Issue3, 30 November 2025

Popup Gallery - A first for Manuka?


Something new popped up in Manuka last week. It is something temporary and flexible using an unconventional space whilst allowing community street front engagement with art.



It's my own pop-up art gallery located at 33 Bougainville Street!


In the past 12 months, I have tried the usual outlets to present my Art at markets, exhibitions, and competitions as well as online. During that process I have been struck by the number of premium real estate street front locations, often empty for several months between tenants.


This gave me the idea of a pop-up Gallery which has now come to fruition after discussions with Real Estate agents.


I am extremely grateful to the agents and specially to the owner who has allowed me the opportunity to display my work until a new tenant is found. It should be a win-win situation as the presence of paintings in otherwise empty space potentially draws attention to the space and its availability for rental.


Now that I have one, we will see if the theory pans out! It could be a first – a street front Gallery in Canberra's most iconic shopping and restaurant precinct.

Eden - A Working Port


In 1965 as a Midshipman-under-training on board the Battle Class destroyer HMAS ANZAC, steaming from Sydney to Melbourne, we encountered the worst weather I experienced in my five years at sea.


The ship was carrying out-of-date aircraft flares in canisters stacked in the waist of the ship, whilst also carrying a long propeller shaft lashed to the upper deck for delivery to another war ship in Williamstown Dockyard.


The storm had everything – thunder, lightning, gale-force winds, a huge swell and enormous breaking waves which engulfed the ship each time it pitched forward. The waves swept along the upper deck and smashed to pieces one of the ships wooden boats hanging in its davits. It also began to create alarm with the aircraft flares, that they might react to the motion and moisture. It was all hands on deck at 2 am to toss the canisters overboard as a ship ploughed its way south. The lashings on the propeller shaft began to loosen creating further potential disastrous consequences which could affect the ship's stability.


The next morning with the storm behind us we limped into Twofold Bay to assess the damage and undertake temporary repairs. After the savagery of the previous night, the sight of Twofold Bay was like entering Shangri-La and I wondered what life would be like living in that region.


Fast forward 45 years and I found myself living in Merimbula only 20 minutes away from Eden and Twofold Bay. Today the port is a hive of activity with fishing, yachting, research, naval and cruise ship visits on a regular basis.


My painting (A2 in an A1 frame, $600) salutes Eden as a working port.

The Economics of Art

Most of my smaller A2 framed paintings have a selling price of around $450. Even so the discretionary dollar is hard to find these days!


I have produced an hour-glass model bringing together the elements involved in producing such a painting. As with human beings, the actual creation or birth of the Art occurs in the narrowest part of the timer and is often a painful process!


More painful is the fact that if my assessments are correct, then the return from my $450 painting is $50.


Assuming that such a painting takes five hours to produce then the artist is earning $10 an hour.

Bearing Witness

Mostly, I paint for pleasure and because I am drawn to a particular scene. There is however a more serious side to my work when I feel compelled to "bear witness" on a matter of conscience.


Twenty-odd years ago I attended an "Authentic Leadership" Course in Halifax, Nova Scotia where I spent five days under the tutelage of Meg Wheatley learning how to bear witness in the face of adversity.


That week changed my life.


The three large paintings above are part of a wider exhibition under development.


The depiction of a Jewish family 2000 years ago with an Arab family today, both from Bethlehem, is stark indictment on humanity.

Until Next time ...

I hope you have found this Issue interesting and encourage you to provide feedback on the content. I expect to have one further Issue before Christmas and until then please enjoy my art online.

Cheers

David Kindon

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