Posts Tagged ‘Museum of Contemporary Art’

Out with the old, in with the new – maybe?

Wednesday, May 30th, 2012

By Joan Cameron-Smith

Vernon Ah Kee’s, Fantasies of the Good, 2004, charcoal on paper. Image courtesy of the MCA and artist. © Vernon Ah Kee

After six months of construction, the Museum of Contemporary Art in Sydney has opened the doors of the new Mordant wing. Marking this occasion, the aptly named exhibition Volume One: MCA Collection, a selection of works from the museum’s collection, is a significant marking point – this is a new chapter for the future of the MCA and within the visual arts landscape of Sydney. (more…)

Sao Paulo Museum of Art cries for help

Wednesday, October 19th, 2011

Masp2 © Eric Matsumoto Okawa, 2010

By Elka Okawa

The Sao Paulo Museum of Art Assis Chateubriant (MASP) is the most important museum of Western art not only in Brazil but also in Latin America. The museum’s permanent exhibition has more than 8,000 artworks with innumerous works by some of the best known artists in the European canon – mostly Italian and French including Rafael, Mantegna, Botticelli, Delacroix, Renoir, Monet, Cezanne, Picasso, Modigliani, Toulouse-Lautrec, Van Gogh, Matisse, Chagall, Diego Rivera, Cândido Portinari, Di Cavalcanti, Anita Malfatti and Almeida Junior. It is possible to also appreciate photographs, drawings and sculptures by Degas, Rodin, Ernesto di Fior, Victor Brecheret. MASP is a member of the Musée D’Orsay’s 19th-century club and in 1982 it was named a heritage site by the Historical Asset Defence Council of the state. This important museum was the first Brazilian museum to be recognised for the great historical importance of its collection. MASP’s founder Pietro Maria Bardi managed it for many years, and only left the management post in 1996, three years before his death.

In addition to being an important tourist destination, for both national and international visitors, MASP is also a cultural centre offering different activities. These include the art school, the atelier, dance and music festivals, theatres, debates, lectures and courses for art teachers. It is the most visited museum in Sao Paulo with an average of 50,000 visitors per month (Folha de Sao Paulo, April 5, 2009).

However, in the last decade, the museum has faced some serious management problems that are directly affecting its financial situation. In 2004, a major Sao Paulo newspaper, Folha de Sao Paulo, released the first article to the wider public calling attention to the museum’s situation.

Although MASP assets are valuated in US$1 billion, just the labour debt is more than US$2 million (…) MASP is facing a serious financial crisis.

How can an important museum like MASP be facing financial problems? Is nobody looking after the museum’s interest? It is not a small art institution where people can pretend as though nothing is happening. It is the biggest museum in Latin America! There are many successful museums all over the world and those who are managing them have no secrets. A comparison of MASP with other museums brings to light the value of this important Brazilian institution.

The Sao Paulo Museum of Art Assis Chateubriant

Sao Paulo is the fourth biggest city in the world and the largest in South Hemisphere with 1,530 km² and more than 11 million people (CENSUS, 2010). As in all big cities, the metropolitan area also includes another 39 cities and more than 20 million people.

At the beginning of the 20th Century Sao Paulo experienced a massive population growth due to immigration, the development of industry and the improvement of the coffee economy. The need for leisure and free spaces immediately increased. As a result, parks, picnic areas, leisure societies, cinemas and theatres emerged (PIRES, 2001). The city has created various cultural spaces including the Sao Paulo Museum of Art Assis Chateubriand (MASP), the Sao Paulo Town Hall, the Museum of the Portuguese Language, the State Art Gallery, the Brazilian Art Museum, the Afro-Brazilian Museum, the Cultural Centre and the Modern Art Museum. In 1922, Sao Paulo hosted Modern Art Week, which featured important local artists such as Anita Malfatti, Mario de Andrade, Oswald de Andrade. At that time, it was not well understood by the population, but it was this event that afterwards raised cultural consciousness in the country and ultimately led to the creation of MASP. 18 years later, in 1940, journalist Assis Chateaubriand collaborated with art critic Pietro Maria Bardi to create an art museum with a brief of being revolutionary. The intention was to create not only a space to appreciate art, but also a centre to disseminate culture and art by teaching and by offering courses to the audience. Chateaubriand’s intention was to create “a house of painting and sculpture to constitute the interest of our (Brazilian) people in arts” (BARDI, 1992). MASP was founded in this context, and opened on October 2nd 1947.

In 1983 a convention called First City and Culture was hosted in Sao Paulo to discuss the future of cultural spaces, as well as their fundraising issues. At that time MASP did not attend the forum for it was self-funded. The quality of its permanent collection meant that works rented to other countries, including Japan, were enough to maintain the institution. Unfortunately, the museum situation has since changed.

In 1995, the architect Julio Neves was elected the new president of MASP. His controversial management style included a US$12 million reform of the building from March 1996 to September 2001.  In the first years of his management, he organised big exhibitions that attracted hundreds of thousands of visitors and inserted Brazil in the mega-exhibition circuit. The museum exhibited The Italian Art in Brazilian Collection in 1996, Monet and Michelangelo in Italian Art History in 1997 and Egypt – Gods’ Land in 2001, which featured more than 120 pieces from Louvre’s collection. This was the turning point.

The management of the museum did not realise that they were constructing a model that tended to concentrate on a visiting public and consequently began to only receive sponsorship for these blockbuster events. With no funds to compete with other institutions, there was a drop in the number of visitors. In 2004, Retrato de Camões, a painting from Portuguese artist José de Guimarães, was deaccessioned to pay a debt of US$1.8 millions. In 2006 the museum had its electricity cut due to another US$2 million debt — this time with the state electricity company. The museum crisis was growing and becoming a big problem with a difficult solution. In 2007, their debt was estimated to be US$6 million.

Museum Management

As with any private company, it is essential for museums to define strategies and products to be offered to customers. For Silberberg (1994), product quality perception, originality, customer service, sustainability, product perception, facilities, community engagement and support and management compromise are key factors to attracting visitors to museums or cultural attractions.

Analysing from Silberberg’s perspective, MASP situation is not bad. Despite the crisis and the fact that there are no new acquisitions, MASP holds Latin America’s biggest collection. The diversity of the works talk for themselves in terms of originality. Service to the client and the sustainability of the institution are points that can always be improved. Despite the problems that the museum is facing, the perception of the museum’s artworks has not changed. The Museum’s building was designed by Lina Bo Bardi, an Italian modernist architect. It is located in one of the city’s most important financial avenues and it is the only construction in the world where the main body rests in four lateral pillars over a 74 meters freestanding space. The MASP problem is clearly related to the quality of its management.

Some Solutions for MASP

The most important museum in Latin America is facing some management shortcoming and solutions will be proposed here.

Firstly, MASP should hire a professional manager.

Good management is about vision. However, museum management is unique.  According to Timothy Ambrose, “museums are for people” (1993).  Besides possessing the usual qualities of a good manager, a museum manager should always keep that point in mind. When Elizabeth Ann Macgregor took up the Directorship of the Sydney’s Museum of Contemporary Art (MCA) in 1999, she knew she had to take the museum’s work out to new audiences. She also knew that the MCA at that point was the only museum in Australia dedicated to contemporary art, so she used this knowledge to create a national profile for the space. Visitor attendance at the MCA increased to over 578,900 in 2010 and came out of a difficult financial position.

Tate Gallery in London, the Metropolitan Museum of Art (MET) in New York and the Guggenheim are managed by specialists in the field, executives and professional cultural fundraisers. Besides that, those institutions publish a public balance sheet annually.

Secondly, the marketing and advertising strategy should improve.

The museum should have its own brand product. MASP’s souvenir shop only sells products with the exhibition content as notebooks, pencils and calendars. No products with the museum brand are sold. The Modern Museum of Art (MAM) has many MAM stores located in the biggest Shopping Malls of the city, selling designer and new artist works like necklaces, scarves and earrings.

Tourism has an important economic role in Sao Paulo.  In 2009, 11.3 million people visited Sao Paulo, a 37.8% increase compared to 2004. Domestic tourists stay 3.3 days on average in the city and spend US$1,700 during that period. International tourists stay longer, 5.3 days and spend an average of US$2,400 in the same period. MASP is a major tourist point for both local and international visitors that stay in the city. Unfortunately, there are no incentive policies such as flyers or booklets in Portuguese, English or in any other language.

The museum could also think about making a cultural partnership or connections with other national or international institutions to promote art.

Thirdly, the museum should create groups to maintain the institution.

The Modern Museum of Art (MAM) has 1,000 members. The contribution varies from US$75 to US$5,000 per year and offers discounts in shops, restaurants and courses offered by the museum. In France there is a National Museum Group that manages funds for the acquisition and conservation of art collections at 34 museums and two exposition centres. This takes place under the supervision of the France Ministry of Culture. The tickets for the museums and the commercialisation of their brands guarantee the financial health of all institutions. In the United States, where the Government does not play such an important role in funding, the museums are maintained by the population. The MET in New York has more than 120,000 members that contribute from US$45 to US$20,000 per year. One successful case is Andrew Mellon from a banker’s family. He donated 900 artworks to create the National Gallery in the 1930s and also started a group with some of his wealthy friends to help the gallery. Interestingly, another group was created from this first one — their wives, otherwise known as bored ‘ladies who lunch’, started volunteering as museum guides. The Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) and the MET in New York have some of the oldest guide programs. The Art Gallery of New South Wales (AGNSW) in Sydney started theirs in 1972. In addition to guiding the public through the artworks, these ladies or their families may also become benefactors. Mollie Gowing, originally a guide, recently left a large bequest to AGNSW of almost 400 paintings, sculptures, photographs, ceramics and fibre works.

And lastly, MASP should be thought as a cultural space.

When it was founded, Chateaubriand’s ideal was to create an integrated art space. Plenty of people visited MASP because of the courses of art history, photography, music and cinema. In the latest years those activities were almost abandoned. The museum has a great space and is located in the heart of Sao Paulo’s commercial area and is currently not being cleverly used.

Again, none of the solutions proposed above are new. Being able to propose some viable solutions just emphasises that hiring the right professionals to manage the museum would improve this never ending nightmare. Despite all problems the museum is facing, in 2011, Indian Ambassador Fausto Godoy donated Asian art and crafts to MASP, placing the museum under the same category as the MET in New York. This might be the light in the end of the tunnel, or it might be an alert saying that such an important museum should not be facing such a sad situation.

References

Ambrose, Timothy, Museum basics, (Taylor & Francis, 1993)

Art Gallery of New South Wales

Bardi, Pietro Maria, A História do MASP (Quadrante, 1992)

Bergamo, Marlene and Daniel Bergamasco, ‘Teto do MASP tem placas de alumínio quebradas, e museu culpa pássaros’, Folha de São Paulo, 19 June 2007

Boyayan, Miguel, ‘MASP pede socorro’, Veja São Paulo, 28 June 2004

Canal Contemporâneo, ‘MASP pede socorro!’

CENSO 2010

Dumazeidier, Jofre, ‘Lazer e Cultura Popular’ (1979) FFLCH/ USP

Lamarca, ‘O Museu Paulista como Atrativo Turístico da cidade de Sao Paulo’ (2001) ECA/ USP

The Metropolitan Museum of Art

Museu de Arte Moderna de São Paulo MAM

The Museum of Contemporary Art, Sydney

The Museum of Modern Art, New York

Pires, Mário J, Lazer e Turismo Cultural (Manole, 2nd ed, 2002)

São Paulo Turismo

Silberberg, Ted, ‘Cultural Tourism and Business Opportunities for Museums and Heritage Sites’ (1994) University of Victoria

TASSINARI, Alberto, Pequeno Guia Berlendis de Hitória da Arte – do Renascimento ao Impressionismo Através das Obras do MASP (Berlendis & Vertecchia, 1995)

Vandals get validation from contemporary art world

Tuesday, October 18th, 2011

By Tali Zeloof

Installation view of Art in the Streets at The Geffen Contemporary at MOCA, April 17-August 8, 2011. Photo courtesy of Brian Forrest

Adopted from the streets after being forbidden by law, graffiti finds an unlikely home scribbled, scratched and sprayed onto the walls of the Geffen Contemporary in Los Angeles. Art in the Streets, the first U.S. museum survey of street art, offers audiences an entrée into a countercultural movement that has overcome odds to cement itself in the contemporary canon. Director of the museum and curator of the exhibition, Jeffrey Deitch, stated that he ‘put street art into the context of the museum to engage new audiences’ (Lyn Winter 2011). While Deitch’s innovative curation and mega-marketing budget brought in a diverse crowd, the record-breaking attendance is largely due to the generous donation made by acclaimed British street artist, Banksy. Justifying his sponsoring free admission every Monday, Banksy claimed, ‘I don’t think you should have to pay to look at graffiti. You should only pay if you want to get rid of it’ (Juxtapoz Magazine 2011). Although spoken with tongue-in-cheek humour, his statement highlights the ambivalent relationship street artists have with the commercial art world, while insinuating that despite the recognition of graffiti as a legitimate art form, street artists still grapple with their dichotomous insider/outsider status.

Entering a grunge warehouse turned contemporary art museum in the middle of Little Tokyo, Los Angeles audiences plunge into a cross-cultural environment evoking the mash-up of eclectic genres and styles that influence street art. It feels like the Geffen Contemporary has been put in Little Tokyo to gentrify the downtown area, which is brilliantly appropriate when you think about graffiti as beautifying a city. Twice a week the Nike skateboard team visits the museum to perform freestyle tricks on a series of custom-made ramps designed by pro-skater Lance Mountain and artist George McFetridge. The skate-ramp, located at the beginning of the exhibition, instantly arouses an atmosphere of fun and frivolous youth. The wheel tracks marking the steep inclines of the structures offer metonymic traces of risk, rebellion and raw adrenalin, the vibrancy and precision of design fulfilling the duo’s ‘goal of making an artwork truly skatable’ (Salo 2011). The building’s acoustics enable the sound of skateboarding to echo throughout the space to assault and amplify audiences’ sensory experience.

The introductory ‘period’ rooms historically contextualise the street art movement. Curators have done this by displaying authentic newspaper clippings of anti-graffiti campaigns, photographs capturing early attempts of political street art as well as a collection of spray paints that dates back to the 1960s when it was first invented for industrial markets. Exhibited in transparent vitrines, the spray paints are artifacts of the graffiti movement, tangible evidence of the art-making tools used by countercultural creatives before pre-made stencils were invented. By charting street art’s evolution, Deitch encourages visitors to shift perceptions of graffiti as vandalism and try to understand the political dimension of this democratic practice that implores the public to engage with the semiotics of the street (Deitch 2011). Although the period rooms seem to offer audiences a holistic history of the street art movement, the absence of female graffiti artists perpetuates the idea that street art is a ‘boys club’ (Acevedo 2011, p.1). So while Deitch advocates the democratisation of image-making, his egalitarianism fails to translate into equal representation of genders.

Although the curators concentrated on street art in key cities such as New York, Los Angeles, San Francisco and Sao Paulo, it was a rookie error to leave out Paris, where graffiti art has its genesis with the Situationist movement and Guy Debord. Debord was the founder of the anti-establishment movement known as the Situationists. Their famous slogan “Never Work”, graffitied on Parisian streets, signalled the start of street art as a form of social and political critique (Andretti & Xavier 1996). The Situationists significantly influenced the oeuvre of stencil and graffiti artist Shepard Fairey whose iconic Obey sticker (displayed in numerous incarnations throughout the exhibition), drew inspiration from Debord’s critical theory on the predictability of bourgeois urban life. According to the exhibition wall text, although the Obey sticker started as a stencilling experiment, it quickly turned into an international phenomenon with pro-wrestler Andre the Giant’s face becoming ubiquitous in major city streets around the world. In contrast to the signage associated with advertising campaigns, the Obey sticker has no apparent commercial motives and so it forces the public to read further into the image and question other manipulative forces enacted by the ruling class.

A visual emblem of the 2008 Obama presidential campaign, Fairey’s Hope poster employs a Russian Constructivist colour palette to depict the then presidential candidate with the words ‘Hope’ printed beneath his portrait. The iconic poster appears in the exhibition next to a letter from President Obama thanking Fairey for his contribution to the campaign. However, there exists an irony in the head of state sanctioning images which he claims, ‘have a profound effect on people, whether seen in a gallery or on a stop sign’ (Fairey 2008). While Obama’s letter recognises the potential of street art to polarise public opinion and bring attention to global issues, his praise perpetuates double standards in street art culture. While an unknown graffiti artist would be fined for sticking his/her stencil on public street signs, the rock stars of graffiti receive thank you letters from the President. Even in a movement characterised by democratic values, there is still hierarchy.

The majority of the exhibition space feels like a candy-coloured jungle gym with ramps constructed to seamlessly guide visitors from room to room. The vibrant murals depicting cartoon creatures with bulging eyes, bucktooth teeth and distorted features create a carnivalesque ambiance that is at times dizzying. In stark contrast to this lollypop land is the immersive installation entitled Street Market, a facsimile of a bleak narrow street. The brainchild of legendary street artists Todd James, Barry Mcgee and Stephen Power, Street Market reflects society’s disillusionment with the ‘new consumer culture that emerged after World War II’ (Los Angeles Times April 15 2011, p. 2). Lit with cheap neon lights and lined with miniature shops, some of which have bullet holes puncturing their front windows, it is an attempt by the artists to authentically simulate society’s moral decay, but the installation felt contrived, over-worked and at times indulgent. Perhaps installing a pseudo street in an exhibition about street art is a little too obvious.

Installation view of Art in the Streets at The Geffen Contemporary at MOCA, April 17-August 8, 2011. Photo courtesy of Brian Forrest

A taxidermist dog casually marking his territory on a serrated steel gate greets visitors as they enter the central gallery. Could the dog be the animal incarnation of a graffiti artist who marks public property as a way of conquering and reclaiming public space? Furthermore, the urine, which is an abject bodily fluid that causes a visceral repulsion in audiences, parallels the negative view of graffiti as a desecration of public streets. In the same gallery, a stencil of a male figure kneeling next to a bucket of paint in a prayer position is superimposed on a wall that Banksy and the students from the City of Angels school graffitied on to resemble a stained glass window. This image of worship perhaps alludes to the ritualistic strategies employed by street artists, some of which include working late at night, wearing inconspicuous attire and signing their work using pseudonyms. The quasi-religious iconography aroused by Stained Window is juxtaposed with war arms that include a gun sporting a string of coloured pencils instead of bullets and an army tank with a heart-shaped balloon hanging from its rocket launcher. Violence is subverted with quirky creativity that articulates Banksy’s anti-war stance.

The Italian street artist known as Blu by his peers also offered a politically charged critique of war. However, his large-scale mural that depicted wooden coffins draped in American dollar notes instead of American flags had to be painted over due to the controversy it generated. Although Blu’s mural had a fleeting life on the outer wall of the Geffen Contemporary, it achieved exactly what a lot of street art tries to, and that is make people question political ideology and no longer accept it as gospel. His correlation between capitalism and causalities offended Bible-belt America; however it is through provocative content that Blu was able to bring the uncomfortable question of  ‘Who profits from war?’ into public consciousness (Lambert 2011, p. 2). By refusing to change the subject matter of his mural, Blu preserved his integrity, autonomy and credibility in the street art world. The erasure of his mural highlights just one of the dilemmas that arise when taking art from the streets and inserting it into the museum (Lambert 2011, p. 2).

The exhibition is littered with Banksy works that subvert street signs’ original meanings. A personal favourite was a sign that read ‘any person found painting graffiti on these premises will be reported’ and then crudely scribbled underneath Banksy wrote ‘to the nearest art dealer’. Although this text-based work critiques surveillance and the commodification of art, it’s an ironic statement coming from Banksy who counts Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt as clients and whose works are held in major museums worldwide. So while Banksy has maintained a mystique around his true identity, his status in the art world and the $500,000 price tags his works fetch makes one question whether he is complicit in his own commodification.

Art in the Streets amalgamates under one roof some of the most cutting-edge, creative and thought-provoking graffiti art. If you have ever paused to contemplate urban art on a brick wall, stop sign or highway, this exhibition is a must see.

Art in the Streets, The Geffen Contemporary at the Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles, 17 April-8 August 2011.

References

Acevedo, L 2011, ‘Few Women Artists in MOCA’s Record breaking ‘Art in the Streets’ Exhibit,’ Her Circle, 12 August, accessed 27 August 2011, < http://www.hercircleezine.com/2011/08/12/few-women-artists-in-mocas-record-breaking-art-in-the-streets-exhibit/>.

Andretti, L & Xavier, C 1996, Situationists: Politics, Urbanism. Museum of Contemporary Art, Barcelona.

‘Art in the Street at the Geffen Contemporary at MOCA’, Los Angelis Times, April 15 2011, p.2, accessed 26 August 2011 from Culture Monster Arts database.

Deitch, J, Gastman R and Rose, A 2011, Art in the Streets, Skira Rizzoli, New York.

Fairey, S 2008, Mediatemple, California, accessed 19 August 2011, < http://obeygiant.com/headlines/check-it-out>.

Juxtapoz Magazine 2011, Banksy Pays for your Monday Moca Admission, accessed 20 August 2011,< http://www.juxtapoz.com/street-art/banksy-pays-for-your-monday-moca-admission>.

Lambert, N 2011, ‘The problem with taking “Art in the Streets” into the museum’, Artinfo, 11 January, accessed 25 August 2011, < http://www.artinfo.com/news/story/36721/the-problem-with-taking-art-in-the-streets-into-the-museum/?page=2>.

Salo, A 2011, Skateboarding a part of MOCA Exhibit, ESPN Action Sports Archive, accessed 24 August 2011 < http://sports.espn.go.com/action/skateboarding/news/story?id=6363739>.

Winter, L 2011, Art in the Street Record Attendance Release, media release, accessed 21 August 2011, < http://www.moca.org/pdf/press/Art_in_the_Streets_Record_Attendance_Release_.pdf >.

Runa Islam: See I Think

Wednesday, November 3rd, 2010

Shanjun Mao

If it is possible to see just one exhibition at Museum of Contemporary Art from August to September, then this outstanding selection of 16mm film installations by Runa Islam from the past seven years should be it. Runa Islam (1970- ), a Bangladesh born British artist and nominee for 2008 Turner Prize, is internationally noted for her 16mm and 35mm film works. Her first solo exhibition in Australia displays her distinctive creativity to blend cinematic elements into display space and promote different ways of viewing.

Islam successfully ‘moves’ a cinema into the art museum, for she displays the works in cinema-like surroundings, which erases the boundary between museum art and film. There are plenty of spaces among each film work, and the audience is left in darkness, while the screens and labels on the wall are lit by dim light from the projectors. When the viewer is walking into the display space, they can feel themselves entering into a private cinema. Indeed, all the projectors in this exhibition are treated as part of the artworks. They either stand on the bases or in the well-designed cabinets which not only enhances the reality of cinema, but also challenges the notion that tools should always be behind the scenes. Additionally, sound in this exhibition plays a relatively important role. Islam either chooses natural sound or lets the sound of the projector to directly match the film. The whole installation of the exhibition greatly enhances the viewer’s experience.

The exhibition not only requires the viewer’s attention visually, but also questions their visual perceptions at the same time. Untitled (2008) is the smallest scale work in this exhibition while cannot be missed. By moving closed focus to distant focus, the artist shows that the more something is magnified, the less truth it reveals. An individual’s vision often gives only one part of the story, which is often distorted by imagination. Be The First To See What You See As You See It (2004) is one of her representations which challenges visual perceptions by creating subtle changes among scenes. Contrasted with the other five works, this short film shows distinct visual and acoustic effects with fresh scenes and smashing sound.

The success of this exhibition is achieved by deep experience and different ways of interpretation. Long shot is an important technique in Islam’s works, which gives the audience time to be in deep contemplation, and the application of abstract and geometric shapes allows the works to be open to interpretation.

Magical Consciousness (2010) is a new work showing Islam’s interest in Eastern meditation. This 8:22 minute film presents several changes of a rectangle Japanese screen and plays a visual game based on changing relationships between Yin and Yang, which in Chinese philosophy are complementary opposites within a greater whole, such as dark and light, visible and invisible, and falsehood and reality. The viewer is encouraged to project their interpretation to the aspect of Yin, which looks invisible but may possess more meaning.

This exhibition of six artworks requires viewers’ time and patience, while it is an invitation to see and think.

In the Balance

Wednesday, November 3rd, 2010

Genevieve Barry

Lucas Ihlien plainly admits that there are trained professionals out there who can do a much better job than me at tallying up all the carbon emissions. I am an enthusiastic amateur, ordinary bicycle riding, compost-making suburban do-gooder. I’ve installed a half-flush toilet, I use energy saving bulbs, ‘safe’ toilet paper and I’ve signed up to ‘green power’, but I don’t really understand whether I am making a difference.

If you are worried about climate change and not sure what you can do, then In the Balance: Art for a Changing World at the Museum of Contemporary Art (MCA) is a must see. Over 30 artists and collectives, who are predominantly Australian, explore one of the most contentious problems we face at the moment. The artists in this exhibition have developed novel ways to get people thinking about climate change.

The exhibition is based around four themes: logging and de-forestation, Australian waterways, mining and sustainability, and recycling. Unfortunately, the majority of works are not spectacular or innovative. There is an abundance of video installations, living plants in jars, photographs of people chaining themselves to trees and anecdotal episodes on recycling -  essentially, all the usual suspects one would imagine to be in an environmentally minded exhibition.

A notable exception to this is Olegas Truchanas’ video work of Lake Pedder before it was flooded by the Tasmanian Hydro Electric Commission.  Exquisite vistas slowly merge into one another, showing a pristine wilderness that can never be recovered. Also, Angela Torenbeek’s Turtle is a devastating reaction to the dangers marine life face due to fishing.

Unfortunately, Weathergroup_U’s video installation was not in operation resulting in what felt like a dramatic under-representation of Indigenous people talking about their affinity with the land. According to the exhibition catalogue, the work interviews Jeffrey Lee, the sole custodian of the Aboriginal land of Koongarra. He is fighting to maintain control of the area to stop mining corporations accessing it for uranium deposits.

However, the truly successful part of the exhibition occurs when the artist calls directly upon the visitor to participate. Lucas Ihlein is conducting an environmental audit on the MCA and its power usage. He sits in a room surrounded by chalkboards for walls and a computer, updating his blog with his findings and holding discussions with visitors.  That a visitor can talk with him about what he is doing is thrilling.  The chalkboards, littered with annotations, measurements and tallies is an artwork in itself, visually demonstrating the tangled web of the energy consumed to perform everyday tasks, like visiting the gallery.

‘Artist as Family’, comprised of Patrick and Zephyr Jones and Meg Ulman, designed a public garden called Food Forest in Surry Hills where food is grown by the community to decrease the dependency on supermarkets. Their project also has a social benefit, as homeless people have the opportunity to feed themselves.

That the visitor is invited to follow the exhibition past the gallery wall to the outside ensures that the artists and curators have delivered on their promise to provide positive outcomes on what could have potentially been a sombre exhibition.  It is a small start, but In the Balance is a valuable excursion where art can be a vehicle for activism.

Lucas Ihlein

Environmental Audit

2010

Hand-drawn diagram; incomplete diagram for The Artist as Family, Food Forest, July 2010

Dimensions unknown

Courtesy and copyright of the artist

Finding loneliness in the multitude.

Tuesday, October 19th, 2010

Kelly Brockhoff

In his keynote address to the Melbourne Art Fair, internationally renowned American curator and art critic Robert Storr looked at the burgeoning number of biennales and art fairs and their impact. Where once there were only two biennales – Venice and Sao Paulo – there are now well over one hundred. Where once there were only a handful of art fairs, now there are dozens. And where once there were international styles, now there are global markets. Although not as controversial as his address at the MCA in July 2008, which ended with a fiery exchange with art critic and curator Okwui Enwezor, Robert Storr, famed art curator, critic, academic and painter did not fail to please. Storr asked the big questions on the value of the biennale; how it engages the audience and the participation of art dealers, curators, collectors and institutions. Storr, with his quiet manner told it as it is while he assessed the new playing field for art.

Storr supported the biennale as a useful form, one not to be thrown away, but one which requires constant revision and careful supervision. The model that is a locally curated art event, exhibiting an array on international artists with funding supplied by government and philanthropic corporations is in complete contrast to the invitational commercial event of an art fair. Yet with the proliferation of both art fairs and biennales today, it is not unreasonable for people to become befuddled and confuse the two separate entities. For those that are on the ‘inside’ of the art world, the blurring could reside in the fact that art fairs, such as the one in Melbourne recently, function as a non-profit event with invitational participation.  The art fair model creates a more prescriptive style of show such as the themed Melbourne Art Fair, where commercial galleries only gain entry if they meet the criteria set by the Art Fair board. As a commercial model the collectors are motivated to attend the fair to discover the next emerging artist and to track the art market. Many galleries that attend the fair exhibit shows that have been previously sold, which then become an exercise in public relations for them. Art fairs, Storr suggested, are defined as a gathering of art selectors who believe in and advance the cause of the artists they choose. Lorenzo Rudolf, the Fair Director of ShContemporary (Shanghai Contemporary Art Fair) in an interview with Artfacts, upheld this view by making the clear distinction that art fairs should foremost support the primary art market with the criterion of market ability and what will sell. Randi Linnegar, Co-Director of the King Street Galleries, supported this opinion with the following comment: ‘An art fair is a commercial event whereby commercial galleries gather in one exhibition area that allows each gallery exhibition space to showcase their artists. The purpose is to bring potential purchasers (now and for the future) of art into a single venue where they can view a very large selection of available works in various mediums by numerous artists; and have price details readily available.’

Storr stated a clear definition of the difference between the role of the two events and their relationship to the audience. Both models – biennales and art fairs – are good occasions to consider what crowds are, how they function and their engagement with the exhibits. The function of art fairs and the dealers, he stated, was to persuade the audience to posses the object of art, whereas the function of a curator of a biennale is to understand how the object or art will possess the viewer. In reviewing the role of biennales today Storr proposed: ‘much of the criticism of biennales stem from the fact that they are partly confused with art fairs’, possibly as a result of the apparent penetration of increased commercial interest. It was with this statement that he controversially suggested, ‘dealers should ease up a little’ on their influence with the curators and allow them the space and time to make their own decisions on the representative artists. A cutting remark directly pointed at the tight knit art community that powers these events with the required finance and resources. It is this dilemma of the relationship between those committed to the activity of art and those that have this power, that have to be constantly worked out. The commonality is that they both share an interest and commitment to art. Although it could be argued that the more information a curator has regarding an artist the more institutionally “reliable” they tend to be considered. Artists running independent initiatives outside the official artistic channels tend to get overlooked or not seen at all.

Storr made the comment that he thought there was a problem with too many curators doing too many biennales, and not enough curators doing one or two. In 2008 Christov-Bakargiev’s, curator for the 2008 Sydney Biennale, response to a question posed by a journalist was that in her view, biennales are more for the artists and curators than they are for the audiences. This may have been true in the past, with biennales being more “insider” affairs, mostly visited by serious critics, artists, curators and a few dealers, but since the 1990s they have developed a wider and more popular audience.  One can only hope that they continue to prosper, to hold and expand their audience, become tools of education yet still engage the individual viewer as they have done in the recent Sydney Biennale.

In Storr’s opinion, the proliferation of biennales does not seem to be the problem but he identified an increased concern regarding the diversity of work exhibited, stating, ‘you don’t have to make representation a statistical phenomena’ with art from every corner of the globe. This was an interesting point from the curator of the 2007 Venice Biennale who greatly expanded the official selection with over 100 international artists represented. With the growing number of artists who show at international biennales and the influence of larger galleries, there is the notion that contemporary art could become a homogenised commodity. This said, the alter argument is that the biennale becomes more exhausting but also richer for this proliferation.

Storr’s view on this global prospect of biennales is that ‘globalisation’ is a phenomenon of markets, not a phenomenon of art. Unlike Coca Cola, which adapts itself to a markets’ preference, Storr references Gerardo Mosquera’s observation of Coca Cola’s formula adapting to the local market. This is why California and Mexico have very sweet Coca Cola whereas in Chicago it tastes like Australian Pepsi. Art should be different in different places and different in contrast to different things. He added, ‘art should be the occasion to think about what is not the same, not dependable, not predictable, but something that you can engage (with) and develop an interest (in)’.

Storr asked, ‘Can sense be made of art and can ideas really be exchanged amidst this proliferation or have we entered into a period when scanning has replaced seeing, keeping track has replaced paying attention, and information has replaced meaning?’ He framed this idea of proliferation within a period of worldwide excess and that now is a good time to take stock and reassess the possibilities available to all facets of the art world. He asserted that art needs ‘the crowd’ as they mirror the artists’ work; for without the crowd to look upon and engage, would the art be art and not just the artists’ work. Therefore the crowd, as it passes through this smorgasbord of art fairs and biennales, is important. To do the crowd justice and provide an experience that is engaging, challenging and provoking, benefits the artist within the curatorial display.  Taking the crowd and creating a circumstance where they have to engage with the art, where they are immediately and personally implicated, removes them from the crowd and creates an individual and personal experience. Storr cites Baudelaire and speaks of ‘finding the loneliness in the multitude’ and the challenge for the Curator to create, for the individual, a room with a work of art more so than in a room with a crowd.

The inevitable negative critique of the biennale event is now almost expected for armor clad Biennale curatorial teams. In fact the journalist Andrew Frost in speaking with David Elliott leading up to the Sydney Biennale this year, asked him if he was bracing himself for a bad review. David responded with the comment that he was looking forward to it because, in his opinion, it was sure sign of curatorial success. The biennale as an exhibition model, continues to roll on expanding and morphing into the monster that it is quickly becoming, closely monitored by its ever-present critics snapping at its heels vigilant in their assessment of its position of value in the art world.


Robert Storr is Dean of the Yale School of Art. He was Artistic Director of the 52nd Venice Biennale in 2007, and Curator and Senior Curator in the Department of Painting and Sculpture at the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA), New York, from 1990 to 2002. 
Presented by the Monash Museum of Art and the Melbourne Art Foundation at Fitzroy Town Hall, Aug 2010

To Keep Your Balance You Must Keep Moving

Tuesday, October 19th, 2010

Elliot Shields

Somewhere between the bronzed and barefooted casual activism of a dreadlocked Combi captain and the bitter disenchantment of a red-in-the-face political rally goer lies a crusade every bit worthy of the common mans attention. In The Balance, currently on at Sydney’s MCA, has skilfully evaded the cringe inducing hang-ups of angry and naive environmentally conscious art in favour of rationality, to which it owes its success.

Part discussion forum, part art exhibition, In The Balance: Art For A Changing World references the increasingly indelicate push and pull between our environment and us. Whilst this is obviously an important relationship, it is also ripe fodder for an entire subculture of idealism. These idealists use and reuse the clichéd semiotics of ‘STOP NUCLEAR POWER’ banners, ambiguous “statistics” handed to you within a threefold pamphlet or perhaps a completely facile chain email. No elaboration is required on the measured level of care generally shown towards these kinds of crusades.

Equally measured yet entirely positive has been the MCA’s approach, bringing together the interesting and the relevant in order to kick start the care levels.  With work from over 30 artists and artist groups on display, the entrance gallery immediately provides the exhibitions symbolic counterpoints. David Stephenson’s immaculate type C prints of industrial landscapes, and the intellectually engaging Environmental Audit realised by Lucas Ihlein.

Stephenson’s photographs are stunning. Large and luscious, his technical proficiency is undeniable as the cold lifeless structures that fill his New Monuments series leave us reconsidering our effect on the land. A series of photographs of dams from around America, the large concrete dams are as much a barrier between our gaze and the river they contain, as they are concrete monoliths. Sitting between walls of earth as if products of some futuristic archaeological dig, they are an effective reminder that the costs of these physical changes imposed upon our environment are certainly not as temporary as the cost of their construction. 

Adjunct to this room of photographs, intended assumably as the starting point of the exhibition is Lucas Ilhein’s Environmental Audit. Explicitly titled, Ihlein’s work is a quantitative audit of the exhibition’s environmental impact, completed as part of a seminar, complete with large blackboards that span all four walls. Using information about the power consumption and environmental efficiency of each work on show, as well as the gallery itself, Ihlein asks the audience whether the effect of the exhibition will outweigh its costs. Does the exhibition with its high aspirations of sustainability politics still have a voice when the audience has been made aware of the power consumption of every light bulb, or every plasma screen? It’s an irony often raised by critics or by the audience, but rarely by the artist, yet Ihlein has highlighted it’s importance most successfully. The works further success comes from its online presence as a blog regularly updated by Ihlein which documents the ongoing tribulations of keeping the work current. As parts of the exhibition change and environmental impacts are discovered, he informs the reader (both via the blackboard and the blog) thus offering an online forum for comments and discussion in which he himself participates.

It is an interesting work and one of the exhibitions greatest assets, enabling the exhibition to be self aware without the disguise and compromise that may be seen if carried out by the museum itself. Ihlein is also able to point out potential flaws in other works and offer a place to discuss them, as he has done in an assessment of Lauren Berkowitz’s Bags.

Bags, originally exhibited in 1994, consists of two large walls created out of white plastic grocery bags. The bags were donated by the public and by the gallery staff, which would generally be read as a comment on the number of plastic bags in existence and how they are almost all completely non-degradable plastic. That being said, it is bizarre that it was actually quite a struggle for Berkowitz to source the number of bags that she required for the work. Instantly, the integrity of the work is degraded as it implies a condition of society that perhaps does not exist anymore. Disregarding the crude pun, If there were such a large plethora of bags floating around, worthy of commentary, then the work should have been quite easy to construct. This pitfall is still quite short however, as to even consider it means the work has had some degree of success.

Particularly now, as Australia finds itself in a pronounced state of political unrest, an artwork capable of making an audience actually think about something as specific as the politics of sustainability has to be considered quite powerful. If Berkowitz’s Bags is but a whimsical tip of the iceberg (a metaphor soon to be out of date), sitting in relative solitude observing Susan Norrie and David Mackenzie’s spectacularly depressing footage of the Sidoarjo mud flow and its victims offers us the cold, dark and deep reality.

The mud flow, which began in 2006, dispels thousands of cubic metres of mud a day, and has so far displaced 50,000 people from their homes with marginal support from the company responsible or the Indonesian government. A bleak reality appears on the two screens before you, and after a wry grin at Diego Bonetto’s request to befriend Sydney’s weeds, or a straight out laugh at the operation of Amy Franceschini and the Futurefarmers Sunshine Still, entering to a woman in hysterical tears over the loss of her home is a sobering experience. Coming face to face with that kind of reality in the setting of the exhibition becomes ceremonious. Inescapable due to it its size and far more poetic than a newspaper article or bulletin on your home television, you’re forced to perceive it as a virtual reality, something which is moving and breathing but far removed from Berkowitz’s biomorphic bags, completely emotive. As dark as the room is, it does nothing if not encourage the audience to view the exhibition in a brand new light, inaccessible to Ilhein’s audit but having a far greater affect on our environment, and how we perceive it.

‘In The Balance: Art For A Changing World’ Is on now at the Museum  of Contemporary Art, Sydney.
Exhibition Closes 31 October 2010

Issue 42 Considered, Conscientious & Controversial

Sunday, October 18th, 2009

Social Resistance and Activism via Street Art

Nick Phillipson

Street Light - An Exhibition of Lightbox Art by Peter Strong

In recent years, the contemporary artworld has seen a rise in the popularity and saleability of artworks typically associated with street and graffiti art. These works are often created by artists who use non-traditional art materials and techniques. Their choice of imagery is commonly appropriated stencils, silhouettes or illustrations of icons and symbols from popular culture. The works are multi-layered, witty, ironic and visually intriguing for the audience.

Some artists, including Sydney based Peter Strong, are now finding their way into commercial galleries. His exhibition titled Street Light consists of nine light-box based works, communicating his personal ideas on social struggle and cultural empowerment. Strong declares, in an email interview, that his work “challenges the status quo… [and] explores the idea of art resistance”, a term used to describe street and graffiti artists whose work acts as a statement of social activism or rebellion against the dominant culture.

For many street and graffiti artists, their practice is influenced not by set rules and conventions surrounding the process and techniques used to create their works, but by their way of life. Will Robson-Scott, author and graffiti art researcher claims that “Being a writer [street artist] informs the way you see the world, it’s more than writing on walls. Spaces and landscapes take on a new meaning, almost every aspect of your life is influenced.” For Strong, this statement articulates how his actions influence the creation of his artworks within his personal and social world.

Strong says on his website (www.vectorpunk.com) that he is heavily involved in local action groups, artist collectives and community building programs within the Inner West of Sydney, mainly Newtown, St Peters and Marrickville. He has been involved in underground art, music and social justice movements working with others on projects such as Vibe Tribe, Ohms Not Bombs, Reclaim the Streets, Graffiti Hall of Fame, Earthdream and Mekanarky. Currently he is part of the Tortuga warehouse which was established in St Peters, Sydney, early 2008.

Strong’s involvement within these groups, collectives and organisations have clearly shaped his choice of imagery as elements of social justice, music, conflict, environmental concern and social struggle are common within his work. He believes, “that street art shows a certain honesty and non commercial intention by adorning the public realm with thought provoking, funny and visually complex images”. Key works from the Street Light exhibition such as Climate Crossroads, The Urban Blues Part Two and Radio Resistance convey these ideas.

Climate Crossroads is a large, bold piece, heavy in symbolism and composed from multi-layer stencils. As the title suggests, Strong’s theme within the piece is climate change and its environmental consequences. This is communicated through the use of appropriation, a technique Strong acquired from his career as a DJ and music producer. In our interview he described his artworks as acut and paste” or “visual sample.”

Climate Crossroads, Peter Strong, 2009. Image courtesy of the artist and Urban Uprising Gallery.

Climate Crossroads, Peter Strong, 2009. Image courtesy of the artist and Urban Uprising Gallery.

 In the foreground of Climate Crossroads five figures struggle to erect a tall wind turbine, a symbol for the development of environmentally friendly energy production. The composition of the figures and the wind turbine is a clear reference to the 1945 photograph of US Marines raising the American Flag on Mount Suribachi, Iwo Jima. With the implied action of the figures, in erecting the wind turbine, it stands as a defence or guard against the imposing tsunami raging out through the centre of the image. The design of this tsunami stencil is also an appropriation: Strong has borrowed from Hokusai’s The Great Wave, 1831. Through this use of symbolism and composition the viewer is able to perceive a narrative and action taking place within the work.

The title is an acknowledgement of the current debate and discourse in mainstream culture. The world is beginning to see the consequences of climate change through extreme global weather patterns and the increasing frequency of natural disasters. Climate Crossroads encourages the audience to act and implement changes in our society to better our world. We are inspired into a sense of activism and social awareness.

The Urban Blues Part Two is another example of Strong’s work being based in time, place and cultural influences. His cityscape is reflective of long back streets, alive with activity, break dancing, BMX riding, skate boarding and groups listening to music. These blurred and multi-layered actions all take place below the silhouette of a Sydney skyline, similar to Strong’s own environment of St Peters, in the Inner West of Sydney.

The Urban Blues Part Two, Peter Strong, 2009. Image courtesy of the artist and Urban Uprising Gallery.

The Urban Blues Part Two, Peter Strong, 2009. Image courtesy of the artist and Urban Uprising Gallery.

 In Urban Blues Part Two, Strong’s technique of applying spray painted stencils directly onto the Perspex covering for the light box is especially successful. The blue monotone colour scheme allows the layered stencils to create an illusion of depth and detail which is then extenuated by the light shinning from below the surface of the image. Overlapping shapes and lines create interest and encourage the viewer to spend time observing its silhouettes. These overlapping shapes and lines also work as a reference to graffiti pieces painted on public walls, buildings, streets and train carriages. In the public domain, graffiti and street art are often painted or pasted over again and again, washed away or reworked by other artists. Over time, remnants of each piece builds a layered and blurred composition similar to Urban Blues. Strong describes this practice as building a “collaborative spirit, the layering of many artists’ works makes a pleasing visual jam”.

Radio Resistance highlights Strong’s belief in social activism. The long rectangular image contains two dominant stencils– one of a large radio with its antennae stretched and the other is a parade of soldiers in full uniform being watched over by their superior. Connecting both stencils is an overlay of rhythmic dots indicative of a radio speaker pulsating with loud music. In this work Strong juxtaposes two opposite forces. The ordered, obedient and disciplined solider, a powerful symbol for control within society; while the second is the anonymous and informative voice spreading a message via mass media, symbolising resistance and youth. This message is also the acknowledgement of ‘lore’, a state Strong witnessed at underground dance parties during the 80s and 90s. He describes ‘lore’ as being “self policed” and a sense of “harmony coming from the wisdom of many minds at the same understanding”. This is the opposite of a watchful policed state, as represented by the parade of soldiers. It is self regulating and works as a consciousness or message across society creating connection and harmony. This desire of a conscious connection and social activism spread via lines of technology is an idea often associated with cultural advocates, disenfranchised social groups and marginalised individuals within society.

Radio Resistance, Peter Strong, 2009. Image courtesy of the artist and Urban Uprising Gallery.

Radio Resistance, Peter Strong, 2009. Image courtesy of the artist and Urban Uprising Gallery.

 Through these three works, the audience is able to experience more than the traditional belief of simple aesthetics and blocked in colour that are offered by graffiti and street artists. Strong’s use of appropriation and symbolism builds up a narrative and message to inspire audiences with a sense of activism and rebellion. The Street Light series grants the audience a window into a different world and culture where art is a way of life and a form of social resistance and empowerment.

Peter strong’s exhibition, Street Light, will be showing at the Urban Uprising Gallery, 314 Crown Street, Darlinghurst, August 20 – 31, 2009

 

 

Warning: The following article may contain the names and images of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people now deceased

Art that bridges cultures

Shivangi Ambani

 Tim Johnson’s works are striking cross-cultural dialogues—fragmented pieces of imagery, that Shivangi Ambani enjoyed deciphering

Indian mythological characters, Radha and Krishna are locked in their eternal dance, the Garba Raas. However in Tim Johnson’s version, they are surrounded by a Tibetan pagoda and an airplane flying alongside a beautiful peacock.

Two Phoenix, Tim Johnson, 1983, Images courtesy of Queensland Art Gallery

Two Phoenix, Tim Johnson, 1983, Images courtesy of Queensland Art Gallery

Painting Ideas, a retrospective exhibition of Johnson’s works, charts his explorations across cultures and media over the four decades of his practice thus far. The exhibition has been developed by the Art Gallery of New South Wales (AGNSW), in association with the Queensland Art Gallery (QAG). It showed at the AGNSW in early 2009, and then travelled to QAG, before it moves on to the Ian Potter Museum of Art, Melbourne in early 2010.

The exhibition chronologically traces the artist’s career from the 1970s, beginning with his early works as a conceptual artist. Johnson told Julie Ewington, Curatorial Manager of Australian Art at the QAG, that at the time he believed painting was exhausted. Instead, he chose to explore his ideas using a wide variety of media including light works and visual kinetics, performance and photography.

“Art was a process of deconstruction. Sometimes the audience became part of the art,” Johnson said during an artist talk at the AGNSW, referring to the series of photos titled Light Performances. “I was getting rid of the distance between the artist and the viewers.”

From 1979-83, Johnson depicted Australian, English, and American Punk musicians and fans using his own photographs or images from the press. This forms the next part of the exhibition. “My paintings recording the Punk musicians—I thought that they would disappear,” said Johnson. “But they are still here in this exhibition. My ideas became interesting to people retrospectively.” 

Radio Birdman Oxford Funhouse, Tim Johnson, 1983. Image courtesy of Queensland Art Gallery

Radio Birdman Oxford Funhouse, Tim Johnson, 1983. Image courtesy of Queensland Art Gallery

During this time he travelled to India, Nepal and Japan. “I went to India in 1976 and again in 1980. I visited the Ajanta Caves and travelled around for several months,” said Johnson in an email interview. “During the first [visit] I painted while I was travelling and also recorded imagery to use on my return to Australia. I painted things like temples, mosques and images from the culture including deities.” His most recent works incorporate Indian deities such as Krishna and Radha, Ganesha, Hanuman and Gaura/Nitai.

Travelling east to find an alternative to the materialism of western society, Johnson discovered a new way of life and the profound influence of these travels resonate in his work to date. “In the ‘80s I discovered the values and the ways of living in Buddhism—not putting yourself first.”

His works soon became a representation of his own spiritual journey and Buddhist messages. Imagery of the Pure Land from Buddhist traditions—the realm of perfect beauty, where one is freed from samsara (reincarnation – the circle of life and death) and full enlightenment can be attained—is a continuing feature in his works.

Johnson also made his first trip to Papunya, Central Australia in 1980, and since then his growing friendship with Aboriginal artists, such as Clifford Possum Tjapaltjarri, Turkey Tolson Tjupurrula and Michael Nelson Jagamara has led him to discover new meanings in his art and another form of art practice.

“During my visits to Central Australia I found the artists producing master pieces in really humble surroundings. Their works were unique—the language in painting, the mythology and geographic mapping,” said Johnson during the artist talk at the AGNSW.

His initial works were representations of Aboriginal life and their art making practice. For instance, in Visit to Papunya II, several of the Aboriginal artists Johnson encountered during his visit, are depicted standing alongside their works, all arranged almost equidistant from each other, on a single plane – a child-like, distanced study of the subject of his work.

Soon, the artists began inviting him to paint with them, which eventually led to about 30 collaborative works. Eagle Dreaming and Wildflower Dreaming are both works he created in collaboration with Clifford Possum Tjapaltjarri, employing his visual language.

Eagle Dreaming, Clifford Possum Tjapaltjarri, 1988. Image courtesy of Queensland Art Gallery

Eagle Dreaming, Clifford Possum Tjapaltjarri, 1988. Image courtesy of Queensland Art Gallery

 

It is from these collaborations, that Johnson’s interest in dot painting arose. The dotted background of many of his works remains a controversial gesture of respect that many see as being exploitative. “I used their style, but not in their abstract form. (My work) is representational,” said Johnson during the artist talk. “I saw Central Australia as a Pure Land,” he said.

In Johnson’s Pure Land, all the varied cultures – Australian Aboriginal dot painting, Buddhist and Hindu deities, Japanese Manga characters, Christian angels as well as Tibetan monks and pagodas – co-exist. His Pure Land paintings are stream-of-consciousness works – a landscape of his mind – where ideas race through and come together in ways previously unimagined, and the audience is asked to keep pace.

The paintings are a reflection of his belief in the seamless interaction that can exist between diverse cultures. While he is aware of the many differences, and the varied paths to spirituality offered by each culture, he is more interested in exploring the similarities and links.

“I see links between Hinduism and Buddhism – there is the historical connection as well as the fact that Buddha taught in India. Many of the deities are similar, sometimes in appearance, but more so in meaning,” said Johnson in an email interview. “There are similarities between the practice of these beliefs as well. Aboriginal culture is so old that it predates many of the better known religions. But the idea of creation ancestors, the idea of spirit in matter and many other fundamental beliefs are common to most other older cultures.”

In Tjnava, devotees dance around the idols of Krishna and Radha, surrounded by images of Nelson Mandela and the Beatles, the Statue of Liberty, and the Sydney Opera House, while Chinese-stylised clouds float alongside flying saucers. “Deities often come from the extra terrestrial,” said Johnson at the artist talk. He has been fascinated with how extraterrestrial creatures and spaceships appear in mythologies from various cultures.

Johnson’s works are as influenced by his travels as by his personal relationships. His involvement with Aboriginal art was sparked by his former wife, the leading social scientist and art historian, Vivien Johnson, who was beginning her groundbreaking research on Western Desert artists. The couple were avid collectors of Aboriginal art, and today theirs’ is one of Australia’s most significant collections of Central Desert painting, according to the exhibition catalogue.

Similarly, his friendship with Aboriginal artists, led to successful collaborated works. Later, he went on to work with his partner, My Le Thi.

Artistic collaborations have been an important part of Johnson’s practice and he has also worked with trained Tibetan thangka painter Karma Phuntsok, as well as Daniel Bogunvic, Brendan Smith and most recently with Nava Chapman, an Australian Hindu devotee. “For the last 2 years I have been collaborating with Nava. He has painted the Hindu imagery in many of my recent works,” says Johnson.

The works are as much the collaborating artist’s narrative as Johnson’s. For instance, in Ganeshji, Lord Ganesha is accompanied by the cartoon character Dumbo the Elephant, an Indian wrestler, a street-side food hawker, and even a scene from the film Slumdog Millionaire, all superimposed upon the background of meticulously painted dots.

“There is a narrative related to Nava’s personal experiences in London where he was receiving teachings from his Guru,” says Johnson. “Like a poem, every part doesn’t have to be logical or located in the same time/space continuum. A painting can create a fragmented reality that is interpreted by the viewer. Everyone sees things differently anyway. I create a collage of imagery in the work – fragmented like life itself.”

Johnson explains the process of their collaboration thus: “I send him a canvas and he paints various images – usually after discussing it with me on the phone. After he sends the canvas back to me, I add more imagery.”

“Some of the imagery is traced, some of it is done using stamps and stencils and some of it is improvised. Then, the imagery is masked with a masking fluid and the background added. Then, the masking fluid is cleaned off and dots added,” Johnson adds.

“These paintings use imagery from a variety of sources – the internet, books, my own photos and so on. Nava draws on his knowledge of Hinduism and sources imagery on the internet,” he said.

At the artist’s talk, Johnson revealed that some of the imagery in his works is painted by projecting an image onto to the canvas and then tracing it. He said that a colleague once told him, “Sydney Nolan does it, so it must be ok!” “Since the 80’s artists have been quoting, integrating and re-looking at art history,” he said.

The stylised clouds often seen in his works, are copied from Chinese embroidery using carbon paper, he revealed during the artist talk. “Think of art as not something special or skilful, but accessible—something that everyone can do and enjoy.”

Tim Johnson – Painting Ideas will show at the Queensland Art Gallery until October 11, 2009, and then at the Ian Potter Museum of Art, Melbourne from November 11, 2009 to February 14, 2010.

Images courtesy of the Queensland Art Gallery.

 

 

On Censorship, Moral Panic and Art

Censorship

Censorship

Tegan Sullivan

Today we find ourselves on a slippery slope heading downhill towards the censoring of our creativity. The classification of artworks and the censorship of their production present the public merely a dumbed-down experience of culture: a palatable blandness. “Art is one of the most powerful forces on the battlefield of ideas: we should never allow its privilege to be eroded” (Burnside, 2008, p.11). Art allows us a glimpse of truth and both recently and historically confronts the sensibilities of its audiences. Art offers a response to the questions thrown up by a society still defining itself. This occurs in a way that often sparks controversy. This controversy creates fierce disputes and through the public’s reaction and the media furore, a desire is voiced to tighten the leash around the throat of artistic expression.

Freedom of speech is a basic democratic right but the censorship debate looks at what happens when this free expression infringes on community sensibility. Foundations are eroded and thought is stifled. Can art enable us to witness a greater truth? As a consumer of art ideas and images, am I not entitled to make my own judgments on what is appropriate? Or do we need protection, the covering up of the rude bits in life to save us from ourselves?

Censorship in our community can fall into two main categories. As outlined by Australian journalist and lawyer, David Marr, there is the censorship of desire and that in the pursuit of power (Derricourt, 2006, p.1). The censorship of desire revolves around ideas of morality, religion, sexuality and the physical body. So much of what we view is classified for us. Our history, as a country, shows many examples of operating as a censored society, emerging in the 1980’s as a relatively libertarian culture. Art in Australia has, for a couple of decades managed to avoid this system of classification which limits our access to the unsavory parts of humanity in its drive for sex, wealth and power.

The different media used throughout art practice brings alternate focuses to the realities of life. The framework of art and the questions it can raise illuminates perceived truths. Photography offers the chance for a heightened, instant depiction of reality. Through this medium Bill Henson came into the general public consciousness quite abruptly last year, when the police seized his works at the RoslynOxley9 Gallery and the exhibition was closed. This was a strong statement of censorship. The media panic occurred in the wake of an exhibition invitation showing a photographic portrait of a nude adolescent girl. Questions were raised regarding artistic exploration versus sexual exploitation. The images were seen by many not associated with the arts, but as pornography. Their reading of the nude figure threw out much of the history of Western art and plunged the Australian community into panic. In their eyes nudity, under the guise of certain modernizations like the Internet, is never without a sexual context. The difference between the pleasure received through viewing the chiaroscuro elements of a Bill Henson image, the soft focus and gentle peering of his lens, become hard to distinguish from the sleaziness of a deviant sexual leer.

In the Henson case, the artworks, the facts of the matter, were removed from the gallery walls and its website catalogue. The public were left with mere headlines and images distorted by black bars to judge this contention. How were they to make up their minds? According to Tamara Winikoff of NAVA: “Public engagement with art is an important right which needs to be protected” (Winikoff, 2008, p.3), yet the debate over the freedom of artists, the protection of innocence and the bubble wrapped timidity of society was never presented on even ground. Moral outrage distorts, the discussion was politicized and the opportunity for dialogue was crippled.

Marketing and advertising introduce the community to small fragments of artistic practice. There is no contextualisation. Media grabs and spin machines can distort and misrepresent the intended climate and context of a work. The public face of art, especially art seen by open means such as the Internet, can deny a work the privacy of gallery walls and the freedom of expression that this entails. As the art critic Andrew Frost states, “Art represents a wide set of values and attitudes to the world and, while some might argue that there are limits to artistic freedom, the measure of a society is how it responds to a minority opinion.” (Frost, 2008 p.1). The health of our culture can be gauged by the ferocity of these debates. Can censoring the artists protect us from what really scares us? Do we need it to?

Through censoring our desires the power of religion becomes a force of authority. Religion and its control over much of our outlets as humans can often lead to the suppression of ideas and images. The case of the Catholic Church and Cardinal George Pell’s attempts at suppression highlight the delicate balance between the belief of faith and the questioning involved in artistic practice. Andres Serrano’s Piss Christ was displayed in the National Gallery of Victoria in 1997, until this controversial work was removed and ultimately silenced by an inability to keep the environment surrounding it safe. The ultimate censorship of the work ensured safety from the ideological harm Pell suggested we would face by associating the glory of Christianity with the base humanity of a certain golden hued liquid. Piss Christ was a blasphemous statement, one the general community needed protecting from. Even the confines of a National gallery, where its very walls sanction images as art, could not separate it from public outrage. Religion and the clout of the Church restrict. The moral rules which govern our society, enforced by our spiritual leaders, protect us from arts constant desire to enquire as to the meanings behind our existence.

The sins of the flesh, our sexuality and the base response of the body is a reality. The supposed ugliness of these instinctual responses guides much repression and constructs many of the rules which govern our society. The safety of sanitizing these parts of our world will deny us of so much of our Australian art canon. Gone will be the fantasies of Norman Lindsay, the thick, sensual lines of Brett Whiteley, Albert Tucker’s images of Modern Evil, and explicit nature of Juan Davilla’s paintings. “A society that censors is a society that lies to itself about its nature.” (Wark, 1997 p.1). We would inhabit a more modest place, but one which surrenders to a conservative outlook, one without the questioning which fuels momentum.

The other idea raised by Marr, the Censorship of Pursuit of Power explores notions of political silencing, of controlling a population and its history. Australia’s relatively new anti-sedition laws fit this description all too well. The real threat of legal action sees artists taming their creative practices to conform to mainstream tastes. The threat of terrorism and the need for community approach has stripped many civil liberties, not just those in the art world.

The conservatism of the Howard Government era in arts recently came to an end. Kevin Rudd and his government have been seen as a welcome break. However, the realities of a Christian conservative Prime Minister set about protecting us from our own excesses have only recently become a little clearer. Politicians fighting for re-election respond quickly to the moral hysteria of the media and the thoughts of a researched public. Our political leader’s opinions can change to follow and absorb the heat of public argument. The aftermath of the Bill Henson issue has seen the introduction by the Australia Council of certain guidelines and protocols for working with and the protection of children. The ideas are dangerous to artistic spontaneity. They require new levels of bureaucratic documentation. A strong link has been forged between the symbolism of voluntary guidelines and the realities of the withdrawal of public funding. No decision, it seems, on freedom of expression is made without a political agenda. Funding at arm’s length as a principle is a luxury for times not filled with public fear and uncertainty.

This debate continues to rage, as we see the Federal Government’s plans for ISP internet filtering and their desire to clean up the internet, sanitise what the Australian people can view and create a safe online environment for our children. Our consumption of art and culture has, through the Internet become a private, domestic activity. The public act of viewing art on gallery walls can be replaced with the seclusion of a laptop screen. The filtering of the Internet: what could become a mandatory measure, protects us from the big bad thing that is the World Wide Web. It ultimately is protecting us from a mass of thoughts and the communication of possible obscenities, all of our own creation. The focus of censorship has shifted with these new technological developments.

“…What really matters is when we become complicit in our own enslavement” says Australian playwright Stephen Sewell (Derricourt, 2006, p.2). Artists may be going through a process of self-censorship in order to make sales, meet funding requirements and keep their art away from harshness of the media spotlight and its hysteria. It becomes quite a simple situation. Those artists who do not comply with the new protocols and all the intricacies that this involves will not get public funding. They will not eat or pay their rent. Or at least they won’t do this from the proceeds of their artistic practices. The invisible nature of this censorship makes it difficult to monitor, control or even prevent. The cultural environment of Australia will be poorer, becoming stagnant, with little creative drive to push the boundaries or few artists left in the country to pursue them. The real threat comes when artists temper their projects to make them more palatable for what could and in many ways has become, a smaller, more conservative and intolerant society.

Bibliography

Burnside, 2008: Julian Burnside, Art Censorship: The bigger picture, NAVA Quarterly, Potts Point: NAVA, September 2008

Frost, 2008: Andrew Frost, Art Matters, Unleashed, 30th May 2008. http://www.abc.net.au/unleashed/stories/s2259532.htm, accessed 18/09/2009

Wark, 1997: McKenzie Wark, Violence link is a distorted view, The Australian, 8th January 1997

Winikoff, 2008: Tamara Winikoff, How Free is Freedom of Expression?, NAVA Quarterly, Potts Point: NAVA, September 2008

Derricourt, 2006: Francis Derricourt, Censorship and the Arts, SAMAG & Australia Council peakinf Forum, Surry Hills, Monday August 28 2006

 

 

C3West: The MCA’s Outreach program – a bit of a stretch?

Michael Wilton

If thinking outside the box is what it takes to keep cultural institutions afloat, then the Museum of Contemporary Art (MCA) is certainly giving it a shot. Under the guidance of their director, Elizabeth Ann Macgregor, they are implementing C3West, “a long term project, seeking innovative ways of working with art, commerce and the community” (www.mca.com.au). The aim is to “broker close collaborative relationships between artists and businesses in Western Sydney… [and] to align business strategies with arts practices, while involving communities in innovative ways.” (Macgregor, p.173) The project raises a number of important questions: How does the meaning of art change when it is used as a business tool? How far do museums have to go to expand their audiences? What is the function of an artist?

Although funding was announced by the Australia Council in December 2006 ($225,000 over three years), the public has only seen one work so far. A portrait series titled Heads Up by Craig Walsh. The work was born out of an artist residency at the Penrith Panthers Leagues Club, organised by the MCA and its partners – Casula Powerhouse Arts Centre, Penrith Regional Gallery, and Campbelltown Art Centre – and exhibited during the finals season from 4 September to 19 October 2008.

“Seventeen large format, full-colour photographic portraits, taken within minutes of the final whistle at a series of Panthers home games, capture intimate responses from both players and supporters to the outcome of the game” (www.mca.com.au)

As a precursor to the C3West project, Jock McQueenie was commissioned to undertake a feasibility study. “The study encompassed the partners’ strategic objectives and common aims, government priorities in the region, the needs of local artists and emerging debates around the social engagement of art” (Macgregor, p.174). For art literate audiences it is almost impossible to look at Walsh’s series of photographs and not consider the myriad of influences he had while creating the work. The MCA may be successful in creating new avenues for artists to get paid, but are they making art? This leads to the more philosophical question: What is art? Although such a question at this juncture is too broad to consider, it should be fair to state that the work produced by Walsh is art, but it would be naïve to view the exhibition in terms of a ‘standard’ gallery experience.

Macgregor admits that the “artists needed to accept that the work they would propose had to answer the objectives of the company” (Macgregor, p.176). However, she also claims that the C3West project differentiates itself from conventional art commission practices. There is no pre-determined way in which the artist has to respond to ‘the brief’. She suggests that the ultimate aim of the project is to allow artists the freedom to develop solutions that no one had thought of before. But what are the implications of an artist being a consultant? How do you discuss the work that comes out of that relationship? Does the work take on a different meaning when it is displayed as part of an art exhibition at the MCA versus a marketing strategy at Panthers Leagues Club?

As an experiment designed to bring two stereotypically different audiences together, the exhibition was announced over loudspeakers during home games. Macgregor states in her essay, ‘A Tale of Two Cultures’ (Griffith Review, Edition 23, March, 2009, www.griffithreview.com) that two key aspects of the MCA’s mission are to “[build] new audiences for contemporary art; and [create] new working opportunities for contemporary artists.” (Macgregor, p.174) This would appear to be the cornerstone of the C3West program, an initiative that challenges the stereotypes of both the Panthers Leagues Club and the MCA. Although Macgregor claims that attendance numbers exceeded expectations for the exhibition, there is no information as to what these expectations were or whether or not the audience was new to the gallery and planned on returning.

Macgregor is continuing the trend of breaking barriers through outreach programs (further illustrated by the work of John Kirkman – Penrith Performing & Visual Arts and Kon Gouriotis – Casula Powerhouse) via the intersection of sport and art. As trends come and go, it will be interesting to see if this model stands the test of time. Stephen Weil, in his essay ‘The Museum and the Public’ (Making Museums Matter, Smithsonian Institute Press, 2002) suggests that there is a “revolution” under way which is seeing a broader public occupying the dominant position. He suggests that this is in part due to the need to appease the tax payer as a great deal of funding comes from the government. The C3West program is largely funded by the Australia Council although there is a stipulation that the business partners must ultimately match the grant. Weil argues that audiences are dissatisfied with the curators ‘version’ of events, or hierarchy of relevant information. In response, curators and public program officers are championing the notion that objects can be polysemic: they have multiple meanings to different people depending on their unique experiences. The aim of which is to dispel the notion that art is elite and for a specifically educated audience. This would appear to align with Macgregor’s desire to expand the MCA’s audience to previously unreachable groups. In this model however, Macgregor is attempting to create an environment where businesses would approach artists for solutions as opposed to the traditional avenues of consultants.

Weil further suggests that rather than communicating new information, the primary focus of the museum should be to engender a sense of self-affirmation. People want to walk away from an exhibition feeling good about themselves and their position in the world. It is not important that they read every label, or remember every fact about the objects on display. To some degree, this sense of self-affirmation can be seen through Walsh’s Heads Up series. “Keep your head up!” is a term often used in response to loss or disappointment and these portraits capture this attitude. Pride in oneself and the team is reflected in their faces through an attempt to disguise the disappointment of the loss” (Macgregor, p.177)

Macgregor goes as far as to suggest that the work produced by artists is of a greater value than work produced by a ‘layperson’. This belief underpins the ideals of the C3West project. She points to the work of Ross Harley in the feasibility stage of the project. As a practical demonstration of the way in which C3 West was going to work, the MCA approached the recycling and waste management company SITA Environmental Solutions. SITA wanted to create a video to promote their new facility. The MCA suggested that they use an artist (Harley) instead of going to a video company. Macgregor claims “SITA got its outcome but with a level of imaginative visualisation and community engagement – well regarded by the local council – that would otherwise not have been achieved” (Macgregor, p.174), perhaps a reflection of the age-old notion of artist as genius.

As the ‘video company’ was never given the opportunity to work on the project, it is problematic to assume that they would not have produced good work. Although my instinct might be to agree with Macgregor, it does appear to put ‘the artist’ on a pedestal. This stands in contrast to Macgregor’s stated mission to address the stereotype that contemporary art is elite. It may even call into question the value of the project; further, one must consider how the artists are chosen.

C3West is still in its infancy. Craig Walsh proposed three works and Panthers wants to produce them all. It will be interesting to see the rest of the work. There are also a number of other artists who are involved with the project whose work has yet to see the light of day. Macgregor claims “C3West has the potential to demonstrate a way of artists working with businesses that can provide unforseen and highly beneficial solutions to their needs, which go far beyond writing a sponsorship cheque” (Macgregor, p.178). Time will tell. At the very least it is an imaginative way of bringing new funds to the visual arts, an industry which historically struggles for wide acceptance.

Bibliography:

E. Macgregor, ‘A Tale of Two Cultures’, in Griffith Review, Griffith University Press, Edition 23, March 2009

S. Weil, ‘The Museum and the Public’, Making Museums Matter, Washington DC: Smithsonian Institute Press, 2002