Moon Dune

Moon Dune developed out of a residency in Tokyo where Amy’s usually sculptural practice needed to downsize and flatten due to space and transport constraints resulting in a series of embroideries on paper using metallic threads sourced in Japan. Conjuring alpine settings from sunny Adelaide, tropical locales from a winter Berlin residency and then lush waterfall scenes while in concrete filled Tokyo; Amy is challenged by the relative greenness of grass. These colourful, sparkly waterfall works could speak of imagined utopic landscape, however, they are quite delicate works that embody a Japanese sensibility – embracing a high level of care, craft and dedication. The stitched surface became quite sculptural and also had a geometric quality, speaking to her sculptural practice, with planes described by directional lines of thread.

Upon returning to Australia Amy began to appreciate our rugged earthy landscape even more and decided to reference Australian rocky landscapes where the lines of the stitching follow strata. In producing this body of work over the course of a year Amy’s interest in geology spread across other continents and even to other planets and also influenced her sculptural works where she references banded rock formations like agates. The natural forms and landscapes represented in both the 2D and 3D works could be from our world or another. The works are laboriously and lovingly made – a nod to the thousands of years it has taken for our earthy and galactic landscapes to evolve.

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Super Natural Geologies | Hugo Michell Gallery | 1 August – 31 August 2019

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The Devil is in the Detail | Hugo Michell Gallery | 28 May – 28 June 2015 (UPDATING SOON)