Natural connections
Nature has always been a part of Zora Verona’s life, “I’ve always been connected to the natural world,” she says, “but I think it began when I moved here to Warburton. I still remember the first windstorms. Windstorms in the country are nothing like they are in the city because the house shakes and the trees are just bending. But I went out to check the fences in the paddock the next morning, and this beautiful glimmering tumbleweed was going through the paddocks. I ran after it and caught it in my hands, and it was a bird’s nest, and I looked down at it, and it was the most exquisite thing I’d ever seen. I’ve been fortunate to encounter these wonders over time, which lodged in my mind.”
Bushfire
A significant catalyst in Zora Verona’s work with birds nests was the fires in 2020, “I was up here in the valley in 2009,” says Zora Verona, “during the Black Saturday bushfires, and I was seeking a sense of restoration in 2020, and I knew that creativity was a wonderful way to have that restoration and have that sense of flow return to you. So I looked around me, and beautiful spinebills were feeding on the salvia blooms outside my window, and the lyrebird was singing in the distance, and fairy-wrens were jumping on the lawn, and it just clicked. I could use natural fibres to create those nest sculptures, and then it just snowballed from there.”
Creative practice
Zora Verona’s embrace of creative practice first took root in Montreal, “I was thinking about pursuing a career as a potter,” she says, “and I was going to sign up for a course, but there was a lot of stigma about art being a hobby and not a career, so I packed away my materials, and that’s when I went travelling and came here to Australia. So it wasn’t until 2020 that I thought, ‘This is an essential part of my life to explore those things’.”
There was more to Zora Verona’s passion for creation than personal exploration, “It was also the message,” she says, “there were so many animals that were displaced or lost their lives during those bushfires, so I wanted to tell the stories in a way that most people didn’t experience. When you live in the city, you don’t necessarily see bird nests; you don’t have that privilege. That was something else I wanted to bring that sense of wonder to people. I truly believe that if we recognise something, learn about it, and are inspired by it, we will care about it. That was the impetus behind my work, but also the exhibition. It’s called The Art and Craft of Nests, and it’s very much that narrative of how humans and birds have evolved together and perhaps our arts and crafts practices have been inspired by one another. Birds are artists, and they’re craftsmen, and they’re architects, and I wanted people to gain that understanding.”