4 minute read
Trentham to Daylesford Art Trail
Ali Webb @houseofwebb
Encourage your inner art critic this winter and explore the creative community that resides between Trentham and Daylesford. This magnificent collective of artists is recognised internationally, but instead of being surrounded by highrise buildings and cityscape structures they are nestled quietly within the picturesque landscape of central
Victoria from which they draw daily inspiration.
From Royal Family commissions to parties filled with the sounds of Patti Smith and Leonard Cohen, these locally based artists know a thing or two about the adventurous art world. Pack a picnic and take a day to discover the artistic plains of the Daylesford region through the eyes of these five contemporary artists and their idiosyncratic studio spaces.
Dianne Longley grew up on a sheep farm in Central West NSW, which is where her sense of adventure and inquisitive love of nature began. Her curiosity continued throughout university in the late seventies, where she enjoyed classes in techniques and processes, morning coffee discussions about art, politics and literature and a weekend party or two with Patti Smith and Leonard Cohen playing in the background live!
Dianne opened Agave Print Studio in Trentham in 2014, offering printmaking facilities for artists as well as accommodation for residencies. It’s not just the fabulous studio space that will make you forget the city, the sweet bird calls in the magic garden and the curious kangaroos in sight of the studio will make you want to stay on and create your own work of art.
Freshly back from his first Sydney solo exhibition, Phillip Edwards has always been inspired by nature. While a watercolour specialist now, Edwards has made conceptual art and sculptures and now finds creative energy in landscape. Obsessed with natural beauty, his love affair began with snow-capped Mt Buffalo with scattered granite outcrops and button grass bogs. His new paintings document the fogs of the ‘golden hour’, sunrise in the Wombat State Forest. Drawn to Bullarto almost four years ago, Edwards lives the true tree change dream, complete with wombats in his backyard. He is planning a trip to the Western Arthurs in Tasmania, where he intends to create mountains of bodies of work!
After being commissioned by the Danish Royal Family, Andrew O'Brien rose to international fame to create an artwork for their last Royal Tour in 2013. The commission generated huge interest across the globe, and Andrew’s work went on to grace the covers of magazines and the walls of sets in television shows.
Large in scale, Andrew’s paintings are often over three metres tall and wide, with his renowned rich colour palettes deriving inspiration from the Australian landscape. This scale and colour embedded a desire to relocate to the creative community of Musk, where he is working on the inaugural Arts Regioniale, a ten-day festival of the visual arts in the region with exhibitions, talks and installations running in 2022.
Making art has been a significant part of Kim Barter’s life for a long time. Kim communicates with the world through her work, allowing her questioning mind to be nurtured and challenged.
Her paintings, drawings and prints are striking with layers of defaced surfaces and heavy paints. The raw energy and spontaneity of people and landscape jump at the viewer with a childlike joy wrapped in glorious amounts of detail. Kim’s farm backs onto the Wombat Forest, where she can observe the change of seasons through the birds, animals, insects, flora and funghi behaviour. The texture of the nearby landscape is reflected in her works which can be seen hanging on the walls of the most luxurious establishments in Central Victoria.
Greg Mallyon has lived and breathed art since he was a child. Following a career as an arts educator and gallery director, Greg settled in Daylesford to set up a studio and focus on his unique paintings. Inspired by the earth and environment viewed and created from an aerial perspective, his works reflect the endless cycle of destruction and renewal of our planet. These breathtaking works are instantly recognisable with Greg’s process of adding and subtracting mediums such as scaping, sanding, gouging and even blowtorching coupled with layers of varnishes, paint and collage.
Greg’s art has taken him all over the world, where culture and landscape have shaped his works, but it’s here in Daylesford, after decades living in cities, where the artist finds himself with a balance of calm being surrounded by the natural beauty of the region.
Greg is currently working on a prominent mural in Melbourne, an exterior of an apartment building in Hawthorn and a series of digital prints that has kept the artist very busy during 2020.
Photos opposite page: Greg Mallyon in his studio. Photos by Chris Turner, Inkdfotogrfa. Above: Andrew O'Brien Below: Phillip Edwards artwork detail DIANNE LONGLEY Agave Print Studio 9 Bowen Street, Trentham Studio visits by appointment agaveprintstudio.com.au
PHILLIP EDWARDS Bullarto Gallery 962 Daylesford-Trentham Road, Bullarto Open 10am-4pm Saturday & Sunday and by appointment phillipedwards.net @phillip.edwards.artist
ANDREW O’BRIEN Stonewalls Studio, Gallery and Accommodation 605 Trentham Daylesford Road, Musk stonewallsmusk.com andrewobrienartist.com
KIM BARTER 2 Apple Tree Ln, Musk Studio visits by appointment kimbarterart.com
GREG MALLYON 22 West Street, Daylesford Studio visits by appointment gregmallyon.com.au
ART IN OUR SURROUNDING VILLAGES Stockroom, Kyneton Challenging, thought-provoking, contemporary Melbourne and international artists on display The Old Auction House, Kyneton Gallery space featuring emerging and mid-career Macedon Ranges and Australian artists in all mediums Catherine Abel, Maldon Renowned internationally for her striking oil paintings Black Gallery, Daylesford Studio and gallery space of artist Cristina Doyle Cascade Art Gallery A contemporary gallery space showcasing original paintings, prints, books and sculptures
Follow the art trail: daylesfordmacedonlife.com.au/itinerary/art-trail