Samstag Museum catalogue | Jenny Sages
View catalogue - Jenny Sages and Shona Wilson
Jenny Sages
Born 1933, Shanghai
Arrived Australia 1948
Lives in Sydney
Jenny
Sages’ understated paintings have a quiet, nuanced beauty. Her vision
is abstract, organic, poetic and intuitive rather than rational and
representational. It is both intimate and overarching, but never
detached. Her abstraction is grounded in the small details of organic
life – the shapes, the tones and textures of vegetation, the desiccated
skins of animals, the weathered patina of abandoned things – yet it is
also imbued with a larger, more ineffable dimension. This may have
something to do with a poetics of immanence, the apprehension of beauty
and meaning that is encoded in the nature of things, connecting the
organic, mortal universe.
Her paintings are testaments
to her sense of connection with the natural environment of the inland.
For twenty-four years, from the mid-1980s until 2008, Sages made annual
sojourns with groups of women friends to walk the land. Over many years
of trekking through Central and Northern Australia, she developed
lasting friendships with local Indigenous people and gained a partial
insight into their traditional relationship with the land. Her approach
to abstraction is not imitative of Aboriginal art but there are
affinities evident in her repetitive organic rhythms and textures and
also in the underlying allusions to nature as a well-spring of spiritual
understanding. Rosalie Gascoigne’s poetic assemblages of found
weathered things are another influence that resonates through her work.
Sages
makes each painting by following an intuitive process, never quite
knowing where she is going to end up but always working within the
parameters of a habitual approach. In 1991 she wrote, "The creative
process is a distillation of experiences which in turn beget a concept
which is converted into a visual image captured in material form."
Starting with subtly textured hand-made paper or with board, she applies
encaustic, oils and pigment, impressing the soft waxy surface with
delicate linear traceries and scratchy markings into which she works
earthy pigments. She eliminates nearly all but the most subtle colour to
allow the luminosity of the encaustic to emit a quiet, meditative
presence.
Jenny Sages is a graduate of the Franklin School of
Art, New York. She did not turn to art full-time until 1985, after a
successful career as a freelance book and fashion illustrator. In
addition to her landscape paintings she is a highly regarded portrait
artist. She has exhibited frequently in the Archibald and Wynne Prize
Exhibitions, winning the Wynne Prize in 2005. She was awarded the Portia
Geach Memorial Award for portraiture in both 1994 and 1992. Her work
has been acquired for many public collections, including the National
Portrait Gallery, Canberra; Art Gallery of New South Wales; National
Library of Australia; and State Library of New South Wales.

