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Kate Birrell
  • About
  • Paintings
    • Street Scenes
    • Footy Paintings
    • Glen Huntly Station - Then and Now
    • Commissions and Other
    • Yamba
    • Exhibitions
  • Shop
    • Footy Art Works
    • Construction Prints
    • Paintings on paper
    • Oil Paintings
  • Archive
    • Home
    • Flats
    • People
    • Racecourse
    • KB TV - Footy Show
  • Contact

#lookatglenhuntly

Royal Avenue, East Cornerink and water colour on paper13.5cmW x 19cmH2018

Royal Avenue, East Corner

ink and water colour on paper

13.5cmW x 19cmH

2018

#Lookatglenhuntly is a series of ink and watercolour work on paper currently up at The Bar Royal as part of the Walkabout Glen Huntly street photography exhibition.

Most of these pieces have been done on location using an ink brush pen, or if I had the patience, a bottle of ink and a sable brush. The sable brush is the most effective way to work but it isn't always practical when out of the studio.

I painted on location at Platform 3 on Glen Huntly station looking toward Platform 2 over a couple of days last week.

Others I did from the table inside my studio on Glen Huntly Rd. which looks onto the street and the Royal Avenue corner. I look for interesting and fleeting moments of being.

Go to the Gallery page to see the full series titled Look at Glen Huntly. Or got my shop if you would like to purchase one.

Installation of work at The Bar Royal

Installation of work at The Bar Royal

And #lookatglenhuntly...why? 

I have asked myself why... why is there an urge to observe and record. What is the point and what does one get from the process of either drawing or painting people going about their daily lives.

For my part, I find it is a way to slow things down, to distill 'micro-moments' of existence, perhaps, to see what they do look like....it is an extension beyond the ordinary.

In looking at these fleeting moments, quite often, the surprising hits upon you, compelling the artist in me, to stay and look further or deeper. Surprising moments in colour, shape, and human drama; surprising for the moments of touching beauty, banal mundanity, intriguing transactions or for just delighting in the comedy of human theatre in the public space.

Much can happen.

Glen Huntly, the suburb, is a space whose urban facade has changed rapidly in a relatively short period of time. As a local moving into the area 20 years ago the nature of the businesses and the pedestrian life has undergone considerable change.

My neighbour Vera, who only recently died, grew up in the area from the early 1920's often remarked that for a long period of time this shopping strip had "everything you could ever need". There was no need to travel to another shopping strip , or mall, to get items needed for daily life...be it groceries, smallgoods, hardware, children clothes, ladies wear, theatre...Glen Huntly had it all.

The theatre was a popular spot for Vera and her friends on Saturday afternoons when she was a young girl; It was located on the site of our Safeway supermarket. For a number of years in the late 1950,s Vera and her husband also ran a business selling jewellery, clock making and in providing watchrepairs.

By the time I settled in the late 1990's change was underway. However, Glen Huntly still had two green grocers ( one on both sides of the railway line), one butcher, Clarke's (or Nick's as we called it), a haberdashery store (a long skinny shop jam packed with bags of wool, cotton needles etc), a hardware store, two cake shops, three chemists, a fish and chippery and a smattering of antique stores, to name just a few notables.

The only cafe at this time was Charlotte's, the French Patisserie. Nancy and Sharon worked the counter serving delectable chocolate eclairs, lattes and babychinos for the kids.

Today, our shopping centre is without a stand alone greengrocer, nor is there a haberdashery, nor hardware store. Op shops and brotherhoods have replaced the antique dealers, and a tobacco business occupies the jewellery store that my neighbour Vera once ran (a shopfront just down from where Woodards is now).

But we do have a Hallal butcher, several Indian and Chinese grocery stores, multicultural restaurants, many cafes and a brilliant new playground within our midst.

The council seems to be more open in their approach to enhancing our locality and there is an ongoing discussion regarding the level crossing. Traffic, or the delays to the flow of traffic due to the crossing are a significant impediment to vehicular movement in the strip.

Pedestrian life is always evolving and with societal issues such as drugs and homelessness, Glen Huntly is not immune to the travesties of life. But with the recent waves of migration and the influx of new residents settling in our suburb to work, study or live, our strip is also seeing new faces full of hope and anticipation for lives just beginning.

Today in Glen Huntly we have rich and diverse community adding depth and a great splash of colour to what I would term 'the Look of Melbourne'.

It is a suburb that epitomises Melbourne's rapidly increasing population and shifting cultural demographic.

#lookatglenhuntly...that's why.

For more Glen Huntly musings read on here Glen Huntly and Mysteries of the Track

The Walkabout Glen Huntly Exhibition is on now and until May the 6th 2018

The Bar Royal

1 Royal Avenue, Glen Huntly

from 4pm Monday - Friday and from 1pm Saturday and Sunday

tags: Glenhuntly, Look at Glen Huntly
categories: Exhibitions, Watercolours
Monday 04.23.18
Posted by Kate
 

Glen Huntly; Picturing Past Lives

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I am curious as to the past life of the Glen Huntly shopping strip.

We still have some have threads of its past life in some of the old signs that are marked upon several shop tops and in advertising such as this one recently uncovered as the upholstery store was being renovated.

If you have any memories to share please let me know or leave a comment in the comment section below.

tags: Look at Glen Huntly
categories: Sketchbook
Wednesday 01.24.18
Posted by Kate
 

Finalist...

detail from Glen Huntly PortraitOil on Canvas100cmH x 76cmW2017

detail from Glen Huntly Portrait

Oil on Canvas

100cmH x 76cmW

2017

Excited to say that I am a finalist in this years Portia Geach Memorial Art prize.

Opening night is next Thursday at the S.H.Ervin Gallery, Sydney!!

Here is some more information re the award and the exhibition here

tags: Urban Portraits, Flats, Look at Glen Huntly
categories: Exhibitions
Friday 10.13.17
Posted by Kate
 

Looking at Glen Huntly; Work in Progress

detail from a recent paintingAfter School, Glen Huntly Street SceneOil on Canvas76cmW x 100cmH2017

detail from a recent painting

After School, Glen Huntly Street Scene

Oil on Canvas

76cmW x 100cmH

2017

Open Studio This Saturday 9/9/2017, along with the Glen Huntly Village Street Market 10am - 2pm

It has been a busy few months and I have gradually been producing some new pieces of work.

I am currently working on my Melbourne paintings, as well as following the Tigers with some smaller A3 works (I will write about these in a separate post) and trying to slot in a few commissions here and there.

With my studio located about 14 km out of Melbournes CBD in the suburb of Glen Huntly, I am working with the local environment as my source of motivation to create. I started with my Melbourne works ten years ago looking at some of Melbourne's more iconic places. More recently have confined my subject to the street life within the Glen Eira municipality. 

I began with some of the urban portraits I did of local people with at work, kids coming home from school and some of the local tradesmen I was acquainted with. This year I have zoomed out a bit and have been looking for everyday moments, vignettes of fleeting transactions between the people on our streets.

I am finding this is a great way to work and in having a studio right on a main road, in a shopping strip, I need only to step outside and take a wander in order to find my subjects, ideas and inspiration.

I have lived in this area for almost 20 years and I am seeing a constant shift and evolution in the way my suburb looks, lives and behaves.

The suburb has seen some big changes with the demolition of large homes giving way to apartment blocks. This of course, not being anything new; a short stroll through the streets will show you that such development clearly took place back in the late 1950's and 1960's.

Like many suburbs within a 15 Km radius of the city, Glen Huntly (and the neighbouring suburb of Carnegie) is loosing the classic family homes that once characterised the suburb. Large Californian Bungalows and Edwardian homes along with their sizeable backyards are literally disappearing from our streetscape. More people are living in smaller homes, apartments or flats and often with little outdoor space. 

And so I find it really interesting to watch and observe the rich cultural variety of day to day life that unfolds upon the pavements and footpaths of the suburb.

My perspective is often from my drivers side seat as I sit out the often protracted time spent with the boom gates down at the Glen Huntly Rd. level crossing, as well as that of a pedestrian and a local resident.

You can follow some of these ideas and sketches as I develop them into paintings on my Instagram site..  lookatmelbourne

I recently read an article describing Glen Huntly as grotty and sleepy. Yes, it certainly needs cleaning up in places but I do challenge the notion that perhaps our suburb has little to offer.

If you would like to share your thoughts on our suburb Glen Huntly please do...with respect, naturally, leave a comment, memory or  opinion.

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tags: Look at Melbourne, Flats, Look at Glen Huntly
categories: Lately Painting
Friday 09.01.17
Posted by Kate