Painting No. 44 – Title “My Melbourne” Story: This Painting was inspired by a series of photos I had taken in June 2009 consisting of different buildings/locations within the city of Melbourne (Australia). I was so inspired by the colour and architectural contrasts Melbourne shows off! After living in Melbourne now for over 40 years, the development of Melbourne has been amazing. Melbourne – Australia has so much to offer and very easy to get around to see. Each time I go into the city of Melbourne I find it has something new to share!
Painting No. 44 – Title “My Melbourne” by Abstract Artist Karen Robinson Oct 2009/June 2010 – by Abstract Artist: Karen Robinson All images are protected by copyright laws!
Below is a photo showing how I used blue tape to assist with my arts practise. It takes many months to complete one abstract painting such as this painting. Each colour I leave to dry thoroughly before commencing on with the next. I apply three layers of acrylic paint to give the colour a rich look!
Use of Scotch-Blue Painters tape to define lines within Painting No. 44 Titled “My Melbourne” by Abstract Artist: Karen Robinson NB: All images are protected by copyright laws!
Below are the set of photos I had taken and used as a source of inspiration for this particular painting. NB: Please hover over the photo to view details of the image!
No. 14 – My Melbourne – Near South Melbourne Market – June 09 Photo taken by Karen Robinson Abstract Artist NB All images are protected by copyright laws!
No. 12 – My Melbourne – Ian Potter Building – June 09 Photo taken by Karen Robinson Abstract Artist NB All images are protected by copyright laws
No. 13 – My Melbourne – Building in Paris End of Collins Street – June 09 Photo taken by Karen Robinson Abstract Artist NB All images are protected by copyright laws!
No. 11 – My Melbourne – Flinders Street Station – June 09 Photo taken by Karen Robinson Abstract Artist NB All images are protected by copyright laws!
No. 10 – My Melbourne – Carrot Sticks next to Tullamarine Freeway – June 09 Photo taken by Karen Robinson Abstract Artist NB All images are protected by copyright laws!.JPG
No. 9 – My Melbourne – Docklands June 09 Photo taken by Karen Robinson Abstract Artist NB All images are protected by copyright laws.
No. 8 – My Melbourne – Customs Building – June 09 Photo taken by Karen Robinson Abstract Artist NB All images are protected by copyright laws
No. 7 – My Melbourne – Melbourne University – June 09 Photo taken by Karen Robinson Abstract Artist NB All images are protected by copyright laws!
No. 6 – My Melbourne – Yellow Cheese Stick over the Tullamarine Fwy 09 Photo taken by Karen Robinson Abstract Artist NB All images are protected by copyright laws!
No. 5 – My Melbourne – Work of Art at Docklands – June 09 Photo taken by Karen Robinson Abstract Artist NB All images are protected by copyright laws!
No. 4 – My Melbourne – Tower beside National Art Gallery 09 Photo taken by Karen Robinson Abstract Artist NB All images are protected by copyright laws!
No. 3 – My Melbourne – Spencer Street Station – June 09 Photo taken by Karen Robinson Abstract Artist NB All images are protected by copyright laws!
No. 2 – My Melbourne – South Melbourne Market – June 09 Photo taken by Karen Robinson Abstract Artist NB All images are protected by copyright laws!
No. 1 – My Melbourne – Catherdal opposite Federation Square – June 09 Photo taken by Karen Robinson Abstract Artist NB All images are protected by copyright laws!
I guess this painting really was/is about the love I have for Melbourne – my home, where I fell in love with a dear and great human being, married that person and now my husband for over 30 plus years; had two children, one daughter whom we cherish and my son, who so sadly was killed in a single vehicle crash in 2009. His loss broke our hearts. Melbourne holds many, many memories that are dear to me and this painting is a tribute to the joys I have experienced whilst living here…
Whilst you are here – please check outmy home page! My Art Therapy Journey – A window into the soul of an Abstract Artist through art therapy and storytelling…by Karen Robinson
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In June, 2014 I was the recipient of a Hume City Council Arts Award for ‘Professional Development Grant” in the category of Established Visual Artists (Melbourne, Australia).
Hume stated that in “2014 Hume Arts Awards received a significant number of applications, signifying the breadth and quality of artistic endeavours being undertaken throughout the municipality, especially among young people. The Awards not only provide an opportunity to recognise and celebrate the talent of local artists, but contribute to community strengthening by encouraging artists to articulate the value of their work and develop a future vision. The Awards likewise assist in promoting the profile of the arts in Hume and supports the building of Hume’s identity and sense of place, contributing to the important development of civic pride” (Hume City Council. June, 20).
It was a proud moment for me and my family and friends. I am very grateful to Hume City Council for this award and hope to be part of Hume community art programs to come!
Karen Robinson’s Hume City Council Arts 2014 Award NB All images are protected by copyright laws!
The abstract paintings below consists of the “Support Material” that I submitted with my application for a Professional Development Program grant.
Painting No. 26B – Title “Green Peace and Human Nature” Sept/Oct 2008 Acrylic on Canvas – by Abstract Artist: Karen Robinson NB: All images are protected by copyright laws!
Painting No. 26A – Title “Green Peace and Human Nature” Sept/Oct 2008 – by Abstract Artist: Karen Robinson NB: All images are protected by copyright laws!
Painting No. 31 – Title “Don’t Tread On Me” June 2009 – by Abstract Artist: Karen Robinson All images are protected by copyright laws!
Painting No. 32 – Title “On the Rails & Youthfulness” by Abstract Artist Karen Robinson – 2009 All images are protected by copyright laws!
Painting No. 37 – Title “The Dining Room Table” Aug 2009 – by Abstract Artist: Karen Robinson All images are protected by copyright laws!
Painting No. 38 – Title “A Bird of Paradise” Sept 2009 – by Abstract Artist: Karen Robinson All images are protected by copyright laws!
Painting No. 44 – Title “My Melbourne” by Abstract Artist Karen Robinson Oct 2009/June 2010 – by Abstract Artist: Karen Robinson All images are protected by copyright laws!
Painting No. 52 – Title “I’m Busy” 2011 – by Abstract Artist: Karen Robinson NB: All images are protected by copyright laws!
Painting No. 51 – Title “Valley of a Thousand Hills” June 2010/March 2011 – by Abstract Artist: Karen Robinson NB: All images are protected by copyright laws!
Painting No. 35 – Title “On the Rails & The Business End of Celebrating Melbourne’s Racing Festival Season” Painted Jan/Feb 2009
A good part of my art therapy journey has involved taking photos, which are part of my visual diary process that I use for inspiration, to create my abstract paintings and abstract digital photo paintings. During a of Melbourne – Australia’s famous racing seasons, I had the good fortune to be able to attend my sister’s Derby Day marquee function at Flemington Race Course 2008. Victoria Derby is a thoroughbred race and is the oldest classic race in Australia, it ran first in 1855 (Derby Day. 2014). Melbourne, once again, turned on a beautiful day with a clear blue sky! During this day, I took many photos of interesting people, in great outfits!
I took this photo below, of a lady enjoying herself in her work’s marquee which was located on “The Rails”. On “The Rails” is located right next to Flemington’s Race Track and is adjacent the finishing line where, if you are lucky enough to be there, you can see the horses close up and their jockeys in colourful silks. This lady’s striking hat and pose made for a good photo. Her hat was a particular inspiration for me. It had been designed by one of Melbourne’s most famous hat designers – Peter Jago!
Lady in striking Peter Jago Hat Derby Day Flemington Racecourse 2008, Melbourne, Australia. Photo taken by Karen Robinson-Abstract Artist NB All images are protected by copyright laws!
Below is the portrait abstract painting I did from the photo inspirations of that day. It is one of four that I painted for the 2008 Melbourne Racing Carnival. They consisted of this Painting No. 35 featured below and Paintings Nos. 32, 33, & 34 – please click hereto view!
Painting No. 35 – Title “On the Rails & The Business End of Celebrating Melbourne’s Racing Festival Season” Jan/Feb 2009 Acrylic on Canvas – 60cms Length x 60cms Wide x 3cms Deep – by Abstract Artist: Karen Robinson NB: All images are protected by copyright laws!
An important part of my art therapy process has been taking photos of people and places that I am most interested in. Looking through a camera lens and concentrating on framing up a story in the camera view finder, totally absorbs ones concentration. Spending the time reviewing them and deciding which will be a candidate for an abstract painting, also adds to the therapeutic process. I use photography as my visual diary for my abstract painting art work.
Melbourne Cup 2008 at Flemington Racecourse – Photo taken by Karen Robinson – Abstract Artist NB: All images are protected by copyright laws!
On the first Tuesday November 2008, I said to my husband, let’s go to the Melbourne Cup at Flemington Races – as I wanted to take a series of photos of this iconic Australian event. A number of days before hand, we had attended Derby Day at Flemington Races where I had taken a series of photos. I wanted to also capture photo images of the Melbourne Cup Day as well. These photos were used as a source of inspiration for four abstract paintings (Nos. 32, 33, 34 & 35). I have always loved fashion and the Melbourne Cup and for these reasons, it is certainly a stand out on Melbourne’s social calendar for socialites, politicians, Australia’s rich and famous; and the everyday Australian punter! The very first Melbourne Cup ran in 1875; a century and a half later it is still considered ‘the race that stops a nation’. For me this significant event is all about the horses and the fashion and on this day I took many photos of fabulously dressed women in their racing finery.
Melbourne Cup 2008 at Flemington Racecourse Photo taken by Karen Robinson – Abstract Artist NB: All images are protected by copyright laws!
My husband joined me to keep me company on this particular day. It was a beautiful day and once again Melbourne had turned on a great Australian Event!
Melbourne Cup 2008 at Flemington Racecourse – Photo taken by Karen Robinson – Abstract Artist NB: All images are protected by copyright laws!
I spotted a lady with a very large pinkish hat. This lady had a degree of gaiety and elegance. To me she seemed to epitomize the feeling of a Melbourne Cup Day. Later I was able to establish this grand lady was Helen Court! I loved her hat; the swath of material that had been manipulated into a work of art and topped with beautiful pink flowers, all in gorgeous pink – was very eye-catching,
Melbourne Cup 2008 – Helen Court – Lady in Fabulous Pink Hat Photo taken by Karen Robinson – Abstract Artist NB: All images are protected by copyright laws!
Melbourne Cup 2008 – Helen Court – Lady in Fabulous Pink Hat Photo taken by Karen Robinson – Abstract Artist NB: All images are protected by copyright laws!
These photos I took served as an inspiration for me and I painted this portrait of Helen Court. This portrait was one of four abstract paintings (Nos. 32, 33, 34 & 35) I did of different race goers during the 2008 Melbourne Racing Season.
Painting No. 34 – Title “Melbourne Cup & Australia’s National Celebration of Horse Racing” Jan/Feb 2009 Acrylic on Canvas 60cms Length x 60cms Wide x 3cms Deep – by Abstract Artist: Karen Robinson All images are protected by copyright laws!
During the process of sorting my photos, I also like to take the opportunity to be more creative and change their appearance by digital manipulation. For me they then become an Abstract Digital Photo Painting. This process totally engages the thinking processes and is a great pathway into using ‘art for therapy’.
Within my blogging process, I would like to take the opportunity to feature and discuss individually selected works I have painted in more depth. To show how art can give us a uncensored voice and allow us to express our feelings and emotions. It can be informative, evoke reactions and actions; it can leave us with a lasting impression! It can be therapeutic in its processes. Towards the end of this blog you will note that I have ventured to discuss another artist’s piece of art work which happens to correlate in some forms with this piece of my own art work.
The first of my paintings I would like to discuss is titled “Polluted Olympics” which I completed in 2008.
Painting No. 19 – Title “Polluted Olympics” July/Aug 2008 Acrylic on Canvas 92cms length x 122cms Wide x 3cms Deep – by Abstract Artist: Karen Robinson NB: All images are protected by copyright laws!
During my time working with a Australian company that afforded me the good fortune to be able to travel for my work, I had the opportunity to travel to China – Guangzhou during 2006-2007. Guangzhou is located on the Pearl River; is the capital and largest city of Guangdong province of the People’s Republic of China and with a population of more than 8.525 million people. That’s a lot of people! It was a major culture shock for me in many ways. One of the things that dismayed me most, was the dreadful air pollution. I could not see a sun shape during the day sky or a moon shape during the night sky; sadly just a dull polluted sky during my visits. I found this shocking as I live in a city, Melbourne Australia where we experience beautiful clear blue skies – most of the time. It served as a warming to me that we need to take air pollution very seriously, or we too could be a city like Guangzhou China in years to come.
“The International Olympic Committee chief praised China’s efforts, but reiterated that outdoor endurance events could be postponed if smog levels are too high” (the guardian, August 8 2008). Brown. J.F. (2008, August 8). The Guardian. AFP Getty Images. [Photograph No. brownafp460]. Retrieved May 22 2014 from http://www.theguardian.com/world/2008/aug/07/china.olympics2008
My inspiration for this painting “Polluted Olympics” came about in 2008, back in my home land Australia, Melbourne. I was viewing images of Beijing on TV, in relation to the forthcoming Beijing 2008 Olympic Games. Beijing is the capital of the People’s Republic of China with a population from 21,150,000 people which is almost the population for the whole of Australia. Note that the resident population of Australia according to the Australian Bureau of Statistics for 2014 is projected to be approximately 23,497,358! These TV images in relation to Beijing 2008 Olympic Games air pollution problems, took me back to my time in Guangzhou and my thoughts on the environmental effects of air pollution.
The central feature of my painting “Polluted Olympics” consisted of what has been nick named the “Bird’s Nest” which is Beijing’s official National Stadium. It was especially designed for use throughout the 2008 Summer Olympics and Paralympics. The following YouTube is an interesting documentary on the making of the “Bird’s Nest”.
Reference: National Geographic Channel. (2013, Apr 26). Megastructures – Beijing National Stadium – the Bird’s Nest. YouTube. Retrieved May 22, 2014 from http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bILacVZJRoU
The “Bird’s Nest” is an extraordinary feat of architecture, engineering and an ambitious design. For me, its is a work of art! A symbol of a new Beijing. It nestles proudly on the horizon of Beijing’s cityscape!
An aerial view shows the National Stadium, also known as the Bird’s Nest, at the Olympic Green in Beijing July 6, 2008. Picture taken July 6, 2008. REUTERS/Yu Shihai/Beijing Tourism Administration/Handout (CHINA) (BEIJING OLYMPICS 2008 PREVIEW). Retrieved May 22 2014 from http://beijingbirdsnest.wordpress.com/birds-nest-facts/
My painting “Polluted Olympics” portrays the visible shaping of the ‘Birds Nest’ architecture of sweeping lines and arches of metal. I coloured these with the olympic ring colours of blue, yellow, black, green and red which represent the five parts of the world that compete against each other. The grey colour, pooled in the centre of the painting, represents the air pollution and is also symbolic of “the ring of steel” that had also become a focal point of these olympic games.
I surrounded the outer edging of the painting “Polluted Olympics” with yellow which was representative of the sunniest of marketing ploys to portray all was well with the air quality at Beijing for the 2008 Olympics!
As I was preparing this blog and researching for images, I came across an interesting article about another artist in China call Kong Ning. The article was called “Artists in China strike blows against the smog” . “Kong Ning has devoted her life to creating art that expresses her feeling toward the environment she has watched deteriorate around her” (Whelan. May 20 2014). The deterioration is attributable to the over-reliance on coal-fired power plants and automobile emissions which is an every increasing problem leading to unimaginable smog and haze (Whelan. May 20 2014). Chinese people are finding creative ways to critique and document their deep concerns through performance art and public creative expression (Whelan. May 20 2014). This Chinese artist Kong Ning took her art featured below, to Tiananmen Square in protest to the air pollution to help highlight China’s pollution problems (Whelan. May 20 2014). “Kong Ning hopes to ‘leave her art for later generations’ while also warning people today of the dangers of neglecting their environment” and states “my main goal is to express… a desire to protect the environment and nature and life…because that is essentially all we have, right?” (Whelan. May 20 2014). I couldn’t have said it better myself and I have such a lot of respect for such an artist who bravely uses her art to promote messages for the greater good of her country.
“Kong Ning hopes to ‘leave her art for later generations’ while also warning people today of the dangers of neglecting their environment” and states “my main goal is to express… a desire to protect the environment and nature and life…because that is essentially all we have, right?” (Whelan. May 20 2014). I couldn’t have said it better myself and I have such a lot of respect for this artist who bravely uses her art to promote messages for the greater good of her country.
Whilst you are here – please check out my my home page!I hope you will continue to join on my art therapy journey…Karen Robinson
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Please share this with family, friends, workmates and interested community groups - thank you:
It is interesting to dwell on what is ‘art therapy’ or putting it differently, can we use ‘art as therapy’. Meaning, we don’t need to produce it ourselves alone, to gain a therapeutic benefit but we can be a viewer of someone else’s art work and come away with a different prospective, we can be enlightened, and we can be enriched from such an experience with art. In being able to do this, we need more help with being able to understand the meaning of the art work! The meaning intended by the artist firstly and most importantly, I feel…
Painting No. 45F – Title “A Fractured Life” Feb/Oct 2012 – by Abstract Artist: Karen Robinson NB: All images are protection by copyright laws!
NB: To view the above painting and it’s painting story, please click on here
Alain de Botton of The School of Life, in his video ‘Art as Therapy’ talks about how we should make a start to use art to “elevate our sorrows, bring us hope, give us courage” and use art as “a resource, a living resource, that is there for our hearts and not an academic or historical exercise” (Alain de Botton. December 3, 2013). He argues that art can be used to help us with our inner most problems of the soul (Alain de Botton. 2013). From my own experience, this has been the case and can be well appreciated within my abstract painting stories.
Welcome to my blog about my art therapy journey and about how others use art for therapy. My art therapy practice consists of abstract painting and what I like to call abstract digital photo painting. I have learnt that abstract painting and the act of writing an accompanying painting story for each abstract painting, has become an important form of self-expression for me. The process of making digital abstract photo paintings was just as therapeutic as painting but without the act of producing an accompanying story.
Painting No. 12 – Title “Coloured DNA” Jan/Feb 2008 – by Abstract Artist: Karen Robinson NB: All images are protected by copyright laws!
My abstract painting has proven to me, to be a very powerful way of being able to communicate deeply personal feelings which otherwise would never have been expressed. During my journey, art has become a way to examine and heal emotional quagmires; and as I looked back over my work, I found it was a window into my sole as an artist.
Abstract Digital Photo Painting No. 64A – Titled “Queenscliff Point Lonsdale ADAP” April 2010 by Abstract Artist: Karen Robinson NB: All images are protected by copyright laws!
I am hoping that by sharing my art therapy journey, will inspire others, to take up art therapy to find their voice – in order to be able to move forward in most difficult of times. Art Therapy has brought me now to a much better place where I find myself being able to seek joy in each day. As an ongoing process, I will be blogging about my art therapy journey “moving forward” and expand on how others have used/are using art therapy to assist physical and emotional well-being. I hope you will join me!…Karen Robinson
Whilst you are here – please check outmy home page! My Art Therapy Journey – A window into the soul of an Abstract Artist through art therapy and storytelling…by Karen Robinson
-37.814107144.963280
Please share this with family, friends, workmates and interested community groups - thank you: