in Garden Island dry dock"
2013 oil on canvas 75 x 100cm
Available 

The end of my first full day painting on the floor of the dry dock - time to lug my easel, paint, chair, paints, brushes and large wet canvases all the way up the stairs of the dock and across the gangplank to my studio on the 'tweendeck of the James Craig. It's a long way up and takes several trips so I won't need to join a gym anytime soon.

Plein air oil painting of tall ship James Craig in Garden Island Drydock painted by industrial heritage artist Jane Bennett
My studio on the 'tween deck of the 'James Craig'
World's coolest studio!
 
Available

Plein air oil painting of tall ship James Craig in Garden Island Drydock painted by industrial heritage artist Jane Bennett
'James Craig in drydock being painted'
2013 oil on canvas 100 x 75cm

Available






Plein air oil painting of tall ships James Craig and HMB Endeavour in Garden Island Drydock painted by industrial heritage artist Jane Bennett
'James Craig and HMB Endeavour in drydock 2'
2013 oil on canvas 75 x 100cm
Available


 
































Related posts

Australia Day 2011 at Darling Harbour Part 1: Endeavour

Sunday, 24 March 2013

Boat at Goat

The Shirley Smith is now on the slipway on the western side of Goat Island.
The last few canvases that I have completed at Moore's Wharf have  Goat Island as their main subject.
The eastern side of the Island which faces Moore's Wharf, features the old amenities block, which was once the site of the iconic TV series "Water Rats", and the heritage cottages which once housed the headquarters of the Harbour Master.
The western side of Goat Island still has an operating shipyard, one of the last vestiges of Sydney's rich heritage as a working harbour.
The only hint of this on the eastern side is the barely visible tip of the crane poking out from the treetops.
plein air oil painting of Sydney Ports tug 'Shirley Smith' on slipway of Goat Island by artist Jane Bennett
Starting a small oil sketch of the
"Shirley Smith" on the Goat Island slipway, 
oil on canvas 13 x 18cm
Enquiries about this painting




















Several years ago I managed to paint on Goat Island, but it was difficult to arrange access there, and even more importantly, back.
It's a long swim to shore.
I have longed to return to paint on Goat Island, and last week I finally got my wish.
I hitched a ride on the "Mann's Point", courtesy of Sydney Ports Corporation, and painted 2 tiny oil sketches.
plein air oil painting of Sydney Ports tug 'Shirley Smith' on slipway of Goat Island by artist Jane Bennett
Starting a small oil sketch of the
"Shirley Smith" on the Goat Island slipway
oil on canvas 13 x 18cm




















I had a great vantage point as I was sitting on a jetty directly opposite.
plein air oil painting of Sydney Ports tug 'Shirley Smith' on slipway of Goat Island by artist Jane Bennett
My first small oil sketch of the "Shirley Smith" on the Goat Island slipway, oil on canvas 13 x 18cm 
Next time, I must take some larger canvases, as I would like to include the crane.
I might not get the opportunity to return until the end of this week as there have been so many commitments and distractions.
My solo exhibition continues until the end of the month. Once the paintings had been hung, and the official opening was over,  I  had to organize a panel discussion and an artist's talk.
plein air oil painting of Sydney Ports tug 'Shirley Smith' on slipway of Goat Island by artist Jane Bennett
Another view of my small oil sketch of the
"Shirley Smith" on the Goat Island slipway,
oil on canvas 13 x 18cm
Enquiries about this painting




















I have left one of my French box easels on Goat Island, to make it easier for me to return with larger canvases.
The people at the shipyard have been wonderful. They are so friendly and easygoing, and have so much passion for the unique maritime heritage of Goat Island.
plein air oil painting of Sydney Ports tug 'Shirley Smith' on slipway of Goat Island by artist Jane Bennett
Starting my second small oil sketch of the
"Shirley Smith" on the Goat Island slipway,
oil on canvas 15 x 31cm




















Painting on the island is an inspiring experience, but the trouble is that if I have left something behind, I have to do without until next time.
It can be awkward to take equipment there, and even more awkward to take it back.
I tried to take the bare minimum of stuff in my trolley luggage, but even so I needed help to lug my easel from the boat to the ramp.
plein air oil painting of Sydney Ports tug 'Shirley Smith' on slipway of Goat Island by artist Jane Bennett
My 2nd small oil sketch of the "Shirley Smith"
on the Goat Island slipway 
oil on canvas 15 x 31cm
My return journey to Moore's Wharf was with the apprentice boat repairers,  in a much smaller boat.
They were keen to get home, so it was a fast and bumpy Harbour cruise. 
It was made even more exciting by having to juggle two small wet canvases and make sure that they didn't fall in the water.

Monday, 24 September 2012

Artist in Residence at the Sydney Heritage Fleet- Part 5 ' Follow the Fleet'

My first attempt to paint the entire Rozelle contingent of the Sydney Heritage Fleet ended in disaster when my canvas stretcher snapped in two.
I was better prepared for my second attempt, with a bigger easel, stronger canvas stretcher, more ballast and longer cable ties.
Armed with a canvas stretched on the strongest and heaviest stretcher frame I could buy, this time I took my "studio" easel. It might be called a studio easel but I can manage to stuff it in the back of the car and use it for plein air painting.
I brought the longest cable ties that I could find to tie the canvas to the easel, and the easel to my trolley luggage, which I am using as an anchor.
The canvas stretcher weighs about 10 kilos; my large easel weighs at least 15 kilos and the trolley luggage with all its contents of extra paint, brushes, palettes, turps, painting medium, sketchbooks, lunch, thermos of water, folding table, first aid kit, spare clothes, hat and boots weighs in at a good 25 kilos. I also took the French box easel, just in case. It took 4 trips to lug this stuff the 200 metres from the car to my painting site, and 5 to lug it back, as a wet canvas has to be handled on its own.
If all of that starts to be blown around in the wind and into the water it really is time to wimp out and go home.
I'll never need to join a gym or a bootcamp. Who knows, large scale plein air painting could become the latest fitness craze!

plein air painting of the Sydney Heritage Fleet from Blackwattle Bay painted by industrial heritage artist Jane Bennett
My plein air painting of the
"Sydney Heritage Fleet from Blackwattle Bay"
2012 oil on canvas 122 x 183cm
Available

It isn't immediately apparent which bits belong to which vessels.
I tried hard to take a photo showing both the painting and all the ships in the same frame to show some of the difficulties.
Apart from the distance making details hard to see, there is a narrow window of opportunity to do any painting. I have to choose a day that has no more than the gentlest breeze, and has enough sun to throw some light on my subject. Even then, there are only a few hours of painting time between when the early morning haze lifts, and when the afternoon sun starts to dazzle my eyes.

plein air painting of the Sydney Heritage Fleet from Blackwattle Bay painted by industrial heritage artist Jane Bennett
My plein air painting of the
"Sydney Heritage Fleet from Blackwattle Bay"
2012 oil on canvas 122 x 183cm
Available

Photography doesn't really work, as a telephoto lens flattens and distorts the relationships between the vessels and the colours are highly misleading. There is such a mad jigsaw puzzle of funnels, prows, awnings and lifeboats all jumbled together. Bits that belong to one vessel can easily be mistaken as belonging to another .
For understanding the close up details, I find it better to visit the Rozelle shipyard and run my canvas past the gauntlet of all the volunteers who have devoted their lives to rescuing these ships. If I've made any truly embarrassing mistakes I can rely on them to correct me. Loudly, often and in great detail!

plein air painting of the Sydney Heritage Fleet from Blackwattle Bay painted by industrial heritage artist Jane Bennett
My plein air painting of the
"Sydney Heritage Fleet from Blackwattle Bay"
2012 oil on canvas 122 x 183cm
Available

In the centre of my painting, the 'Bronzewing' and 'Currawong', tugs recently acquired by the Sydney Heritage Fleet, are face to face like two old friends having a chinwag.
Crammed behind them, the funnel of the a coal-fired steam tug 'Waratah' juts out at a jaunty angle. 'Waratah' was built at Cockatoo Island in 1902.
After a lot of untangling. the steam tug 'Lady Hopetoun' appears shadowed in the background of the dilapidated hulk of the 100 year old ferry 'Kanangra'. The 'Kanangra' is another link with Cockatoo Island. I remember catching her in the morning when I was painting on Cockatoo island in the early 1980s. I think she was retired by about 1985.

plein air painting of the Sydney Heritage Fleet from Blackwattle Bay painted by industrial heritage artist Jane Bennett
My plein air painting of the
"Sydney Heritage Fleet from Blackwattle Bay"
2012 oil on canvas 122 x 183cm
Available

Beyond the 'Kanangra' are the runts of the litter, the 1908 motor launch 'Protex', the 1943 motor launch 'Harmon' and the 1955 motor launch 'Berrima'.

plein air painting of the Sydney Heritage Fleet from Blackwattle Bay painted by industrial heritage artist Jane Bennett
My plein air painting of the
"Sydney Heritage Fleet from Blackwattle Bay"
2012 oil on canvas 122 x 183cm
Available

To the right of the canvas is the graceful 1903 "gentleman's schooner", 'Boomerang', which I have just finished painting on the slipway at Noakes.

plein air painting of the Sydney Heritage Fleet from Blackwattle Bay painted by industrial heritage artist Jane Bennett
My half finished plein air painting of the
"Sydney Heritage Fleet from Blackwattle Bay"
2012 oil on canvas 122 x 183cm
Available

All of these are dwarfed by the bulk of the 1927 steamship "John Oxley", currently being restored to its former glory.
plein air painting of the White Bay Power Station from Blackwattle Bay painted by industrial heritage artist Jane Bennett
My half finished plein air painting of the
"White Bay Power Station from Blackwattle Bay"
2012 oil on canvas 41 x 51cm
Available

By 1pm the changes in the direction of the light had made it difficult to see any useful details on the ships.
It was still about an hour before the wind would change, so I started painting a small canvas of the silhouette of the White Bay Power Station.
I have frequently painted this beautifully brutal building, from the inside as well as the outside. However I have rarely painted it from Blackwattle Bay, so I'm making up for this oversight.
The wind whipped up about 2pm, so both canvases are going well, but still unfinished. Till next time.

Related posts

Artist in Residence at the Sydney Heritage Fleet Part 1
Artist in Residence at the Sydney Heritage Fleet Part 2 : The 'Lady Hopetoun'
Slipping away
Artist in Residence at the Sydney Heritage Fleet - Part 4 'Blowing in the wind'
'From the Hungry Mile to Barangaroo'
"Lashed to the Mast" - Plein Air painting as extreme sport
Painting the 'Poolya' at Glebe Island
Jane Bennett paints the 'Lady Hopetoun'
Exhibition SALT IN THE AIR 27 April - 3rd May 2013 (asma-artistinresidence.blogspot.com)
Boat at Goat (janebennettartist.blogspot.com)