G. W. Bot

Last updated

G. W. Bot
Born
Christine Falkland

1954
Spouse Sasha Grishin
Website gwbot.net

G. W. Bot is the signature name for the Australian artist Christine Grishin, nee Christine Falkland, who has been a full-time artist for more than 30 years. [1] [2]   She is a printmaker, sculptor, painter and graphic artist who works with her own shapes and glyphs to represent the landscapes she loves. [3] Since 1985 her primary work is linocut printing. [4] She is known nationally and internationally from about 50 solo exhibitions, and more than 200 mixed, group exhibitions. [2] Her work is held in more than 100 art collections including: the National Gallery of Australia; the British Museum; The Victoria and Albert Museum, London; the Bibliotheque National, Paris; The Museum of Modern Art, Osaka, Japan; and the Fogg Museum at Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts. [3]

Contents

Biography

Bot was born 1954 in Quetta, Pakistan, of Australian parents, and later travelled widely with them. [2] She studied art in London, Paris and Australia and graduated from the Australian National University in 1982. [2]   She has had residencies at Bundanon and Riversdale, NSW, properties Arthur Boyd left to Australians. [5]

Bot lives in Canberra surrounded by gardens and views into bush land, which inspire the shapes and glyphs that define her work. [4]   She has a studio at the Strathnairn Arts Association in Holt, ACT. [6]

Like many female artists who have experienced motherhood, Bot felt isolation when the children were young. Her choice of linocuts facilitated working on a kitchen table, and she expanded her skills and scope of work during this domestic period. [4] She also loves poetry and draws on it for much of her work. [4] She adopted the name G. W. Bot because she wanted a totem and there are many wombats on the property where she lives. The early French explorers recorded the name for the animal as le Grand Wam Bot and from this she derived G. W. Bot. [5]

Work

Bot has worked in many mediums: gouache and watercolour, oils and tempura, intaglio, lithography, and relief printing, but mainly linocut. [7]

Bot has stated: “Like the unexplored and unmapped Australian landscape, the linocut is an unchartered medium without codified orthodoxies. It can detail a preciousness and intricate fragility like the spikes of a banksia or a vast monotony of tone.” [4]

In the 1980s her works were figurative.  But then in the 1990s Bot began to evolve the glyphs that represent for her the metaphysical and spiritual elements of landscape. She also began to use layering, and sometimes added collage or textiles to her works. [4]   For Bot the glyphs are a system of marks, a language, that have evolved from many rough sketches of the landscape. [5]

Typically, Bot’s work features strong silhouettes, a natural colour palette, course visual texture and complex, rhythmic patterns and glyphs. These glyphs are symbols of natural elements. [8]

She credits Aboriginal artist Rover Thomas with teaching her about black in the Australian landscape.  After a fire, the black land bursts into bloom, so black is the colour not of death but of regeneration. [5]

In 2013 Bot began to sculpt glyphs in steel and Treaty Glyphs (2013) and Glyphs – Between Worlds (201) and were shown in two separate exhibitions. She makes them from plain carbon steel. After cutting and smoothing the sculptures, she puts them into the ground to rust to a ruby-brown colour.  They are then bolted to a backing, standing out slightly to cast their shadows. [5]

Ethos

During the COVID-19 pandemic (2020) she was interviewed at Strathnairn Arts Association in Canberra, ACT, Australia: [9]

“What would you most like people to know about your Arts practice? "Art matters – art is a voice that reaches out to others so that they can see the world again as if for the first time. Like a child who sees the moon and is so overcome that they need to share the experience with others just in case we hadn’t ever seen the moon. In surreal times – like this COVID-19 pandemic – we all perhaps need to hear the voice of the child/artist for inspiration, for hope, for sanity and survival.“

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Emily Kame Kngwarreye</span> Aboriginal Australian artist (1910–1996)

Emily Kame Kngwarreye was an Aboriginal Australian artist from the Utopia community in the Northern Territory. She is one of the most prominent and successful artists in the history of Australian art.

Kathleen Petyarre was an Australian Aboriginal artist. Her art refers directly to her country and her Dreamings. Petyarre's paintings have occasionally been compared to the works of American Abstract Expressionists Jackson Pollock and Mark Rothko, and even to those of J. M. W. Turner. She has won several awards and is considered one of the "most collectable artists in Australia". Her works are in great demand at auctions. Petyarre died on 24 November 2018, in Alice Springs, Australia.

Cyril Edward Power was an English artist best known for his linocut prints, long-standing artistic partnership with artist Sybil Andrews and for co-founding the Grosvenor School of Modern Art in London in 1925. He was also a successful architect and teacher.

Danie Mellor is an Australian artist who was the winner of 2009 National Aboriginal & Torres Strait Islander Art Award. Born in Mackay, Queensland, Mellor grew up in Scotland, Australia, and South Africa before undertaking tertiary studies at North Adelaide School of Art, the Australian National University (ANU) and Birmingham Institute of Art and Design. He then took up a post lecturing at Sydney College of the Arts. He works in different media including printmaking, drawing, painting, and sculpture. Considered a key figure in contemporary Indigenous Australian art, the dominant theme in Mellor's art is the relationship between Indigenous and non-Indigenous Australian cultures.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Bronwyn Bancroft</span> Australian artist (born 1958)

Bronwyn Bancroft is an Aboriginal Australian artist, and among the first Australian fashion designers invited to show her work in Paris. Born in Tenterfield, New South Wales, and trained in Canberra and Sydney, Bancroft worked as a fashion designer, and is an artist, illustrator, and arts administrator.

Daisy Jugadai Napaltjarri was a Pintupi-Luritja-speaking Indigenous artist from Australia's Western Desert region, and sister of artist Molly Jugadai Napaltjarri. Daisy Jugadai lived and painted at Haasts Bluff, Northern Territory. There she played a significant role in the establishment of Ikuntji Women's Centre, where many artists of the region have worked.

Contemporary Indigenous Australian art is the modern art work produced by Indigenous Australians, that is, Aboriginal Australians and Torres Strait Islander people. It is generally regarded as beginning in 1971 with a painting movement that started at Papunya, northwest of Alice Springs, Northern Territory, involving Aboriginal artists such as Clifford Possum Tjapaltjarri and Kaapa Tjampitjinpa, and facilitated by white Australian teacher and art worker Geoffrey Bardon. The movement spawned widespread interest across rural and remote Aboriginal Australia in creating art, while contemporary Indigenous art of a different nature also emerged in urban centres; together they have become central to Australian art. Indigenous art centres have fostered the emergence of the contemporary art movement, and as of 2010 were estimated to represent over 5000 artists, mostly in Australia's north and west.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Violet Teague</span> Australian artist (1872–1951)

Violet Helen Evangeline Teague was an Australian artist, noted for her painting and printmaking.

Eric Prentice Anchor Thake was an Australian artist, designer, painter, printmaker and war artist.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Dorrit Black</span> Australian artist (1891–1951)

Dorothea Foster Black was an Australian painter and printmaker of the Modernist school, known for being a pioneer of Modernism in Australia. In 1951, at the age of sixty, Black was killed in a car crash.

Maringka Baker is an Aboriginal artist from central Australia. She lives in the Pitjantjatjara community of Kaṉpi, South Australia, and paints for Tjungu Palya, based in nearby Nyapaṟi.Maringka is known for her paintings. Maringka paints sacred stories from her family's Dreaming (spirituality). As well as the important cultural meanings they carry, her paintings are known for being rich in colour and contrast. She often paints the desert landscape in bright green colours, and contrasts it against reds and ochres to depict landforms. She also uses layers of contrasting colours to show the detail of the desert in full bloom.

Nura Rupert is an Australian Aboriginal artist from north-west South Australia. She produces her works using intaglio methods of printmaking. The designs are drawn by etching and linocutting, and the prints are done on paper.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Judy Watson</span> Australian artist

Judy Watson is an Australian Waanyi multi-media artist who works in print-making, painting, video and installation. Her work often examines Indigenous Australian histories, and she has received a number of high profile commissions for public spaces.

Christian Marjory Emily CarlyleWaller(Yandell) (2 August 1894 - 25 May 1954) was an Australian printmaker, illustrator, muralist and stained-glass artist. At 15 she moved to Melbourne, where she studied at the National Gallery School. In 1915 she married fellow-student Mervyn Napier Waller.

Dorothy Djukulul is a traditional Australian Aboriginal artist who lives in Ramingining in Central Arnhem Land. She speaks Ganalbingu and is a part of the Gurrumba Gurrumba clan, who identify as being a part of the Yirrija moiety.

Gertie Huddleston (c.1916/1933–2013) was an contemporary Indigenous Australian artist who worked in the Ngukurr community.

Marie Elizabeth Rita McMahon is an Australian artist, known for her paintings, prints, posters, drawings, and design work. Born in Melbourne, she has worked in various communities of Australian Aboriginal people and as of 2020 works in Sydney. Her work has focused on social, political, and environmental issues. Her posters about Aboriginal rights and Aboriginal life appear in major gallery collections in Australia.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Helen Ogilvie</span> Australian artist (1902–1993)

Helen Elizabeth Ogilvie was a twentieth-century Australian artist and gallery director, cartoonist, painter, printmaker and craftworker, best known for her early linocuts and woodcuts, and her later oil paintings of vernacular colonial buildings.

Nancy Gaymala Yunupingu was a senior Yolngu artist and matriarch, who lived in Arnhem Land in the Northern Territory, Australia. She worked at the Buku-Larrnggay Mulka Centre in Yirrkala, where her work is still held, and is known for her graphic art style, bark paintings and printmaking.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Barbara Brash</span> 20th century Australian woman printmaker

Barbara Nancy Brash was a twentieth-century post-war Australian artist known for her painting and innovative printmaking. In an extensive career she contributed to the Melbourne Modernist art scene, beside other significant women artists including: Mary Macqueen, Dorothy Braund, Anne Marie Graham, Constance Stokes, Anne Montgomery (artist) and Nancy Grant.

References

  1. "Australian Galleries, Works On Paper [Sydney] · Related artists · Australian Prints + Printmaking". www.printsandprintmaking.gov.au. Archived from the original on 16 February 2014. Retrieved 23 July 2020.
  2. 1 2 3 4 "about". G.W.Bot. Retrieved 5 July 2020.
  3. 1 2 "G.W. Bot". Australian Galleries. Archived from the original on 22 March 2020. Retrieved 5 July 2020.
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 6 G W Bot Garden of Possibilities, exhibition brochure, 7 June – 21 September 2003, Canberra Museum and Gallery, Canberra, ACT, Australia.
  5. 1 2 3 4 5 McKENZIE, Janet. "GW Bot interview: 'Living and working in Australia has meant coming to terms with the country in one's own way'". Studio International - Visual Arts, Design and Architecture. Archived from the original on 4 March 2020. Retrieved 5 July 2020.
  6. "G.W. BOT". Strathnairn. Archived from the original on 5 July 2020. Retrieved 5 July 2020.
  7. "The humble linocut in the age of digital technology. (2001) by Bott, G.W. · Australian Prints + Printmaking". printsandprintmaking.gov.au. Archived from the original on 6 July 2020. Retrieved 5 July 2020.
  8. "G. W. BOT - aboriginal art, australian art, Arts d' Australie Stephane Jacob presents a wide selection of works by leading aboriginal and western australian contemporary artists". www.artsdaustralie.com. Archived from the original on 5 July 2020. Retrieved 5 July 2020.
  9. "IN CONVERSATION WITH G.W. BOT — Strathnairn Arts". Strathnairn. Archived from the original on 6 July 2020. Retrieved 5 July 2020.