Wednesday, 24 April 2019

All Bound Together: Small Works by Raemon Rolfe


From the Tide Pool to the Stars No.5
An on-going theme for me is our connectedness with all living things and with the rocks, water, air and time.  

Inspiration for these works came from a re-reading of Steinbeck's The Log from the Sea of Cortez, 1941.  He writes …

       "....all things are one thing and that one thing is all things—plankton, a shimmering phosphorescence on the sea and the spinning planets and an expanding universe, all bound together by the elastic string of time. It is advisable to look from the tide pool to the stars and then back to the tide pool again."  (Steinbeck)



Richard Feynman’s poem, I Stand at the Sea was a source of ideas for the works in my 2018 show and the verse below inspired my new work.  

Deep in the sea all molecules repeat the patterns 
Of one another till complex new ones are formed. 
They make others like themselves 

And a new dance starts. 

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Further inspiration came from Nick Lane's book  The Vital Question:  Why is Life the Way it is,2015. Lane’s hypothesis provides an insight into the very beginning of life four billion years ago. 
All complex life on earth shares a common ancestor, a cell that arose from simple bacterial progenitors on just one occasion in four billion years. Was this a freak accident, or did other ‘experiments’ in the evolution of complexity fail? We don’t know. We do know that this common ancestor was already a very complex cell. It had more or less the same sophistication as one of your cells, and it passed this great complexity on not just to you and me but to all its descendants, from trees to bees." Nick Lane

According to Lane: rock, water and CO2 are the shopping list for life, and that the perfect conditions for life occurred deep in the sea in alkaline hydrothermal vents formed when seawater percolated down into the mantel rocks and reacted with olivine before bubbling back up again and forming large, warm, porous vents on the seafloor.


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Media
Encaustic is the main medium used in the composite works. Encaustic paint comes down to us from Ancient Greece and may be the earliest form of easel painting. It is made by melting beeswax with dammar resin and adding pigment. The molten paint is applied quickly to the substrate and each layer is fused with a heat gun. In these works I’ve applied other materials to the surface, such as graphite and gold dust and then applied shellac and burnt it with a blowtorch to create texture. 
The resulting surfaces are protected with a special encaustic sealer.
Some of these works may also include metals, sand, letterpress and collage elements often sourced from Powell  Native Animals of New Zealand 1959; I've had this much-loved little book since childhood.  

The five slightly larger works are in oil paint with cold wax, pigment, sand, marble dust, metal patinas, letterpress, and are on oil paper mounted on 300 gsm watercolour paper.





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Thursday, 12 July 2018

New work, 2018: An Atom in the Universe



'Mountains of Molecules'

'No life to Entertain'

'Tortured by Energy'

'A New Dance Starts'

'A Pattern ever more Intricate'

'Matter with Curiosity'

'An Atom in the Universe'

The idea that the atoms we are made of have consciousness and curiosity which enables us to wonder about our place in the universe is the theme of this series of seven small diptychs. The poem ‘An Atom in the Universe’  by Theoretical Physicist Richard Feynman (Poem and link below) provided the inspiration and the titles of the works.  I first heard about Richard Feynman at the superb Science Show presented by Prof Brian Cox and British comedian, Robin Ince, in Wellington last year.

Media: oil paint, wax medium, sand, ash, marble dust, collage on acrylic emulsion on board.  Size: 440x290mm 

The Exhibition opens Friday 13th at  5-7pm and will run until August 1st at
Taylor-Jensen Fine Arts   Contact Stuart Schwartz    finearts@taylor-jensen.co.nz  06 3554278
or me at  raemonrolfe@xtra.co.nz

By Richard P. Feynman

There are the rushing waves 
mountains of molecules 
each stupidly minding its own business 
trillions apart 
yet forming white surf in unison. 

Ages on ages 
before any eyes could see 
year after year 
thunderously pounding the shore as now. 
For whom, for what? 
On a dead planet 
with no life to entertain. 

Never at rest 
tortured by energy 
wasted prodigiously by the sun 
poured into space 
A mite makes the sea roar. 

Deep in the sea 
all molecules repeat 
the patterns of one another 
till complex new ones are formed. 
They make others like themselves 
and a new dance starts. 

Growing in size and complexity 
living things 
masses of atoms 
DNA, protein 
dancing a pattern ever more intricate. 

Out of the cradle 
onto dry land 
here it is 
standing: 
atoms with consciousness; 
matter with curiosity. 

Stands at the sea, 
wonders at wondering: I 
a universe of atoms 
an atom in the universe.

Saturday, 26 May 2018

Recent work: Unseen Processes


Unseen No.1     2017
Oil paint with cold wax medium and other media on board
750x550mm plus frame
Unseen No.2       2017
Oil paint with cold wax medium and other media on board
750x550mm plus frame



The processes that occur in the universe at the smallest end of the scale have been a continuing source of inspiration for me.  In his book of poems ‘On the Nature of things’,  Roman poet and philosopher Lucretius Carus wrote in c90BC that ‘nature ever by unseen processes works’. He was referring to the theories of the ancient Greek atomists 500 years before that, who believed that all matter was made of atoms or indivisible particles.   

In modern particle physics, the uncertain world of quantum mechanics explains how all matter and energy in the universe behaves on an atomic and subatomic level.  


Light, Time and Space        2017/18
Oil paint with cold wax medium and other media on board
750x550mm plus frame

To make these works I’ve used oil paint mixed with wax medium and incorporated particles of materials such as sand, ash and marble dust to build up textures as well as add meaning.  

Many thanks to David Lupton for taking such great photos of my work.



Tuesday, 16 January 2018

'Beach Days' new work for Manawatu Art and Garden Trail, January 20-21 2018


Waikanae with Rain
Oil paint, cold wax and marble dust on board & frame, with polymer casting, sand, 

metal patina & gold leaf
Plimmerton Heads: Late Afternoon
Oil paint, cold wax and marble dust on board & frame, with polymer casting, metal patina and gold leaf

Waikanae: Sun setting over Kapiti Island
Oil paint, cold wax and marble dust on board & frame, with 
metal patina & gold leaf
Waikanae, Late Afternoon
Oil paint, cold wax and marble dust on board & frame, with polymer casting, sand, 

metal patina & gold leaf

Waikanae Beach: Passing Shower
Oil paint, cold wax and marble dust on board & frame, sand, 
metal patina & gold leaf

Kapiti Coast Looking South
Oil paint, cold wax and marble dust on board & frame, with polymer casting,

metal patina & gold leaf

Raumati Beach: Setting Sun
Oil paint, cold wax and marble dust on board & frame, with polymer casting,

metal patinas & gold leaf

Foxton Beach with Kapiti Island
Oil paint, cold wax and marble dust on board & frame, with polymer casting, sand, 

metal patina & gold leaf

Beach holidays over several years provided the imagery for this series of small mixed media works.  Gazing at the sea and contemplating my place in the universe was the underlying motivation.  I like the way Amercian physicist, Richard Feynman, put it in the last verse of his poem  'Atoms With Consciouness, Matter With Curiosity'.


Stands at the sea, 
wonders at wondering: I
a universe of atoms
an atom in the universe.



Foxton Heads: From the Boat Ramp No.2
Encaustic and oil paint with polymer casting, on board,  140x190mm
Palm Beach, Waiheke Island: morning after a storm
Encaustic and oil paint with polymer casting, on board,  140x190mm
Crossing Hauraki Gulf
Encaustic and oil paint with polymer casting, on board.   140x190mm     SOLD
Foxton Heads: From the Boat Ramp No. 1
Encaustic and oil paint with polymer casting, on board,  140x190mm
Waikanae with Sun Setting over Kapiti No. 1
Encaustic and oil paint with polymer casting, on board,  140x190mm           SOLD
Paekakariki: Late Afternoon
Encaustic and oil paint with polymer casting, on board,  140x190mm             SOLD
Foxton Beach: Afternoon
Encaustic and oil paint with polymer casting, on board,  140x190mm
Waikanae: Sun Setting over Kapiti Island  No. 2
Encaustic and oil paint with polymer casting, on board,  140x190mm 
Raumati with Passing Shower
Encaustic and oil paint with polymer casting, on board,  140x190mm
Cloud, Land and Sea
Encaustic and oil paint with polymer casting, on board,  140x190mm
My gallery will be open from 10.00am to 4.00pm both days.  Tickets for the Art Trail are available from FADAS, Feilding
You are welcome to visit my gallery any time by appoinment.    phone