Journey to Water
From 2006 to 2013 Rachel Carroll traveled to see the longest River in Australia. The Murray Darling River Basin. #artexhibition #savethemurray
Venue: Mary McKillop Museum
Address: 50 Mount Street, Nth Sydney
Date: End Dec 1
Time: 10- 4pm Daily
Ticket: FREE
Web: https://www.marymackillopplace.org.au/museum/whats-on/
: https://www.facebook.com/rachelcarrollartist/?ref=bookmarks
: www.rachelcarroll.com.au
EMail: rachel@rachelcarroll.com.au
Call: 423982349
Address: 50 Mount Street, Nth Sydney
Date: End Dec 1
Time: 10- 4pm Daily
Ticket: FREE
Web: https://www.marymackillopplace.org.au/museum/whats-on/
: https://www.facebook.com/rachelcarrollartist/?ref=bookmarks
: www.rachelcarroll.com.au
EMail: rachel@rachelcarroll.com.au
Call: 423982349
This Survey exhibition is a culmination of 8 years work and the work is together for the first time at Mary McKillop Museum.
Exhibition by environmental artist, Rachel Carroll. Entitled "Journey To Water", this exhibition is a survey exhibition and will be open to the public from 26th of July to December 1st.
Visitors will journey through Australians' largest river system, exploring paintings and mixed media drawings from Rachel's site visits to sections of the Murray Darling River System.
The artworks, related artist diaries and material samples gathered over a eight-year period reveal the devastating environmental impact on the once 'Mighty Murray', whose water flow has been severely reduced.
This exhibition will capture the diversity of bird life and the surrounding habitat, in which so many species depend on the health of the river system for survival.
The site studies that have been undertaken by Rachel will direct our attention to the ecological decline of these life-giving waters and the necessity to protect native species and animals from further extinction.
We hope that this exhibition will urge Australians to pause and rethink critically important issues effecting the ecological, cultural and economic sustainability of our nation.
It has always been Carroll's focus to bring the "bush to the city", in the hope that others will connect with nature. Art acts as a little reminder to go visit and love the "greater green", as she calls it. One example of this happening is when a client bought one of her largest drawings of the Coorong, only to then drive 14 hours to find the same location. Before this moment they had not been to this part of Australia before.
"If an artwork can inspire someone to drive 14 hours to find the same view and experience nature, then I feel I have done my job as an artist." R.Carroll
After living and painting in Scotland for nearly three years and painting the cities of Edinburgh, New York & Sydney, Carroll was compelling to find a deeper meaning in her art. Returning to Australia to begin a MASTERS degree in 2006 Carroll found that meaning on the front page of the SMH. The demise of the Coorong was a feature article, and so began her journey. Since 2006 Carroll has been to a new location on the Murray Darling River Basin every year, and each year has been a new body of work. Carroll often camps and paints on location for a week to engage with nature, local bush rangers, scientists and the local Aboriginal tribe, if possible. This entire collection from 2006 to to 2014 will be displayed in an exhibition in 2019 ( watch this space)
Carroll also teaches, runs workshops & demonstrates to share her passion for nature and painting. " Art is ultimately a way to communicate an idea or a way to better understand our natural world and immerse yourself in an experience of nature. Art teaches us to look again and much like music art is here to engage the soul." R.Carroll 2018
Exhibition by environmental artist, Rachel Carroll. Entitled "Journey To Water", this exhibition is a survey exhibition and will be open to the public from 26th of July to December 1st.
Visitors will journey through Australians' largest river system, exploring paintings and mixed media drawings from Rachel's site visits to sections of the Murray Darling River System.
The artworks, related artist diaries and material samples gathered over a eight-year period reveal the devastating environmental impact on the once 'Mighty Murray', whose water flow has been severely reduced.
This exhibition will capture the diversity of bird life and the surrounding habitat, in which so many species depend on the health of the river system for survival.
The site studies that have been undertaken by Rachel will direct our attention to the ecological decline of these life-giving waters and the necessity to protect native species and animals from further extinction.
We hope that this exhibition will urge Australians to pause and rethink critically important issues effecting the ecological, cultural and economic sustainability of our nation.
About Rachel Carroll
Rachel Carroll has been a practicing artist for over 20 years. An expressionist and an environmentalist painter Rachel prefers to paint about locations that are surviving rather than focus on an area that is in demise.It has always been Carroll's focus to bring the "bush to the city", in the hope that others will connect with nature. Art acts as a little reminder to go visit and love the "greater green", as she calls it. One example of this happening is when a client bought one of her largest drawings of the Coorong, only to then drive 14 hours to find the same location. Before this moment they had not been to this part of Australia before.
"If an artwork can inspire someone to drive 14 hours to find the same view and experience nature, then I feel I have done my job as an artist." R.Carroll
After living and painting in Scotland for nearly three years and painting the cities of Edinburgh, New York & Sydney, Carroll was compelling to find a deeper meaning in her art. Returning to Australia to begin a MASTERS degree in 2006 Carroll found that meaning on the front page of the SMH. The demise of the Coorong was a feature article, and so began her journey. Since 2006 Carroll has been to a new location on the Murray Darling River Basin every year, and each year has been a new body of work. Carroll often camps and paints on location for a week to engage with nature, local bush rangers, scientists and the local Aboriginal tribe, if possible. This entire collection from 2006 to to 2014 will be displayed in an exhibition in 2019 ( watch this space)
Carroll also teaches, runs workshops & demonstrates to share her passion for nature and painting. " Art is ultimately a way to communicate an idea or a way to better understand our natural world and immerse yourself in an experience of nature. Art teaches us to look again and much like music art is here to engage the soul." R.Carroll 2018