Artwork #1: Pick-up Sticks

IMG_1936We’ve called this painting Pick-up Sticks after the children’s game of coloured wooden sticks that you drop in a pile, then try to remove a stick without making any of the others move.

Someone worked hard on Pick-up Sticks and we think perhaps they worked too hard: there is a lot going on in this painting. Colours, lines, shapes, texture; it’s a never ending party of a painting.

We found it in Paddington during a council clean up week, when the pavements are full of trash and treasure and the sounds of people shifting the piles around, looking for good stuff among the broken things. People can be seen walking around holding lamps, or a pile of old unwanted novels, gifts from the street fairies, or whoever you like to blame when you get home with a strange new object for the house.

Pick-up sticks, however, is headed for a different fate. It’s heading for a new life as a new artwork.

pick up sticks

 

Our project

 

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Every day, all across Sydney, people are abandoning artistic projects. Paintings people have spent hours of work on are discarded, tossed out on the street with rusted woks and broken clothes racks, destined to become landfill.

Re:make has a mission: to rescue these unloved art projects and give them a new life with the help of a group of emerging and established Sydney artists. In the first series of re:make, 12 rescued paintings will be paired with 12 artists. Working with the original canvases, the artists will transform these once abandoned paintings into new works of art. The remade works will be collected into a group exhibition opening in early 2014.

The works will be available for sale, with proceeds funding an art workshop program at East Sydney High School,  a community school providing for young people who have experienced difficulty in accessing mainstream education.