Media release – July 30, 2008
Outstanding
Australian artist Trisha Lambi shows off her best nudes at Kerala Gallery,
Northcote, Melbourne
Outstanding
Australian oil artist Trisha Lambi shows some of her best nudes at Kerala
Gallery, Northcote in Melbourne this month.
Lambi became a
fulltime artist after her second child started kindergarten in 2003.
As well as Florence,
in Italy, she has successfully exhibited in Brisbane, Sydney, Melbourne and
Wollongong and her works are in private collections in Australia, Spain,
China, Germany, Ireland, Canada, Cyprus and the United States.
Lambi has won many
art awards in Australia and around the world.
One of her works as been selected in The Money Myth Exhibition
presented by the Toyota Community Spirit Gallery in Melbourne.
Her painting for the
2006-2007 Guangzhou Art Fairs in China was selected to represent Australia in
all advertising for the event.
Another of Lambi’s
figurative works, ‘The Ballet Roche’, has been selected to be part of the
Five Senses exhibition and will travel and be seen throughout Australia this
year and next.
Lambi has been
accepted for inclusion in the English language publication of Who's Who in
Visual Art 2008—2009.
Another Lambi
painting, Nude Whimsy, was selected in the international juried exhibition Au
Naturel—the Nude in the 21st Century in Oregon, USA.
Lambi spoke today about the emotions and feelings of the women in her
paintings.
“The women in
my paintings feel and face pain and in my landscapes a deep emotion is evoked.
This emotion comes as I paint and subconsciously it dictates the creation of
each facet of the painting – the palette, the background, the brushstrokes.
Each piece takes me on a journey, sometimes unwelcome but always illuminating,”
Lambi said.
Lambi paints while
her children are at school. Her oil painting challenges and excites her.
``When I’m
painting, I’m in another world. I love it! I love light on form and I love
to try and capture emotion subtly. It’s also great meeting people who have a
real affinity or connection with the work I create. It’s quite a bond and I
treasure it.
``I started doing portraits of my son and progressed to starting a
small business doing portraits for other people. I also found time to start
oil painting - before this I had painted only three or four paintings so it
was a steep learning curve but I loved it. I want to keep painting until I'm
very old - if I had to stop I know a part of me would die. Next to my family,
it is everything to me.’’
Lambi grew up on a farm near Warwick on the Darling Downs in
Queensland. She is the second youngest of eight children and the youngest of
five daughters. But it was not
until her son was born in 1996 that she started to take her art seriously.
Ends
Media advisory: For further information,
comment, photos, or interview please contact Trisha Lambi on 07 32947285 or
0419 745 911