Artwork Description

Oil on canvas, stretched and ready to hang.

Signed on the front.

“Gerry Turpin is a Mbabaram man from north Qld and a renowned Ethnobotanist. Gerry has been employed by the Queensland State Government for about 30 years and has previously been involved in the Queensland Herbarium’s Vegetation Surveys and Regional Ecosystem Mapping Project in Queensland. He currently manages the Tropical Indigenous Ethnobotany Centre at the Australian Tropical Herbarium in Cairns, in partnership with James Cook University, Dept. of Environment and Science and CSIRO, and has worked with many Traditional Owner groups on Cape York and other parts of Queensland. Gerry is also a member of the Ecological Society of Australia Board of Directors with the role of Indigenous Engagement. As an Indigenous ethnobotanist Gerry has a strong cultural commitment to facilitating effective partnerships that support Indigenous communities to protect, manage and maintain their cultural knowledge on the use of plants.”

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Medium

Oil on Canvas won 1st Prize Cairns and Finalist at the Stanthorpe Art Prize

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Stretched and ready to hang

This artwork is currently stretched and ready to hang.

#Aborigianal, #tropical, #portrait, #detailed, #vibrant, #illustrative, #nature, #human, #brown, #light green

All art by Pam Schultz

Environmentalist, author, poet, mother and wife, Rees is a busy person. Her kitchen tells it all; the native herbs, fruits and seeds she concocts into distinctly ‘Tasmanian’ culinary delights; the landscape she loves, through her kitchen window of imagination exists at numerous locations across Tasmania. A beach without birds is a poor place indeed! Mawson Bay beach is a part of the Tarkine wilderness area, NW Coast Tasmania. It is recognised as having National Heritage values. Aptly named, the wide stretches of beach and sand dunes reminds me of Mawson’s historical and desolate trek through the Antarctic in the year 1912. Indeed, the wild ocean stretches all the way to Argentina. There are no dogs on this beach, just sand, birds, seaweed, cuttlefish, rocks. ochre and creek estuaries. When one walks this desolated beach, they might feel they are drifting along unchartered territory just like Mawson in the Antarctica. Deep Sea corals are up to 6 klms below the surface of the ocean. The colours are striking but only deep sea submarines can access this underwater wonderland.The painting has swirls and patterns of gold and black. The edges are painted with a pattern.
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