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Lionel Bawden’s sculptures at Karen Woodbury Gallery

Lionel Bawden’s sculptures at Karen Woodbury Gallery

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Above image: The world of the surface 2011. Lionel Bawden. Coloured Staedtler pencils, epoxy & incralac on perspex shelves. 29.0 x 23.5 x 29.0 cm & 26.7 x 24.0 x 10.7 cm, 2 pieces. Image courtesy Karen Woodbury Gallery and the artist.

Exploring the patterns intrinsic to organic growth and mutation, where, like the Fibonacci spiral, nature performs a series of self-perpetuating patterns, Lionel Bawden’s sculpture continue to evolve. The latest works to arrive in the stockroom of Karen Woodbury Gallery have emerged over the last three years as a dripping and molten exploration of bending a medium.

The caverns of temporal suspension (between two sites) 2011. Lionel Bawden. White Staedtler pencils, epoxy & incralac. 45.5 x 63.5 x 8.0 cm. Image courtesy Karen Woodbury Gallery and the artist.

The caverns of temporal suspension (between two sites) 2011. Lionel Bawden. White Staedtler pencils, epoxy & incralac. 45.5 x 63.5 x 8.0 cm. Image courtesy Karen Woodbury Gallery and the artist.

Where earlier iterations explored patterns derived from the hexagonal cross section of the pencils from which his work is formed, these latest works both embrace and deny their existence. To wit, the colours of the pencils have been arranged to form concentric diamond patterns, where both the coloured portion of each pencil end and the surrounding timber mimics an inlay.

Pattern spill 2014. Lionel Bawden. Coloured Staedtler pencils, epoxy & incralac on perspex shelf. 34.0 x 27.0 x 29.0 cm. Image courtesy Karen Woodbury Gallery and the artist.

Pattern spill 2014. Lionel Bawden. Coloured Staedtler pencils, epoxy & incralac on perspex shelf. 34.0 x 27.0 x 29.0 cm. Image courtesy Karen Woodbury Gallery and the artist.

This is countered by the form the sculpture takes, which is almost oblivious to the formal diamond pattern. Rather these sculptures stretch and drip their way across shelves and tables. Elongating the forms further, Bawden has allowed the lengths of the pencils to be exposed as layered and elegant fringes of colour.

Flipside 2011. Lionel Bawden. Coloured Staedtler pencils, epoxy & incralac on perspex shelf. 28.0 x 33.0 x 13.0 cm. Image courtesy Karen Woodbury Gallery and the artist.

Flipside 2011. Lionel Bawden. Coloured Staedtler pencils, epoxy & incralac on perspex shelf. 28.0 x 33.0 x 13.0 cm. Image courtesy Karen Woodbury Gallery and the artist.

Bawden’s work is held in collections of note including Artbank, The Queensland Art Gallery and the National Gallery of Australia as well as regional galleries and many private collections in Australia and abroad. He is represented by Karen Woodbury Gallery.

Crossing the mirror 2011. Lionel Bawden. Coloured Staedtler pencils, epoxy & incralac on perspex shelf. 29.8 x 24.7 x 16.5 cm. Image courtesy Karen Woodbury Gallery and the artist.

Crossing the mirror 2011. Lionel Bawden. Coloured Staedtler pencils, epoxy & incralac on perspex shelf. 29.8 x 24.7 x 16.5 cm. Image courtesy Karen Woodbury Gallery and the artist.

www.karenwoodburygallery.com

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