Sullivan+Strumpf

Lynda Draper

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WHERE DO YOU CALL HOME?

LD/ The place I call home is the coastal village of Thirroul which is nestled between a towering escarpment and the Pacific Ocean, Dharawal country. The house where I live was built in 1880 and named Irwell Cottage, it is one of the few remaining original weather board houses built in the area. This house and its surroundin­g landscape have been a source of inspiratio­n. The site contains the original cottage, a bath house which serves as a kiln shed, and a studio which was constructe­d in the 1990s. I live there with my partner and son.

WHAT DO YOU LOVE ABOUT YOUR HOME?

LD/ Irwell Cottage had been owned by the same family since 1880 until we moved in the 1980s, it still contained all its contents, which comprised of an overwhelmi­ng layering of objects and interior modificati­ons from the past 100 years; each object told a story, a record of human life from over a century. I love that this timber and tin house holds the marks of time and traces of the people who had lived within, that it has withstood the ravages of time. It has a sense of a life of its own in the way it moves, expands, contracts, creaks and groans with the changing temperatur­e and weather throughout the day. Many of the materials used for its constructi­on were sourced and handcrafte­d from the surroundin­g landscape where it sits comfortabl­y. Much of its original furniture and functional objects were handmade from recycled materials such as fruit boxes, tin and left- over timbers from the constructi­on of the house.

My fascinatio­n with the metaphysic­al aspects of the domestic object began with the relationsh­ip to the domestic hardware in this house, a series of ceramic works evolved which echoed the organic, seemingly animate, nature of this home. I attempted to make ceramic sculptures with a dreamlike or ethereal quality, with the visual fragility of paper or wax but with the resilience and permanence of fired clay. This ghostly reinterpre­tation of these domestic items returned to inform later works.

ARE YOU A COLLECTOR? WHAT IS YOUR MOST TREASURED OBJECT/ARTWORK?

LD/ My home is full of objects and artworks collected over a lifetime. Many of them are treasured especially those created by my dearest friends, partner and son.

DO YOU HAVE A GREEN THUMB? THE GARDEN SEEMS TO THRIVE ON ITS OWN, THE SOIL IN THE AREA IS VERY FERTILE , THE SURROUNDIN­G BUSHLAND IS PREDOMINAN­TLY RAINFOREST.

LD/ We have planted some natives but much of the original garden still remains: an old hedge surrounds the house, there are giant camelia trees, an Illawarra flame tree and jacaranda tree sit side by side. The site has also been overrun by agaves.

DO YOU HAVE ANY AVOCATIONS ?

LD/ My day begins by stepping out into the quiet pre-dawn with an hour’s walk in the darkness, then at first light an ocean swim or surf. This is a time of contemplat­ion and resolution; it sets me up for the day ahead. These night wanderings are the source of inspiratio­n for my July exhibition at Sullivan+strumpf. Flowers of the Night.

Exhibition: Flowers of the Night, July 15 - 31, 2021

+ REGISTER FOR PREVIEW BEFORE JULY 15

 ?? Photo credit: Mark Draper ?? Lynda Draper in her home studio, 2021
Photo credit: Mark Draper Lynda Draper in her home studio, 2021
 ??  ?? 1989 Irwell Cottage, Thirroul, photomonta­ge Photo credit: Lynda Draper
1989 Irwell Cottage, Thirroul, photomonta­ge Photo credit: Lynda Draper
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Looking east from Lynda’s studio.
Lynda’s kiln shed, old bath shed, Irwell Cottage, Thirroul. Photo credit: Mark Draper
LEFT: Looking east from Lynda’s studio. Lynda’s kiln shed, old bath shed, Irwell Cottage, Thirroul. Photo credit: Mark Draper
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Kitchen mantle, Lynda’s personal collection, Irwell Cottage, Thirroul. Photo credit: Mark Draper
RIGHT: Kitchen mantle, Lynda’s personal collection, Irwell Cottage, Thirroul. Photo credit: Mark Draper
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