A sense of harmony and beauty can be expected from the latest exhibit at Dubbo's Western Plains Cultural Centre.
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Leo Cremomese's exhibition The Colour of Invisible opened at the WPCC on Saturday.
It explores the artist's personal relationship with nature by transforming a private outdoor experience into an internal gallery space.
"In this show, I adapt these outdoor private and intimate experiences of place so that they can be shared with an audience within the context of a gallery, bringing the non-human, for a moment, to the human domain," Mr Cremonese said.
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"In my paintings and installations, I use different materials and colours, resonating in harmony with our bodily physicality, to give form to that which is usually invisible."
From Tuesday, a Q&A session with the artist will be uploaded to the WPCC website's online studio.
Dubbo Regional Council's cultural development coordinator Jessica Moore said the curators helped to chose which pieces should be exhibited.
"Leo Cremonese's work is a unique combination of painting and installation, and fashion from a variety of materials, resulting in a sense of harmony and beauty within the gallery walls," Ms Moore said.
"Creomense attributes his ability to connect and have silent conversations with the bushland that surround his home in Kandos to his animal spirit and Zen master; a cattle dog named Penny who would often accompany him on his walks. It was during these bushwalks that Cremonese found solace, a state-of-mind he aims to recreate within his work."