David Gryn blog

Posts Tagged ‘Minimal’

The Feeling of Things, Jane Bustin at Fox/Jensen Sydney and Art Basel Hong Kong

In Art Basel, Art Basel Hong Kong, Jane Bustin, Uncategorized on 23/03/2019 at 7:06 pm

JANE BUSTIN OPENS AT FOX/JENSEN SYDNEY 6 APRIL

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To hold a thing, whether with our hand or our gaze is to capture a feeling, giving meaning to the object, not the subject. – Jane Bustin 2019

Ezra Pound said that “glance is the enemy of vision” and whilst I am disinclined to argue with his insights and though, in essence I agree with his sentiment, I am not convinced all glances ought to be judged equally.

There is something in the fugitive glance that may reveal a greater truth, a visual veracity that is assembled through glimpses, each with a different complexion, made at a different moment, felt in a different way, seen with differing consciousness.

Jane Bustin’s paintings seem to encourage us to “glance”. Their composition, their material range, their attention to edge, their use of reflective materials such as copper and aluminium lends perception a contingency that resists static vision. These glances do not signal inattention, rather they invite a heightened if unconscious sensitivity and ultimately, contemplation.

French poet Francis Ponge, whose works have “stirred” Jane Bustin’s and whose elevation of the simple objects in our world – a plant, a shell, soap – revealed the hidden relationship between the inner life of human beings and the world of objects.

Bustin’s works take their titles from early 20th century modernist literature and poetry – Djuna Barnes, Jean Rhys as well as Ponge, – “a sensory language rather than a dictatorial narrative”.

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Jean – sleep it off lady, Jane Bustin, 2019, wood, acrylic, copper, silk, beetroot 51 x 43 cm

Poet Robert Bly wrote of Ponge “It is as if the object itself, a stump or an orange, has links with the human psyche, and the unconscious provides material it would not give if asked directly. The unconscious passes into the object and returns.”
This exchange between the unconscious and the object feels to me to be at the heart of Bustin’s exquisite works. Her modestly scaled paintings feel as if they were assembled from a constellation of modest materials but whose conflation creates new unimagined sensations and feelings.

Bustin suggests that “the surfaces experience a range of intimate handling techniques, sanding, brushing, dying, burning, ironing, masking, stroking, dripping … over a period of time the experience between the maker and the material is co-dependent creating a history of conversations, considerations, mistakes and solutions.”

For Ponge, all objects “yearn to express themselves, and they mutely await the coming of the word so that they may reveal the hidden depths of their being,” Clearly for Bustin all materials yearn to express themselves too. Rather than waiting for the “word” Bustin adjusts and aligns matter directly, announcing new perceptions.

Bustin’s feeling for material is highly nuanced. In The Feeling of Things there are unexpected and beautiful juxtapositions of colour and surface, dualities of hard and soft, reflective and absorbent, face and flank, are resolved within a pliable geometry that allows her to explore matter and its interrelationship in the way that a scientist might were they in search of poetry via empiricism.

Jane Bustin will be present for her exhibition which opens at Fox/Jensen Sydney on Saturday the 6th of April in Sydney. Jane will also be showing with Fox Jensen at Art Basel Hong Kong.

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Young Mother, Jane Bustin, 2018, anodised aluminium, wood, acrylic 56 x 39 cm

PDF PREVIEW

Fox Jensen

Jane Bustin

 

Text for Jane Bustin by Anthony Rudolf

In abstraction, Anthony Rudolf, Berlin, Gallery, Jane Bustin, Leslie, Minimal, painting, Uncategorized on 05/07/2017 at 6:53 pm
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Jane Bustin, Fühler at Leslie, Berlin

TEXT FOR JANE BUSTIN
Anthony Rudolf

What could be less verbal than a Jane Bustin painting?

What could be more verbal than a Mallarmé poem?

‘One does not write with ideas but with words’, Mallarmé said to Degas, who fancied himself as a poet and had plenty of ideas.

As Borges might have said, we would expect the first livre d’artiste to have been created by Mallarmé (as translator) and Manet: Poe’s ‘Raven’, and we would be right.

Let me rephrase my first sentence: not what could be less verbal but what could be more silent than a Jane Bustin painting? After all, Debussy’s La Mer is as wordless as a Bustin painting. Silent it is not.

(Debussy set one of Mallarmé’s most significant poems, ‘L’Après-midi d’un faune’, to music. Mallarmé told Degas: ‘I thought I had already set it to music’).

My answer to the question posed above — what could be more silent than a Jane Bustin painting? — is a dead child whose absence his poet father commemorates, that “absence [which] is condensed presence” (the phrase is from a letter of Emily Dickinson, a poet well worth reading “against” Mallarmé).

The dead child is Anatole Mallarmé, whom Jane Bustin too commemorates and whose existence breathes into, inspires, Jane Bustin’s paintings, via the father’s heart-rending posthumously published poem.

It is neither paradoxical nor ironic that Jane Bustin depends so heavily on words during the gestation of her work exhibited at Test-tube. Goya went further: he included words inside the visual image.

Mallarmé would have reacted to these paintings with silence. He was always eloquent.

By Anthony Rudolf 2012

from
European Hours: Collected Poems by Anthony Rudolf

Born in London in 1942, Anthony Rudolf has two children and two grandchildren. He is the author of books of literary criticism (on Primo Levi, Piotr Rawicz and others), autobiography (The Arithmetic of Memory) and poetry (The Same River Twice and collaborations with artists), and translator of books of poetry from French (Bonnefoy, Vigée, Jabès), Russian (Vinokourov and Tvardovsky) and other languages. He has edited various anthologies. His essay on R.B. Kitaj was published by the National Gallery in 2001, and he has published essays on other painters. He is Paula Rego’s partner and main male model. He has completed a volume of short stories and is now at work on two new memoirs. His reviews, articles, poems, translations, obituaries and interviews with writers have appeared in numerous journals. Rudolf is an occasional broadcaster on radio and television and founder of Menard Press. After a lifetime of uninvolving day jobs, he became Visiting Lecturer in Arts and Humanities at London Metropolitan University (2000-2003) and Royal Literary Fund fellow at the Universities of Hertfordshire and Westminster (2003-2008). In 2004, he was appointed Chevalier de l’Ordre des Arts et des Lettres by the French Minister of Culture and, in 2005, he was elected Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature

Jane Bustin, Fühler at Leslie, Berlin

http://lesliegallery.de/jane-bustin/

The London Open 2015 – a FAD Q&A with Jane Bustin.

In abstract, Art, Artist, FAD, Gallery, Jane Bustin, London Open, LondonOpen2015, Magazine, Minimal, painting, Whitechapel on 21/07/2015 at 12:34 pm
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Tabitha’s Cape 2014 by Jane Bustin

The London Open 2015 Q&A with artist Jane Bustin. A FAD Magazine Interview

The London Open Whitechapel Gallery’s triennial exhibition has just opened. 48 of the most dynamic and exciting artists have been chosen from an entry of over 2100 and this online interview comes from FAD Magazine …

1. Have you always felt yourself an artist?
Probably after the first week of art school when I realised you could actually just paint all day.

2. Can you tell us more about your work and what are the main ideas you would like to express?
I make abstract formal compositions reflecting on modernism and materiality. & I take influences from 14th century frescos, 15th century Dutch painting, iconography, modernist architecture and design, French modernist literature, dance, fabrics, books, hardware stores, Japanese ceramics, neon signs, cosmetics, sweet wrappers …

My main interest is to create a resonance within the work that goes beyond its material properties.

3. How do you start the process of making work?
The start of the work is always through the choice of materials.

4. Do you consider the viewer, when making your work?
Always and never, since I am primarily the viewer.

5. Name 3 artists that have inspired your work.
Masaccio

Vermeer

Rothko

6. What defines something as a work of art?
When you need to look again and again and something stirs in the pit of your stomach.

7. How was it finding out you had been chosen as part of The London Open?
Satisfying

8. How have you found working with the Whitechapel Gallery on the exhibition?
The curators and assistants have been superb, I have never before as an Artist in a large open exhibition felt so considered, involved and appreciated.

9. What plans do you have to continue to pursue your art career in 2015?
I am looking forward to exhibiting in November at the Ingleby Gallery, Edinburgh in a show ‘Resistance and Persistence’ based on an essay by Sean Scully on Giorgio Morandi, including works from both artists.

10. Final Question – if you had £49,000 to buy art who would you invest it in?
Women Artists over the age of 49!

www.janebustin.com

Get more details on The London Open: HERE

Whitechapel Gallery

77-82 Whitechapel High Street, London E1 7QX

Tube: Aldgate East 

http://www.whitechapelgallery.org/

T +44 (0)20 7522 7888 

E info@whitechapelgallery.org

Twitter 

Facebook 

The London Open 2015

Galleries 1, 8 & 9

Mon: Closed

Tues, Weds, Fri, Sat, Sun: 11am–6pm

Thurs: 11am–9pm

Jane Bustin in Chapter at Austin Forum 20 June 2013

In abstract, Art, Bruce McLean, Donal Moloney, Gianni Notarianni, Jane Bustin, Jo Volley, Minimal Art, minimalism, painting, Rose Davey on 12/06/2013 at 8:04 pm
Tabitha by Jane Bustin

Tabitha by Jane Bustin, 2013

CHAPTER

Now open and it is excellent !!!

An ancient order of friars and a group of young artists will open a new non-profit, contemporary art space in west London with its inaugural show, ‘Chapter’, on Thursday 20 June.

Priest and artist Gianni Notarianni O.S.A. (Order of Saint Augustine), and artists Robert Phillips, Rose Davey, Donal Moloney, Kieren Reed and Sarah Kate Wilson have invited eighteen established and emerging artists to exhibit in the new Austin Forum, Hammersmith. The artists have been chosen to represent excellence in a cross section of contemporary art practices, with established artists exhibiting alongside emerging practitioners and with an emphasis on creative ways of responding to the Austin Forum space.

The exhibiting artists are: Ed Allington, Jo Bruton, Bronwen Buckeridge, Jane Bustin, James Capper, Matthew Ensor, Geraint Evans, Nick Goss, Abigail Hunt, Sachin Kaeley, Sam Kennedy, Natasha Kidd, Hannah Lees, Barry Martin, Bruce McLean, Damien Meade, Tom Price, Jo Volley.

The title ‘Chapter’, a name given to the friars practice of coming together in the priory to share issues and ideas, alludes to the intentional decision to have no overarching theme for the show, rather a sharing and celebration of contrasting expressions.

Opening Times:

Exhibition opening times: 21 June – 4 July 2013

Tuesday -Sunday 11am to 7pm, (Monday by appointment)

The Space: Austin Forum

The Austin Forum’s subterranean, double-height space is located in the Augustinian Centre, behind St. Augustine’s Church and Priory, 55 Fulham Palace Road, W6 8AU. Near Hammersmith for tubes and buses.

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ArtStack

Jane Bustin Anatole Notes at Testbed

In abstract, Anatole Notes, Art, Artprojx, Battersea, David Gryn, Jane Bustin, Jerwood Drawing, John Moores Painting Prize, Mallarme, Man Ray, Mark Blacklock, Will Alsop on 01/09/2012 at 10:35 pm

silence (il pardonne) / silence (he forgives)
oil on oak, somerset paper, japanese paper and letterpress 2010 14cm x 74cm
Jane Bustin

Anatole Notes (part 1) by Jane Bustin

with
Les Mystères du Château de Dé by Man Ray presented by Artprojx

at
Testbed 1

‘Mallarmé would have reacted to these paintings with silence. He was always eloquent.’ Anthony Rudolf on Anatole Notes

The Anatole Notes project consists of assembled groupings of paintings, objects, paper and letterpress text. Each assemblage reflects on the unfinished fragmented poems ‘Pour un Tombeau d’Anatole’ by Stephane Mallarmé (1879), ‘a tomb for Anatole’ translated by Paul Auster (1983). These fragmented phrases are Mallarmé’s attempt to come to terms with the death of his eight year old son Anatole. The sound and the visual arrangement of Mallarmé’s poems were as important as the meaning. His most famous poem ‘un coup de dés’ was a major influence on hypertext and has been the subject matter for many artists including Man Ray, Marcel Broodthaers etc.

Bustin’s reflections on his texts attempt to combine the written words with visual equivalents to reveal the expansive meaning of the text. Each work consists of three or four painted objects arranged on the wall and floor; they are made of various materials e.g. wood, linen, paper, metal, oil paint and readymade chairs. The Mallarmé text has been hand letter-pressed onto paper or linen by New North Press. See http://www.janebustin.com

This series has works that also feature in the John Moores Painting Prize and Jerwood Drawing Prize.

‘The purity of vision and execution in Jane Bustin’s work is startling. Warmth and emotion blur the edges of a teak-tough minimalism as exemplified in the materials used: natural wood grains and rich papers abutting sheer plastics and the mattest blacks.’ Mark Blacklock, writer

Contact: David Gryn david@artprojx.com +447711127848 http://www.artprojx.com

Press info, pricelist, images, more information all available on request.

Jane Bustin: Anatole Notes at Testbed 1 – Opening Weds 29 August 6-8pm

In abstract, Anatole Notes, Art, Artprojx, Battersea, David Gryn, Jane Bustin, John Moores Painting Prize, Liverpool Biennial, London, Mallarme, Man Ray, painting, Testbed 1, The Doodle Bar, Will Allsop on 09/08/2012 at 9:34 am

Private View: Wednesday 29 August 2012 6-8pm

Anatole Notes (part 1) by Jane Bustin 
with
Les Mystères du Château de Dé by Man Ray presented by Artprojx

Testbed 1 
33 Parkgate Road, Battersea, London SW11 4NP
29 August – 2 September 2012. 11am – 6pm daily

RSVP events@artprojx.com

The Anatole Notes project consists of assembled groupings of paintings, objects, paper and letterpress text. Each assemblage reflects on the unfinished fragmented poems ‘Pour un Tombeau d’Anatole’ by Stephane Mallarmé (1879), ‘a tomb for Anatole’ translated by Paul Auster (1983). These fragmented phrases are Mallarmé’s attempt to come to terms with the death of his eight year old son Anatole. The sound and the visual arrangement of Mallarmé’s poems were as important as the meaning. His most famous poem ‘un coup de dés’ was a major influence on hypertext and has been the subject matter for many artists including Man Ray, Marcel Broodthaers etc.

Bustin’s reflections on his texts attempt to combine the written words with visual equivalents to reveal the expansive meaning of the text. Each work consists of three or four painted objects arranged on the wall and floor; they are made of various materials e.g. wood, linen, paper, metal, oil paint and readymade chairs. The Mallarmé text has been hand letter-pressed onto paper or linen by New North Press.

“Unusually serious, yet mesmerisingly beautiful, with a deftness of painting and aesthetic balance, Bustin is an artist’s artist, and has a intense quality and master touch. Avowedly not for the minimalist purists, like most of her work, each painting tells a story, it just requires the audience participation to look and realise they are seeing the pure distillation of a concept, an idea, a poetic phrase, a musical note. We expect so much to be done for us with our visual culture, but here Bustin, as ever, makes us particiapte in exploring our language of looking.” Artprojx Review

Other Anatole Notes works by Jane Bustin have been selected for the John Moores Painting Prize 2012 and the Jerwood Drawing Prize 2012http://www.janebustin.com

Contact: David Gryn david@artprojx.com +447711127848 http://www.artprojx.com
Press info, pricelist, images, more information all available on request.

Venue info and directions: http://www.thedoodlebar.com
Updates at https://davidgryn.wordpress.com

Anatole Notes (part 1) by Jane Bustin – press release

In abstract, Art, Artprojx, Battersea, David Gryn, Jane Bustin, Jane Gryn, Jerwood Drawing, John Moores Painting Prize, London, Mallarme, Man Ray, Minimal Art, painting, Testbed 1, Will Alsop on 17/07/2012 at 2:36 pm

– sacrificed
– to veil
– sacrifiés
– pour voiler

Anatole Notes (part 1) by Jane Bustin

with

Les Mystères du Château de Dé by Man Ray

presented by Artprojx

Testbed 1

33 Parkgate Road, Battersea, London SW11 4NP

29 August – 2 September 2012. 11am – 6pm daily

Private View: Wednesday 29 August. 6 – 8pm. 

RSVP events@artprojx.com

PRESS RELEASE

The Anatole Notes project consists of assembled groupings of paintings, objects, paper and letterpress text. Each assemblage reflects on the unfinished fragmented poems ‘Pour un Tombeau d’Anatole’ by Stephane Mallarmé (1879), ‘a tomb for Anatole’ translated by Paul Auster (1983). These fragmented phrases are Mallarmé’s attempt to come to terms with the death of his eight year old son Anatole. The sound and the visual arrangement of Mallarmé’s poems were as important as the meaning. His most famous poem ‘un coup de dés’ was a major influence on hypertext and has been the subject matter for many artists including Man Ray, Marcel Broodthaers.

Bustin’s reflections on his texts attempt to combine the written words with visual equivalents to reveal the expansive meaning of the text. Each work consists of three or four painted objects arranged on the wall and floor; they are made of various materials e.g. wood, linen, paper, metal, oil paint and readymade chairs. The Mallarmé text has been hand letter-pressed onto paper or linen by New North Press. The use of the architecture and the derelict state of the exhibition space at Testbed, echoes the emptiness and barren nature of the Anatole texts.

Artprojx presents: Les Mystères du Château de Dé, 1929, film 35mm by Man Ray. 25 mins (continuous screening as part of the Anatole Notes exhibition throughout the day).

The longest of Man Ray’s films, Les Mystères du Château de Dé, follows a pair of travelers on a journey from Paris to the Villa Noailles in Hyères, built by the architect Robert Mallet-Stevens with a cubist garden designed by Gabriel Guevrekian. This modernist collaboration was made as an architectural document and inspired by Mallarmé’s poem ‘Un coup de dés jamais n’abolira le hasard’.

Jane Bustin has been selected for the 2012 John Moores Painting Prize and the Jerwood Drawing Prize 2012. Bustin has been in numerous group exhibitions including Kettles Yard Cambridge, Ferens Museum (Hull), Southampton City Art Gallery, Djanogly Gallery (Nottingham), Royal Academy (London) and recently at the B55 Gallery (Budapest). Bustin has had solo shows at The Eagle Gallery (London), Artprojx Space (London) and The British Library (London). Her work is in several collections including V&A Museum (London), Yale Center USA, Ferens Museum (Hull). http://www.janebustin.com

Contact: David Gryn david@artprojx.com +447711127848 http://www.artprojx.com

Press info, pricelist, images, more information all available on request

Venue info and directions: http://www.thedoodlebar.com/

Image:

– sacrificed
– to veil

– sacrifiés
– pour voiler
by Jane Bustin

at John Moores Painting Prize 2012 

and other Anatole Notes works at Jerwood Drawing prize

Anatole Notes project by Jane Bustin

In abstract, Art, Artprojx, David Gryn, Eagle Gallery, Emma Hill, Jane Bustin, Mallarme, Minimal Art, painting, poems, poetry on 01/11/2011 at 5:50 pm

Malade au Printemps 2010

The Anatole Notes project consists of assembled groupings of paintings, objects, paper and letterpress text. Each assemblage reflects on the unfinished fragmented poems ‘pour Anatole un tombeau’ by Stephane Mallarme (1879), ‘a tomb for Anatole’ translated by Paul Auster (1983).

These fragmented phrases are Mallarme’s attempt to come to terms with the death of his eight year old son Anatole. Paul Auster comments;
  ‘this is one of the most moving accounts of a man trying to come to grips with modern death, that is to say death without God.’
As a major symbolist poet, Mallarme was interested in Art reflecting upon an emotion or idea rather than representing the natural world. He believed;
  ‘the sensation becomes the truth, not the time and place’. 
He made many collaborations with artists of other disciplines e.g. Manet, Whistler, Munch, Debussy, Zola and Verlaine. The sound of Mallarme’s poems were as important and sometimes more important than the meaning. His most famous poem ‘un coup de cles’ was a major influence on hypertext. His use of the blank space and careful placement of words and punctuation on a page allowed non-linear and consequentially visual readings of the text.
In Mallarme’s pursuit for the ‘oeuvre pure’ he deduces that:
  ‘having found nothingness, I have found the beautiful’.
In the Anatole texts, it is apparent that Mallarme felt the inadequacy of words to translate the enormity of emotion he felt for his son’s death.

My reflections upon his texts attempt to combine the written words with visual equivalents to reveal the expansive meaning of the text. Each work consists of three or four painted objects arranged on the wall and floor; they are made of various materials e.g. wood, linen, paper, metal, oil paint and readymade chairs. The Mallarme text has been hand letter-pressed onto paper or linen by New North Press.

www.janebustin.com

For more info on this project contact David Gryn at david@artprojx.com

DIVERGENCE – an exhibition of abstract painting. Opens 2 Sept.

In abstract, Alice Browne, Art, Artprojx, Claire Undy, Clare Wilson, Dragica Carlin, Jane Bustin, Minimal Art, minimalism, Nadia Mulder, painting, Sarah Mcnulty, Susan Sluglett on 29/07/2010 at 10:11 pm

DIVERGENCE

featuring; Alice Browne, Jane Bustin, Dragica Carlin, Sarah McNulty, Nadia Mulder, Susan Sluglett, Claire Undy, Clare Wilson

in an exhibition of abstract painting at Forman’s Smokehouse Gallery, Stour Road, Fish Island, London E3 2NT

PRIVATE VIEW: Thursday 2 September 6-9pm

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Divergence is an exhibition of eight abstract painters whose work contains no theme or direct subject matter, nor exist as ‘abstractions’ of something real. Rather, they are explorations of their very nature as an abstract painting: an enquiry uniting all artists in the show. At the point of drawing conclusions their practises diverge, culminating in a widely varied selection of work, ranging from the coolly minimal to the energetically gestural. An enduring sense of the real and the human perpetuates throughout these eight diverse practises, creating an engaging visual experience for the viewer.
Visiting the exhbition
Thursday 2nd September – Sunday 3rd October 2010
Opening times: Thursday & Friday 5-9pm, Saturday & Sunday 12-5pm.
Getting there:
Forman’s Smokehouse Gallery is on Fish Island in East London and looks out across the new Olympic Stadium.
By public transport it is a short walk from Hackney Wick Station, (London Overground) or Pudding Mill Lane Station (DLR). Busses: 8, 26, 30, 236, 276, 388 and 488 also serve the local area.
For step-by-step, photographic directions from Hackney Wick Station, Pudding Mill DLR, or Old Ford Footbridge, please click here to be taken to Foreman’s website.
There is free street parking close to the gallery.
Images:
Alice Browne – Production Still
Jane Bustin – beloved on a chair
Dragica Carlin – Domination of Bronze
Sarah McNulty – Aerial
Nadia Mulder – Night Contours
Susan Sluglett – A Figure Marginalised
Claire Undy – Breath Breath

Clare Wilson - Slow Float

Sue Hubbard THE IDEA OF ISLANDS – book launch 30 June

In abstract, Art, Artprojx, David Gryn, Donald Teskey, Eagle Gallery, Eagle Pub, Emma Hill, Estelle Thompson, Farringdon, Jane Bustin, Kevin Finklea, Matt Magee, Minimal Art, minimalism, painting, poems, poetry, Sue Hubbard on 24/06/2010 at 9:11 am

Idea of Islands by Sue Hubbard

Sue Hubbard: THE IDEA OF ISLANDS

Book launch and poetry reading

on Weds 30 June from 7-9pm

at The Eagle Gallery (above The Eagle pub)

A new limited edition of 15 poems written on the west coast of Ireland with drawings by the Irish artist Donald Teskey.

http://www.facebook.com/

at

CALLIGRAMS 24 June – 24 July 2010
Jane Bustin, Kevin Finklea, Matt Magee, Estelle Thompson

The Eagle Gallery

159 Farringdon Road

London EC1R 3AL

open Weds-Fri 11am-6pm and Sat 11am -4pm

0207 833 2674

www.emmahilleagle.com

emmahilleagle@aol.com

Idea of Islands

Set in a wild, remote landscape, on the west coast of Ireland, Cill Rialaig is a pre-ramine village that clings to at steep slope 300 feet above the sea on the old road that leads to Bólus Head. The restored stone cottages of the village, which now support residencies for visiting artists, are about as far west as you can go in Europe without falling off. From this rugged coast the island rock of Skellig Michael is visible, some eight miles out into the Atlantic, where pre-Augustinian monks once built their beehive huts. This is a landscape permeated with history and memories. It was here that the poet Sue Hubbard and the painter Donald Teskey met and initiated a collaboration that resulted in this book.

The Idea of Islands comprises a suite of fifteen emotionally incisive poems by Sue Hubbard and eleven powerfully atmospheric drawings by Donald Teskey RHA.

Responding to her experiences of Cill Rialaig, Sue Hubbard explores in her work both the dark and the light within human experience. She evokes the perceived and the actual world through a careful attention to the detail of things – be it nature, the incidental or the everyday – and attempts to give voice to our deepest emotions and our sense of inchoate spiritual longing. Her subjects are those of love, loss and memory. She writes of our vulnerabilities, so often concealed, and through their disclosure suggests the possibility of renewal. Donald Teskey’s large-scale drawings of the Cill Rialaig terrain are no landscape idylls. This body ot work, complementary to the poems, powerfully evokes a vivid sense of that remote and harshly beautiful place, confronting us with the raw forces of nature at the inhospitable edge of the world: the bruised and weathered architecture of the coastline; the ocean, foaming and restless; the cliffs, dark, ancient and enduring; depictions of a dynamic landscape at its most elemental.

http://www.suehubbard.com/the-idea-of-islands.html

http://www.occasionalpress.net/ideaislands/publicationsiofi.htm

Jane Bustin's les dernieres fleurs in Calligrams