From my sister Chris Tammer

The other day I received an email from my sister Chris which included some recent watercolours she has been occupying herself with.




MUGS



These were all “still life” images of plants or objects she has found at home.





ORCHID



What struck me as most unusual is that Chris had never really explored drawing or painting before, although she may have wanted to do so. In her email she explains how she came to this new phase of her life.




Dear Peter,

As you know, years ago I met a prospective partner who ran a 
restoration/conservation business.



This was at a time when I was studying music at a TAFE level and was the 
happiest I’ve ever been in my whole life. I was applying to attend the Latrobe 
music composition course. The prospective partner was going through a 
phase where she was losing staff but receiving more and more offers 
for work. Tenders for the Princess Theatre, ANZ Gothic bank, in Melbourne, 
and Labassa, the Italianate house house in Caulfield, to name a few.



When she asked me to come and work with her, two things went through my mind.



1. I’ve waited all my life to finally immerse myself in music and follow my 
dream, and now you want me to give it all up to come and work for you.



2. I have never painted anything but a wall in my life. What makes 
you think I’d be able to mix colours, paint within the lines and 
know anything about art or other things you do?



Very long story short.



I gave up my life’s dream and went to work with her at Labassa. 
Climbing a scaffold was the first hurdle I had to jump, even before
 I could even think about sitting on this wobbly, cold, metal structure, adding 
minuscule dots of the correct colour to the ceilings and walls of these 
hand-painted/stencilled age-old, artisans’ surfaces.



I finally went back to study at an adult level in 2008. This was at a private college 
called MIECAT. It was an art therapy undergrad course. I was immediately thrown 
into a place mixing with people who could make colours and movements of their 
hands produce truly beautiful things at a swift stroke of the hand. I felt like I did 
not fit in at all, but I worked on my projects using a mix of basic art, and 
music or sound as a therapeutic mode of finding meaning.



It was fun. It was interesting. 
And I was by now being commissioned to composed 
music for film, theatre and circus. All the while I was running my 
own hairdressing business. But always in the back of my mind was the 
thought, “I wish I could have the time to explore drawing or painting. 
I’m sure I would get okay at it, even if I did not at first succeed.”

 



Cut to 31 years later.



A diagnosis of 4th stage Metastatic Breast Cancer.

Serious.

Palliative.

All over red rover.

“Not long.”

 



I’ve spent many an hour thinking about what I really want to spend these, 
the last years, months or days of my life, doing. I tried crochet but I was 
experiencing acute pain in both hands and couldn’t go on with it. I tried 
composing music again but I couldn’t seem to think straight and 
feel the desire like I used to.

 



A few of my friends are incredibly artistic. Really artistic.
They know how to fit a scene into a square or oblong sheet of paper.
Fran, who like me, has put her artistic self aside for a long time, started 
sending me photos of watercolours. I have always loved the washiness 
of this medium. 

Fran was making these amazing little scenes of found broken shards of crockery.
She moved on to still life cups, vases, then flowers and fruit. She has become
prolific. I’m talking one to two paintings a day. She suggested I go over
to her house between lockdowns early this year. Really. Please don’t ask
me which one! I live in Melbourne for God’s sake! It was early this year.

 

I did a really bad rendition of a shard of crockery. 

 

Then, the same day, I painted a pomegranate.


 

 

POMEGRANATE



Oh my pride! My old me would say I was not proud. But my brother said

“No need for humility Chris, and no apologies”. So I will tell the truth.

I am so excited by this creation. One and a half hours sitting with my

friend and making this just fell on to the page. I cannot tell you how

exciting it feels.

 

The rest is history. 


Not! 


It’s now. It’s how I live. 

I wake up thinking about it. 

I go to sleep thinking about it. 

I watch and search YouTube, Pinterest, Instagram for

ideas, lessons, pictures and ideas.


 

 

PEAR


I see shadows and colours and feel the brush move across this

incredibly textural paper made of cold pressed cotton.






LEAF


For months I would not paint on good paper as I thought I didn’t deserve to

“waste” it. But I still went ahead and bought it, and good paints and brushes.

Mostly online of course, because of our many lockdowns. 


I’ve set up my studio area in my kitchen so I can go there anytime I want.

All the time if I want. I love being in lockdown. I don’t have to do anything else.

I can spend time in my own world. And I’m starting to use beautiful paper. 

 




Poppies are Popping



I feel that the brush with watery, colourful or muted paints 
not only makes my dreams come true with each stroke, 
but it’s like a caress of the page. Not just a sweep of it.






The Sick Rose



This painting reminded me of William Blake’s wonderful poem


“The Sick Rose”



O Rose thou art sick. 


The invisible worm, 


That flies in the night 


In the howling storm: 


Has found out thy bed


Of crimson joy:


And his dark secret love


Does thy life destroy.






Comments

  1. A beautiful story of your sister here Peter, on many levels.
    A window into a soul.
    Thanks for sharing.

    And Chris thank you for not holding back. Your words struck a chord.
    "I love being in lockdown"
    You don't need my advice, but can I suggest
    you keep using the
    "good paper".

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I will never use anything but good paper Richard. Nor will I paint on both sides of the page, and then find I have two nice paintings and I can only frame one of them!

      Delete
  2. Lovely Chris. Inspiring even for me to try.

    ReplyDelete
  3. PS. I visited Fran I between lockdowns. Not DURING lockdown.

    ReplyDelete

  4. Basically, I feel Chris's paintings have an inner life or 'soul' to them that makes them more than 'just water colors'. This is probably because Chris is painting from her soul and not from her head. She loves what she is doing and that love shines through in the quality of her work.

    I see art work from U3A at the doctor's surgery (on the very rare occasions I go there) and most of it tends to be dreadful, dreary or both, generally lacking in any kind of inner life, except for the rare occasions when something jumps out and smacks you in the face. But that is very, very rare.

    Chris's work stands above that kind of thing because of the quiet inner life that shines through.

    I'm not an art critic and certainly not a water color critic so this is just a lay opinion.

    ReplyDelete
  5. I agree with David here - really great art work. Thanks for sharing, Chris, and for sharing your story too ! All the best to you !

    ReplyDelete
  6. Great artwork, thank you for sharing !

    ReplyDelete

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