17.2 C
Los Angeles
Thursday, October 3, 2024

Amazingly Colourful Abstract Art By Amalia Keefer

Art is a language, and each artist creates their own dialect. Through brushstrokes and colours, shape and line, a painter communicates visually what it is sometimes to difficult to pin down in words. Something close to a feeling.

In a quiet pocket of inland Queensland, Amalia Keefer has harnessed this unique expressive power in her painting practice. Her bright, kaleidoscopic compositions are abstract renderings of a stray moment in her day: her cat stretching out on the bed, or a screenshot of a stranger’s apartment. She takes these everyday frames and builds on them with layers and layers of colour, based on her mood and intuition. The resulting works are distinct and inviting, like hearing a word in a foreign tongue that still sounds familiar.

Science Says Sleep Helps Keep High-Calorie Cravings in Check

A lack of sleep could cause more than exhaustion: It might also affect the number on the scale. Several studies have linked sleep deprivation to weight gain. One study found women who slept fewe

A Melbourne Family Home That Feels Like A Warm Embrace

Renovating a family home is always a highly personal experience, but especially in the case of Rebecca and Tom Long.

Rebecca purchased this Clifton Hill house in 2015 with her husband, actor Tom Long. The pair undertook renovations over 2017-18 while Tom was being treated for multiple myeloma. Tragically, after a long battle, Tom passed away in January 2020.  This home, which holds his beloved family, is part of his legacy. 

Alongside interior designer Kim Kneipp, the couple have created supremely comfortable oasis for their blended family. There’s a very literal, tactile softness in the textured walls, shaggy wool carpets and perfectly worn vintage furniture. A roaring fire in the living room captures a country house feeling, reflective of both Tom and Rebecca’s upbringings.

With its warm, comfortable and natural feel, Rebecca says the home feels like an embrace in times of bliss, and grief since Tom’s passing. Here, home is most certainly where the heart is. 

Cherrie Miriklis-Pavlou – The Design Files | Australia's most popular design blog.

GardensCherrie Miriklis-Pavlou - The Design Files | Australia's most popular design blog.

‘As soon as I stepped foot into the property my face lit up,’ Cherrie Miriklis-Pavlou, managing director of iconic Melbourne florist Flowers Vasette, tells me of her first encounter with Beechmont. ‘I fell in love with it immediately.’

On this particular day, Cherrie and her husband had taken a Sunday afternoon drive to the Dandenong Ranges, just outside Melbourne, with no intention of buying a property. They’d seen a ‘for sale’ sign, so stopped to have a look. It wasn’t what they were after. ‘The real estate agent bailed us up and asked us what we were looking for. I told her, and said maybe in a year or two we’d like to buy something.’

Before Cherrie and her husband Paul knew it, they were chatting trees, plants, and gardens with the owners of Beechmont, a 10 acre property near the town of Olinda, and Cherrie was smitten. Two days later they had bought the place. ‘It takes something pretty big to get me excited, and Beechmont did it.’

Of course it did! For a florist and serious flower lover, 10 acres of mature exotic and native trees, underplanted with a diverse collection of exotic shrubs such as viburnum, dogwood, virraya rhododendrons, camellia, cornus, edgeworthias is heaven!

The previous owners had established a vast seven-acre garden on the property – converting horse paddocks into sweeping lawns and garden beds, transforming a tennis court into a formal walled garden, and turning a former nursery into a parterre garden.

The diversity and abundance of flowers and foliage here is like a botanical lolly shop for a woman for whom ‘flowers are oxygen’. Cherrie tells me her team harvests between 150-200 bunches of flowers and foliage from the garden every few weeks for use in projects at Flowers Vasette. ‘Each time I visit the garden it transforms itself’ Cherrie says. ‘That’s what I look forward to. I just run around and see what’s growing in what patch. It’s amazing what pops up.’

While Cherrie’s dream is to one-day live full-time at Beechmont, it’s currently a weekend retreat for her and her family. The property is hired out as a luxury mountain retreat for holidays, weddings and special events when Cherrie and her family aren’t here. ‘We love this garden,’ Cherrie tells me. ‘We have a private garden at home in Ivanhoe, but Beechmont is a whole different calibre. It rejuvenates you.’

Flowers Vasette is the Principal Partner of Lee Mingwei’s ‘The Moving Garden’ currently on show at the National Gallery of Victoria until 29 January 2017.

The gravel and box hedge parterre sits on the site of a former plant nursery.  Photo – Annette O’Brien for The Design Files.


A whimsical water feature in the garden at Beechmont. Photo – Annette O’Brien for The Design Files.


New growth on a rhododendron shrub. Photo – Annette O’Brien for The Design Files.


Mature conifers and brightly coloured rhododendrons frame the entry driveway.  Photo – Annette O’Brien for The Design Files.


Cherrie Miriklis-Pavlou, managing director of iconic Melbourne florist Flowers Vasette. Photo – Annette O’Brien for The Design Files.


A blue ceramic urn framed by box hedges forms a strong focal point within the rambling garden. Photo – Annette O’Brien for The Design Files.


The garden is a combination of formal rooms such as the tennis court and parterre, and looser mixed shrub and perennial plantings. Photo – Annette O’Brien for The Design Files.


The Beechmont garden of Cherrie Miriklis-Pavlou is framed by native bushland, including mountain ash trees (Eucalyptus regnans). Photo – Annette O’Brien for The Design Files.


Cherrie Miriklis-Pavlou in the garden at Beechmont. Photo – Annette O’Brien for The Design Files.


What Cherrie loves most about the garden is the sense of surprise – each time she visits something new has popped up in the garden beds! Photo – Annette O’Brien for The Design Files.


Tulips! Photo – Annette O’Brien for The Design Files.


A Wollemi pine grows tall (and a little crooked!) in the garden at Beechmont. Photo – Annette O’Brien for The Design Files.


A former tennis court has been transformed into a formal garden at Beechmont, a 10 acre property in Olinda, Victoria. Photo – Annette O’Brien for The Design Files.


The house is often rented out for weekend visitors and special events such as weddings. Photo – Annette O’Brien for The Design Files.

Check out our other content

Check out other tags:

Most Popular Articles