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Getting to know our members: Carmen Ky

October 14, 2021 by Anthea Boesenberg Leave a Comment

Dawn – Glasshouse Mountains, 2016, watercolour and linocut, each panel 21 x 21cm

As a student at the National Art School in the 1960’s I was introduced to Taoist philosophy and discovered Indian tantric art. At that time, I didn’t realize the influence this would have on me.

After graduation I exhibited paintings and taught at TAFE for many years. Then I studied and professionally practiced Traditional Chinese Acupuncture for ten years alongside my art practice. Working with subtle energy systems of Five Element Acupuncture, naturally influenced my artwork.


Throughout the 1980’s and 1990’s I worked as a stills photographer on documentary film and book projects with Aboriginal elders and began to see expression of that elemental energy in their stories, song-lines and country, this changed the way I viewed landscape.


Some photographic projects that personally influenced me were the documentary “Flight of the Windhorse” about the first Australian Himalayan hot-air ballooning expedition in Nepal in 1985 (my introduction to Tibetan Buddhism). Photo research and photography for the book “Burnum Burnum’s Aboriginal Australia – A Traveller’s Guide” produced for the Bi-Centenary in 1988. The documentary “Kakadu Man” about Bill Neidjie, of the Bunitj clan Gagudju language group of northern Kakadu in 1990. (he invited me back to draw and paint his country).

In 1992, two favourite assignments as photographer were for the Sydney visit of the 14th Dalai Lama of Tibet and photographing the handover ceremony for the remains of Mungo Lady at Lake Mungo, both in 1992.


Lake Mungo, like Kakadu, became a place that draws me back and I have produced and exhibited paintings, drawings, etchings and photographs from these places over the years. I always took a sketch pad, pencils, inks and crayons with me to sketch during breaks from photographing. Back home in the studio, many paintings, works on paper, experiments with etching and chine-colle came about because of these projects and journeys. Initially I worked with painting, printmaking and photography as individual practices, now I equally enjoy mixed media.

Desert Dreaming, 1988, two colour plate etching, 39.5 x 50cm, edition 25


In 2000, the Museum and Art Gallery of the Northern Territory included me in their exhibition “Artists in the Field: A Retrospective’ and bought one of my drawings for their collection.

In 2001, the Manly Art Gallery and Museum presented a survey show of my work based on 13 years of desert journeys called “Alchemic Wilderness: a survey 1988 – 2001- Lake Mungo, Desert and Kakadu”. It included photographs, drawings, etchings and paintings. They acquired an etching for their collection.


I decided to investigate Tibetan Buddhist ideas of the Five Elements as a portal into concepts of landscape, (including Australian Indigenous) for the Master of Philosophy, Visual Arts Graduate Program at ANU. I completed five bodies of work from landscapes as diverse as Lake Mungo (earth) Mystery Bay (water) Central Western Desert (fire,) Glasshouse Mountains (air) and Space as the fundamental basis of all the elements … inner space, outer space, the bardo, pictorial space, mind space. Chinese, Indian and Tibetan cultures have variations in their philosophical and visual traditions of the Five Elements. This was an opportunity to examine the diverse knowledge systems and spiritual practices I have engaged in over many years and explore how my Buddhist practice interfaces with the methodology of my art practice. I actively reviewed my painting practice as a contemplative art practice and investigated traditional and contemporary Australian, European and Tibetan artists. This research became part of my exegesis titled “Contemplation and Immersion: Exploring the Five Elements and Australian Landscape” awarded in 2020. My work is suffused with Buddhist philosophy and overlaid with environmental concern.


Carmen Ky, 2019, Graduate exhibition SOAD Gallery, ANU Canberra.

To see more of Carmen’s work go HERE.


Filed Under: Artist's Talk Tagged With: Buddhist philosophy, Carmen Ky, chine colle, Dalai Lama, Etching, Kakadu, Lake Mungo., Manly Art Gallery and Museum, mixed media, National Art School, painting, Photography, printmaking, The Five Elements, Tibetan Buddhism, Traditional Chinese Acupuncture

Getting to know our members: Denise Scholz-Wulfing

October 4, 2021 by Anthea Boesenberg Leave a Comment

Denise Scholz-Wulfing in her home studio.

Denise has lived and worked in Europe and has travelled extensively throughout Asia, but she has always returned to her home in Sydney. After completing a B.A. in Visual Art from COFA in 1983, she continued her art practice, moving from painting and drawing to printmaking, (specifically etching) over the last 15 years. 

Her work is figurative and narrative in style and draws inspiration from her travels and the art that she had seen during those travels. She has taken particular delight in, and has been inspired by, the work of artists such as Pieter Bruegel and William Hogarth. She finds further inspiration in the world around her and uses various narratives to explore ideas, feelings and emotions. 

Her most recent etchings are strongly influenced by the purchase of land in the country and, while still populated by people, the images explore the bush, its landscape, iconography and symbolism.

Please visit the Artist’s page to see the range of her work: https://sydneyprintmakers.com.au/portfolio/denise-scholz-wulfing/

Denise Scholz-Wulfing - Paddocks with Gum Trees. Taylors Flat
Denise Scholz-Wulfing, Paddocks with Gum Trees, Taylors Flat, 2017 etching, 29x42cm

Denise describes her Practice:

My printmaking practice has developed over the years as I have refined my etching technique. My approach to etching is traditional, working with copper and zinc plates, and acid or ferric chloride. After applying a hard ground to the plate I then scratch the image onto the plate, I do this many times to develop the line work and in doing so the tonal contrast of my images. I then refine the image by adding aquatint to increase the tonal value. Generally, I work in black and white or sepia on a cream paper for the drama, contrast and clarity that this brings to my prints.


For me etching is the ideal tool to develop my drawn ideas. I have long admired the work of figurative artists who are moral or social and commentators. These artist/printmakers such a Pieter Bruegel, William Hogarth, William Blake and Francisco Goya, use drawing as a central part of their practice creating ‘stages’ on which their characters play. Often inspired directly by these artists I reference Biblical or mythological stories and combine them with personal imagery to give my etched images an extra dimension. 

Over the past few years I have increasingly used the landscape and natural environment as a metaphor for issues which are foremost in society, such as climate change and environmental degradation.


I continue the search for the ideal combination of subject and form, experimenting lately with collaging and reworking old prints into mixed media constructions.

Denise Scholz-Wulfing, Bird &, mixed media, etching, collage, wood, 20 x 40cm.

Filed Under: Artist Portfolio, Artist's Talk, Artists Profiles Tagged With: collage, Denise Scholtz Wulfing, Etching, iconography, Landscape, mixed media, Pieter Bruegel, William Hogarth

Chaos and Order: Anna Russell, Anthea Boesenberg and Rhonda Nelson

July 11, 2019 by Anthea Boesenberg Leave a Comment

Filed Under: Exhibitions Tagged With: Anna Russell, Anthea Boesenberg, ceramics, Chaos and Order, Felicity Hall, intaglio, mixed media, monotype, relief, Rhonda Nelson, woodblock

Laura Stark: Vestige, Cockatoo Revisited

January 16, 2019 by sydprint Leave a Comment

Filed Under: Exhibitions Tagged With: Broadhurst Gallery, Cockatoo Island, cranes, Hazelhurst, Laura Stark, mixed media, Vestige

Robyn Waghorn and Laura Stark : Landscape Reconfigured

July 3, 2016 by sydprint Leave a Comment

Invite Landscape Reconfigured  (1)

Filed Under: Exhibitions Tagged With: Gymea., Hazelhurst Regional Gallery, Landscape Reconfigured, Laura Stark, mixed media, Robyn Waghorn, Ruth Burgess

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