FOCUS ::: Cold Blooded: eX de Medici @ Drill Hall Gallery



eX de Medici, Cure for Pain, 2010-2011, watercolour on paper, 114 x 415 cm, private collection, Sydney (image courtesy Drill Hall Gallery)
 
Cold Blooded: eX de Medici at the Drill Hall Gallery brings together some of the artist’s recent works, including a large panoramic, Cure for pain, 2010. This work has sort of championed de Medici’s oeuvre in terms of recognisability, thanks to various press reviews and gallery marketing material. The work is impressive in both its size and intricate detail, and represents something quite utterly encompassing. This effect is founded on a set of layered binaries; nature/man-made, peace/violence, life/death. 

De Medici’s fresco-like work details symbols of war in a study of military armour over a history of violence. Helmets from previous wartime intersect engulfing foliage of poppies and pigeons. The placement of armour alongside this specific flora and fauna pay consideration to the ways natural life is inducted into a nationally recognised system of meaning where poppies and pigeons become natural relics of wartime. The commentary associated with man-made manufacturing (product and culture) and its impacts on the natural world circles the work. It expands from a relevant but cliché conversation about attempts to destroy opposing human ideals at the expense of the landscape, to a more focused examination of the integration of human and nature. This is also illustrated in the comparatively historical/biological study of helmets as they evolve over time, alongside the varied species of flora and fauna. The study of these entities (history/biology) is a continuation of de Medici’s previous work. The artist has worked with watercolour to achieve intricately rendered compositions; another binary where a traditionally conservative medium is applied to depict existential and politically-charged themes. 

De Medici worked initially as a tattoo artist with her own parlour in Canberra. One of her most well-known subjects, Geoff Ostling wears a skin of de Medici’s tattooed botanical studies (native Australian flora). Ostling intends to have his skin displayed in a gallery once he passes away; continuing the life of his skin as de Medici’s canvas. In 2000, De Medici undertook work at the CSIRO, recording moth species. The artist’s experience tattooing skin, depicting native flora and working within the context of scientific illustration at the CSIRO is evident in Cold Blood: eX de Medici. These paintings have precision and fine meticulous quality that will reward an inquisitive viewer.

Cold Blooded: eX de Medici
Drill Hall Gallery
28 June – 11 August 2013

eX de Medici is represented by Sullivan + Strumpf, Sydney

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