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Mezze is widely served in the Greek and Middle eastern world. An assortment of little dishes and tasters which accompany a nice ouzo or a glass of wine. So when you read mezze moments you will have tasty snippets of life as I live it, India for four years and now Brisbane Australia, all served up with some Greek fervour and passion.

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Saturday, 29 February 2020

New Green, New Women.

In the intervening weeks since I last wrote the rain has fallen steadily at times, in torrents otherwise. It's wonderful to be able to walk through the city Botanic Gardens and see them turning from that dry and desperate state to lush and green. Then swiftly onwards to an exhibition I have been meaning to catch for some time now "New Women" at the Brisbane Museum as it ends on the 15th of March and a shout out to anyone who hasn't seen it to go https://www.museumofbrisbane.com.au/whats-on/new-woman-curator-tours/.
Last weekend I had the pleasure to go on a tour with Vida https://www.museumofbrisbane.com.au/whats-on/walking-with-vida/ which was so much fun and it was my starting point to want to see more of the women artists.
So through the city Botanic Gardens...








To one of Daphne Mayo's work in the city - The Women's War Memorial in Anzac Square. She put a nurse in right at the end to make sure women were represented - can you spot her? It was said of her that she was a slight woman but did a man's work!

The Exhibition is a collection of women artists work over 100 years. It presents personal stories and the work of ground breaking women who fought to have a place in the art world of the time, as well as the more recent work done by women artists, innovating and challenging boundaries.

I have always been a great admirer of one of Brisbane's early woman sculptors, Daphne Mayo who is responsible for the Tympanum above the city hall but also many other significant art works in the city. Vida Lahey another of Brisbane women artists and Daphne were great friends and collaborators and the latter painted a portrait of Vida in her later years. Here is Vida in 1965.


Jeanette Seldon took the shape of Gum leaves and put into them the most exquisite sea and land scapes which you can just discern in this photo.

Pamela Macfarlane 1926 - 1999 painted this beautiful portrait entitled Bloden Mead.

Betty Quelhurst has a background in the army and was a well known painter - this self portrait painted in 1947 is entitled The Red Coat. She reminds me of my mother. On the right of matron.


Megan Cope created something specially for the Quandamooka People. 

And Donna Marcus produced this art work in 1961 which is an iron slide made of Aluminium teapots and steel rods. 


Its a considered and well curated collection of women artists - do see it if you can.

Friday, 14 February 2020

Discoveries with Dougall 16 The attraction of flowing water

Blue up above and blue below and in between hues of green.

 Look at the colour of this tree - a cadaghi eucalypt with Chlorophyll in its trunk according to my friend Verity. 
 And the girth of this one fig which is taller and wider then the houses behind it. 
Our footpath impassable in the gushing water 
Dougall and I set out without a moments hesitation today to catch the sun before more rain came down. He loved the gushing water and it became a game to see where he could approach the creek without being carried away. He darted in and out of the bushes with such delight. We came back dirty and muddy and so very happy to have had our walk out and about.





Thursday, 13 February 2020

From raindrops rainbows of fungi grow.

I look up and it is a solid covering of cloud cover slipping into gun metal grey for the whole week. Not a crack of blue in the sky. The rain is coming down as if someone up there realised that not enough had been released and decided to chuck it all down in one. Rainfall that has exceeded monthly levels in a day, warnings are out now for local flooding. Dougall and I had to find another walk as the creek had burst its banks and we could not cross the flooded plain without gumboots. 
And growth - well you could sit and watch it. From one day to the next and this happens.





Staggering colours, shapes and sizes and popping up everywhere. Thought I would share them with you before they all disappear once more.

Tuesday, 4 February 2020

A garden home

The garden has loved the rain and I have been very excited to see the first bloom on our Tibouchina tree after we had it cut back. It is so very beautiful you will agree. And the sky is Blue.


The rain has made a difference of course and the weeds have sprung up, so I spent an afternoon weeding like mad and just generally tidying up after all the weeks away. I filled the buckets and carried them down to the open compost bins we have at the bottom of the garden near the Bee hive.C mowed the lawn and all the grass clippings go into them as well. Our activity in the last couple of days clearly disturbed a new occupant. It has probably nested there so we expect lots of slithery sidlets might be hatching out soon. Good thing I didn't go too close to the bin eh. 



 One of my cheeky chappies is back on the deck and life takes its course. 
The sky has turned grey and we await the rain.