
Kim Walmsley - Toowoomba
Kim Walmsley’s art is an expression of her connections with her traditions and cross-cultural experiences and her connectedness to the earth and its elements. Kim explores numerous mediums and design elements and has a distinctive and original style. She creates a balance between shades of light and dark through the softness and vibrancies of her unique interpretation of the land and beauty of Aboriginal spirituality with strong linear qualities.
“It’s not just about painting. My ability to create is connected to my heritage. Being Aboriginal is a gift and being an artist is my purpose. My role is to play one small part in the regeneration of our people’s connection to their spiritual identity.
I was adopted and raised by wonderful people and have lived a life that has taught me to appreciate and respect many cultures and people.
The older we get, the wiser we should be. We can truly flourish and appreciate our purpose and goals to create happiness from within as a part of the cycle of life.
My art is about connecting to the elements, to people and to stories.
Knowing where you come from can make such a difference in developing a sense of belonging and wellbeing.
Kim as a proud Mununjali/ Wiradjuri woman now calls Toowoomba home and acknowledges the Jarowair and Giabul people as the traditional custodians of the land, like many of the other Aboriginal people who have travelled from their country to live in Toowoomba.
The people of the Mununjali were visitors to this land many years ago. Attending ceremonies on the outskirts of Toowoomba and festivals in the Bunya Mountains with many groups from around Queensland and beyond, Mununjali has a clear connection with this land and its past.
Image to right: Baiame and Kim Walmsley during fabrication.
Braham Stevens - Bamboo Mountains, Far North Queensland
Braham Stevens (born 1969) - an Australian based site-responsive collaborative artist whose captivating sculptures and thought-provoking interventions are dramatic in scale and daring in their form. The artist’s choice of advanced materials, highly contrasting finishes and bespoke surface treatment are as important as the sculpture’s bold fluid aesthetic.
The artist’s contemporary large-scale multi-media practice is geared towards the architectural and public domains - predominately transforming heavy-gauge advanced metals/alloys, oversize random stone and hardwood into bold fluid sculptural form. A focus of enquiry into contours, fractals, regenerating cyclical patterns and natures diverse forms of fluid expression informs the artist’s evocative biomorphic signature-aesthetic, that defines vivid negative space through multi-layered positive reinforcement.
The resulting inherent dichotomy imbues his artwork with an engaging depth, character, tactility and visually striking readable at distance multidimensional detail - executed with a level of artisan craftsmanship and refinement not often seen at that scale. The resolved and integrated outcome, acting as a powerful complementary counterpoint to activate the landscape, architecture and built environment, setting up a potent site specific dialogue, tension and multi-layered connection to place.