Showing posts with label Environmental Action. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Environmental Action. Show all posts

06 August 2018

Holy Mountain




Respect the Mountain is holding an exhibition from 9 to 12 August 2018 at the Long Gallery, Salamanca Arts Centre, Hobart. To quote the exhibition organisers:

Dear kunanyi is an exhibition of contemporary artistic responses to kunanyi / Mount Wellington. The exhibition looks at our relationship with the mountain, its importance to our city and its presence in our lives. We are creating a patchwork quilt of experiences, thrown around us just when the winter is at its darkest, and we need it most.

This is the painting I did for the show:

Holy Mountain    oil on canvas     90 cm x 212 cm


I don't know how Tasmania's original inhabitants regarded it, but over the past two centuries kunanyi has been explored by bushrangers, scientists, athletes and holiday makers. On its slopes you can find many traces of past activity.

This painting is a playful meditation on the various people who have enjoyed kunanyi. Do not attempt to take it literally – let your imagination wander among the rocks and bushes, feel the sun on your back and the wind in your face, and next time you stroll along one of the many mountain paths, hear the spirits of those who walked kunanyi before you.

A week later:

When I went to collect my painting from the gallery I discovered I had won second prize in the People's Choice award! Many thank yous to all you lovely people who liked my painting better than the other hundred and fifty or so in the exhibition.

22 February 2013

Saving the World


What an entertaining evening of Environmental Action – well, other people acted, I just watched from a safe distance on the sidelines.

First up, a stirring speech by Senator Christine Milne at the opening of the 2013 Weld Echo exhibition at the Long Gallery, Salamanca Arts Centre.

I didn't have time to do any work for it this year, but I was able to assure Jenny Weber from the Huon Valley Environment Centre that they'd done a splendid job without me. Some really terrific sculpture there this year, as well as plenty of painting, prints and photography. Didn't have time for a good look, but I'm working at the SAC on Saturday so will take my time then.

Christine and Peg Putt went to visit Miranda Gibson for morning tea in her Observer Tree last week. They were hoisted up to her platform sixty metres up a eucalyptus tree where they enjoyed a pleasant tea with a magnificent view across the southern forests. Then they had to come down again. You have to step forward off the platform, Miranda explained. Otherwise the ropes get twisted. More used to braving political challenges in the Senate than swinging through the treetops, Christine found this – well – terrifying. However, once safely back on earth she felt more than confident to step forward off the platform when facing a press conference on environmental policy the next day.

If you haven't heard of Miranda Gibson and The Observer Tree, here's a link to her blog.

Christine began by saying she was pleased we were here rather than listening to a talk by Climate Change Deniers at the university, and she may have been right, but dear Lord Monckton's address wasn't until seven thirty, so I had plenty of time for more wine and cheese after the senator's speech before driving down there.


The Flat Earth Society, clad in their preferred medieval garb in recognition of their favourite historical period, the medieval warming period (not particularly coincidentally a key period for climate deniers), was ably represented outside the Stanley Burbury Theatre at UTAS. Somebody told me this venue was hired without revealing to the management precisely who the speaker would be, but this is only a (probably malicious) rumour and shouldn't be repeated in public. At any rate, the Flat Earth Society members are delighted by Lord Monckton and rather hope he will join forces with them.
Lord Monckton congratulates members of the Flat Earth
Society on their garb, thanks them for their support,and
invites them to come in and listen to his talk

More than sixty people turned up to listen to him, and the Flat Earth Society was busy handing out leaflets declaring that not only Climate Change is a myth. They decry the conspiracies of Governments, mainstream science, NASA, Google maps and other agencies that deny the earth is flat and publish fake (probably digitally manipulated) maps that DO NOT SHOW the ice wall surrounding the earth AT ALL.

We should all support them wholeheartedly. After all, everyone knows the weather is controlled by dragons.  If (and I say IF) there is global warming, it’s nothing to do with human activity. It can only be due to dragon flatulence, and I defy your muddle-headed scientists to prove me wrong.

I didn't consider it necessary to pay $25.00 to hear Lord Monckton's talk. Surely a Viscount has a much better idea of what is really happening and far more credibility than someone who only has titles after their name, and then only because they spent a few years at some university? No class, that kind. No class at all. And anyway, I'd looked at his presentation on line last night. Here.

back inside to preach to
the converted
You can make your own decision.


24 January 2013

Monster From the Deep

A pleasant excursion turns unexpectedly into a desperate battle with a deadly monster . . .


It was fine and sunny, so after lunch the three chums decided to motor to Stokes Point to paddle in the ocean and look at the lighthouse.


They paused along the way to admire rolling fields and picturesque lakes.

As they approached the southernmost point of the island, the road wound through mysterious sand hills. "What wonderful scenery!" Elizabeth exclaimed, trying yet again to get a good snapshot from a moving vehicle.


Further along the coast they were enchanted by a flock of small grey bushes grazing placidly by the roadside.


Most galloped away as the motor approached,


but one old bull stood his ground. The chums decided not to linger and they drove quickly by.


Suddenly Mary cried "Oh! What is that?" Off in the distance they saw a red and alien shape lurking among the rocks.


"Oh! no! I do believe it is a Net!"
At that moment two more friends drove up.
"Let us drag it in so that it will not be washed out to sea again when the tide comes in." they suggested. "Ghost nets roam the ocean and entangle innocent sea creatures. We must not let this one escape!"
Everyone agreed this was a matter of life and death and they must do whatever they could to defeat the monster.

 Excitedly, the chums scrambled over the rocks to inspect the Net.


"We'll drag it up there." Alison decided. "That should be far enough."


They tugged and tugged, but the Net refused to budge. It was far too big and heavy to move.
"We'll have to cut it up" Tim declared. "Has anyone brought a knife?"
Everybody searched their pockets, but nobody could find anything useful. For a moment they feared they would have to give up, but then Alison remembered she had some scissors in her car and hurried off to fetch them.

The scissors did the trick, but it was slow and tedious work cutting through the tangled strands of Net.


Elizabeth took her turn with the scissors

then she wandered off to take snapshots of rock pools and interesting boulders. There was so much to look at!






They all helped drag pieces of Net to higher ground. Even after it was dismembered the Net fought back. It was heavy and awkward, and inclined to catch hold of rocks, but the chums persisted and eventually they were satisfied it would never again return to the water.

"We can pull it right up to the road and take it away tomorrow." Tim said. Everyone felt very pleased with themselves. They waved goodbye to Tim and his mother and resumed their excursion.

Alison had a little paddle.


Elizabeth took a nice snapshot of the lighthouse.

Then they all went home for tea.
Next morning Tim took a big knife and went back to the foreshore. He cut the dried up monster into little pieces and took them away to the tip. The man at the tip said "you should get a medal for this. Or at least a photograph in the paper". "No" Tim replied modestly, "I would rather not have any publicity."

20 January 2013

King Island Cats



I like cats. I really do. But I don't approve of them. Cats are beautiful, elegant, lethal predators, incredibly decorative, totally Gothic and greatly to be admired.

Admired, that is, unless you are a native bird or a small, endangered marsupial or a harmless lizard, like this baby blue-tongue. In which case you probably don't like cats at all. 

So I do not have a cat, and mutter unkind words about people who do, especially if they live close to bush-land and don't keep Kitty closely confined day and night.

Cats have done horrible things to native wildlife on King Island. According to the King Island Natural Resource Management Group Inc. brochure, in an average year your domestic moggy annihilates 16 mammals, eight birds and eight reptiles.

So people are out there trapping feral cats -  and Robyn Eades turns them into useful things like antimacassars, coat-hanger covers and hats.





When I returned from a walk the other day I found her in the kitchen I share with the Cultural Centre volunteers, stirring a huge pot she had boiling away on the stove.
 It was full of leafy greenery from a native plant harvested near her house and smelt wonderful, but it was not to eat. In went several skeins of hand-spun wool and after an appropriate period they emerged the most delicate shade of sage green.


This is Robyn. You can buy her hats and other fur-based products, her yarns dyed using native plants, as well as her lovely soft, knitted possum hair mittens and hand-made soaps from the King Island Cultural Centre. 

http://kingislandculturalcentre.blogspot.com.au/





13 February 2012

Weld Echo 2012

Weld Echo exhibition opens this Friday evening - 17th February. Apart from supporting the efforts of the Huon Valley Environment Centre, I like doing work for WE as it is an opportunity to experiment with different styles and ideas.

These are the paintings I'm entering this year:

Eagles over the Weld
71cm x 56cm  oil on canvas
Everybody's into Steampunk these days . . . got a bit bored with this one. Not weird enough. Oh well.  More paintings under way.


Three Men on a Log
 50cm x 40cm oil on canvas

This was inspired by a photograph of my grandfather and two other Forestry Dept workers crossing the Weld River near Fletcher's Cabin in 1925 or thereabouts.


Time and place: Weld Echo Exhibition 16 - 29 February, 2012
Long Gallery, Salamanca Arts Centre
77 Salamanca Place, Hobart Tasmania

30 May 2011

Come to the National Day of Climate Action

Sunday 5 June: Join Australians saying "yes" to a cleaner Australia:
11 am at Franklin Square, Hobart.
I can't believe I'm going to a demonstration IN SUPPORT of Government policy! We do live in a strange world.

Man From the City 56cm x 71cm


Another thing I'm doing is entering three paintings in this year's Weld Echo Exhibition, the annual fundraiser for the Huon Valley Environment Centre. You can see a photograph I took on the Weld River a month ago; it's planned to put a bridge across here for logging access.

Weld Echo 2011

1-12 June, Long Gallery, Salamanca Arts Centre, Hobart

A collaborative exhibition of works inspired by the wild Weld Valley of Southern Tasmania.
An important fundraiser for the campaign to protect the Weld Valley forests from industrial logging.

Opening Night Wednesday 1st June, from 6pm.

Drinks, nibbles, speakers, including special guests Peter Cundall and Greens MP Kim Booth





One of my paintings is above; here are the other two:

Eating the Trees - 50cm x 40cm

Great Weld Circus - 50cm x 40cm

24 January 2010

Say not the struggle naught availeth . . .

The Gunns20 exhibition finishes tomorrow; thank you to all my Melbourne friends who took the time to go along, and particular thanks to those who sent donations to the Huon Valley Environment Centre. Big hugs to all of you.

Reactions to the exhibition were mixed, as expected, and one or two people thought we were just preaching to the converted. However, even the converted need to be informed of what is happening beyond their suburban back yards! But we are encouraged; we will carry on; we have nothing to fear but fear itself. So gird your loins, grab your Kipling, once more into the breach and let's give the beggars what for, what?

By the way, here are the paintings I exhibited.
Simulacrum


Clearing




You can read my Artists' Statement about them on my website.

08 December 2009

The following is from a publicity release from the Huon Valley Environment Centre. The case is an attack on everybody's right to engage in peaceful protest, whether or not you choose to support the particular issue (i.e. defence of Tasmania's Old Growth forests). I am exhibiting two paintings in the exhbition at the Hogan Gallery in January. Do come along!

Free Speech and Tasmania’s Forests On Trial

This February Six Defendants will stand trial in the long running Gunns 20 case.
Gunns Ltd, the Tasmanian native forest logging company, is suing five individuals and one grass roots environmental organisation. The case has already cost Gunns Ltd $2.8 million and is likely to cost much more by the end. It is one of the longest running and most expensive cases of its kind in Australian legal history. Fortunately, this planet is blessed with courageous people who are prepared to fight for a healthy democracy and the public good, to defend freedom of speech, and to fight for the future of our forests and wildlife. By supporting this fundraising exhibition, you are supporting the defendants in this nationally and internationally significant court case. It will have far-reaching implications for the right to protest and the right to free speech.

Background:
Five years ago, in December 2004, Gunns Ltd issued a $6.4 million, 216 page writ against 20 environmental activists and organizations. Multiple writs later, with cases variously dropped, dismissed or otherwise discontinued, six defendants remain. The case is set to test the legal limits of protest, activism and free speech. The six remaining defendants are individuals with limited assets plus a small grassroots organisation, the Huon Valley Environment Centre, based in the south of Tasmania.
The Gunns20 case will go to trial in February 2010 in the Supreme Court in Melbourne. The case may run for up to five weeks. The defendants are preparing for the trial. Unlike Gunns, which is a company, they are being sued as individuals. They face the possibility of being taken to the cleaners by a court case like this - and indeed into potential bankruptcy. It affects not just the defendents themselves, but also their loved ones, their families, friends and other people. And there is the impact on the wider community, from the potential for intimidation by a large corporation to restrict freedom to protest.
But the legitimate right of people everywhere on this planet to stand up for what they believe can’t be taken away if we are going to have a healthy democracy. The woodchipping industry in Tasmania is destroying native forests at the greatest rate in history; this year approximately 150,000 log truck loads will go the woodchip mills for export to Japan, China, Korea, and the great majority of that is through this company called Gunns Ltd. You only have to look at what’s happening to the magnificent forests of Tasmania and the wildlife after the loggers for Gunns have been through, and you see total devastation. Nothing is left alive.

Events
Freedom to Speak A Corporate Unmasking - Gunns 20 Fundraising Collaborative Exhibition – 20 Artists At Hogan Gallery, Smith St, Fitzroy Melbourne. 15 Jan - 28 Jan 2010

Comments
Australian Greens Leader, Senator Bob Brown says; “In the Franklin campaign, we broke the law, we were prepared to pay the consequences, and everybody I run into who was part of that movement at the time feels proud that they were. Because a great benefit came out of it, including investment, jobs, and of course the retention of beauty. Where do you draw the line?: you draw it in your own conscience, and you have to be well aware of the consequences and you have to, in your own lifetime, either accept every law that’s brought through, or determine whether there are other higher moral principles, ethical principles, including the rights of future generations, which are an inherent law of human activity, which have to be obeyed as well. "

Prominent Melbourne Barrister, Brian Walters SC says; “I don’t think anyone should say that the corporations shouldn’t have rights. They do have rights, and they should be able to access the courts. The question is, for what purpose? And the question is, what do we sacrifice if we allow them to just use their corporate power rather than their corporate rights? In the United States, following the huge explosion of SLAPP suits in the 1980s, nearly every state has now adopted anti-SLAPP suit legislation. It’s usually called Protection of Public Participation legislation, and under that legislation, if a corporation brings an action with the purpose of silencing public debate, they are liable to punitive damages in the courts. And that’s been applied, it’s meant a huge drop in the number of SLAPP suits, and an increase in the creativity of public debate within the United States. We should have that here.”

The Remaining Defendants
Adam Burling
The ancient and wild forests of Tasmania inspire and nurture Adam's spirit. He has campaigned for a number of years with the Huon Valley Environment Centre for their protection from the woodchip companies. It was the threat of industrial forestry near his home and the impact on the local community that pushed Adam and other local residents to take a stand for their small rural valley. It was this stand for the wildlife, forests and people of Lucaston, that has resulted in him being sued by Gunns Ltd.

Louise Morris
Louise Morris initially came to Tasmania in 2001, after campaigning for the protection of Western Australia’s forests, for a short summer vacation. From that point on Louise fell in love with the Tasmanian landscape and lifestyle and become heavily involved in the campaign to protect Tasmania’s forests. Louise spent much of 2005 coordinating the Friends of Forest and Free Speech national tour. The tour highlighted the Gunns 20 case and the need for a bill of rights that protects free speech and the right to peaceful protest. Louise is currently working as a climate campaigner for Friends of the Earth, while attempting to complete a degree in Politics and International Studies. Louise was honoured with the 2005 Australian Conservation Foundation’s Peter Rawlinson Conservation Award.

Mrs Lou Geraghty
Like many Tasmanians, Lou never for a minute considered that one day she would become involved with an environmental campaign, nor be in danger of losing her home and life savings over a court case bought by Tasmania’s largest logging corporation. Married with children and grandchildren, Lou and her husband were in the process of developing their property for eco-tourism when the magnificent forests next to her Lucaston property became an industrial logging zone. All plans were put on hold while she and her neighbors fought for the peace, safety and amenity of their families and the surrounding wildlife and forests. This struggle became a ground breaking documentary entitled ‘The Battle of Bakers Creek’ and Lou ended up as one of the Gunns20.

Neal Funnell
Neal is the youngest member of the Gunns 20. One day he would like to make lots of money at the expense of those around him and go on to become a powerbroker in one of Australia's two major political parties. He would like to thank Gunns for this invaluable legal opportunity.

Brian Dimmick
A well known Tasmanian film and documentary maker, Brian produced the ground breaking 2003 documentary "The Battle of Bakers Creek". Hailed as one of the most powerful environmental films ever seen, the documentary covers the battle waged by members of a small Tasmanian community against Gunns Ltd plans to log the beautiful forests of the Lucaston Valley, 40 minutes south of Hobart. Brian knows only too well the high price of telling the outside world about environmental destruction in Tasmania. While filming traffic footage for the documentary in a public place, Brian, and his camera equipment, were attacked by a log truck driver. The attack was caught on film and broadcast nationally giving a window for the rest of the country on the realities faced by brave people trying to raise awareness about logging in Tasmania.

The Huon Valley Environment Centre Inc.
Located in Southern Tasmania’s woodchipping heartland in the town of Huonville, the Huon Valley Environment Centre stands against incredible odds and is a brave beacon to the community. The Centre is a meeting space for environmentalists and has a great range of gifts, books, plants and a lending library. It has become an oasis for many environmentally minded people. It is staffed by a committed group of Tasmanians volunteers. Established in 2001, the centre's activities include forest campaigns, herb health and organic expos, and coordinating events about local environmental issues. Huon Valley Environment Centre campaigns for Tasmania's threatened World Heritage value southern forests. It is spearheading the campaign to protect the Lower Weld Valley, a valley of ancient forests and wild pristine rivers.