This bandana is:
- 100% Japanese cotton overdyed with natural indigo
- Made in the USA
- Artist-designed
- Printed by hand using eco-friendly, water-based ink
- LIMITED EDITION! once they are sold out, they are never printed again
- 22”x22"
- Hand cut and sewn with a folded flat hem
Meet the March artist- Shane Drinkwater! @shane_drinkwater
Tasmanian born artist Shane Drinkwater has exhibited widely within Australia and is now represented overseas by:
-Cavin Morris Gallery, New York USA
-Pulp Gallery, Massachusetts, USA
-Gagné Contemporary, Toronto, Canada
-Coag Gallery, Copenhagen, Denmark where in 2021, The Museum of the Mind
(located in the Hermitage Amsterdam) purchased 9 of his works for their collection then showed 3 in the exhibition “Obsession for numbers and schedules”
He is currently represented by Boom Gallery in Geelong, Australia.
Shane studied for 3 years at the University of Tasmania, School of Art in Hobart and one year at the National Art School in Sydney. He has lived in Queensland since 1994, after time spent in Paris: as recipient of the Alliance Française/Australia council fellowship he had access to studio space near the Bastille for 4 months in 1988. He went back and stayed on another 6 years.
When talking about what painting means to him, Shane states: “Painting is something I’ve always needed to do and I’m enjoying it more and more: it’s the joy of putting colour, shape and gesture on a surface. I’m interested in the making! I delve into the act of painting with a minimum repertoire of visual elements aiming for a maximum intensity, working with a visual language of lines, dashes, dots, to create works that seem like mysterious coded systems. Some works read almost as topographical or astronomical maps, others as keys of symbols, arranged and categorised. Texture is also an important part of my work, particularly on paper. Ideas and images appear through the making of the work, language becomes unnecessary, I let the work speak for me.”