At the Gallery
Paintings by Kate Stevens: Scenes from an Afternoon
Gorham Art Centre Canberra, Australia

Sweeping landscapes
on small canvases
Heavy oil paint
applied in thick daubs
Foreground mauve
purplish colour
Distance implied by
yellow fields
massed green trees
Big sky
light light blue
Just when I’m getting bored
seeing similar landscapes
the same colours
over and over again
I step away
and am captured
Australian pastoral landscapes
not my favourite
and yet the
sweep
space
colours of
rippling land
low rising hills
attract
Quietly appealing
limited colour palette
mauve
yellow
dark grey green
light blue sky
hint of fencing
daubs of black
cows with white face
Inhabited land
controlled by unseen people

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Author: Pamela Collett
I was born and raised in Kansas City, Missouri. I have a B.A. from Stanford University and a M.Sc. from Cornell University. I have lived and worked in San Francisco, Berkeley and Oakland, California as well as in Washington, DC. Outside the United States, I lived and worked in Venezuela, Pakistan, Afghanistan, China, Uganda, Somalia and Kenya. I currently live in Canberra, Australia.
I edited three books: Bold Plum: with the Guerillas in China's War against Japan by Hsiao Li Lindsay; Peace and Milk: Scenes of Northern Somalia by James Lindsay and Fatima Jibrell; and Solo vale si piensas rápido by Mehedy Lopez, a book of poetry in Spanish. In 2016, I published a book of my poetry and drawings, Silence Spoken.
I have taught communication skills, English as a second language, and English for journalists (in Beijing, China) at university and secondary school levels. I was a features writer for the Daily Journal, (Caracas, Venezuela), and The Chronicle of Higher Education. I am a member of the ACT (Australian Capital Territory) Writers Centre, active in a writers’ group and a contributor to poetry readings, That Poetry Thing, in Canberra, Australia.
View all posts by Pamela Collett
It’s the light
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Yes but are you talking about the physical or the inner light? or both
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The light captured in the paintings. Not easily done. And so characteristically Australian. In all my travels, I’ve never seen light like it.
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