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About these drawings...
Drawing has always been at the core of my practice, at the beginnings
of my work. Some of my earliest serious work after leaving art school
was drawing. Since then, while my work has not always ended up as
drawing, it has always started there, or at least moved through
drawing. No matter where it ends sculpture, video, photography
whatever my practice begins with ideas and then become drawings.
For much of the last ten years, I have primarily used drawing as
a way to develop ideas and then to communicate those ideas during
the production process. I don’t show these drawings. I don’t personally
regard them as art works. They are part of the process; partial,
necessary rather than important, more or less resolved literally
unfinished.
These drawings are different. They are finished; both in the sense
of resolved and polished and in the sense of complete within themselves.
They tell small stories and the intimacy of the medium suits the
intimacy of the stories that they tell. These small stories are
important because they allow me to expand the world around the creatures
that I have developed digitally and in silicone sculptures. They
also allow me to shift the focus away from the creatures and on
to us. It allows me to looks at other aspects of the relationship
between them and us and to explore it through a series of moments.
It also allows me to find new elements for my world.
There are a lot of babies in these drawings. I’m interested in
children for a number of reasons. For one, a young child represents
possibility, both positive and negative. Also babies don’t make
judgments. The world is totally new to them - they just take it
in. They have no expectation and are always surprised. Children
aren’t threatening. On the contrary, they bring out the best in
us; we want to care for them, protect them.
In this case, I use children to evoke the idea of vulnerability.
In my work, it is often the creatures that seem vulnerable. They
are mostly reliant on us and at our mercy. In these works it is
us the humans, the children that are vulnerable. The situations
that these children are in feel uncomfortable. They are just too
close to the creatures and it’s creepy. It is ambiguous whether
there is any animosity or just the rough and tumble of play. Like
that moment, as a child reaches out to a pat even the most familiar
pet, when we worry that they will be bitten.
Patricia Piccinini, 2006 |