PHILIPPA BLAIR - Fera Natura

+64 021.453.418:: thelab@fe29.com

Fera Natura (2020)
Mixed media on canvas
Diptych - 1525 x 1015 mm

SOLD
Fera Natura 2020 mixed media on canvas 2 x 760 x 1015 mm diptych b on wall
Tartan Garden (Ballachulish) 2021
Mixed media on canvas
Diptych - 1525 x 1015 mm
Tartan Garden (Ballachulish) June 2021 mixed media on canvas 1525 x 1015 (diptych) on wall with detail Meg 01
Of Music and Agriculture (2020)
Acrylic and oil on canvas
Triptych - 1015 x 2280 mm
Of Music & Agriculture 2020 acrylic & oil on canvas 1015 x 763 mm x 3 (triptych) on wall 01
Hatch (2020)
Acrylic and oil on canvas
Diptych - 1015 x 1525 mm

SOLD
Hatch 2020 acrylic and oil on canvas 1015 x 1525 mm diptych on wall with detail 2a
Drawing into Painting (2016)
Mixed media on canvas
Triptych - 760 x 2280 mm

SOLD
Drawing into Painting 2016 (left) mixed media on canvas 3 x 760 x 760 mm (triptych) on wall 01
Whichever Way to Santa Fe (2017)
Acrylic, oil and spray on canvas
Diptych - 1015 x 1525 mm
Whichever Way to Santa Fe acrylic & oil spray on canvas 1015 x 1525 (diptych) on wall 01
Couples (2018)
Mixed media on canvas
Diptych - 710 x 1110 mm
Couples 2018 mixed media on canvas 710 x 560 x 2 mm diptych on wall 0 with detail Meg
Tree in Three (2019)
Mixed media on canvas
Triptych - 610 x 1365 mm
Tree in Three Sept 2019 acrylic & oil on canvas 610 x 457 mm x 3 (triptych) on wall 01
Green Graft (2012)
OIl on canvas
760 x 760 mm

SOLD
Green Graft 2012 oil on canvas 760 x 760 on wall with detail 4 Meg
Nesting (2012)
Oil on canvas
760 x 760 mm

SOLD
Nesting 2012 oil on canvas 760 x 760 on wall with detail 1 Meg
Repair (2012)
Oil on canvas
760 x 760 mm
Repair 2012 oil on canvas 760 x 760 on wall with detail 0 Meg
Growing Up (2011)
Acrylic, oil & metallic spray on canvas
610 x 610 mm
Growing Up 2011 acrylic & oil spray on canvas 600 x 600 on wall with detail c
Melt/Echo (2011)
Acrylic, oil and metallic spray on canvas
610 x 610 mm
Melt-Echo 2011 acrylic & oil spray on canvas 600 x 600 on wall with detail e
Eye-lander (2018)
Mixed media on canvas
455 x 455 mm

SOLD
Eye-lander mixed media 450 x 450 with detail a
Long Grey Cloud (2017)
Acrylic, oil and spray on canvas
300 x 300 mm

SOLD
Long Grey Cloud (Happy Thnksgiveing) 2017 acrylic & oil spray on canvas 300 x 300 on wall with detail d
Untitled #1 (2020)
Mixed media on canvas
455 x 455 mm
Fera Natura L sm 2020 mixed media 450 x 450 on wall with detail Meg 1a
Circuit (2019)
Mixed media on canvas
455 x 455 mm
Small 1 mixed media on canvas 450 x 450 mm Meg 0
Horse Whisperer (2019)
Mixed media on canvas
455 x 455 mm
Untitled small 4 mixed media 450 x 450 on wall with detail Meg 1
Untitled #2 (2019)
Mixed media on canvas
455 x 455 mm
Fera Natura 2019 mixed media 450 x 450 on wall with detail Meg 1
Arrival 2019
Mixed media on canvas
455 x 455 mm
Arrival mixed media on canvas 450 x 450 mm c on wall meg 01
Mapping/Portrait (2019)
Mixed media on canvas
455 x 455 mm
Untitled small 3 mixed media 450 x 450 on wall with detail Meg 0
Untitled Gouache #1 (2021)
Gouache on watercolour paper
Framed 500 x 405 mm

SOLD
Gouache 1 A4 framed on wall with detail b
Untitled Gouache #2 (2021)
Gouache on watercolour paper
Framed 500 x 405 mm
Gouache 2 A4 framed on wall with detail a1
Untitled Gouache #3 (2021)
Gouache on watercolour paper
Framed 500 x 405 mm

SOLD
Gouache 3 A4 framed on wall with detail a3
Untitled Gouache #4 (2021)
Gouache on watercolour paper
Framed 500 x 405 mm
Gouache 4 A4 framed on wall with detail a
Untitled Gouache #5 (2021)
Gouache on watercolour paper
Framed 500 x 405 mm
Gouache 5 A4 framed on wall with detail a1
Untitled Gouache #6 (2021)
Gouache on watercolour paper
Framed 500 x 405 mm
Gouache 6 A4 framed on wall with detail a
Score (2005)
Graphite, ink, vellum & gesso
Framed 720 x 840 x 35 mm
2108 23 Score 2005 mixed media (graphite, ink papers, gesso) framed e1
Imaginary Place (2005)
Mixed media (ink, graphite, vellum)
Framed 720 x 840 x 35 mm

SOLD
210823 Imaginary Place 2005 mixed media framed b1
Humming Bird (2005)
Coffee or tea stain, vellum, ink & graphite
Framed 720 x 840 x 35 mm

SOLD
210823 Humming bird 2005 mixed media (coffee or tea stain, papers, tracing paper, ink, graphite) framed e1
Untitled #1 (2021)
Mixed media on paper
Framed 620 x 480 mm
Vellum & ink 2 A3 framed on wall with detail 0
Untitled #2 (2020)
Vellum & ink on paper
Framed 620 x 480 mm
Vellum & ink A3 framed on wall with detail 2

Click here to see images of the exhibition in situ.

Born in Christchurch in 1945, Philippa Blair graduated with a Diploma in Fine Arts from Canterbury University in 1967. She has taught and exhibited internationally for over 40 years and has more than 100 solo and 300 group exhibitions to her credit. Represented in numerous public and private collections in Japan, France, Italy, Germany, Malaysia, Australia, New Zealand, and the United States, she has works in The British Museum (London), Chan Lui Museum (Taiwan), The National Art Gallery (Canberra), Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa, Auckland Art Gallery, Christchurch Art Gallery, as well as many corporate collections in the United States including Citicorp, Citibank, General Electric, and Hong Kong and Shanghai Banks.

Geographical consciousness plays an important role in Blair’s painting. Her vibrant works fuse influences from her NZ heritage with the frenetic pace of the many cities in which she has lived and worked. Abstracted maps sit alongside architectural elements (“architecture is in my genes”), music scores and cell structures – vivid elements of her vocabulary reflecting other important influences – ballet and dance (her first passion), and memories of a microbiologist father, Dr Ian Blair (a professor at Lincoln College, Canterbury) and a musician mother, Grace McKenzie, a professional soprano and pianist. Her mother was also an artist and studied at the Canterbury Art School at the same time as Rita Angus.

Blair spent her childhood at Lincoln on the Canterbury Plains, studying piano from the age of 6 and riding and caring for her horses – something she credits with giving her courage and a love of the natural world. She was very close to her father and was often allowed to act as an assistant in the laboratory, introducing her to the exciting world of discovery. Dr Blair was a scientist, a trout fisherman and a writer. His influential textbook on plant and human diseases, “Micro-organisms and Human Affairs” (1948) has been a long-term source of inspiration for Blair, as has her father’s concern for the environment. (Dr Blair was a trustee of the National Library of New Zealand; he served on the National Water Pollution Committee; was appointed a Guardian of Lake Wanaka and co-edited a book on the resources of the lake. He also served on the Royal Commission into Nuclear Power Generation in 1976-77, and in retirement was actively involved with the Queen Elizabeth II National Trust.)

Blair’s influences are also evident in her process. “When I begin, I improvise, like you would in jazz music.” Starting with paper and ink drawings, she structures visual rhythms and articulates space. “But I don’t make the paintings from the drawings – I try to create an atmosphere where I am confident enough to work direct and be brave enough to make changes as I go.” The process of drawing is integral to her artistic practice, not only in the initial working stages but also as compositional elements within her paintings. Drawing becomes part of the collective elements which contribute to the layered and sculptural qualities of her paintings, creating a 2D/3D conversation.

Blair paints her canvases from above providing her with an ‘eagle-eye’ view – “like the flying aerial views of my childhood dreams – the result of both a vivid imagination and the stories my father would tell of canoeing on the Canadian lakes and meeting up with bears”. Starting with a gesture, a line that marks the space, differing viscosities of pigment are applied in a multitude of ways – from fine delicate drips to the voluptuous pigments squeezed directly from the tube. Large paint pours are confidently plotted, the canvas tilted to manipulate directional flow. Paint is applied from several directions, with physical build-up taking place alla prima (wet-on-wet) and usually at high velocity. “I love the alchemy of the work, the secretive build up in layers – acrylic underpainting with thicker oil on top – painted at the same time so it curdles and waiting eagerly for the next day to see the results..” The paint is often applied with stencils suggesting architectural design. Taping the trajectory lines, she works at the canvas much as a surveyor would on a plot of land. Then comes what Blair likens to an archaeological dig – paint is scratched off with trowels, uncovering what is already buried within the surface of the work – an act of excavation as well as creation.

Blair’s process is spontaneous but also direct and disciplined. The work is highly physical, athletic and time based, revealing an association with music. Arcs and pivots, literally extensions of expertly choreographed movements of the body, are used, the element of time apparent in their barely contained velocity. The canvas itself can become a wondrous site of both prospect and exploration, where a journey may begin or end on the same or multiple canvases. The diptych format is common to many of Blair’s paintings – “it heightens spatial awareness and physicality, and intensifies and increases ‘breathing space’. The panels form tensions – like electro-magnetic fields where the colourful charges jump across space from one side to another.” What at first sight might look like chaos, on closer inspection is in fact expertly contained – corralled within deliberately placed lines. While the painting is primarily done on the studio floor, once ‘finished’ it goes up on the wall where it stays for a long time. It is here that the work is fine tuned.

Returning to NZ in 2014,  after 20 years living and working in Los Angeles, Blair’s work has been influenced by time spent living and working on continents (Australia, Europe and the United States). “There’s a conversation between continent and island. It’s quite different living and working on a continent – it’s the expansiveness, which comes into the work.” While she has stated an admiration for other artists such as Frances Hodgkins, De Kooning and especially Kandinsky, Blair credits much of her inspiration to contemporary American women painters. Her work nonetheless remains personal and independent.  “Hers is an intense, highly disciplined method that has taken years to refine into a complex visual vocabulary. A delicate balance is struck between drawing and painting, chaos and order, colour and graphic sensibility.” A.L Hutchison, Los Angeles 2004

Channelling energy from various sources (cultural, political, geological, meteorological), there is no doubt that Blair’s works have drama. They also have wit and the element of the unexpected. They take the viewer on journeys that are unpredictable, sometimes uncomfortable, but always stimulating and inspiring. Blair’s aim is to make people stop and work at it – “like listening to an orchestra, it should take time”.

The titles of Blair’s works are also no accident. “They are abstract, ambiguous and suggestive of action and sound, even though they are landscape oriented. Underneath the abstraction there’s a type of mindscape – it’s a psychological thing more than sea, land and sky. There is a sort of horizon, and that’s a landscape format, but as soon as I put the work on its end, it transforms.”

More than 30 years since Blair’s last Dunedin show, Fe29 is delighted to introduce Fera Natura – an exhibition of selected works from 2005 to 2021, including works from Blair’s time living in vibrant cities overseas and since she returned to her quieter New Zealand home. Drawings, collages and decollages are shown along with mixed media paintings, illustrating a little of Blair’s process of working ‘from drawing to painting’.