Archive for the ‘Artwrite Issue 43’ Category

‘The Shape of Things to Come’ – Benjamin Armstrong

Wednesday, November 3rd, 2010

Iris SiYi Shen

Tolarno Galleries, Melbourne

Provocative, uncanny and organic are a few adjectives used to describe Benjamin Armstrong’s sculptures.  This applies to his new exhibition The Shape of Things to Come. However, none of these words can explain the ambiguity that is inherent throughout his sculptural practice, from early objects of pointy, conical shape to later rounded domes with fleshy wax material.

As reading is an important part of Armstrong’s working process, perhaps the ambiguity of his objects is a window that allows open interpretation, similar to books.  Therefore, time became a dimension that factors into the reading of the object. The longer the viewer observes, the more its meaning unfolds.

‘Jailbreak’ – Damian Dillon

Wednesday, November 3rd, 2010

Georgina Sandercock

Artereal gallery

The Damian Dillon Jailbreak exhibition, held at the Artereal gallery, presents a slick selection of the artist’s mixed-media photographs. Dillon digitally manipulates, graffiti’s and draws on banal photographs of the urban built environment from major cities in Ireland and Australia. Jailbreak explores the connection between place and past and the conflicting emotions of Irish-Australian migrants. Dillon cleverly depicts sites that are not easily distinguishable from another, suggesting the reality of migration is moving from one dejected situation to another. Dillon’s graffiti technique begs the question of what is blocked out and why. The photographs are engaging and raise culturally interesting questions.

‘Pop Rocks’ – Stupidkrap

Wednesday, November 3rd, 2010

Yasmin Haas

Chinese translation here

Urban Uprising Art Gallery

Stupidkrap provides emerging and established urban art to a strong following on line. How, in conjunction with Urban Uprising Gallery they present Pop Rocks, an inspiring and refreshing body of work. Its tasteful but humorous Lowbrow style includes graffiti and protest art, Japanese erotica and pop surrealism with taboo, unconventional, and rebellious themes and extreme doses of originality and experimentation in terms of its content. Not a disappointment, this show is a colour explosion, a visual ecstasy tablet, with a huge local following; it is an exciting glimpse of local Australian talent set in a fantastically positioned gallery space.

Refusing Fashion? – Rei Kawakubo

Wednesday, November 3rd, 2010

Xi Fu

Rei Kawakubo is known for remaking forms of clothes with concepts originating from education in fine arts and literature rather than formal fashion design training. She specialises in austere and deconstructed garments and sticks to using single colors. In 1981, she began to present her revolutionary concepts of ‘femininity’ in Paris where she created sensations with her androgynous and innovative works. She challenged the established notions of beauty with the avant-garde fashion concept that was initially thought of as ‘ugly’ in contrast to the classical system. Rei’s works are a constant process of renewal of thinking, although the issue is arguable.

‘The Edge of Trees’ – Fiona Foley and Janet Laurence

Wednesday, November 3rd, 2010

Kate Finn

Chinese translation here

Museum of Sydney

29 pillars made from wood, sandstone or steel symbolise the 29 Aboriginal clans who once inhabited the area surrounding the first Government House. With an inspiring quote from the historian Rhys Jones to guide them, describing the ‘first meeting’ as the Aboriginal people hid within the edge of trees, Foley and Laurence have created a site-specific public sculpture for all Australians. The work integrates the concerns of Sydney’s Aboriginal people, their life and culture, the people of the First Fleet and the rich and varied flora of the city, which is, juxtaposed against Sydney’s skyscrapers. The site, which once symbolised cultural destruction, is now welcoming and comfortable and was seen by many as a step towards reconciliation.

Shadow play— A Special Puppet Show

Wednesday, November 3rd, 2010

Suzy Shu

Chinese shadow play, also called ‘Piyingxi’, is one of the oldest drama forms in China. Its name means “lamp shadow play”, and it also can be seen as a special kind of puppet show. Chinese shadow play has a history of about 2,000 years. Because of the way it works, it has been called ‘the ancestor of movies’, while for people today the shadow play was performed and developed more as a kind of cultural heritage. Puppets and figures from shadow plays have been collected by museums in many foreign countries. The Chinese government also likes to give it to foreign leaders as a special gift from the Chinese people.

The shadow puppets are made of clear plastic or buffalo and donkey’s leather, and the figures of the shadow puppet show are from the Chinese myths, legends, stories and even classical books. People can tell a figure’s character by their mask. For example, a red mask represents uprightness, a black mask, fidelity, and a white one, treachery. The protagonist has long narrow eyes, a small mouth and a straight bridge of nose, while the antagonist has small eyes, a protruding forehead and sagging mouth. A clown has a circle around his eyes, projecting a humorous and frivolous air. These puppets are painted using bright colors, making them become very lively and beautiful. In shadow play, the puppets are usually moved by artists’ hands behind a thin screen with some music and singing which tells the story to the audience.

Chinese Shadow Play Puppets

Courtesy of Confucius Institute Online

The Marvellous Creature Ventures

Wednesday, November 3rd, 2010

Iris SiYi Shen


Benjamin Armstrong is a young artist from Melbourne. He has liked drawings ever since primary school. At the age of 17, he studied at art school to become an artist. He also likes reading and travelling. He says that journeys through books and the real world provide great ideas for his sculpture.  Can you think of a time where you wanted to be creative as the result of a journey?

Look carefully, Benjamin Armstrong’s sculptures are weird and strange. What do they look like to you? These sculptures may look careless and unplanned but in fact are carefully designed by the artist through a lot of reading, drawing and experimentations. Sometimes, this process takes up to one year to finalise.

So what is he trying to make? Benjamin Armstrong does not want to tell you what he is making. You sometimes have to be a detective when you looking at his art. There are many hints in his objects.

This is made of glass and wax. The combination of clear dome shell and fleshy wax material looks like a creature that lives in a foreign land. Does it resemble a creature you might have seen somewhere else?

The key material in Benjamin’s creature – glass – is sometimes made naturally in super-hot volcanoes. Perhaps the artist is telling us that his creatures are also creations of the natural world. What else is he telling us?

Now CREATE your own creatures.

What is your imaginary creature? Turn it into a reality!

Now you know what it looks like, construct your creature with any material you can find at home.

Patricia Piccinini

Wednesday, November 3rd, 2010

Elinor King

Chinese translation here

Look closely inside the wombat enclosure at the Melbourne Zoo and you might notice a funny looking animal waddling about in there. Not quite a platypus, not quite a mole, its long body and leathery skin is like nothing you’ve ever seen before. This is the siren mole, a robotic creature made by Australian artist Patricia Piccinini to join the wombats in their zoo home for a short time.

Patricia decided to make the siren mole when she learned that scientists had created a living creature from scratch in a laboratory. Her mind was immediately full of questions – where would such a creature live? What would it eat? Who would look after it? Why would anyone make a new animal anyway? So she made siren mole to ask those questions to others and make them think about the answer.

The siren mole is an example of an artist trying to make us think about the world we live in and how we live with it. As well as creating the robotic siren mole, Patricia Piccinini also made a series of photographs showing her siren mole with people. This is to make us think about how we could relate to creatures made by scientists and how to care for them.

Sweet Barrier Reef – A Poem

Wednesday, November 3rd, 2010

Vi Girgis

Sweet Barrier Reef

Ken Yonetani

Sweet Barrier Reef

2005

White sugar, icing sugar, polystyrene foam

600 x 1200 x 160cm

Installation view Adelaide Biennial, 2008

Courtesy and copyright of the artist

http://www.kenyonetani.com

This is an artwork by Ken Yonetani.
It is large and white and very sugary.
It looks like a sparse and lonely ocean floor,
With some beautiful coral shapes, and not much more.

But why is everything so bleached and white?
Shouldn’t this seascape be colourful and bright?
Why, it’s a warning from Mr. Yonetani;
To take care of our environment, including the sea.
For if we do not, the colours will disappear
And we will be left with the deathly whiteness you see here.

Though the elegance of this sweet work will truly amaze,
Remember its important message as upon it, you gaze;
To be kind and thoughtful to nature and all its creations,
So that the earth’s wonders can be enjoyed by future generations.

A Documentary Photographer Delves into the Staged

Wednesday, November 3rd, 2010

Krystal Seigerman

Charles Hewitt Gallery, 22nd July- 9th August 2010.

The first impression is of the frames; in silver, black, gold and bone, they are both exquisitely ornate and somewhat overbearing. However the photographs are unnerving in their intensity and they soon draw the viewer in.

Tamara Dean’s recent exhibition, This Too Shall Pass, is in some ways a natural transition. Dean has worked as a photojournalist at the Sydney Morning Herald for nearly a decade and joined the independent photo agency Oculi soon after it was established in 2000. Her documentary work has long been characterised by a palpable intimacy made possible due to a strong rapport with her subjects.

In recent years Dean has travelled beyond pure reportage, fluidly incorporating the genres of classical portraiture and landscape. For her series Ritualism and Divine Rites Dean imagined scenes rich in symbolism and archetype, referencing sources as diverse as the Heidelberg School and the Pre-Raphaelites.

The fourteen images from This Too Shall Pass continue Dean’s exploration of spirituality through staged photographs. Shot mainly in decaying urban locations, Sydney morphs into a world where nature threatens to claw back control. The ephemeral nature of the locations echo one of documentary photography’s central concerns- to record our visual history before it disappears. Indeed Dean contends that most of these locations have now been transformed, hence the melancholy title borrowed from a well-worn proverb.

Although Dean includes some male models, it is the girls and young women who dominate. As in her documentary practice these women are Dean’s friends, family and acquaintances; strong women, they navigate their place in an ambiguous world. While Dean uses period costume, there are deliberate slippages. In The Evocationtwo women in gypsy dress crouch on rocks in the foreground as a full moon rises. The otherworldly atmosphere is interrupted by a subject’s tattoo peeking through her crimson shawl. These women are simultaneously exotic, yet human.

In This Too Shall Pass it is always dusk; blues and greens dominate with fleeting touches of complimentary yellows and reds. Dean’s use of low-key lighting is luminous and adept, with echoes of Bill Henson’s complex chiaroscuro. In Kath, a girl on the verge of womanhood stands in profile within a shadowy room as light falls from behind, modelling the folds of her simple cream dress. Her face is transformed into a silhouette, reminiscent of a delicate cameo brooch.

These formal portraits are in danger of jarring against the looser, exterior scenes, yet the consistent visual style holds them together.

Although stylised, Dean’s images are freer and more dynamic than her contemporaries, such as Samantha Everton. While Everton uses complex studio lighting and seamless photomontage techniques to create staged tableaux, Dean’s work remains indebted to her photojournalistic origins, with a use of subject movement and textured film grain.

As for the frames, a gallery staff member counters that Dean sees her practice as belonging to a continuum of art history and the framing further alludes to this tradition. It is intriguing to imagine where on this continuum Dean will voyage to next.

Tamara Dean

Kath

2010

Pure pigment print on archival cotton rag

85 x 66cm

Courtesy and copyright of the artist