Join us for this wonderful program of meditations and the Dedication.
Soulscape 2: Celebrating 20 years of Visionaries
After exhibiting in 3 spaces earlier this year we are delighted to bring you part of the exhibition digitally. Some artworks were only shown at one location while others toured all three.
The work represents the variety of styles and expression that Visionaries has exhibited over the past 20 years. Some of the works were in the original Soulscape exhibition while others are new.
Soulscape II Opening At Merthyr Rd Uniting
A wonderful evening was held to celebrate the 20th Anniversary of Visionaries. The book “Art + Faith” was launched along with the Soulscape exhibition.
Geraldine Wheeler introduced the artists and spoke about each work.
Dr Lindsay Farrell reflected on the ideas of faith and art and how it manifests in various expressions as shown by the exhibition.
Jenny Phillips produced the book Art & Faith to celebrate the 20th Anniversary of Visionaries. Many thanks to Jenny for putting this book together and also to Kevin Phillips who assisted with the organisation of this Opening event. For copies of the book please contact us and we will forward your inquiry to Jenny.
Soulscape II Visionaries art exhibition reflection
The artists and friends of Visionaries firstly express thanks to the minister, Rev. Murray Fysh, the admin officer, Debbie Riddell, and all the members of Merthyr Road Uniting Church, for agreeing that we hold our 20th anniversary celebrations here, at Merthyr Road UCA, where it all began, as part of the church’s seeking to reach out to the artists of the New Farm community and beyond in SE Queensland, and encouraging Christian artists to recognise the role of their faith as they make works of visual art. The first exhibition, “Soulscape”, was held in May 1999.
We hope that the current members of this congregation who were part of the planning and development then will enjoy looking back to those times and the new members since then (our last exhibition here was in 2005) will be enriched by knowing this part of the congregation’s history. Visionaries these days has made St. Andrew’s Uniting Church in the city with the Vera Wade Gallery there, its home congregation, through the generous invitation of that church which developed the gallery space in the first decade of the 21st century. We made links there from 2006, exhibited regularly from 2010 when the new Vera Wade Gallery space was finished and became more formally linked there in from 2017/18.
This Soulscape II exhibition includes some of the work shown in 1999, e.g. the Frank Wesley woodblock prints, work which has been done over the time and some completed especially for this 2019 exhibition. The book that Jenny Phillips has prepared, The Art of Faith, includes photographs from the opening events of those early years and then thoughts and pictures offered by a group of present members of Visionaries.
We give thanks to God for inspiration across the years and every way that any person has been aware of the presence and love of God for them through the art which has been made.
Geraldine Wheeler, May 2019
Soulscape II continues in July at the Peter W Sheenan Gallery at the Australian Catholic University, Banyo, Queensland from July 2 – July 28, 2019.
Soulscape II
Visionaries 20th Anniversary Exhibition
May 24 – 26, 2019
Merthyr Road Uniting Church, New Farm, Queensland, Australia
The celebration for the 20th anniversary of the first Visionaries’ exhibition will be held over the last weekend of May, 24th to 26th, at the Merthyr Road Uniting Church, New Farm. Friday night May 24th will be the party celebration and opening of the exhibition, 6 pm to 8.30 pm.
Download the poster to help promote this exhibition
Lenten Reflections Exhibition 2019
Cherish Exhibition 2018
“Cherish”
an exhibition by artists from
Visionaries
Peter W Sheehan Gallery
Australian Catholic University, 1100 Nudgee Road, Banyo
July 17 to August 14, 2018
Artists:
Jennifer Evans, Jennii Gould, Joy Harris, Nabeel Hawa, Virginia Hasker, Marcelien Hunt, Peter Hunter, Bee L. Kirk, Elizabeth Kusay, Marion McConaghy, Dianne Minnaar, Elisabeth Murray, Gregg Nowell, Murhaf Obeid, Jenny Phillips, Susan Pietsch, Tricia Reust, Sharon Roberts, Sarah tucker-Douglas, Gabriella Veidt-Wiedmer, Geraldine Wheeler
Catalogue
“Cherish” Catalogue
Artists:
Jennifer Evans,
Priceless
Mixed media (graphite, watercolour) on watercolour paper
29.7 cm x 42 cm (A3)
Jennii Gould,
Cherish Life
Oil pastels, 60 cm x 46 cm
Joy Harris,
Holding the Christ light
Pastel, 24 cm x 20 cm
Virginia Hasker,
1 Childhood
Watercolour, 58 cm x 43 cm
- The end of the day
Watercolour, 43 cm x 58 cm
- Maturity
Graphite and pastel, 43 cm x 58 cm
Nabeel Hawa
Innocence Instinct
Glass-scratching art, 39 cm x 31 cm $250
Marcelien Hunt,
- The World in Waiting
Oil , 60 cm x 60 cm,
- Poverty
Oil, 50 cm x 55cm
Peter Hunter,
- The Lampadusa Cross
Oil on canvas, 100 cm x 75 cm
- Martha and Mary No 2
Oil on canvas, 40 cm x 30 cm
Bee L. Kirk,
Remembering Love
Video, comprising photography and sound track, 2.52 minutes length
Elizabeth Kusay,
Cherish Refugees
Mixed media, encaustic, set of 4, 30 cm x 30 cm each, set $800
(Half of any sale goes to Barnabas Fund) or $300 each
Marion McConaghy
Precious Love
Photograph.
Dianne Minnaar,
Seed of Faith
Mixed media and 18 karat gold leaf on wood, 55 cm x 43 cm
Elisabeth Murray,
Portraits of hope
Graphite on paper, a series of 9, each framed size A4
Gregg Nowell,
Are you not more valuable than they? Matthew 6:26
Acrylic and gouache on canvas, 61 cm x 61 cm
Murhaf Obeid,
- John Paul 2
Acrylic, 65 cm x 55 cm
- Icon of Jesus Christ
Acrylic with gold leaf, 30 cm x 40 cm
- Icon of St. Mary with child Jesus
Acrylic with gold leaf, 30 cm x 40 cm
Jenny Phillips,
- Love will find a way 2. Cherish 3. The other 4. Take time
5 Together 6. As one
Graphic work, series printed digitally, each 28 cm x 35 cm
Susan Pietsch,
Home
Acrylic on board, 90 cm x 60 cm
Tricia Reust,
- Rock and a hard place
Mixed media on canvas, 122 cm x 92 cm
- Red, yellow and truly blue 2
Pastel, 64 cm x 105 cm
Sharon Roberts,
Comfort
Oil on linen, 102 cm x 76.5 cm
Sarah Tucker-Douglas
- Cherish: God’s Work
Mixed media, 70 cm x 40 cm
- God Is; the heart of art
Prison issue pencil on prison paper, 80 cm x 80 cm $500
Gabriella Veidt-Weidmer,
- Sunday afternoon near Mt. Mee
Acrylics on canvas board, 62 cm x 47 cm
- Winter sun in the sleepout
Acrylics on canvas board, 62 cm x 47 cm
Geraldine Wheeler
Community lunch at St Andrew’s
Gouache stencil on black stonehenge paper, 61.5 cm x 44.5 cm
Cherish Exhibition: July 17 to August 14, 2018
Peter W Sheehan Gallery
Australian Catholic University
1100 Nudgee Road, Banyo
July 17 to August 14, 2018
Opening hours: Monday to Friday 9 am to 5 pm
Artists:
Jennifer Evans, Jennii Gould, Joy Harris, Virginia Hasker, Nabeel Hawa, Marcelien Hunt, Peter Hunter, Bee L. Kirk, Elizabeth Kusay, Marion McConaghy, Dianne Minnaar, Elisabeth Murray, Gregg Nowell, Murhaf Obeid, Jenny Phillips, Susan Pietsch, Tricia Reust, Sharon Roberts, Sarah Tucker-Douglas, Gabriella Veidt-Weidmer, Geraldine Wheeler.
Catalogue Essay by Geraldine Wheeler:
The theme “cherish” was chosen for this Visionaries’ exhibition during the group meeting discussion in 2017, as a summary of the thought in Matthew’s Gospel 25:40 “…just as you did it to one of the least of these who are members of my family, you did it to me.” (NRSV translation) The theme has been expanded to include the challenge to cherish not only all God’s people but the whole of God’s creation. Respect and care for the whole creation is part of caring for each member of the human race.
The artists have taken a wide range of approaches in visualising this theme, ranging, on one hand, from some of the most urgent questions of social responsibility facing Australians today, several of which are echoed in the parable with reference to:
the hungry, the thirsty, the strangers, those in need of clothes, the sick and those in prison;
and on the other hand, to little scenes of beauty, light and life itself, all to be cherished as gifts of God.
Some works refer to the ways certain churches serve community meals, e.g. St. Andrew’s Uniting Church in the city as suggested in the work of Geraldine Wheeler, and Elisabeth Murray has drawn portraits of some of the people served at the Red Hill community where she volunteers, exhibited with permission. Susan Pietsch speaks through her painting of the greatest, unmet need, that of housing for those who sleep on the streets. So much housing in this country is unoccupied while many still sleep on the streets.
Two of the artists, Tricia Reust and Peter Hunter, express ideas related to the need to value and to cherish the first peoples of this country, and Sarah Tucker-Douglas brings a perspective which includes her indigenous Australian heritage.
Other work relates to the needs of refugees. Two of the artists know that experience first hand, Murhaf Obeid and Nabeel Hawa, and Elizabeth Kusay draws upon the work of the group in Toowoomba whose adopted task is to care for refugees and migrants in that area. Marcelien Hunt’s work, Poverty, is also grouped with the other works in this section.
Jennii Gould and Gregg Nowell suggest the value of the very small, the tiny birds, reflecting upon others who are so often undervalued, but precious in the eyes of God, as in a different way we see also in the detail of bracelet designs in the work, Precious, by Jennifer Evans. Dianne Minnaar’s icon alludes to Jesus’ reference to the smallest seed which can grow into the large tree.
Human bonding and cherishing one another is of great importance to personal well being. We see that expressed in a range of ways, particularly through the work of Sharon Roberts, Marcelien Hunt and the photograph taken by Marion McConaghy to express the bond between father and daughter, as she reflects upon the life of her late father, Rev. James McConaghy.
Some of the artists depict moments, places and experiences to be cherished, or faith and stages of life itself, as we see in the work of Jennii Gould, Virginia Hasker, Joy Harris. Gabriella Veidt-Weidmer, Jenny Phillips, Dianne Minnaar and Murhaf Obeid.
The range of media used by the artists is also diverse. There is drawing in pencil, graphite, ink and pastels, painting in oils, water colour and gouache paints, acrylics, the medium used for icon writing including a mix of media together with gold leaf, and photography, graphic work and less common media such as glass –scratching (Nabeel Hawa) and encaustic processes (Elizabeth Kusay). Sarah Tucker-Douglas, who is a prison chaplain, has presented work using the paper and pencils issued for art work in the prisons.
Jenny Phillips, who is a graphic artist, groups a series of small works to express the diversity of ideas within the theme. Two artists who particularly work in the area of a contemporary approach to the tradition of writing/painting icons are Murhaf Obeid and Dianne Minnaar. We see this in the works they have contributed.
A first for a Visionaries’ exhibition is the presentation of a video with the work of Bee L. Kirk, Remembering Love.
Our need to cherish the gifts of God to us, gifts of faith, the gift which is our relationship with God in Christ, and all that is part of the world in which we live, the diverse gifts of creation, underpins the thinking and the expression through the visual arts for this exhibition.
The artists of Visionaries thank the Australian Catholic University once again for the opportunity to contribute to the life of the university, in particular we thank Alasdair Macintyre. Since the university moved to Banyo, this has been almost an annual opportunity, firstly in the gallery space of the visual art department, later in the upstairs vestibule space of the whole department and more recently in the Peter W. Sheehan Gallery space.
Geraldine Wheeler
Lent to Easter 2018: Geraldine Wheeler
Psalm 139, Gouache stencil painting on black Stonehenge paper, 71cm x 71 cm
Geraldine Wheeler
Where streams of living water flow (Psalm 145:2, a paraphrase of Psalm 23), Gouache stencil painting on black Stonehenge paper, 62cm x 44.5cm
Psalm 23: He leads me beside still waters: Girraween, Gouache stencil painting on black Stonehenge paper, 40.7cm x 30.5cm
Psalm 121: I Lift my eyes to the hills: Meteroa, Gouache stencil painting on black Stonehenge paper, 40.7cm x 30.5cm
Lent to Easter 2018: Sharon Roberts
Song in the Darkness, Acrylic, 51cm x 41cm
Sharon Roberts
Psalm 42:8b “…at night his song is with me, a prayer to the God of my life.”
Lent to Easter 2018: Jenny Phillips
Acrylic, each 30cm x 30cm
From Left to Right top Row: Poplar Grove, Winter’s Peak, Radiant
From Left to Right Middle Row: Burst, Granite, Deep Water
From Left to Right Bottom Row: Sunset Gum, Ribbon Dance, October