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Runglio Rungliot: James Drinkwater

Past exhibition
February 6 - 28, 2017
  • Essay
  • Works
  • In the 72 hours at “Rungli Rungliot”, there was an explosion of contemporary romantic landscape painting and drawing. The minutiae of the landscape—tree stumps, glimpses of water and the haze of smoke from the campfire—became his focus rather than the grand vistas. 
  • Ralph Hobbs
    January, 2017
    RUNGLI RUNGLIOT
    The Moon fell hard on Rungli Rungliot
    Thus far and no further
    cutting and kicking teeth
    drawing fire into black
    sheets of ice across the french ream
    Every fear of the modern world
    I feel to old for this new country
    saplings rise
    an army of youth
    turning ghost, spotted gum
    asleep at the foot of the fire
    The arctic wind is a fist fight
    staggering men when we fall off chairs
    kick that french roll another metre
    Liberated by the labour
    watermark, black swan
    Rungli Rungliot
    DRINKWATER, 2016


    “Rungli Rungliot” translates as “thus far and no further” from the Sauria Paharia people of West Bengal. It is the name given to a Tasmanian Highland hut nestled in a sapling forest in the land of a thousand lakes. Sixty years ago, the original owners found their Eden. It was a place to be at peace with the world—they needed to search no more.

     

    The surrounding landscape can be described as tough. It is a rugged beauty, weather-beaten by southerly Antarctic winds and blistering summer days since the last ice age.

     

    In July 2016, artist James Drinkwater travelled to this place. He immersed himself in the trees next to the lake where he documented and created paintings and drawings night and day. These works became the source material for the major studio paintings in Drinkwater’s Rungli Rungliot exhibition at the Australian High Commission in Singapore in February 2017.

     

    In the 72 hours at “Rungli Rungliot”, there was an explosion of contemporary romantic landscape painting and drawing. The minutiae of the landscape—tree stumps, glimpses of water and the haze of smoke from the campfire—became his focus rather than the grand vistas. Effortlessly, Drinkwater molded the experience of being in that wild country at that moment in time. Ever the intuitive mark maker, nothing was off limits in the pursuit of creating a surface that resonated with his vision of the landscape.

     

    The initial drawings were created, start to finish, in the three days and nights he spent in the bush. The artist feverishly danced between the large sheets of paper scattered around “Rungli Rungliot”. He worked by torchlight when the winter light failed. Paintings bore their patina from the shellac ink being dragged in the frigid lake then loaded with collage of found objects and broken drawings—the works slowly drying by open campfires in the below-zero temperatures.

     

    In the ensuring months in his Newcastle studio, Drinkwater worked from drawings and memories etched in his psyche from his time by the lake. The drawings developed into major paintings—the graphic quality transformed into layers of oil and hard collage. Visual motifs in his initial works were fully developed into major aesthetic moments.

    Read more

    Through the rich oils, Drinkwater’s paintings took on an all-pervasive glow reminding the viewer of the Claudean light synonymous with the 17th Century landscape master. One senses the mist as it drifts from the lake and into the bush. These paintings move well beyond the idea of recording the landscape—they are the landscape.

     

    James Drinkwater is an artist at the forefront of a generation of young Australian painters, buoyed by a love of the land and of the traditions of the great European and Antipodean Modernists. He sees his role as an artist to identify and remind us of the key elements of a country and society and celebrates them in paint. His rise to prominence was affirmed when he won the Brett Whiteley Travelling Art Scholarship in 2014. He has also been a finalist in the prestigious Wynne and Sulman prizes at the Art Galley of NSW multiple times, in recent years. His work is included in significant corporate, institutional and private collections.

  • Works
    • James Drinkwater Arctic Winds Sweep the Floor , 2016 Oil on Board 94 x 75cm
      James Drinkwater
      Arctic Winds Sweep the Floor , 2016
      Oil on Board
      94 x 75cm
      Sold
    • James Drinkwater I Fell Asleep at the Foot of the Fire , 2016 Oil on Board 140 x 122cm
      James Drinkwater
      I Fell Asleep at the Foot of the Fire , 2016
      Oil on Board
      140 x 122cm
      Sold
    • James Drinkwater I Took Flight into the Endless Night , 2016 Oil on Board 140 x 122cm
      James Drinkwater
      I Took Flight into the Endless Night , 2016
      Oil on Board
      140 x 122cm
      Sold
    • James Drinkwater If this Canopy Would Only Cover Me , 2016 Oil on Board 140 x 122cm
      James Drinkwater
      If this Canopy Would Only Cover Me , 2016
      Oil on Board
      140 x 122cm
      Sold
    • James Drinkwater Night Fell on Rungli Rungliot , 2016 Oil and mixed media on board 94 x 150cm
      James Drinkwater
      Night Fell on Rungli Rungliot , 2016
      Oil and mixed media on board
      94 x 150cm
      Sold
    • James Drinkwater Passage to Rungli Rungliot, Tasmanian Highlands, 2016 Oil and mixed media on board 180 x 360cm triptych
      James Drinkwater
      Passage to Rungli Rungliot, Tasmanian Highlands, 2016
      Oil and mixed media on board
      180 x 360cm triptych
      Sold
    • James Drinkwater Roll Me Out Over This Winter Ground , 2016 Oil on Board 94 x 75cm
      James Drinkwater
      Roll Me Out Over This Winter Ground , 2016
      Oil on Board
      94 x 75cm
      Sold
    • James Drinkwater Rungli-Rungliot 1 , 2016 Mixed media on paper 114x102cm p size; 124x112cm framed
      James Drinkwater
      Rungli-Rungliot 1 , 2016
      Mixed media on paper
      114x102cm p size; 124x112cm framed
      Sold
    • James Drinkwater Rungli-Rungliot 2 , 2016 Mixed media on paper 114x102cm p size; 124x112cm framed
      James Drinkwater
      Rungli-Rungliot 2 , 2016
      Mixed media on paper
      114x102cm p size; 124x112cm framed
      Sold
    • James Drinkwater Rungli-Rungliot 3 , 2016 Mixed media on paper 114x102cm p size; 124x112cm framed
      James Drinkwater
      Rungli-Rungliot 3 , 2016
      Mixed media on paper
      114x102cm p size; 124x112cm framed
      Sold
    • James Drinkwater Rungli-Rungliot 4 , 2016 Mixed media on paper 114x102cm p size; 124x112cm framed
      James Drinkwater
      Rungli-Rungliot 4 , 2016
      Mixed media on paper
      114x102cm p size; 124x112cm framed
      Sold
    • James Drinkwater Rungli-Rungliot 5 , 2016 Mixed media on paper 114x102cm p size; 124x112cm framed
      James Drinkwater
      Rungli-Rungliot 5 , 2016
      Mixed media on paper
      114x102cm p size; 124x112cm framed
      Sold
    • James Drinkwater Rungli-Rungliot 6 , 2016 Mixed media on paper 114x102cm p size; 124x112cm framed
      James Drinkwater
      Rungli-Rungliot 6 , 2016
      Mixed media on paper
      114x102cm p size; 124x112cm framed
      Sold
    • James Drinkwater Rungli-Rungliot 8 , 2016 Mixed media on paper 114x102cm p size; 124x112cm framed
      James Drinkwater
      Rungli-Rungliot 8 , 2016
      Mixed media on paper
      114x102cm p size; 124x112cm framed
      Sold
    • James Drinkwater Rungli-Rungliot 9 , 2016 Mixed media on paper 114x102cm p size; 124x112cm framed
      James Drinkwater
      Rungli-Rungliot 9 , 2016
      Mixed media on paper
      114x102cm p size; 124x112cm framed
      Sold
    • James Drinkwater Saplings Mist and Things We Couldn't Explain 2016 Oil on Board 94x75cm
      James Drinkwater
      Saplings Mist and Things We Couldn't Explain 2016
      Oil on Board
      94x75cm
      Sold
    • James Drinkwater Spotted Gums By The Waters Edge , 2016 Oil on Board 94x75cm
      James Drinkwater
      Spotted Gums By The Waters Edge , 2016
      Oil on Board
      94x75cm
      Sold
    • James Drinkwater The Lake and its contents , 2016 Oil and mixed media on board 180 x 122cm
      James Drinkwater
      The Lake and its contents , 2016
      Oil and mixed media on board
      180 x 122cm
      Sold
    • James Drinkwater The Last Light , 2016 Oil and mixed media on board 180 x 122cm
      James Drinkwater
      The Last Light , 2016
      Oil and mixed media on board
      180 x 122cm
      Sold
    • James Drinkwater The Rising , 2016 Oil on Board 94 x 75cm
      James Drinkwater
      The Rising , 2016
      Oil on Board
      94 x 75cm
      Sold
    • James Drinkwater Tight Bush and Highland Floors, A Painter is Born , 2016 Oil on Board 94x75cm
      James Drinkwater
      Tight Bush and Highland Floors, A Painter is Born , 2016
      Oil on Board
      94x75cm
      Sold
    • James Drinkwater We Dropped them off via the Only Sun , 2016 Oil on Board 94x75cm
      James Drinkwater
      We Dropped them off via the Only Sun , 2016
      Oil on Board
      94x75cm
      Sold
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Nanda\Hobbs acknowledges the Gadigal people of the Eora Nation as the traditional owners of the land upon which our gallery stands, and recognise their continuing connection to land, waters and culture.

12 - 14 Meagher St, Chippendale 2008

Gadigal Land (Sydney)

tel: +61 (0) 2 8599 8000
info@nandahobbs.com

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