
Housing a permanent collection, Reflecting Canberra, and a variety of local, national and international exhibitions, CMAG provides a refreshing insight to the integration of social history and the visual arts.

Wind II, 2002
screenprint and linocut
on Kozo paper
74.9 x 120 cm
Purchased 2005
born 1955
Patsy Payne was born in London and came to Australia in 1960 where she grew up on Sydney’s northern beaches. Payne studied archaeology and education at the University of Sydney, and then printmaking at Sydney College of the Arts, where she was subsequently a lecturer in the early 1990s. She has been Head of the Printmedia and Drawing Workshop at the ANU School of Art since 1995.
Payne has exhibited her work extensively since 1983, in solo and
group shows, across Australia and in Switzerland, Austria,
France, Poland, Hungary, the UK and Japan, and has had artist
residencies in Sri Lanka, Switzerland, Belgium and the US. Her
work is widely collected and is held in major public collections,
including the National Gallery of Australia.
Payne works across the spectrum of the graphic arts, making
linocuts, woodcuts, screenprints, photo-etchings and drawings
in various media; she frequently combines several techniques in
a work or series. Many of her prints are not editioned and are
unique. Payne’s art is exquisitely subtle and nuanced. Taking
cues from the landscape, the human body or symbols such as
the mandala, she produces graphic works that appear
deceptively simple – often monochromatic – but which are
actually complex, layered virtuoso examples of printmaking.
Wind II is a linocut of a cloudscape transformed into another
landscape. The depth achieved in the shades of grey gives this
work an airiness and transparency that suggests an infi nite
stretch of sky; in Payne’s lighter-than-air works there is a strong
metaphysical component, making a connection between
human endeavour and the order of the cosmos.
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