Showing posts with label Booranga. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Booranga. Show all posts

Monday, August 25, 2025

Anything But Common

Commonplace books were popular from the Renaissance through to the 19th century.

A commonplace book is an ancient system for recording knowledge.

(They are) albums of distinguished quotes interrupted by analysis (which) curate ideas from many places. Some have handmade… paper ink and binding. They may incorporate prints, digital art and repurposing.

(Paraphrased from assignment description for subject ART317: Art & Books, Charles Sturt University)

Associate Professor Charles Sturt University (CSU), Sam Bowker for his subject ART317: Art & Books sets an assessment task of producing a commonplace book to record students’ responses and learning. This year, 2025, the result is the exhibition, at the HR Gallop Gallery on campus, Extraordinary Commonplace Books showing work produced by some twenty students. The exhibition is being held in conjunction with Sam Bowker’s public lecture series Art & Books which commemorates the 25th anniversary of the subject, originally created by Dr Sue Wood, being offered. Proceeds from the lecture series are being donated to Wagga Wagga’s Booranga Writers Centre which lost its state funding in 2024 but continues to offer workshops and monthly readings/open mics to the community.




The content of the lectures and my recent interest in producing collages made seeing Extraordinary Commonplace Books compulsory for me.  I was rewarded with creativity, synthesis and ingenuity that captured the essence of the subject of study and also celebrated individual interests and talents. Stylistically the books were very diverse, from Deborah Martinez’s rustic stick bound loose leaf folio with its delicate uneven pages, to Kira Sarkany‘s extensive large scale pastel decorated concertina-scroll, to the detailed and eclectic scholarship and illustration of Caitlin Grieve’s work. Jess Verco’s book was remarkable for its impeccable script and ingenious use of QR code-accessible audio, while Grace Frede‘s work exemplified thorough independent research and featured a wonderful fold out section on Rafa Al Nasiri’s poem Almond Blossom (2009) complete with her own expressive painting. I am singling out just some of the impressive achievements this class has produced, as many as an hour spent with my phone camera and note book allowed but the work on show was universally impressive.

Caitlin Grieve's painstaking collage work 

The remaining lectures in Dr Bowker’s series will look at book illustration and the future of the book in our techno-centric society.  If this collection of extraordinary commonplace books is any indication, the handmade, tactile and visually eclectic will retain a strong place in our reading and aesthetic preferences.

Extraordinary Commonplace Books is open until Friday 29 August, 2025 10am - 5pm weekdays The HR Gallop Gallery is in the centre of Building 21 near carpark 5 off Darnell-Smith Drive, Charles Sturt University Campus, Wagga Wagga.


Tuesday, December 7, 2021

Seven Year Itch?

A few weeks ago I did some rather drastic gardening, clearing out an area that was choked with weeds in an effort to access the rain water tank we’ve never used and to get a clear view of Willans Hill from our kitchen window. Something stung or pierced my right forearm that day and it has been intermittently itchy ever since. I am used to healing more slowly as I age but I still have a rough red itchy patch that hasn’t completely cleared up. I forgot to mention it to the doctor when I saw him a few days ago for our ultimate consultation (he and his partner, both GPs, are following the well-established trend of rural GPs departing for Sydney). I am wondering if a plant fibre or insect ‘bit’ has penetrated my skin. I suppose it will either work its way out over time or enter my blood stream and kill me. My great Aunt Hannah died of a bite (either redback or scorpion, depending upon which account you read) sustained while gardening in Chatswood so there is a family precedent for such a catastrophe. I am choosing to process my itch in a more metaphorical way though… 

We’ve lived in Wagga Wagga for  seven years now. Could I be experiencing the itch that comes with that passage of time? In December 2015 I blogged about moving here. Rereading that post, it is positive about relocating, but it isn’t quite the paean to Wagga I remembered it as being. I remarked on ‘what I miss and what I welcome’ in my new environment, showing that, one year on, I was mindful of both. I knew the day would come when I was more familiar with Riverina people, locations and place names than I was with those I’d left behind. Although a trivia quiz at the recent  ‘Aqua Chicks’ Christmas party revealed my poor grasp of Wagga street names and of their family connections to various ‘chicks’. I had learnt about architect Steve O’Halloran’s legacy (he designed the Civic Theatre and is the father of an impressive  patrician aqua ‘chick’ who recited Mulga Bill’s Bicycle at the party).  I have researched the artistic hub that was the Wagga Wagga Teachers’ College (one of the teachers there, Lionel Gailor, entered his mural designs in the Sulman art prize competition in 1953 and students submitted the design for the podium for ER II’s 1954 visit to Wagga). The fast flowing Murrumbidgee and its gnarled sentinel gums still delight me, spreading development  means that we see fewer kangaroos than we did in our first year. I do now frequently bump into people I know when I am out something I craved I when I wrote that 2015 post. The passage of seven years, two of them without the option to travel, courtesy of COVID, has made me restless for occasional changes of scenery. A friend and I were poised to go to NYC and I had just got my first Australian passport when the pandemic hit. While writing this I have been able to make a flying visit to Sydney, which could be the subject of a complete other pluses and minuses post, but did mean I could see our son and catch up with friends.


Steve O'Halloran's Civic Theatre with some modern extensions but its wonderful mural still prominent 

Most things about the tree change have been completely positive: part-time work in a congenial atmosphere, learning how not to kill plants in this soil and climate,  walking our dog Stella in the delightful Botanic Gardens and finding joy in the Booranga writers’ and book groups. I am used to sharing the house with a few dozen daddy longlegs and will never take our view for granted. I could do without the angle of the driveway (I have meniscus tears in both my knees) and I foolishly thought a modern (1970s) house would be easier to maintain than our previous Victorian and early 20th century residences. It isn’t and we aren’t getting any younger. 

While my affection for the Riverina’s endemic gums never dims, I realise my appreciation for the enormous eucalypt in our front yard was naïve. An arborist has told us that it is not native to the Riverina but to Western Australia and suited to that dry climate. The species was chosen by local gardeners for its quick growth however its location here in a heavier rainfall region and beside our fish pond means it leaches moisture from its surrounds and has grown dangerously large, threatening to drop its substantial branches at any time. We are waiting for said arborists to make good on (i.e. not cancel at the last minute) their fourth appointment to prune the monster!


The 'monster' gum

On the subject of the pond, I think I have blogged before about its maintenance requirements and how two goldfish have spawned a clan of over forty! The sight of those swirling  tangerine shoals and of little fish mouths piercing the water’s surface begging for  pellets has its own aesthetic but the banjo frogs that used to serenade us each evening have been silenced. I have seen the piscine ruffians scoffing frogspawn and even tearing apart a live frog. I am now trying to figure out a way to restore the native pond life. I’m going to ring the zoo and see if they want some gold fish – I have given away dozens in the past.


 Our fish pond - topping up the water level and and about to feed the ravenous occupants

In other aquatic news, there is now, again COVID instigated, a ceiling on numbers for aquarobics classes and I am seldom quick enough to secure a spot so my established regime is disrupted. I have bought an exercise bike but it has not won my allegiance in quite the same way. It will soon be hot enough to choreograph my own routines in our (unheated) pool, in the meantime I need to ‘get on me bike’ and generally think laterally about alternative forms of exercise. 

That is if I don’t succumb to great Aunt Hannah’s fate!

Balm for the soul (and the itch) - Wagga's Botanic Gardens

Note: all my photos.