The intention of this work is to present an alternative view of colonial architecture within a notional Tasmanian ‘Garden of Eden’. It does this by juxtaposing images from Doré’s Paradise Lost (1866) with stylised trees from a painting by John Glover (1832) and 19th century botanical illustrations of apple varieties. Flat, highly coloured geometric shapes intrude on this landscape to represent exotic architecture. A wide variety of technique, including UV printing, spray gun and oil painting amplify the disjunctive presence of these imaginary follies. The picturing of the follies as unstable forms suggests that heritage values are contestable, unfixed and ultimately subject to the whims of changing societal attitudes
Early European settlers were the key actors in a place-making exercise that constructed an English-s...
The Picturesque aesthetic emerged in the later 18th century, uniting the Sublime and the Beautiful a...
Art history is replete with works whose prior existence is affirmed only by text, most commonly thro...
The intention of this work is to present an alternative view of colonial architecture within a notio...
Drawing from scholarship in fire ecology and ethnohistory, this paper suggests new approaches to art...
This practice-led textile research project explores notions of tropical paradise from the perspecti...
This studio-based research explores how painting can act as a vehicle for my reflections on the...
Recent academic fashions have posited visual images of colonial landscape space as forming part of a...
In recent times a number of major exhibitions have been mounted in Australian drawing from the deep ...
This is a revised extract from a co-authored book, Environment and Empire (OUP, 2007). In this artic...
South Australia colonial art has been largely overlooked in the context of the history of the art of...
This project investigates modes of representing the experience of a historically informed experience...
Title from inscription in scroll bot. c.; Part of the collection: Drawings of colonial architecture ...
A tree farm, in simple terms, is an area of land that has been planted with seedlings of a single t...
© 2018 Piers GrevilleFaced with fundamental redrawing of human relationships to the global and local...
Early European settlers were the key actors in a place-making exercise that constructed an English-s...
The Picturesque aesthetic emerged in the later 18th century, uniting the Sublime and the Beautiful a...
Art history is replete with works whose prior existence is affirmed only by text, most commonly thro...
The intention of this work is to present an alternative view of colonial architecture within a notio...
Drawing from scholarship in fire ecology and ethnohistory, this paper suggests new approaches to art...
This practice-led textile research project explores notions of tropical paradise from the perspecti...
This studio-based research explores how painting can act as a vehicle for my reflections on the...
Recent academic fashions have posited visual images of colonial landscape space as forming part of a...
In recent times a number of major exhibitions have been mounted in Australian drawing from the deep ...
This is a revised extract from a co-authored book, Environment and Empire (OUP, 2007). In this artic...
South Australia colonial art has been largely overlooked in the context of the history of the art of...
This project investigates modes of representing the experience of a historically informed experience...
Title from inscription in scroll bot. c.; Part of the collection: Drawings of colonial architecture ...
A tree farm, in simple terms, is an area of land that has been planted with seedlings of a single t...
© 2018 Piers GrevilleFaced with fundamental redrawing of human relationships to the global and local...
Early European settlers were the key actors in a place-making exercise that constructed an English-s...
The Picturesque aesthetic emerged in the later 18th century, uniting the Sublime and the Beautiful a...
Art history is replete with works whose prior existence is affirmed only by text, most commonly thro...