Monday 12 March 2018

Liz Walker - Words from the Artist


The making of Salt Lake took a lot of thought and many, many hours. Aluminium sourced from vintage pot lids and domestic ware was a natural material choice for many of the pieces referencing not only the strange metallic colour of the lake but the factory and workers that once earned their living from the salt they harvested from its source.


My intention was to make an installation which reflected the lake, its history and the people who lived around it and so I included various domestic fragments- all of which could quite easily have been collected from the edge of the lake.


Many of the fragments, including the growth on the old chair were treated with salt over a period of weeks in order to imitate the effect of being submerged in the brine and then exposed to the air once again.


Looking at the work you’ll notice a dry and deflated football and an old leather boot. Both were found in a parched river bed but could easily have been found in Beeac.  The salt shaker speaks for itself and the small oil funnel references the site of the Gainger Bros Garage where the installation is displayed. Old bottles, jug and pot, money tin and biscuit container, old brass taps and telephone insulator supports remember the people and life of the town.  As does the satchel, constructed out of iron, looking like its been cast aside at the end of the working day at the factory.


Thinking about the birdlife and brine shrimp they feed on, I grew salt crystals on one of the nests and some of the feathers. Gum leaves constructed out of rusted and burnt metal scattered around the floor space could have been collected from around the town -if only they were real.


The window frame presents   the viewer with an ariel view of Lake Beeac at various stages of its annual cycle-dry and crystalline, when the sun rises or perhaps when its setting and when the lake is full of water once again and teaming with life.


'Salt Lake' is displayed in the window until Sunday March 25, 2018.

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Liz Walker will be running a workshop as part of Lorne Sculpture Biennale  Education Program 2018:



Spectacular Sea Dragons


Come and make your own Dancing Dragon from the Forgotten Forests 

Join artist Liz Walker and Avis Gardner as they guide you in a creative process working with natural and recycled materials in the construction of your own spectacular sea dragon. 

Learn and be inspired by Weedy and Leafy Sea Dragons; the marine emblem of Victoria and South Australia . These little-known but incredibly fascinating creatures are incredibly beautiful and endemic to our fragile
southern reefs. 


Sunday 25 March- 10 - 12pm and 2 - 4 pm


Suitable for children 7 years and above accompanied by a parent

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