An earlier portrait in Prahran (2005)
Words, voices and images: Connecting to cultures around the world
Words, voices and images: Connecting to cultures around the world
Traditional art school or studio practice is that you have a studio nude and you paint the figure quite anonymously and in a way that it does not really matter who the person is. They are just a body or a type that you are painting.
PETER HYLANDS: If we can just come back to Melbourne again for a moment and talk about the models that you select for your work.
PETER CHURCHER: Well…. the sort of traditional art school or studio practice is that you have a studio nude and you paint the figure quite anonymously and in a way that it does not really matter who the person is. They are just a body or a type that you are painting.
PETER HYLANDS: …and the process of selecting models, how do you do that? Do you wander around the street and look for people?
PETER CHURCHER: Well no I don’t, I always thought that was what I might have to do, because every time I walked around the streets, I would see these really interesting and marvellous characters and I would think, well it’s all here, the visual material waiting to be painted, it’s just a matter of how does one access it? Some of the things that happened which were quite fortuitous, I got to know a place called the Lighthouse Foundation where the young teenage kids were living and they had a place up the road.
I got to know the director of the Foundation and she was very happy for me to employ some of the young kids and they could come down to the studio and sit for me, and I would pay them as they needed work. So that was a really handy way of me accessing contemporary youth and once you start painting one person, the ball starts rolling, and one thing leads to another and before you know it, you have a whole network of people who know about you.
PETER HYLANDS: If we can just come back to Melbourne again for a moment and talk about the models that you select for your work.
PETER CHURCHER: Well…. the sort of traditional art school or studio practice is that you have a studio nude and you paint the figure quite anonymously and in a way that it does not really matter who the person is. They are just a body or a type that you are painting.
PETER HYLANDS: …and the process of selecting models, how do you do that? Do you wander around the street and look for people?
PETER CHURCHER: Well no I don’t, I always thought that was what I might have to do, because every time I walked around the streets, I would see these really interesting and marvellous characters and I would think, well it’s all here, the visual material waiting to be painted, it’s just a matter of how does one access it? Some of the things that happened which were quite fortuitous, I got to know a place called the Lighthouse Foundation where the young teenage kids were living and they had a place up the road.
I got to know the director of the Foundation and she was very happy for me to employ some of the young kids and they could come down to the studio and sit for me, and I would pay them as they needed work. So that was a really handy way of me accessing contemporary youth and once you start painting one person, the ball starts rolling, and one thing leads to another and before you know it, you have a whole network of people who know about you.