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My Tiny Italian Garden

Category Archives: Photography

Making the most of your gifts

21 Thursday Nov 2013

Posted by Teresa in Garden, Home, Photography, Uncategorized

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Tags

childhood, garden, gifts, Italianness, lilies, propagation

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Whenever my mother received a bunch of carnations she would pinch out the green shoots and plant them in the garden. Within a few months they had turned into small plants and soon after flowers would follow. My parent’s garden was always full of plants but I never saw them buying any of them or going to a nursery. It was always a matter of exchanging seeds with other Italians or taking a cutting and propagating it. There was something miraculous about this because it was making something out of almost nothing. I remember being enchanted by the idea of propagation and would pinch new shoots from plants on the way home from school and try to grow them. I found it wasn’t that hard and had a lot of success. I still love the idea, but pushed for time, I often end up buying seedlings off the shelf. However, a few years ago a friend gave me a small pot of ornamental indoor lilies. When they died off I dug the bulbs into the garden and that small pot has become around 50 plants and every spring they pop up underneath the mango tree and put on a show.

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Angels Over Sydney

01 Monday Apr 2013

Posted by Teresa in art, Australia, Performance, Photography, Travel

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amusement park, amusement rides, Angels, Easter, Fair rides, joyfull, rollercoster, Sydney Royal Easter Show

Yesterday, at the Sydney Royal Easter Show, I was entranced by the people flying through the air. Not simply because they were so high and moving so fast, but because it’s just wonderful to see people having so much fun.

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Grevilleas from Outer Space

26 Tuesday Mar 2013

Posted by Teresa in art, Garden, Home, Photography

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

close ups, courtyards, flowers, friends, garden, Grevilleas, macro photography, plants

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At a distance Grevilleas look like old dry brushes, but up close they look lush, soft and sensual. With a mass of curly insect-like antennae they almost look like they come from another planet. However, I found these in the tiny courtyard of my good friend Cathie P today while we were testing out my macro lens on her camera.

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Sunflowers in the Garden

23 Saturday Mar 2013

Posted by Teresa in art, China, Cooking, Garden, Home, Photography, Travel

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

Ai Wei Wei, China, Family, home, Italy, Kwinana, macro, Perth, photography, Sunflowers

A few weeks before we left for China I pulled up most of the vegies from the garden. I didn’t want our guests to walk out to a garden full of weeds so I scattered flower seeds randomly in the garden bed. Some of these were sunflowers and they sprouted immediately. We saw the first flowers bursting through just before we left.

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Our guests tell me that they loved walking out and seeing a patch of bright colour everyday. By the time we got back the sunflowers were at the end of their life so I replaced them with basil, eggplants bok choy and spinach. However, they were not ready to give up the garden totally and soon enough seeds from the old sunflowers started to sprout amongst the basil. I was so glad because I’ve always loved sunflowers.

When I was a child I would plant the seeds in any nook and cranny. Then when the flowers were spent I would dry them out and eat the seeds with my mum. I’m going to try this with poppet when these flowers go to seed.

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I love the way the flowers turn with the sun. In fact the Italian name for them is Girasole, which literally mean ‘turn with the sun’. Curiously, they also seem to follow me around. Where ever I go I come across them. Maybe it’s just that they’re common or that they grow almost anywhere or that I notice them because I love them so much. In any case, over the years they have kept me company and cheered me up in my travels.

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I took this photo in 1991 in Kwinana, an industrial suburb in Perth on one of my first photographic adventures with poppet’s dad. This was long before digital photography; when you used film sparingly. This was the only shot of the sunflower I took that day and I can still remember the moment the shutter clicked.

When we went to Italy in 1999 we ran into an enormous field of sunflowers driving from Venice to Rome and had to stop and get amongst them. (This is a much younger me.)

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I kept seeing them in China but sadly I didn’t take any photos.  However, it did make me think about Ai Wei Wei’s installation Sunflower Seeds. I haven’t seen it but the idea of it excites me. The work is made up of millions of hand crafted porcelain sunflower seeds. Apparently, sunflower seeds were one of the few treats during the cultural revolution and friends would catch up while indulging in this simple pleasure. I noticed that this practice continues today in other forms. Once when we went to dinner with a group of friends in Shanghai bowls of sunflower seeds were placed on the table at the end of the meal and everyone began cracking the husks open. It reminded me of my childhood when I would dry out my sunflower seeds and them munch on them with my mum.

I’ve added these links to Ai Wei Wei’s Sunflower Seeds.

http://www.tate.org.uk/whats-on/tate-modern/exhibition/unilever-series-ai-weiwei-sunflower-seeds

http://artasiapacific.com/Magazine/72/SunflowerSeedsAiWeiwei

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Chicks on Speed

14 Thursday Mar 2013

Posted by Teresa in art, exhibition, music, Performance, Photography, Theatre

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Art, Artspace, Chicks on Speed, exhibition, iPhone, music, performance

I didn’t have my canon with me with me at the opening of the Chicks on Speed exhibition last night so I used my iPhone. It’s a bit tricky taking photos of movement with the phone as you have to anticipate where the movement is going to compensate for the shutter delay. And then there is always the soft images and the blurring… but their performance was so outrageously fun that I had to snap away.

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Australian Gothic

12 Tuesday Mar 2013

Posted by Teresa in Home, Photography, Travel

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Austalian, Austalian Gothic, Gothic, landscape, photography, Picnic at Hanging Rock, Wolf Creek

I’ve had a kind of bloggers block over the last few weeks, except writing is not the problem; images are. I’m still struggling to find my eye in an Australian context. I decided to look at some photos I’d taken in Australia over the last few years for inspiration. I came across a series I started working on about 5 years ago I called Australian Gothic. While the images of Australia that populate ad campaigns and soap operas focus on beautiful beaches, lovely sunshine and suburban bliss there is also a literary and filmic tradition that focuses on Australia as a harsh, uninhabitable place full of the unknown. Think Picnic at Hanging Rock, Wolf Creek or Mad Max and you will get a sense of Australia not as a country of endless fun and relaxation but as a harsh, unnerving and ghostly environment. Even the idea of Australia as a place of endless sunshine is turned in on itself, as it becomes something that is overwhelming, blinding, scorching and fatal. There is also a tradition of Gothic architecture that peppers the Australian landscape; churches, schools, tin sheds, rusty windmills and gargoyled buildings. This was the Australia I wanted to reference when I took these photos and I think it might be the one that helps me look through the lens again.

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Life at Home

14 Thursday Feb 2013

Posted by Teresa in China, Home, Photography, Travel

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Buddha, China, garden, Madonna, photography, travel

We’ve been back from our trip about a month now and I feel bad that I haven’t post a blog yet. It has taken me a while to get over the shock of getting back to everyday life at home after the high of living in China. I’ve always loved China but this time I fell ‘in love’ and leaving felt like I was ending an intense romance prematurely. I cried when it was time to leave the apartment. To make matters worse, on the way to the airport the chauffeur put on the Madonna song ‘I’ll say Goodbye’ which set me off again, even though it also made me feel ridiculous. Before My Tiny Italian Garden returns home to Australia, I though I would add a few last photos from China.

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Poppet Puts on a Show

13 Thursday Dec 2012

Posted by Teresa in China, Photography, Theatre, Travel

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

blurred images, canon 5D, childhood, China, joyfull, memories, movement, photography, Play, Poppet, Tongli, travel

We arrived back in Australia yesterday and its hard to let go of China. I miss it already. I’ve been going through some of my photos in an attempt to hang on to the sensation of being there and I found these of Poppet in Tongli. He found the little lane way and used it as a playground. I thought it was a great opportunity to take a few photos of him that captured his free spirit and playfulness. As I was snapping away a small crowd gathered to watch. I think they might have thought it was a some sort of photo shoot. However, it was just a mother trying to freeze and contain a few precious moment of her darling son.

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Misty Mornings at the Summer Palace

08 Saturday Dec 2012

Posted by Teresa in China, Photography, Travel

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Beijing, cold, fog, mist, photography, Summer Palace, tourism, travel

IMG_4913It was cold the morning we went to visit the Summer Place but we decided to take a boat ride anyway. The lake was full of mist and the thought of cruising through it and taking photographs was very appealing to me. My friend Cathie P and I both like taking photographs on misty mornings. We know that the result will be photographs with poor definition, low contrast and too much white but we like them anyway. I was thinking of her as I was looking through the lens, wishing she could see what I was seeing. Boats disappeared into a soft white haze and weeping willow that trees looked blurred when breeze blew through their branches. The mist made the scene in front of me look like a faded picture.

This post is for Cathie P.

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Tongli

07 Friday Dec 2012

Posted by Teresa in China, Photography, Theatre, Travel

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

China, cormorants, fishing, Oarsmen, Oarswomen, photography, Shanghai, Tongli, tourism, Venice, water towns

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We were taken to the beautiful water town of Tongli last weekend. Apparently, unlike some of the other water towns around Shanghai, it is still all about the locals and local tourism. With houses backing right up to the canals and lovely old bridges it’s just charming. Like Venice the tourists take rides on long thin boats that are oared by a single ‘oarsman’. Unlike Venice though the oarsmen are mostly women.

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While I was wandering around with my camera I noticed a small fishing boat with a passenger load of cormorants.

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As I started taking photos a weathered but rather spritely old fisherman jumped on board and put on a show with the birds. He nudged a couple of them into the water with his pole. They ducked under a few times and when they popped up he guided them back onto the pole. Once on the boat, he slid open a floor plank and stroked their necks, at which point —accompanied by a few gasps from the crowd— the birds coughed up a fish.  This was all done with great dramatic effect. He sure did know how to keep his audience in suspense. When he jumped back onto land he collected money from a satisfied audience. It would have to be the best street/water performance I’ve seen for a long time.

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