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HEATHERMATTHEW

  • Portfolio
  • News
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    • about me
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Standing in front of my Forest Floor painting from 2022 at BigCi artist residency, Bilpin, NSW.

Walk the Talk

March 30, 2025 in Environment, Australia

When you know that it is time to take action, to ‘walk the talk’ and go out on a limb. Literally! The exciting news is I’m off to takayna/Tarkine in the wild north west of Tasmania to make art about the threatened ancient rainforests in the wilderness. Am I nervous? Hell yeah!

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Tags: environment, Tasmania

Playtime at Bundanon Art Museum, Illaroo, NSW.

Fuzzy Felt Play

March 22, 2025 in Australia, Art

When a visit to a famous Australian art museum inspires childish art play, you know that it was worth the effort to visit. Bundanon was gifted to the Australian people by artist Arthur Boyd and his wife Yvonne in 1993. When I finally got to visit it, I experienced how the Australian landscape continues to inspire artists to capture the spirit of the bush, even in fuzzy felt.

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Tags: art exhibitions

Thin Ice - WIP - scroll artist book

Scrolling

March 16, 2025 in Iceland, Artist Books

What happens in the polar regions affects us worldwide. I was reminded of this when stitching the words in my scroll artist book, from ice crack to melt and flood. Having narrowly avoided flooding from the recent cyclone event, this scroll book is a narrative of our climate crisis and its impact.

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Tags: Iceland, artist books

Rescued 2025. Paperpulp, mud, ink, paper and stitching on hessian sandbag.

Sandbagged

March 09, 2025 in Resilience, Environment

Sandbags have a particular resonance with me. In February 2017 my art studio in South Murwillumbah was flooded in the aftermath of ex-tropical cyclone Debbie. My daughter and granddaughter lived upstairs above the studio and were forced to evacuate by rescue boat as the waters rose higher.

Floods, fires and climate crisis have become the themes of my artworks since that time. Melting glaciers, avalanche landslides and coastal erosion from high tide storm surges have also featured. It’s like the art of disaster!

Now I am making art with sandbags which survived the floods of 2022 when my house on the coast narrowly escaped flood waters on the street. It’s been three years since that event and now the threat of flooding has increased with the advent of Cyclone Alfred.

As I write this we are waiting for the cyclone to reach landfall. Many areas in the district are already without power. Trees are down, the creek is rising. Disaster could happen any time now. It’s a waiting game. So my blog post is being written while I still have power and internet.

The news cycles are filled with doom, gloom and fear. It has held me in its vice of paralysis. No creative work, too much movie watching and mindlessly scrolling social media. I had to break the cycle.

What better way to do that than with finishing off my sandbag pieces which have stalled in their resolution. I unearthed the four of them. I had started stitching one of them in red not long after my knee operation last year. The stitches were angry and I could feel that anger seeping through.

I needed calm in the midst of the cyclonic turmoil all around. I asked advice online and was advised to unpick the red stitching which had stalled its completion. That sage advice was all I needed to get going again. Once unpicked the piece became a clean slate ready to receive new energy.

I loved the unpicked threads sticking up. All they needed was to be glued down in place. This became the first sandbag artwork finished. When I took a photo of it I realised it looked like a flotilla of boats, rescue boats from that first 2017 flood. I had a title!

Three more sandbag artworks to go. I started with the second one, realising that I was experiencing the same feeling that I had experienced when I created the artworks for my Deluge exhibition; stitching flood-marked papers together to create a narrative of hope and resilience.

Stitching as healing. I darned the little lattices of exposd hessian. They reminded me of the lattices of Islamic architecture , of the harems where women lived, their faces unseen.The shape was like an upturned teardrop, and the title presented itself as Aftermath.

The next sandbagged artwork with its circular ‘walking’ stitches was about the waiting, this in-between time as we ‘walk around in circles’ not knowing what to do next until Alfred arrives. It became Waiting for Alfred. Now I am working on Surge, hoping that the storm surge which is predicted will be gentle with us.

The act of stitching has stilled my mind, resolved my artworks and given me new creative inspiration for another project. I know that starting somewhere, anywhere, creates its own momentum. All I had to do was thread a needle and begin.

Aftermath 2025. Paperpulp, mud, ink, paper and stitching on hessian sandbag.

Surge (work in progress) 2025. Paperpulp, mud, ink, paper and stitching on hessian sandbag.

Tags: create through crisis, climate crisis

Forest Family 2021 - paper pulp painting created during my residency at BigCi, Bilpin .

Forest Whispers

March 02, 2025 in Artist Residencies, Trees

When trees whisper their secrets, who listens? As an artist making work about the environment, I feel called to bear witness to the trees and forests threatened by logging, environmental destruction and pollution. Trees may help save our planet from destruction. Helping them survive is a reciprocal action.

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Tags: papermaking, environment

Wet prints drying of rusted papers with cyanotype prints

Down the Rabbit Hole

February 23, 2025 in Photography, Creativity

Like Alice discovering wonderland, I have dropped down the rabbit hole of research into alternative photographic processes. Shocked at my ignorance relating to silver extraction for the photographic industry, I am discovering ‘kitchen compounds’ and botanical processes that promise to be an alternative method of image production.

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Tags: cyanotypes, experimenting

Detail of a cyanotype print using blackberry leaves as a stencil

Never Say Never

February 16, 2025 in Photography, Artist Residencies

Pest or Passion? I’ve had both reactions to the humble blackberry. But never would I have thought it could lead me down an interesting path of discovery about alternative photographic practices. Yet I now find myself regarding this plant with new eyes.

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Tags: artist residencies, cyanotypes

Experimenting in style - cyanotype workshop participants showing off their creations

Once in a Blue Moon

February 09, 2025 in Photography

I never wanted to be a teacher as I was considered a ‘disruptive’ student even in primary school. So holding a workshop is really a ‘once in a blue moon’ event for me. Yet I did hold one this week as part of my mini artist residency in Mornington, Victoria. I learnt so much from the participants’ creative experiments that I have discovered new techniques for making cyanotype prints.

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Tags: cyanotypes, workshops

Altered book inside page with morning pages and photogram collage

This Too Shall Pass

February 02, 2025 in Resilience, Time

Liberation comes in many forms. Mine came from tearing up years of my Morning Pages journals and immersing them in a vat of water ready to turn into paper. Not only the start of a new project but also a new way to look at the impermanence of life. That when things feel too hard to bear, “this too shall pass”.

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Tags: time, create through crisis

The stress/rest images of my heart 2022

Stress or Rest

January 26, 2025 in history, Resilience

The heart in stress or at rest? When we feel engulfed in chaos, we are challenged to ‘take heart’. On this Australia/Invasion Day in Australia, I am remembering all the protests of the past decades which have resulted in changing government policies or mainstream attitudes. The pictures of my heart remind me of the beating heart of Planet Earth, connecting us all on our one world.

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Tags: create through crisis, history
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