‘I wouldn’t sell for all the money in the world’: a head-turning work of floral nihilism

In a new series sharing stories of artwork in Australian homes, Kathleen Olive shows the prized 3D work by her brother-in-law artist

Kathleen Olive calls the work “flower bombs”, but her brother-in-law artist Keiran Gordon knows them by another name. “He calls them ‘floral nihilism’.”

Gordon started his art career studying sculpture but now creates 3D paintings using unusual materials such as hand sanitiser gel and highlighter ink.

Olive says one day Gordon was painting and drawing on plastic paper with acrylics, “and because he trained as a sculptor, he started scrunching [the paper] up and he realised he could bond them to metal. The paper weighs about 50g but it manages to hold its own against the metal. As he scrunches it – they hold the lines.”

Scrunched works of sculpture
‘I love the painting and the line and I love the imagination of it,’ says Olive. Photograph: Nikki To/The Guardian

As for this particular flower bomb work, “I wouldn’t sell for all the money in the world. I really love his work. I love the painting and the line and I love the imagination of it.”

Scrunched works of sculpture
Olive is an avid collector of her brother-in-law’s work. Photograph: Nikki To/The Guardian

The work hangs in the hallway of the home Olive shares with her partner.

“We have a salon in the house and it is part of the salon hang. Visitors respond to the energy of it – it’s not like anything else. You can change the angle and perspective totally and it’s like a different painting. A friend loved it so much that she brought one herself.”

Olive is an avid collector of her brother-in-law’s work. So far she’s bought a work from each series that Gordon has exhibited.

“I also have a cloud that he made in the same way. He did the same technique with a cloud that looks like it’s floating against the wall. You move it to a different place in the house, and it looks different and it’s really joyful. It has an interesting relationship with light – it catches shadows with parts that have been scrunched. It throws shadow and the cloud does too – they make their own shadows on the wall.”

Contributor

Brigid Delaney

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
‘You do see a bit of Jackson Pollock in it’: the country pub with a striking Nicky Winmar artwork
Pat Furze shows the painting by the AFL great that has a special place in his regional pub

Brigid Delaney

28, Oct, 2022 @7:00 PM

Article image
‘It was unloved and used to mop up paint spills’: resurrecting a rejected Florence Broadhurst print
In a new series sharing stories of the artwork in Australian homes, Clare Delaney shows the used drop sheet that’s been given a second chance in her lounge room

Brigid Delaney

14, Oct, 2022 @7:00 PM

Article image
‘I’m proud of us in the picture’: a family portrait captures laughter in lockdown
In a new series sharing stories of the artwork in Australian homes, Alice Gage shows the painting she commissioned for her husband’s birthday – which still gives her a shock every time she sees it

Brigid Delaney

07, Oct, 2022 @7:00 PM

Article image
‘It gives off psycho vibes’: the sharehouse with a homebuilt shrine to Princess Diana
In a new series sharing stories of artwork in Australian homes, Kate McGuinness shows the homage she made to the people’s princess and an eBay seller

Brigid Delaney

04, Nov, 2022 @7:00 PM

Article image
‘I love that they’re not by an artist’: the accidental pop art found in a dollar shop
In our series on artworks in Australian homes, Melbourne artist Beci Orpin shows us the handcrafted sale signs she chanced upon at a local store

Doosie Morris

25, Jun, 2023 @3:00 PM

Article image
‘It was a huge relief that she liked it’: a first-time art buyer’s maiden painting
In our series on artworks in Australian homes, Brad Gordon-Smith shows the calming painting he was once nervous about displaying

As told to Doosie Morris

02, Dec, 2022 @2:00 PM

Article image
‘After I die I can haunt it’: a portrait of a comedian with Archibald ambitions
In our series on artworks in Australian homes, Paul Verhoeven shows us the portrait that will forever wed him to his Magnum PI moustache

Doosie Morris

28, Jan, 2023 @7:00 PM

Article image
‘Maybe it all started with this artichoke’: the botanic prints that mark a new life chapter
In our series on artworks in Australian homes, Karina May shows us the lino prints that furnish her apartment – after she purged an ex’s ‘Astro Boy’ aesthetic

Doosie Morris

11, Feb, 2023 @7:00 PM

Article image
Wall stories: a Franciscan friar’s wedding portrait is a call to compassion
In our series about artworks in Australian homes, theologian Cath McKinney shares a painting by a man whose art and life showed the grace of vulnerability

Doosie Morris

18, Feb, 2023 @7:00 PM

Article image
‘He’s much more cheery than that’: a son’s self-portrait, painted in secret
In our series on artworks in Australian homes, Kylie Needham shows us the surprisingly restrained self-portrait her son painted at age 12

Doosie Morris

15, Apr, 2023 @12:00 AM