Friday, 2 October 2015
Nellien Brewer: Human Trafficking Awareness Week
Nellien Brewer: Human Trafficking Awareness Week: Eros is known as the god of love. According to Freudian theory this includes the sexual instinct which may lead to the pursuit of unin...
Human Trafficking Awareness Week
Eros is known as the god of love. According to Freudian theory this includes the sexual instinct which may lead to the pursuit of uninhibited pleasure. The negative results of uninhibited self-gratification in the absence of a transcendent authority in the post-modern world include activities such as pornography, prostitution, child molestation and human trafficking. Gratification for the perpetrator invariably leads to the destruction of the victim, mentally and often physically.
In these works a decaying leaf becomes a metaphor for the fragility of the victim. Scripture becomes a metaphor for the soul of the victim which is set free, often only through death.
Friday, 18 September 2015
Nellien Brewer: Joburg Fringe 2015
Nellien Brewer: Joburg Fringe 2015: Joburg Fringe 2015 This year the Joburg Fringe was held at Arts on Main, Maboneng Precinct. Claudia and Sarie put out an open call for ...
Thursday, 27 August 2015
Shards
Many South Africans have a religious background. We are taught that God will protect us, and to have faith in His Word. At the same time, South Africa is inundated with crime and violence which put these theories to the test. Broken glass and bullet holes are relics of the crime we face on a daily basis.
In the works Shards #1 and Shards #2 (oil on digital prints, 2014), I have combined Scripture with images of shattered windshield glass. The glass shards have a beauty in spite of the horror. It obscures the Word in some areas, while the Word remains clearly visible in others. This becomes symbolic of the push-and-pull between faith and fear - a spiritual and psychological battle faced by most of us.
Saturday, 22 August 2015
Nellien Brewer: 2 Chronicles 15:3 (2015)
Nellien Brewer: 2 Chronicles 15:3 (2015): Inner cities fascinate me – the socio-economic make-up; the different cycles of decay and regeneration that keep repeating over and o...
2 Chronicles 15:3 (2015)
Inner cities fascinate me – the socio-economic make-up; the
different cycles of decay and regeneration that keep repeating over and over.
Wealth is found adjacent to abject poverty. Slum buildings rub shoulders with
ultra-modern or beautifully restored architectural gems. At the same time,
inner cities are hostile environments which often isolate people from families,
wholesome values and nature. This hopelessness and despair is expressed in
various ways – crime, violence, neglect, vandalism and graffiti – the
expressive art of the streets.
This image was created for the Altered
Realities exhibition at the Pretoria Art Association. It shows existing graffiti photographed on a wall in
Durban. Various foliose and crustose lichens are growing over the image. The
lichen consists entirely of Scripture and partly obscure the graffiti. The
image is a comment on society and the reality of its rejection of traditional
values, while the lichen, in overcoming harsh reality through complex
resilience, becomes a symbol of regeneration and hope.
Digital photographic print, digital print on Perspex,
framed, 900 x 600mm
2 Chronicles 15:3 (detail)
Monday, 10 August 2015
Lichen in oil on digital print
Lichen #1 (2013) Lichen #2 (2013)
Lichen continues to fascinate me, and I love exploring ways to represent these exquisitely intricate little organisms. These two images show foliose lichens painted in oil on digital prints of text lichen.
The digital image was created in Photoshop and shows organic lichen 'growing' over a background of lacy text. The background was created in Old Testament Scripture (Psalms), while the lichen images are New Testament (Gospels). Conceptually this symbolises the modern church where non-traditional, organic forms of worship and gatherings co-exist with the formal traditional churches.
Sunday, 2 August 2015
Nellien Brewer: Lichen
Nellien Brewer: Lichen: I am fascinated by lichen. I have been photographing it for years in various locations – from the deserts of Namibia to the a...
Lichen
I
am fascinated by lichen. I have been photographing it for years in various
locations – from the deserts of Namibia to the architectural masterpieces of
Europe. Lichen occurs all over the world and in areas where nothing else will
grow, yet many people are completely unaware of the existence of these visually
exquisite, complex little organisms which are not plants but consist of two and
sometimes three different organisms (a fungus plus a photosynthesizing alga
and/ or bacterium). Many urban spaces
are devoid of vegetation, but lichen can be found growing on the walls or
paving. For me lichen is not only a symbol of resilience and regeneration but
also a silent witness that covers history while watching it being made.
Once I became aware of the complexity and beauty of the little organisms, I started doing art about them - experimenting with sculpture and painting. However, as in the case of the fig leaf, it seemed that nothing I did adequately conveyed the complexity. It called for a unique interpretation, and once again text and magnification was the answer.
I have completed 4 lichens (1000mm x1000mm) which each contain an entire Gospel - Matthew, Mark, Luke and John. The completed work - A new religion - 4 Gospels - was selected for the 2014 Sasol New Signatures exhibition.
Friday, 24 July 2015
Ficus carica: Whose design is it anyway? (2013-2015)
We have a fig tree outside our kitchen. For years I have noticed the
beauty of the leaves - especially when backlit by the sun. Over the years I
have tried a number of techniques to ‘artistically interpret’ the leaves until
I finally realised that the natural design was simply too strong and as such,
perfect.
The vein pattern on the leaf has been interpreted in Biblical text which
I use as a metaphor for the design code underlying all natural systems. The fig
leaf contains four complete books of the Bible – Psalms, Proverbs, Ecclesiastes
and Song of Solomon. The scale of the work and the laborious, time-consuming
act of typing the text word by word means that I have worked on it for 2 years.
Tuesday, 21 July 2015
Sura 8:12
Sura 8:12 (2015)
The literal
interpretation of the Quran by Isis and other terror groups such as Boko Haram,
Al Qaeda and Al Shabaab has led to unspeakable atrocities, the destruction of
ancient sites and the persecution of many.
This work was
inspired by the beheading videos which too often adorn our screens and the
heads are those of actual victims. The heads of such victims are usually
displayed as trophies to be mocked and ridiculed, or even kicked around as
soccer balls. The symbol shown in the work is the symbol painted on the homes
of Christians during the destruction of the city of Mosul.
One feels
helpless in the face of such horror. There is a need to speak out, to protest,
to do SOMETHING – to not be found ‘fiddling whilst Rome burns’.
With this
artwork I hope to give the victims dignity and prominence in a way which lauds
their courage in the face of certain death.
Monday, 16 February 2015
Termites
A joint German-Chinese study using behavioural mathematics (reported in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences) found that the group has an ability to process information 'far more efficiently than Google'. According to study co-author Jurgen Kurths, single ants may appear random, but the group quickly becomes an ordered line in their search for food. A team from the Georgia Institute of Technology revealed that ants' skills at building stable tunnels in loose sand could aid in the design of a new generation of search-and-rescue robots.
Termite patterns on a tree trunk reveal order and intricacy, despite the destruction wreaked upon the host structure. A new system takes over the old one - evocative of human civilisations/ societies which are continually built up or broken down. Remnants of the old remain but things can never be the same.
A study of termite patterns combined with grids and text as a metaphor for Intelligent Design led to the works Termitary and newsociety in 2009. I continue to collect reference material, and hope to continue the exploration of this fascinating subject.
newsociety (2009) |
Termitary (2009) |
Monday, 9 February 2015
How the text works started
At one of my 2nd year BVA crit sessions in 2007 I had masses of work. My father had passed away and our family farm had been lost in a land claim. My foundations had been viciously shaken and so I was obsessively working with loss, the ghosts of the past and memories.
One of our lecturers was Frikkie Eksteen , an artist whom I find tremendously inspiring. The one thing he found most interesting about my entire presentation was a tiny (accidental) stain on one of the photographs in my workbook! After my initial shock I decided to look for ways to explore this stain - possibly as a 'ghost' in other works. The result was Kraakbeeld (2007).
Kraakbeeld (2007).
I had no use for this image other than as an addition to other digital work, but the image did have a strange beauty which continued to intrigue me. I had previously used text in my art, and decided to interpret the image in text as an experiment. This resulted in Let the words of my mouth and the meditation of my heart be acceptable in Thy sight (2008).
Let the words of my mouth, and the meditaion of my heart, be acceptable in Thy sight (2008)
The work received the 'Art on Paper Merit Award' at the Thami Mnyele Fine Arts Awards 2009, and was selected by Ms Elfriede Dreyer for the Me3 exhibition at Fried Contemporary in 2012. It was also included in the Me. Ek exhibition she curated for the 2013 KKNK.
Let the words of my mouth, and the meditaion of my heart, be acceptable in Thy sight (2008). Detail.
The physical typing of each word is extremely time-consuming, and the digital files are enormous. Yet this allows me to explore minute detail in a variety of scales impossible to achieve by hand, and I am constantly challenged to find out how far I can push this - I am truly hooked.
Saturday, 7 February 2015
Detail from Fig Leaf (2014)
2015 is already one month old. I continue to be fascinated by the intricacies of nature, and the incredible design behind everything. I simply do not have enough hours in every day to explore all the ways of giving visual expression to my sense of wonder!
The size of my digital fig leaf image is 1500mm x 1000mm. It originally contained the Book of Psalms which hadn't filled all the cells. I then added the Book of Proverbs, the Book of Ecclesiastes and finally the Song of Solomon and I now feel it is complete. The layered image provides a host of options for printing. I am thinking of printing each book on a separate layer of perspex and then combining all 4 layers into one work.
Fig Leaf (2013) - Book of Psalms
Fig Leaf (2015) - Book of Psalms, Proverbs, Ecclesiastes and Song of Solomon
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