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PICTORIAL CYCLOPEDIA OF EXOTIC PLANTS

2019

Intricate and overlapping patterns. Botanical interlocking parts. Burgeoning. Painted cut paper layered with graphite drawings in somewhat flamboyant, colour-assault collages. A material-generating experiment in textile/sculpture inspired watercolours. 

Artist Statement / Notes on Process: 

“Pictorial Cyclopedia of Exotic Plants” is a body of work inspired by the burgeoning vibrancy of the botanical world. I am curious about our human relationship with plants - especially the specific quality of life that plants emit and how we experience this. The work so far has been a controlled encounter with the eros of the plant kingdom. 

 

Some musings, challenges and things I have been playing with: 

 

- These works were an experiment in bringing principles from my textile/sculpture studio practice into the painting process. I became aware of the presence of plants in so many of the textiles we take for granted in our daily lives. Once I started looking, plants were everywhere: living areas, restaurants, clothing etc. In “Pictorial Cyclopedia of Exotic Plants”, I played with this abstraction and repeating of botanical forms that I noticed in these daily textiles, suddenly becoming conscious of how ubiquitously they framed my life.  I translated them into patterns and layers of cut and painted paper, incorporating watercolour portraits and graphite drawings, “patchworking” them together. In traditional textiles, patterned sections of cloth are often layered or placed alongside each other. These can be reworked and mended over generations, as sections of reused and new cloth are incorporated and layers of coloured threads mend inevitable wear. In all of this, a strange visual harmony emerges that is at once mature and flamboyant. I took inspiration from this. 

 

- Intricate and overlapping patterns ; interlocking parts. Layers upon layers in the perceptual field. I have been exploring my own edge of “too much”: too much colour, too much pattern, too much perceptual stimulus. In this work, I experimented with this act of pressing up against my own threshold of over-stimulation - not so much that I became flooded, but just enough that I could research and observe that terrain. (I had a breakthrough with the layers when I started to separate and build them up with dividers, making the compositions 3-dimensional. Finally, I found the sculptural and sensorial quality I was looking for). 

 

Note: The title of this exhibition comes from a tome bought at The Book Shop entitled, “Exotica: Pictorial Cyclopedia of Exotic Plants” by Alfred Byrd Graf. I was immediately taken by its’ vintage black and white photo documentation - An exhaustive tour of every type of plant life imaginable. It has been a constant companion to me in the creation of these pieces.

- A. Goodall, November 2019

Click each work to view photos, titles, medium and availability

"Posy" Alexandra Goodall
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