SILK PADDOCKS: WIDGIEWA by Jacky Field
Multi-media gets a bad name, hand maiden to the excesses of surrealism, first cousin to craft, it hasn't been since the 1920s that artists comfortably exhibited sculptures and 'ready-made' painted art objects in a single sweep. Yet in Jackie Field’s show the conversation about geometry is both compressed and expansive.
Field has been known primarily for sculpture. Her hand formed minimal and biomorphic pieces held the germ of Hans Arp but with a tactility that made you want to touch their curves. Field admits her art practice has a secretive nature and she prefers to work in complete social isolation, drawing straight lines with a steady hand, layering veils of colour slowly and methodically.
“Widgiewa”, her new show in the cavernous gallery space of Koskela, combines her signature sculptures and a new collection boxed ‘paintings’ that layer painted sheer silk organza and gouache. The luminous nature of the materials generate different levels of intensity.
In installation they evoke the Cubist colour play and wit of Sonia Delaunay. But in closer proximity they yield more intimate convergences: Warm tones reverberate and the pale surface of the silk takes on a porous quality, like petals submerged in water or skin seen through a veil. Changing with conditions of light, each work is named after a paddock in the broad area of rural NSW where her family had a property. Perhaps it’s an oddity to express vast space in miniature and aridity in jewel tones, but the force of the smaller works dwells in their power to expand, almost glower, beyond the frame.
Field describes the function of living with her work in terms of a peripheral, almost aura-like spectral presence “The function of the painting is being near it, not looking at it in a frontal objectifying way, it’s like a mandala, this is something you inhabit and live with, it’s not about impressing visitors!”
The works are not rigid. Because they are hand drawn there is something softly warped within their compositions. Stretched like a map across a lightbox, they draw you in, looking for shadows, a bleed in the colour or a tear in the surface. Even in close-up the imagery remains discreet, tightly held, a grid pivoting upon a circle or a landscape for the palm of the hand.
EXHIBITION
WIDGIEWA | Jacky Field
3 – 25 October 2015
Koskela
Courtesy of the artist and Koskela, Sydney.


Pulse, the title of his current exhibition at Utopia Art Sydney, alludes to the rhythmic equilibrium of parts that has long characterised his work. As...
Visiting Venice in late June, once the champagne flutes have emptied and the holders of “professional” badges have flown home, offers a different kind of...
The curator Con Gerakaris’s considered arrangement of diverse works conjures the distinctive cultural and physical topographies of Asia. Entering A Tear in the Fabric, the...
Walking into Anna Johnson’s studio is like passing through a portal into another world: a flight of rickety wooden stairs leads to the top floor...
After winning the Fishers Ghost Open Art Award last year for her epic video installation Margaret and the Grey Mare, 2023, opportunities across the theatre,...
Co-curators and longtime friends Helen Hyatt-Johnston, Brad Buckley, and Noel Thurgate and Gallery Curator Lizzy Galloway, selected the Buddha from Harpur’s extensive collection of Ch’an...
William Kentridge’s Self-Portrait as a Coffee-Pot opens with the artist pacing back and forth against the backdrop of his studio, with remnants of a sketch...
To commemorate fifty years since the invasion, Savvas travelled to Cyprus to video her walk from her mother’s home in Kaimakli, Nicosia, to her father’s...
National museums serve as custodians of collective memory. They preserve, interpret, and present stories that shape a nation’s cultural identity. The National Museum of Australia...