Apr 22, 2017

Clive Murray-White / Michelle Caithness: a Collaboration

Michelle Caithness Michelle Caithness Michelle Caithness

Clive Murray-White / Michelle Caithness: a Collaboration

This is an exhibition of drawing and sculpture by two artists who have discovered that they share an almost identical set of artistic values.

Clive makes marble sculptures about or based on Michelle whilst Michelle draws Clive in his studio making the sculptures of her. Both ask numerous questions about the evolution of portraiture and neither pressures the other to create flattering “realistic” representations.


Portraiture, of any kind, is inevitably collaborative and possibly invasive but when two artists are both artist and subject, things can become doubly interesting. In this case each has progressively encouraged the other to accept new freedoms and experiment with the intention of getting closer to his or her true expressive potential. 


Simon Gregg, Curator Gippsland Art Gallery, opens the exhibition.


Installation view


Installation view

Michelle Caithness

I have never considered myself to be a portrait artist, having only produced two such works in my life. Given the opportunity to draw Clive at Cowwarr in 2016 I was confronted with the reality of a sitter and the inherent formal obligations of the process.


A traditional approach to the task pulled me into using old art habits: The classical frontal or three quarter pose and a search for ’likeness’, both fell short of revealing Clive in context.

A person as a subject is made of many things. The challenge of portraiture became fresh and exciting when the three dimensional nature of artist making sculpture, within an architectural setting, loomed as a distinct possibility.

 My subject lives and breathes in a spectacular setting, with sculptures and lumps of stone, within an illuminating landscape.


Installation view

Observing the sculptor working in his studio with works completed, works in progress and amongst the tools and detritus of creation, presented intriguing compositional opportunities.


Michelle Caithness Spring Studio: Number One

Clive’s physical characteristics became animated through the repetitive act of working and contemplation.

The relationship of sculpture to drawing through the act of mark making on surfaces and the play of light on stone led me to new exciting formal discoveries with charcoal on rough paper.


Michelle Caithness Spring Studio: Number Two

Clive in his studio held all of the information I needed. His process of discovery mirrored my own need for formal invention. I became free to interpret the notion of portraiture in my own way.


Michelle Caithness Summer Studio: Number Two

Clive Murray-White

Michelle has a face shape that is deeply etched into my subconscious. For at least the past 25 years whenever I doodle this has been the face I draw. To me finding the living version just seems like a moment of well-deserved fate. I can draw a recognisable representation of her in a matter of seconds. This tempted me to make my first sculpture of her somewhere between a relief and a drawing on stone that concentrated more on how I perceive her than being chained to the restrictions of slavish representation.


Clive Murray-White Michelle One

Whilst that little work, Michelle 1, is most definitely recognisable as one of mine it blasted through some self-imposed restrictions on what I would or would not allow myself to do. 


Clive Murray-White Michelle Five

The fact that Michelle could see and appreciate this liberated me to push my expressive and formal boundaries into corners I have not dared to fully explore before.


Clive Murray-White Michelle Three

Each sculpture goes through a series of approximations from roughing out to finishing.  Each tool leaves graphic evidence of its work. Up until now I would hurry through the initial activities and rush towards a finish.



I now stop, even in the very early stages, to thoroughly assess what may be there in case it could be expressively useful. 


Michelle Seven

This simple procedure, discovered while making the Michelle heads, seems, from my perspective, to have added a new vitality to my work.



Michelle Caithness Winter Studio: Number One


Installation view


Michelle Caithness Summer Studio: Number One

Clive Murray-White / Michelle Caithness: a Collaboration runs until May 1 2017 at the Cowwarr Art Space but during its 2 month exhibition period the collaboration hasn't stood still!


Michelle seen here with Soula Mantalvanos installing the second version of the exhibition at the Queenslcliff Gallery and Workshop, for her residency during the Streeton Prints exhibition. And yet another version of the collaboration will be going to the Charles Nodrum Gallery in Richmond, Melbourne in September.

And back in Cowwarr, Michelle Eight has been completed, it represents the first sculpture that we both worked on together with Michelle drawing on it to suggest changes. This spurred us on with the start of Michelle Nine to both work on the actual carving together. 


Michelle gets stuck into her hair!!!


its not all hard grind, see mugs of tea and then a cold one at the end of the day