Posts Tagged ‘Art Administration’

Editorial

Wednesday, May 30th, 2012

By Christiane Keys-Statham & Emily Sinclair


2012 is a big year for the arts and culture sectors in Australia. Our new National Cultural Policy will shortly be released postponed due to budget concerns – a victim of the surplus, and will hopefully reflect, inspire and, most importantly, commit to supporting Australia’s incredibly diverse and vibrant arts communities.

Our class this semester is made up of people from many different backgrounds, cultures and walks of life. The defining idea behind this issue of Artwrite is to provide a snapshot of Australia’s artistic and cultural life on the eve of the National Cultural Policy. (more…)

Editorial

Wednesday, October 19th, 2011

Welcome to Artwrite #47. Artwrite is a collaborative student-run magazine produced by Art Administration students at the College of Fine Arts, UNSW.

In this edition, our writers delve deep into issues of accessibility in the arts. ‘Community engagement’, ‘social inclusion’ and ‘diversifying and developing audiences’ are phrases increasingly used by practicing arts professionals everywhere, and we examine just what is being done both locally, and globally, to bring about such changes.

Our features discuss both sides of the issue and range from explorations of local artist-run-initiatives, to the alternative use of public space for art events such as Sydney’s Festival of Free Spaces. Photographer Dean Sewell openly discusses illegal guerrilla art in a bold interview with Renay Ringma and we consider why contemporary art spaces are still associated with notions of exclusivity and elitism.

This edition also reviews a diverse range of exhibitions, from the Art Gallery of New South Wales’ current blockbuster Mad Square: Modernity in Modern Art, to the public display of private art in White Rabbit’s Beyond the Frame. Also under the spotlight are Penrith Regional Gallery’s New Acquisitions in context and Bronek Kozka’s Memory, Myth and the 1/4 Acre Block.

The efforts of our fellow students must be acknowledged. Without their effort and ingenuity this edition of Artwrite would not have been possible. Every student in the class joined in the sub-editing and they all committed to working cohesively to ensure each article is at its absolute best.

Special thanks also go to Joanna Mendelssohn for pushing us to our creative limits and teaching us the importance of meeting deadlines — a lesson we all learned quickly, and ultimately, the reason we were able to produce a publication we are all proud to be a part of in such a short space of time.

We can only hope you enjoy browsing through the assorted collection of articles, reviews, opinion letters and short kids pieces assembled here.

A PDF version of this edition is currently in production, guided by the exceptional design finesse of Dale Maxwell-Smith, David Lyndon and Gokcen Altinok. It will be archived in the UNSW library under UNSWorks.

Megan Hillyer & Nina Pether, Editors, Artwrite #47

A Coming Together of Disparate Forces: Career Lessons from Dr Gene Sherman

Monday, October 18th, 2010

Kim Goodwin

The career journey of Dr Gene Sherman is now familiar to those with even a passing interest in the Australian Arts Landscape. First migrating to Australia at age 18 from South Africa, she and her family returned to South Africa after only nine months in Melbourne. The Sherman family then travelled to England before returning to Australia to establish a home in Sydney. This migration, plus extensive travel, has engendered a truly global mindset within Dr Sherman and her whole family.

Professionally, Dr Sherman spent 17 years in academia, firstly completing a masters by thesis and then a doctorate in French literature at the University of Sydney, before commencing teaching there. Following this she joined Sydney’s prestigious Ascham Girl’s School in the role of head of languages.

Sherman Galleries, originally run by Celia Winter-Irving and named the Irving Sculpture Gallery, opened in 1981.  In the mid-1980s, as Australia’s attention started to drift towards Asia, Dr Sherman joined the gallery and began shifting the focus from contemporary Australian and International sculpture, to that of art from the Australian-Pacific region. In 1989 the gallery moved from its original location near the University of Sydney to Paddington, and thirteen years later it consolidated two Paddington premises into one enhanced exhibiting space in Goodhope Street. In 2007 the Sherman Galleries closed and was reborn as the Sherman Contemporary Art Foundation (SCAF), a Sherman family philanthropic enterprise dedicated to the public exhibition of significant contemporary art from Australia and the Asia-Pacific region. SCAF has four key aims as illustrated in the mission statement:

1. To exhibit significant works by innovative and influential artists from Asia, the Pacific and Australia, providing a space that can house works not always suited to private galleries,

2. To publish texts communicating to broad audiences including both the art industry and educational sectors,

3. To develop educational programs in association with the projects, illustrated by the launch Contemporary Art for Contemporary Kids, a partnership with Queensland Art Gallery’s Children’s Art Centre, commencing October 6th,

4. To continue to develop SVAR (Sherman Visual Arts Residency) a program for international artists considering short, medium and longer term exploratory trips to Australia, particularly to Sydney.

On Friday 24th September COFA announced that Dr Sherman and her husband Brian will gift $2 million towards the new COFA Gallery.  This generous donation will contribute to the construction of two new purpose built galleries, the first to be known as the Sherman Gallery and the second named in memory of Nick Waterlow, former curator of COFA’s Ivan Dougherty Gallery, who died last year.

This brief summary of Dr Sherman’s experience and the progression to the Sherman Contemporary Art Foundation does not begin to touch on the leadership and educational role she has had within the Australian arts and academic community, from the sponsorship of scholarships, to contribution to publications such as the recently published The Modern Woman’s Anthology (2010), to guest lecturer and philanthropist. Not to mention her donation of contemporary Japanese fashion to the Powerhouse Museum.

Given her incredible life experience, Dr Sherman can provide remarkable guidance to those interested in a career in the creative industries. What follows are some of the key themes and life lessons she has learnt to date.

Plan, prepare and be organised

‘If you don’t plan ahead, create templates and stick to the templates, then things go awry.  Life being what it is sometimes, this is what they do.’

A constant in Dr Sherman’s life is her focus on planning and preparation, often over considerable periods of time. She commenced the planning process, with the support of her husband Brian, nine years prior to the launch of the Sherman Contemporary Art Foundation.

As a mother with two young children and undertaking a doctorate, organisation and planning was paramount. Dr Sherman dedicated eight years to her masters and PHD, and at every stage she had a five-year plan, one year, six-month, monthly, weekly and daily plan.

But what happened if circumstances interrupted her ability to complete her daily plan? She would set her alarm for the middle of the night, get up and completed her allocated tasks.

It was a combination of strict adherence to her templates, accompanied by a regular review process that saw her consistently achieve long-term goals that would leave many of us struggling.

Capitalise on your strengths and the strengths of those around you

‘I’m both an educationalist and an on going learner.  Every day I learn things consciously and subconsciously, and when somebody tells me something I find interesting, I try to learn something from it.’

Throughout her career Dr Sherman has built on her learning progressively, ensuring that she takes every new experience and consolidates it with existing knowledge. Her career at Sydney University gave her the teaching skills to take to Ascham.  Her leadership experience at Ascham was then drawn upon as she made the move into gallery management.

Dr Sherman speaks openly about her passion for learning every day, and it is this, along with her ability to communicate and build relationships that form the foundation of her success.

We are never alone in developing our skills and achieving our goals. Dr Sherman describes her mother-in-law as her ‘secret weapon’ in her ability to achieve such a mammoth task as simultaneously raising a young family, working and completing a doctorate. She never hesitates in recognising the support she has received from her family, both her mother in law who lived with the family for 10 years, but also her husband Brian who played a crucial business-mentoring role throughout her career. Her achievements are their achievements.

Like many successful people, she has cultivated guides and mentors along the way. While her husband coached her in the financial and business side of running a gallery, it was William Wright AM who joined the already established Sherman Galleries in 1992 as curatorial director, who Dr Sherman cites as being a key mentor and guide in the art world. Over time their role as mentors may diminish, but Dr Sherman always maintains and values these relationships.

Mix the creative, the educational and the business

‘Cross pollination is so important.  I was a university academic for many years, for 11 years I taught in a University. So of course when I came into the gallery world, I was an example of the cross pollination and in a way it was very natural to me.’

We often surround ourselves by like-minded people, and despite the increased flexibility in the modern employment market, most do tend to have linear career paths within the same, or similar industry. There are significant advantages, however, by building bridges between industries and this is something Dr Sherman has succeeded in doing on many occasions.

She has made a conscious effort throughout her career to bring the arts industry and educational institutions closer together.  She speaks of her surprise when organizing a crate exhibition in the mid 1990s where she found many of the academics that attended had never seen a crate in which art is transported. It was then she realized those on the academic side of industry had very little practical experience. Over the past 20 years Dr Sherman has sought to bridge the gap between the practical and the academic elements of the arts industry to enable maximum opportunity for all.  Clearly the Sherman’s most recent contribution to COFA demonstrates the value with which they hold relationships with the arts education sector.

Dr Sherman has also demonstrated the considerable benefits of mixing business expertise with artistic knowledge. Creative people who can ground themselves with the fundamentals of business theory will be at a distinct advantage. While this does not necessitate the completion of a Masters of Business Administration, of forming long lasting relationship with individuals in the business world who can share knowledge and provide support when called upon.

Read the external environment

‘I never saw the world as confined to one set of ideas, or one set of practices.  You couldn’t if you had my background.’

The ability to understand and benefit from global trends has been a factor in the success of Sherman Galleries. Dr Sherman’s skill in identifying Australia’s shift toward Asia in the cultural, political, economic and artistic arena led the Sherman Galleries to be one of the first to specialise in Asian art. This then paved the way for art spaces such as 4A and White Rabbit.

Dr Sherman provides three lessons to determine success in this area.  Firstly developing and listening to intuition, and in her case it was her father who played the role of visionary. At age six her father told her two pearls of wisdom, to be recalled 57 years later, that women could do anything and that the next century would be the Asian century. As Australia has recently transitioned from our first Mandarin speaking Prime Minister to our first female Prime Minister, clearly Dr Sherman’s father was correct on both counts.

The second lesson is to be a global citizen. Dr Sherman grew up in a family that spoke five languages collectively, and her passion for travel and study of European and Asian cultures is well documented. While many families are global in nature today, this was a more unusual circumstance in the mid-1950s. Dr Sherman has always understood this knowledge of other cultures as a strength to be nurtured and built upon.

Finally, to understand your environment you must foster intellectual curiosity. There is not a day that goes by where Dr Sherman doesn’t extend her knowledge through reading. Not just reading for professional development, but reading widely and broadly across any subject that catches her interest. Prior to beginning her extensive travel to Japan, Dr Sherman chose to read Japanese literature translated into English for two years.

Dedication

‘It comes naturally to me, I have to work at doing it, but I don’t have to work at thinking I’m going to do it, it’s my nature plus my training.’

The last lesson we can gain from Dr Sherman’s experience is probably the one of most importance; that of applying dedication to everything you do.

It is clear from every anecdote Dr Sherman shares, she has never waivered in her dedication to achieve whatever goals she has set herself, whether that be six years completing a doctorate or nine years in transitioning the commercial gallery into the contemporary art foundation. She applies that dedication even to her fashion choices, for 25 years she wore only three Japanese fashion designers.  Not a single other thing.

The underlying theme from listening to Dr Sherman is passion. Dr Sherman describes herself as a coming together of passion and pleasure, a combination of disparate forces, the artistic, the academic, the business, the cultural, some would say it’s a perfect storm. Whatever endeavor she has directed herself toward, she has done so with passion. This is the lesson we can all learn from.

Issue 43 Letters

Monday, October 18th, 2010

Perpetual Volunteers

Chinese translation here

As an aspiring arts worker, I am very concerned regarding the job availability in the arts sector. We are encouraged to work as volunteers as much as we can, but I wonder if this can lead to decreasing job availability. Could it be that the many volunteers always ready to work for free undermines the possibility of finding paid jobs?

Further, arts organisations largely rely upon volunteers and interns to carry out their activities and projects. Will this dependence on often transient and unqualified workers lead to impoverished organisational performance?

Martina Baroncelli

A NSW Aboriginal Art Gallery

It was great to see the Open Weekend which celebrates Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander art at the Art Gallery of New South Wales over the October long weekend. The quality and popularity of the event highlights the concerning oversight that NSW does not have a Government owned and operated art gallery dedicated to Aborignal art. Indigenous art is a huge part of the Australian art market both nationally and overseas and is an important link to our country’s history and identity. I fully support the National Trust’s call for an Aboriginal art gallery at the Barangaroo site.

Catherine Birrell

Bubble wrapping community arts

Chinese translation here

When did criticism become a dirty word in community arts? In a field that submissively goes under the Australia Council moniker of Community Cultural Development (CCD), community artists too often dismiss critical evaluation on the basis of irrelevant, elitist or capitalist values.

Many a heartfelt CCD conference will slosh you with persuasive arguments for increased funding, gushing with exuberant success stories, but what of the projects that don’t work? What about those that run out of funding, dissolve in conflict, meet with endless red-tape or collapse with an embarrassingly disheveled product? How are these projects received, and how can we learn from these failures?

By blanketing projects and participants from public scrutiny, community arts workers miss the opportunity to evaluate and develop better processes and products. Further, this over-protection serves to disempower participants, contravening the empowerment agenda so common to CCD.

Edwina Hill

Lets hope David Elliot has composed his own song for survival.

Why is it that David Elliot so blatantly ignored the beauty and songs of survival of Cockatoo Island in the 2010 Biennale of Sydney? The decision to rig up makeshift gallery walls behind Dale Frank’s sublime canvases did no favours for the artworks nor the space. Come on David, have a look around – if you don’t want the historical and/or aesthetic inimitability of that particular space to impact on the works, then why not pick another one of the 70+ warehouses on the Island to place the work? Perhaps you should try and fit them in with the other 48 or so artists you laughably crammed into the MCA. Or why not squish them in as another afterthought into the thoroughfare of the AGNSW?

Emma Pike

Is populism the answer to relevance in the 21st Century for museums?

As the attendance at the ACMI Tim Burton show has gone through the roof, there is an emerging issue of museums inviting popular culture to boost visitor attendance.

Museum directors are sticking their nose into the entertainment business by turning museums into mini high-class shopping malls with fine dining experiences, quirky gallery shops and pop music concerts. Perhaps they also need to consider the original roles of museum – to exhibit, interpret and collect culture that provides knowledge and inspires creativity.

Making museums relevant in the 21st Century is one thing, but alienating loyal visitors is another.

Iris SiYi Shen

Censorship, moral panic and art

The focus of the art and censorship debate should be shifted from ‘is censorship needed?’ to ‘what kind of censorship can benefit both artists and audience?’

Art is not a free zone where artists can do anything they like as though nothing else matters. Artistic expression that signals the values of some individuals can embarrass or upset others.

In a democratic society, both ‘artist value’ and ‘audience value’ should be recognised. This validates art censorship in the public space.

Censorship is necessary. Thus, discussing how to improve the system by which government can regulate artistic expression seems more practical and more beneficial.

Qian Zhao

Issue 42 Letters

Wednesday, October 7th, 2009

Letters to the Editor

In the following letters to the editor, the authors address a variety of concerns and issues as they relate to the current Australian arts scene. The authors critically comment on what has piqued their interest, infuriated or inspired them.

Art Prizes: Artists’s cash cow?

Does Australia have too many art prizes? Are these awards too irresistible for cash strapped artists to ignore? Is a $100,000 prize too alluring when, according to David Throsby in his article “Don’t Give Up Your Day Job”, the mean creative income for visual artists is approximately $3,100 annually? Is the Australian desire for competition and sport pushing our artists to race and perform? Do art awards limit the scope, production and controversial nature of an artists potential? Can the desire for public recognition and a cash payout encourage artists to surrender their artistic integrity? How can we then, make art available to the public without the spectacle of blockbuster exhibitions and awards?

Tegan Sullivan

The AGNSW’s most recent gaff

Of the numerous regrettable decisions made by Australian collecting institutions, paying $16 million for a second-rate Cezanne is just the latest. Is the Australian passion for French Post-Impressionism so overwhelming that a leading institution willingly perpetuates the myth of Australian art inferiority? Auctioning off major Australian artists to pay the record price is irresponsible and damaging to the domestic market. The Cezanne has its merits and can be cited as a jewel in the AGNSW collection, but only for an institution that perceives the value is in the artist’s reputation and not the quality of the work itself.

Yasmin Green

The lingering connection between art and politics

Artworks usually are related to propaganda, whether political or individual. The Art and China’s Revolution exhibition was on at the Asia Society in New York City. It could show the aesthetic merit of the artworks which were largely produced during the period of China’s Cultural Revolution (1966-76). However, most of these artworks received great critical attention in the art market because of their political sensitivity, rather than their aesthetic value. As a Chinese art student, I wonder when Chinese artworks could be valued with less political intention.

Zhisheng Sa

Re-figure: A contemporary perspective on figurative representation in art

The suggestion that twentieth century representational figures, which exist as a testament of “traditional skill and idealism”, should be perceived as the pinnacle of contemporary public art is beyond my understanding. Surely Librado’s problem with our multicultural society is his failure to grasp its ability to inspire – the very same traditional ideal that appears in contemporary public art, but with less didactic purposes.

Neil Brandhorst

The (non)issue with public art

“Outdoor art isn’t what it used to be” – thank goodness! Ken Johnson (New York Times, 25th July 2009) mourns the decline of monolithic, neo-Classical heroic sculpture in favour of contemporary public art that offers “relatively empty experiences”, reflecting “the absence of any consensus of values in our pluralistic, multicultural society”. Contemporary outdoor art will not be to everyone’s taste, precisely because it does reflect our “pluralistic, multicultural society”, rather than a colonial, militant culture where conformity is the key to success. Give me giant flowers over generals any day.

Judith Thomas-Meulman

Culture for the dinky-di Aussie

“Aussie! Aussie! Aussie!” Ken Oath. During my four years overseas, I cringed every time I heard the cry. I returned home to see Shane Warne: the Musical advertised above a urinal. Bloody awesome. Is this what we’re into now? Perhaps the lowest common denominator is the key to attracting a paying audience? I can’t wait for the exhibition of “Memorable Moments of Merv Hughes’ Mo.” There’s got to be a better way of bringing people to the arts.

Michael Wilton

Hope and graffiti

The news that American artist, Shephard Fairey was arrested for graffiti while travelling to Boston for his first solo exhibition is disheartening (ABC news, 7 July 2009). Fairey created the image of Obama for the immensely successful Hope campaign, which now hangs in the National Portrait Gallery in Washington. The ‘Zero Tolerance’ policy is an outdated response to graffiti. Melbourne has a better idea: the City Lights Project – a changing exhibition held in Melbourne’s laneways. The exhibition celebrates street art and recognizes that graffiti adds to the city’s heartbeat. When will law enforcers realise that graffiti has moved beyond vandalism and consider exercising some discretion?

Adela Zverina

The crumbling attention spans of the Twitter Generation

Anthony Gormley’s One & Other public project on the fourth plinth at the Triangular Square is debilitating. Gormley argues that the living effigy becomes a metaphor to reflect the diversity and vulnerability of our multifaceted society. Unfortunately, such frivolous and whimsical conduct sadly reiterates how obsessive we are with “Britain’s Got Talent”. Gormley underestimates the length of an hour and how short-lived people’s attention spans are. Andy Warhol has cracked the conundrum 40 years ago; Gormley’s plinth watch deflates before the 15 minutes, shorter if you Tweet.

Ricky Lau

Low-brow cabaret

Tim Maybury, I’m afraid your recent presentation at the MCA’s Creative Sydney 2009 was more lowbrow than Lo-Fi And Loving It! What a mish-mash of random, disjointed performances. It quickly degenerated from a choir of sweet old ladies, to a bizarre cabaret of black PVC leotard clad gimps, stimulating anal sex with power tools upon a pink Chewbacca; that is, before I walked out. I was told by the event’s media release to expect the unexpected. I just didn’t anticipate being embarrassed for the state of contemporary art.

Alison Van Der Linden