A NEW ARTS NORTH WEST WEBSITE CONNECTING CREATIVE COMMUNITIES

 
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In what has been a year full of challenges and adapting to a new normal, Arts North West is excited to launch another new initiative for the New England North West, an expansion of the Arts North West Connect program and website.

First launched in 2012 as Country Art Escapes, Arts North West Connect started as a physical art trail through the New England North West, promoting arts and cultural venues through hardcopy maps, a phone app, and a website. This original version operated on a subscriber model and at its peak, incorporated around 70 subscriber venues.

In 2018, Country Art escapes underwent a refresh and a rebrand, transforming into Arts North West Connect, shifting focus to be primarily a subscriber based online arts directory promoting cultural venues, artists and events in region.

From the end of 2020, Arts North West Connect will be taking on a completely new look and purpose. Firstly, and fore mostly, Arts North West Connect will be completely free and cover the entire New England North West creative and cultural landscape.

“2020 has brought about a complete overhaul of way in which we operate at Arts North West, we have had to rethink ways in which we interact with our arts and cultural community and the ways in which we can best support the region as we begin to reopen to the new norm” said Steph McIntosh, from Arts North West.

The new Arts North West Connect website launching in the coming weeks, has been separated into sections to capture the myriad of talents and skills in the region, arts and cultural venues, artists portfolios, technical skills registry, comprehensive maps, and events.

“Arts North West Connect will be an incredible and valuable resource for the entire New England North West region. This will essentially be the most comprehensive database of all things creative and cultural in the region, disguised as a new snazzy and sleek website.

This approach of crossing across 12 different local government areas, through a unified website, promoting solely arts, culture, and tourism in the region, has never been done before in this region. Steph McIntosh

We are determined to make this a success, but the website will only be as good as the information that is put into it, so please follow us on Facebook and spread the word” Mrs. McIntosh continued.

In celebration of the new website and just in time for Christmas, Arts North West Connect will also be facilitating an online Market Place for the month of December. Details will be released via the Arts North West Facebook page and Arts North West Connect website www.artsnwconnect.com.au

Individuals, groups, organisations wanting to register their details can do so all online via the website.


Art in the time of COVID

 
Photo: ANW executive director Caroline Downer and Panorama Project coordinator Michèle Jedlicka with some of the sketchbooks.

Photo: ANW executive director Caroline Downer and Panorama Project coordinator Michèle Jedlicka with some of the sketchbooks.

 

CREATIVE REFLECTIONS on life through the winter of COVID-19 will soon be on display for the New England North West.

The Arts North West (ANW) Panorama Project regional tour begins this Friday, 16 October at the Glen Innes Library. The exhibition consists of free A5 sketchbooks sent out from April through August to regional recipients aged 16 and up. Participants were encouraged to fill their sketchbooks as they chose, asking just that each book return for the exhibition in the same A5 size.

Now collected and collated, the show of over 180 sketchbooks is now ready to hit the road tol visit 17 libraries and venues across the 12 council areas ANW supports from now until August 2021.

“It has been wonderful to see our little sketchbooks return, and see how our community has responded to these times with such creativity,” ANW executive director Caroline Downer said.

“I hope people will be able to catch it on our tour, and spend a bit of time glancing through these pages of thoughts and images that reflect our place and our time.” Caroline Downer

Glen Innes artist Stephen Wright invested his talent in photography and imagination into his sketchbook.

“I found the Panorama Project to be an invaluable exercise in coping with the trials and tribulations of drought, bushfires and COVID. A simple but elegant idea; give regional artists and creatives an A5 booklet each with only one directive...respond!” Stephen said.

“I chose to reflect on my relationship and experiences of a special place that I walk through almost every day. It’s gradual desiccation, the impact on the people who depend on it as a home and livelihood, the sense of impending doom and the cathartic relief of rain and life returning.”

To learn more about Panorama Project tour dates and the project itself, go to www.artsnw.com.au/#/panorama-project.


Pandemic inspires artist to go bush

 
COUNTRY SOLACE: New England artist Isabelle Devos is planning to go bush on a plein-air residency (photo: David Elkin)

COUNTRY SOLACE: New England artist Isabelle Devos is planning to go bush on a plein-air residency (photo: David Elkin)

 

AN ARTIST will live and work in the New England National Park, embarking on a ‘plein-air residency’ made possible with a micro grant from Arts North West.

New England-based painter Isabelle Devos will spend several days living in the park, walking, exploring, drawing and painting.

“The pandemic has affected my creative practice by having exhibitions changed into virtual online exhibitions and openings or cancelled altogether,” she told Arts North West this week.

“My creative process has expanded to spending more time outdoors drawing and painting with inks, still doing rural landscape based paintings” Isabelle Devos

“I have found real solace in being in the bush more regularly, near green and nature and away from too many people.”

Forest Bathing

A contemporary landscape painter whose work is represented in Sydney and New England galleries, Devos said she cannot say for certain what the art work executed in this bush residency will look like.

“But I expect that it may include large-scale drawings of trees, plants and nature.

“I will also be doing some research into ‘forest bathing’ and science around the impacts of being in nature on a person's creative and mental wellbeing.

“The micro grant will help fund some additional art supplies that work well outdoors, such as a folding metal easel, larger brushes, thick papers and will also be funding the accommodation within the national park.”

To follow the progress of the project head to Isabelle Devos Art on Facebook and @isabelledevosart on Instagram