Sunday, September 20, 2009

The New Age of Landscape - smaller works

I have been working on some smaller Google Earth-inspired landscapes in the series - 2 drawn from the larger works of JFK and Heathrow airports, and one from the view of Williamstown harbour in Melbourne.

Williamstown Harbour
Oil on Canvas
340mm x 340mm
Melbourne
2009.

Heathrow Small 1
Oil on Canvas
340mm x 340mm
Melbourne
2009.

JFK Runway
Oil on Canvas
340mm x 340mm
Melbourne
2009.

See the earlier works here: http://lesleymelody.blogspot.com/2009/05/new-age-of-landscape.html

Saturday, September 5, 2009

Report from the AIR - Artist in Residence

Week 4 as the AIR in Melbourne Central

Being at the new studio/gallery every day for a few hours is a very productive habit, after over a year of being away from my main studio and painting in the corners of the kitchens of rented cottages in Melbourne's bayside suburbs.

The location attracts a diverse range of people - though not many in the serious art-buying market, and a fair population of the bewildered wandering the mall on cold autumn days.

The light is great with the big windows overlooking Little Lonsdale Street, and the white walls make the paintings really stand out.

This painting is the latest in a long series of spheres emerging within surreal landscapes.

Having multiple pieces of work on the go at one time enables me to get a break from each style - the result of the first few week's work is therefore incredibly diverse.

People ask me "what style do you paint?" expecting a single genre or method. Not this artist!


Blue Rising
Oil On Canvas
Melbourne
2010 .

This is the newest in 'The New Age of Landscape' series, a detailed part of the much larger 900mm x 900mm Heathrow Airport satellite view on Google Earth.

Using incredibly fine brushes the progress you see here represents about 20 hours of painting. (Note: see the finished image here).


Lesley Melody on Goollery - the Google Gallery

People have been Twittering and blogging the amazing website Goollery.org, where a collection of the best Google-derived and inspired works of art, science and software have been showcased.

The great news is that my new series of landscapes inspired by Google Earth images has been selected to feature in the Goollery Earth section.

The initial works are quite large and extremely time-consuming, so I have started working on some smaller, more practical sizes.

Take some time to browse through Goollery and see the amazing things that have been inspired by all the different tools and services that Google has brought to our world.