Intriguing Paper Art by Kerry Toomey, Indigenous Artist
My friend in paper, Licia Politis in Sydney, Australia, introduced me to the paper art of Kerry Toomey after attending two recent exhibits in which Kerry's work was featured. She was one of the included artists in a First Nations Exhibition at Hazelhurst Art Centre where her tissue paper hat and face sculptures were displayed. A separate solo exhibit of paper shoes, Munduhii, took place at Casula Powerhouse Arts Centre.
I asked Kerry via Instagram to tell us about her paper art:
"I am a Gamilaroi woman who grew up in Pilliga, New South Wales and currently live in Sydney. I have been inspired by stories of family. My art grapples with themes of Indigenous displacement and oppression, as well as survival and resistance."
"I work across a range of mediums and use a variety of symbolic materials to speak on these topics, such as tissue paper, lace, ochre, echidna quills, emu feathers, snake skin, quandong seeds, leaves, and flowers."
"I was a classroom teacher for over thirty years before I went to UNSW and graduated from COFA, now called Art and Design."
"I'm now retired and working full-time on creating new and interesting artworks, and have enrolled at Hazelhurst Gallery in the Art on Paper class to be around like-minded people. I enjoy making art from paper because it is so versatile, ranging from sculptures to paintings. I'm still learning how to tell my story through art, especially with the use of paper."
"I mainly use regular facial tissues. They are a delicate and fragile material, designed to be thrown away, and therefore suggestive of the fragility of Aboriginal culture and the way it is often discarded and devalued by non-Indigenous Australia."
"I have exhibited in New South Wales since 2015 and am continuing with a variety of artworks, some sculptures, watercolour, mixed mediums, and photography."
Hazelhurst Gallery - Art on Paper finalist, joint winner of local artist award and people's choice
From the Hazelhurst Arts Centre website: "First Nations women have always been keepers of culture and play a central role in family and community and passing on culture to younger generations. The artists and contributors in Wuliwulawala were Dharawal women or women from other Nations who live on Dharawal land in southern Sydney."
Enjoy this video that details the Wuliwulawala: Dharawal Women Sharing Stories exhibition. Kerry presents her paper art at the 11:12 minute mark.
You can view more of Kerry's engrossing work via her Instagram feed, @kerry.toomey.
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Hi Ann, Did you change host sites or something for your blog? Just double checking even though the link I clicked on in my email did bring me here. Thanks Pat S
ReplyDeleteI'm glad you clicked over to ask, Pat, thanks. New post alerts used to go out via Feedburner, but Google is discontinuing that service. You're now receiving my alerts via Follow.it instead. Hopefully it will be a smooth transition for everyone.
DeleteAnn, thanks for letting me know, lol. I hadn't heard they were discontinuing Feedburner.
DeleteAmazing artwork and good to see the Indiginous artist featured.
ReplyDeleteI'm glad you enjoyed the post, Bronwyn, and thanks for your comment.
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