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the art life

"...it's just like saying 'the good life'".

Free Booze!

Monday, January 30, 2006
Slowly, Slowly
7-18th February, 2006, Opening night: Tuesday, 7th February 6-8 pm
Kudos Gallery, 6 Napier Street, Paddington





Slowly, Slowly brings together 5 artists whose creative practice is central to a cultivation of stillness in order to recognise inspiration. The artists are Annalisa Backlund, Jacqueline Belcher, Alexandra Noble, Marisa Purcell and Melinda Schawel. They place strong emphasis on experience, thus allowing creative activity to unravel the loops of the mind. In order to be receptive to the experience of making art, these artists nurture an approach that embraces stillness and slowness.

In terms of both process and concept, the time spent in the studio gestating and generating work usually culminates in more than just a piece of art. These artists believe that time devoted to making art, is usually akin to a deepening of self knowledge. Consciously feminine in their practice, the intuitive reigns over contrivance, and gives way to clarity during the creative process.

These 5 artists have learnt to work within the parameters of ambiguity and each continue to discover their own method of dealing with the material they generate. This exhibition aims to express that a cultivation of awareness is central to creative perception, both in the making and experiencing of works of art. Such deepening of awareness seems to vitalise and infuse the creative encounter with consciousness and can allow an uninhibited pathway to perceiving the world with accuracy and appreciation.

*



Gary Grealy, Baggage 17.


Baggage
Australian Photographers Gallery
143 Beattie Street, Balmain, NSW 2041
February 8 - March 19 2006.


A major exhibition of photography by Gary Grealy will open at The Australian Photographers Gallery on Wednesday 8th February, 2006 at 6pm till 8pm. The show will include 24 new works and will be held in conjunction with an APG group show.

The artist will be giving a free floor talk at the gallery on Saturday 11 February at 2pm.

"Baggage is a photo essay exploring the impact of religion during my formative years and its effect on my attitudes, personality, hang-ups and superstitions as an adult. The images use nature as a representation of the self, with a background of man-made surfaces. These two elements are juxtaposed with images from the family album, passports, birth certificates and personal iconic Catholic motifs from my childhood."

*




On thursday at 6.30pm at sydney (302 cleveland st), my architect friend stuart harrison (visiting from melbourne) and i are giving a slideshow (actually powerpoint) talk about our experience at the icehotel (sweden) last december, where we made some ice architecture and got to use chainsaws and stuff!

"our trip to the ice hotel" (an illustrated lecture, accompanied by =drawings & scale models, explaining what we did & how we did it, along with some krazy kool drinks & scandinavian metal)

presented by lucas ihlein & stuart harrison at "sydney" (that's the name of the venue 302 cleveland st surry hills nsw Thursday Feb 2nd 2006 6.30pm

*

TO RE-ESTABLISH SOMETHING OF A BOND
MOP Projects 2 February - 19 February 2006
opening Thursday 02.02.06 6-8 pm



Nana Ohnesorge, A Grim Tale.


MOP Projects opens 2006 with a refreshing show of painting and sculpture from National Art School Honours candidates Nana Ohnesorge and Mitch Cairns. Both artists won major prizes at their graduating exhibition in November 2005. Ohnesorge received a studio residency in Paris with assistance from the Reg Richardson Fund, while Cairns received the Clitheroe Foundation painting scholarship.

Nana Ohnesorge paints with respect to her former medium of collage. Her work is constructed in layers of perceived ideas of her former homeland of Germany from both a personal, and art historical perspective. Elements of her own life experience are built into paintings that also appropriate features of German Romanticism, Social Realism and Pop Art.


Mitch Cairns, Wrong House.


Mitch Cairns’ paintings explore the world of fiction. Coupling well known Australian stories, Cairns forms new histories to explore a wider sense of national identity. Cairns’ paintings aim to prompt a re-examination of Australian folklore.

MOP Project Space: Janet Hearne



Janet Hearne, Derailment, Broken Hill Line.


This work sets out to explore a duality of visual experience through the combination of projection, sculptural installation and the interaction between these two mediums within a narrative image. In intercepting the light source, the viewer becomes implicated in the dichotomous nature of the work obscuring the projected image in order to reveal the underlying construction and drawing beneath. The construction acts as, both a manipulation of the perspective's inherent within the overall image of the derailed train and a device that shatters its uniformity. In fragmenting the image and the consequential framing of certain details the legibility of the whole becomes compromised- its ability to function as a narrative image lessening in direct proportion to the growing complexity of the construction. The work experiments with the balance between the figurative image, and the point at which the base structure disturbs the cohesiveness of the image, to the extent that it breaks down entirely.

*




TOOLS

opens 6-8pm Wednesday 22 February
FirstDraft Gallery
116-118 Chalmers St. Surry Hills
Open Wed to Sat 11am - 6pm
until 11 March 2006


The girls from glossy sexy SLIT: dyke sex magazine are back for their third annual exhibition and this time they come bearing tools! Celebrating the launch of issue #9, "TOOLS" features femmes, butches, bois, and T-men, hardworking biceps, tool belts and tools of all trades; medical, mechanical, electrical, domestic.

Taking 'dyke sex, culture, politics, and porn' to the walls, the "TOOLS" exhibition features a diverse group of queer women artists including Ülker Arcan, Nicole Barakat, Penelope Benton, Jo Blowsumsnow, Nicole Brown, Tallulah Brown, Marion Conrow, Celia Curtis, C. Moore Hardy, Amanda James, Sam King, Joy Ng, Megan Oliver, Sindy Ray, Dr X Stealth, Glita Supernova, Cat O'Nine Tails, Arlene Textaqueen, Leanne Thompson and the Seditious Artists Society: Paula Abood, Soraya Asmar and Deborah Kelly. Women performers also featured in the exhibition include burlesque threesome Ménage a’ Tart, professional showgirl Suzie Q, DJ Sveta, and rock goddesses Bracode.

The girls have approached the theme both literally, physically and conceptually, from images set in the garage, through to an installation of backyard tattoo tools, a giant pink feather duster, nurses, butchers, gardeners, bois on the sporting field, pole dancers, tools in the bedroom and tools represented through words, body parts and politics.

Curated by lady penelope, this is some hard-working lady action that you do not want to miss!

*



Gifts For You Baikko

Friday, January 27, 2006
While sprucing up The Art Life with a host of new links we recently received an email from Hugh Symonds letting us know about his handsome web presence. He uses his mobile phone camera to take shots which he posts to his site without any digital manipulation in between. We are always looking for new links to Australian artist web sites. You can send us your URL to our super exclusive Hotmail address posted at right.


Freeway Blogger


But this being the interweb we’re not constrained by national borders [unless those borders happen to be Chinese of course, thanks Google] so we have decided for 2006 to bring back what was a feature of The Art Life when we first started in 2004 – a hand picked selection of international artist sites, blogs and more general web sites for your time-wasting enjoyment. The section is ingeniously called Sites and lists a half dozen or so recently perused web sites. Among our recent additions are some art collaborative projects. Freeway Blogger is a fantastic site that documents the activities of US anti-war activists who use roadside signs to get their messages to speeding motorists. Our favourite: OSAMA BIN FORGOTTEN.


Post a secret...


Another US site is the home of Wooster Collective’s ongoing ephemeral art projects documentation. Not to be confused with the Wooster Group [theatre types, former home base of Willem Dafoe and the late Spalding Grey], the Wooster Collective says its site is “dedicated to showcasing and celebrating ephemeral art placed on streets in cities around the world” and takes contributions from readers around the world. The startling Post Secret receives snail mail post cards from people who want to get a secret off their chests. Most of it is banal – as you might expect – but other secrets are deeply odd: “I wish I was Asian”. Yikes. In a similar ongoing project, the now veteran site Exploding Dog artist Sam Brown invites readers to send him a one line email which, if the mood takes him, he turns into a drawing. The difference between this and a thousand other sites is that it has been going for years and the drawings are good.

Other additions to our links include the nicely titled Bad Bad Art blog, which lists crimes against the English language by art writers, academics and others trying to explain – for example – why a bar of soap allegedly made from Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi's fat is a good thing. We have become so inured to this kind of writing that we almost took it seriously. A completely pointless web site but which is nonetheless very beautiful is Camera Toss, an ongoing group blog dedicated to the art of throwing your camera in the air and recording the results.

A different kind of pointless is the blog
dedicated
to Tony Johansen’s legal challenge against the awarding of the 2004 Archibald Prize to Craig Ruddy. We thought the challenge must have died in the arse since nothing had been heard of it since early 2005, but no, the team behind the challenge are eagerly looking forward to their days in court, scheduled for the 29th and 30th of May 2006. Johansen himself surfed into The Art Life to leave a comment on a story we did more than a year ago and left the blog address, so we’ve included it here for future reference. We also discovered that Johansen has his own web site, so if you want to see what the man who would be king does in his studio, check it out.

Lost and Found

Monday, January 23, 2006
A leading Spanish museum has admitted it has lost a massive steel sculpture which weighs 38 tonnes. Madrid's Reina Sofia Museum bought the Richard Serra sculpture in the 1980s for more than $200,000 (£114,000). The museum says that in 1990 it put the sculpture in a warehouse belonging to a company that specialises in storing large-scale artwork. But when it sought to put the sculpture back on display a few months ago, no-one knew where to find it. The police are now investigating its disappearance.

Madrid 'mislays' Serra sculpture, BBC News.

The Henry Moore Foundation, at Perry Green, Hertfordshire, has suffered the loss of a large bronze sculpture by Henry Moore. Reclining Figure 1969-70 (catalogue ID: LH 608) was stolen at 22.13 on Thursday 15 December. The work weighs 2,100kg and measures approximately 360cm (length) x 200cm (height) x 200cm (width). It has a value of at least £3 million.

The sculpture was taken from the Foundation’s estate by a Mercedes truck and crane, which Hertfordshire police have since recovered. CCTV footage captured the entire incident and investigators are now examining it further.

The piece had until recently been on display in the extensive grounds where the artist lived and worked for over forty years. Tim Llewellyn, the Foundation’s director, comments, ‘The team here are extremely upset. This work is of great importance and to have it taken from us is devastating. We urge anyone with information to please contact the police.’

A reward of up to £100,000 is being offered subject to specific conditions. If you have any information please contact: DCI Mark Ross, Hertfordshire Constabulary – 0845 33 00 222 or Mark Dalrymple, Tyler & Co – 0207 377 0282 or email: [email protected]

Reward Offered for Stolen Sculpture, Henry Moore Foundation.


Liberty holding up her ‘It’s not my fault’ flame is a familiar billboard image now to most Sydney-siders in the CBD. It is an invitation to explore the careers of the Kienholz (Nancy and *Edward), two of the most significant social commentators and installation practitioners to have exhibited on our fair shores. (*Edward Kienholz passed away 1994 RIP)

The exhibition is a political minefield, fitting to an art couple who emerged from LA’s Beat Generation … and whose cultural contributions ran parallel to the limelight stealing Andy Warhol, evolving like a massive, earnest shadow to Warhol’s focus-grabbing rendering of the Pop aesthetic.

Compare a pair of shiny silver stilettos to a taxidermically preserved and toxic King Kong (though, please note, none of the above artists were responsible for either of these images) – to get an idea of the very distinct creative dialogues expressed by artists who shared many synergies in their renderings, both conceptually and sociologically.

Look on my works, ye mighty, and despair, Fiona Prior, Henry Thornton

Dan Flavin's art is amazingly beautiful - but is it anything more? Certainly his installations are ecstasy for the eyes. Moving among these arrays of dazzling colour, these sheaves of glowing poles, this radiance drifting out across the gallery, light contained and then set lyrically free, you wonder how it is possible that so much pleasure could emit from such a dismal source: the cold fluorescent tubes of strip lighting.

Tubular Spells, Laura Cumming, The Observer.

The prize for pointless ingenuity, meanwhile, goes to Natasha Kidd, who pumps 25 gallons of white emulsion around the gallery so that the out-flow dribbles vertically down a large rectangular canvas. It's quite fitting that a painting created according to the principles of a central heating system should resemble a radiator.

The Art Of White, Alfred Hickling, The Guardian.

Alex Danchev's recent biography of Georges Braque is wonderful to read: impressionistic and allusive, fizzily building up a portrait of a man who has been, until now perhaps, intriguingly absent from history's gaze, certainly outside France.

Braque is most famous for being Picasso's co-conspirator in the adventure that was cubism. The two names are perpetually intertwined, Braque's as the follower, the validator: "pard" to Picasso's Wild Bill Hickock, the feminine principal to Picasso's masculine, anti-Picasso to Picasso's Picasso.

Intriguing insights into the life of reticent cubist co-conspirator, Miriam Cosic The Australian, January 20, 2006

Gaffs, Bad Jokes and Comments

When we published the results of our summer poll last week we revealed that voting for Nigel Milsom had been the subject of some good natured poll rigging. We claimed that "agents" working for the artist had arranged multiple votes by getting around our fool-proof security measures, demonstrating perhaps that Art Life readers are not fools. As a result we decided to disqualify Milsom and award the top honour to Sarah Smuts Kennedy and Christopher Hanrahan.

We based our not altogether serious claim on the fact that we can track user ISPs and see who has been online and when. Although someone did take upon themselves to vote multiple times, we have no idea who they were and or why they were doing it. Milsom wrote to us to point this out and we unreservedly apologise to him for any embarrasment our joke may have caused. We now proclaim all artists and shows on the original as winners, just because we can...

We decided to follow up our non-poll with a poll on the poll, which is probably taking reflexivity a bit too far...

That Last Art Life Poll Was

A sham 48% 37

Rigged 19% 15

Unrepresentative 18% 14

Faked 9% 7

Biased 5% 4

total votes: 77


In a similar mode of craven apology, we also made a mistake last week by stating that outgoing GrantPirrie staffer Clare Lewis had been a gallery manager at the Redfern space. In fact, Lewis was a gallery assistant and it is the indefatigable James Steele who is the gallery manager. While on the subject of GrantPirrie, another reader emailed us to advise that when we mentioned Todd Hunter in our email alert, we probably meant Todd McMillan. We probably did. Apologies all round.

Emails: You work at the Museum of Contemporary Art - perhaps you are the director, perhaps a preparator or an assistant curator, perhaps even a senior curator... Whatever your title you're wondering "whatever happened to my weekly email update?" It's a mystery. Some MCA staff are getting their emails, while others are not. Send us an alternative email address or speak to the volatile loner in the corner [i.e. your IT guy] about the problem. They have time on their hands and are always happy to help.

A couple of readers wrote to us to advise us that we're not that special after all - that is, we were not the subject of a recent article by Sebastian Smee - we were simply being paranoid. Smee's seemingly non-sequiter reference to the memory of gold fish was a refrence to an article he had written way back in 2005 for The Australian reviewing the work of Jo Law:

Visiting a shared house one day years ago, I saw a copy of Tolstoy's War and Peace propped up in front of a goldfish bowl. The occupants told me they turned onepage a day for the benefit of the hapless fish. The joke got its kick, of course, from the widespread belief that goldfish have an attention span that lasts, depending on whom you ask, between three and nine seconds. (A colleague informs me this is false and a slur on goldfish, who can actually be trained to respond to stimuli, if not necessarily to great literature.) I was reminded of the poor fish's plight by a brilliant work by Jo Law in an exhibition called BEAPworks at the John Curtin Gallery in Perth...


We have aboslutely no recollection of this article which may prove some sort of point, but we've already forgotten what we were going to say.

Which brings us once again to Comments. On several occassions we have called for calm and reason among our dilligent readers who feel compelled to make comments [often many times a day]. We welcome such reader participation under the rules we outlined last week but sadly, even our calmer readers were pulled into a rather nasty slanging match late last week and we have decided to act to restore some semblance of order. We have therefore temporarily suspended the commenting rights of several readers and will restore them in 10 days time. Think of this as a kind of time out where everyone can just calm down and think about what they've done. Thanks to Super Nanny for suggesting this approach.

How To Live The Art Life

Wednesday, January 18, 2006
Welcome back for another year! TEAM Art Life wishes our readers a pleasant stay while visiting the blog and we’ll do everything we can to make your visit a memorable one. If you have enquiries, questions or suggestions, simply contact an Art Life representative, now moving through the cabin serving a selection from our drinks menu. Visitors should try to take advantage of all our facilities while on board. To help make your stay with us as enjoyable as possible, visitors should observe a few simple rules.


Complimentary drinks service...

In 2006, The Art Life will be published every second Wednesday or Thursday with an earlier update if needed. For those who absolutely need to know what’s happening as it’s happening, please send us an email and we’ll add you to our mailing list.

If you would like to leave a comment, all you need to do is click on the word Comments handily located at the end of each post. Although the Comments are provided for your enjoyment, we take no responsibility for what happens there with the exception of posts that are defamatory, libelous, abusive or written under the name of a real person but are by someone who is demonstrably not that person. In the first instance, offending comments will be deleted and if the author persists, they will be ejected by Art Life Air Marshals with a permanent ban. You may use your real name to leave comments or a pseudonym, it’s entirely up to you…

Please sit back and enjoy a drink and our in-flight entertainment. [Art Life Management, please cross check and prepare for departure…]

We Are Golden

Campbelltown Arts Centre. They have a cafe that sells good strong coffee and plays Nina Simone. Looking out over the trees to the clouds, with the jazz music and the heat, we’re starting to doze...

Outside the galley there is a painfully thin man wearing a woman’s multicoloured, striped jumper. It might just pass for a man’s jumper but it hangs on his body like a wet towel slung over a chair. He's wearing track pants – blue with sporty stripes – a pair of lady’s 70s sunglasses and he’s carrying a can of Jaguar rum ‘n’ coke. Trying to act nonchalant as walks round the car park he repeatedly points his finger as though he’s seen something interesting that needs to be singled out. He looks back. He looks forward. He points his finger again. But it’s all a fake. There’s nothing in the distance at all. It’s a simulation of an activity, a facsimile performed by someone who has forgotten the basics of normal everyday human behaviour. This guy may even get away with it sometimes but the girlfriend trailing along behind him blows the whole charade. She can barely keep her eyes open. The guy points again and glances back. The woman shrugs at him and says impatiently – yeah, yeah – and then stumbles on her thongs. Her eyes flick open for a moment, then slowly close again as she shuffles to the pedestrian crossing, her track pants sliding down her fat bum.

Change of scene and location. It’s GrantPirrie in Redfern for the opening of Todd McMillan’s show alone alone. McMillan’s work has been included in a lot group shows around town over the last couple of years and as we’ve seen more of his work, the more we’ve become convinced that he’s the real deal. His inclusion in shows at commercial spaces like Sherman’s and an upcoming gig at the MCA curated by Rachel Kent pretty much prove that we’re not alone in that assessment. Judging by the crowd at the GrantPirrie opening there seems to be a lot of good will towards McMillan and his suite of photographs and editioned DVD.


Todd McMillan, Oh Captain, my captain [dead albatross], 2005.
C type photograph, 120x84cms. Courtesy of the artist.

McMillan’s previous video works documented his performances and they had a rough and ready feel that added to their considerable charm. This somewhat shaky approach mostly works again for the artist. His use of a studio setting, some plastic Christmas trees, a bucket stolen from The Clock Hotel and a guest appearance by Tony Schwensen [and featuring the return of those eye watering shorts worn in Schwensen’s Performance Space show], all combine into an investigation of tropes from Romantic fiction and art. There’s The Rhyme of The Ancient Mariner, Casper David Friedrich, Henry David Theroux’s Walden and a tribute to lost boy poet Nick Drake. We wondered if maybe this time the works were done a little too quickly, perhaps too off the cuff, but one has to respect the perversity of doing something so fastand loose up against the icy beauty of the c-type print. We know that McMillan has the skills to pay the bills – as we used to say in the 80s – so we can only assume the whole deal is a deliberate short circuiting of the wide screen production values that this kind of subject usual enjoys. It’s Bill Henson meets stand up philosophy.

We had gone to see McMillan’s show knowing already that we were probably going to like it and we weren’t disappointed – it’s as strong a debut show as we have seen and doff our flat caps to GrantPirrie for giving him a go in the unpopular January slot which is usually reserved for group shows and Indigenous art. We had received an invitation directly from Zanny Begg to Mori gallery and the four shows all happening at once in the gallery space; Begg has a show called Glass Half Full in the small room, Adam Geczy has one wall of the big room for his Obituary For A Forrest and Black Sassy Collective and Huon Valley Environment Centre, Jai Critchley, Anna Belhalfaoui, Hanna Hildenbrand, Margaret Mayhew and Catherine Rogers have the rest.

We know, expectations are the killer of an open mind, but we went expecting to see a lot of pictures of trees and what we got were a lot of pictures of trees. Now it’s all very well to have a show to raise money for a good cause but it seems it’s impossible for many artists directly involved with those causes to rise above visual clichés. This is an image of a forest – we must save this forest – this art work is underwritten by an unassailable moral goodness - the end. Should we be complete bastards and mention that all these images attempting to save trees are printed on paper? It doesn’t matter because the cause is a sound and making a judgment based on the kinds of reasoning one takes to other art exhibitions would be wrong. So what if half of the Black Sassy Collective and Huon Valley Environment Centre work is actually some home made posters with stuck on text that look like school projects? Being in an art gallery is just a venue and it could just as well be a church hall or a local shopping centre.

Adam Geczy’s work attempts a much more sophisticated marriage of image and idea by placing large charcoal on paper drawings of trees – seen from the ground looking up - with photocopies of obituaries of recently deceased humans. It’s interesting to finally see a work by Geczy because until now we'd only read his articles and marveled at his books. For a guy with a major bugbear about Ricky Swallow’s work [and it’s alleged connections to sentimental fascism through the latter artist’s exemplary craft skills], we would have thought that Geczy would be a guy who could slam dunk Swallow in a WWE craft skills smack down. Not so. It turns out Geczy is just a so-so kind of artist when it comes to the craft of making an image on paper and the conceptual apparatus is about as obvious as it gets. Tree, looking up, deceased person, heaven, trees as individual living organisms, the irony of charcoal on paper – it’s all to much and yet, not enough.

The rest of the exhibition is a massive blancmange of images of trees of people protesting trees being cut down, some good, many not good. Among the Black Sassy Collective and Huon Valley Environment Centre work there’s a piece by Selena De Carvalho called Embers which features earth tones, a stuck on machine part, some furious cross hatching that looks like pipes and a big carbuncle like a livid eye. It’s teeny weeny – only 15cms by 7cms – and looks like a marquette for a huge installation for Ryde Civic Centre. We loved it. The triumvirate of Belhalfaoui, Hildenbrand and Mayhew promoted themselves prior to the opening of the show as a chance for people to come and see what art critics do in their sketch books and we can tell you it is mostly brown. Mayhew uses distemper and oil on linen [we had always thought that ‘distemper’ was sickness that some pets get, but we were clearly wrong]. Critchley is a guy who lives in a tree and Stephen Mori told us that he even gets his mail delivered there. We think that that is some sort of achievement.


Zanny Begg, Glass Half Full, installation view.
Courtesy of the artist.


And so to the final room and Zanny Begg’s work. Perhaps alone in the whole show, Begg’s work had a very pleasurable and interesting reflexive quality, being as much about the social conditions of environmental campaigning and documenting individual responses as it was about the subject itself. Glass Half Full was a sequence of placards lent against the gallery wall with accompanied by ambiguous but suggestive commentaries:

Intellectually the glass is half full, emotionally its is half empty

On the walls people had scrawled "we are winning". I think a lot of people believed that then. I'd like to be able to write that on walls again

It's such a huge gap between here and there

I'm not sure I would write a slogan anymore


Next to each of these placards was a portrait, perhaps of the person who had made the comments, suggesting that there is a context for these activities outside the ‘issue’. The shadows in the portraits were rendered by removing the surface of the cardboard on which they had been painted to reveal the corrugated structure below. Maybe mentioning that these – and other works – had been painted on paper wasn’t such an act of bastardry after all? Indeed, the irony of this material playfulness is far more effective that Geczy’s laboured constructs. Begg adds in another layer with an accompanying zine that documents the personal history of environmental campaigners revealing that the characterization of those individuals as “professional protesters” or “rent-a-crowd” is an attempt to remove personal history – something far more provocative and meaningful than unfocussed group activity.

Ian Milliss wrote to us recently to tell us that we were “missing things” at “both ends of town”. We aren’t getting to all the shows, either in commercial galleries or in artist run spaces and it’s true, we are very lazy people. There was one show off our usual beaten track that we vowed we wouldn’t miss [and it’s on until November so the chances were good]. That show is City of Shadows at the Police and Justice Museum at Circular Quay and we managed to see it last week some 10 months before it’s due to close. [Actually, someone else told us that there isn’t a single art magazine in the country that covers museum exhibitions in places like the Historic Houses Trust or at the Australian Museum. We step confidently into that breach].


City of Shadows.
Courtesy Historic Houses Trust.


The attraction of the City of Shadows exhibition is that it’s a show of photographs from the archives of the Sydney police force dating from 1918 to 1948. Crime scene photographs fascinate us, their opaque, fragmented narratives and richly evocative settings remind us of a citynow almost completely vanished from the physical world. Going to the show we imagined that it would be just the photographs end to end, perhaps in several large rooms, and their dark magic would work its way into our minds. Instead City of Shadows is an exhibition with too much stuff and too little space. The curators have jammed what could have fitted nicely into Level 4 at the MCA or into a similar space at the Art Gallery of NSW into three galleries no larger than a small living room. The show piles photos one on top of the other illuminated from the rear by strip lighting. The walls are crenellated flats that we assume are meant to be modeled on Sydney’s inner city terraces and the third room is a long comic strip around a small room with additional photographs. It’s a general-public-friendly kind of set up quite distant from the more “art” oriented exhibitions that we are used to. It doesn’t demand too much of you and provides some nifty special effects where otherwise people might just get bored by looking at images.


City of Shadows. Courtesy Historic Houses Trust.


Whatever the shortcomings of the available space, that there’s too much stuff in too small a space, and that the show was jammed packed when we went to see it, City of Shadows has to be easily one of the most fascinating shows on in Sydney at the moment. Divided into three sections – The Beat, Rogues Gallery and Dark Places – the show steps through three fascinating views of a lost city. The Beat are photographs of places where murders, disasters and human tragedies took place and is restricted to a stretch land called "The Horseshoe", the suburbs immediately around Sydney starting in the west at Pyrmont and Ultimo, stretching south to Surry Hills and Redfern, then to East Sydney, Darlinghurst, the Cross and to the harbour. Rogues Gallery is a collection of suspect photographs taken in the course of arrests or investigations and Dark Places are crime scene photographs ranging from railway stations to bedrooms, from alleyways to public bars, from the water of the harbour to desolate vacant land.

The curators also created a three-screen video presentation with any accompanying voice over by curator Peter Doyle that is about as hard boiled Aussie cop as you could imagine. The videos brilliantly compile shots with a laconic description of the stories within. A large number of the images in the police archive have no accompanying information, so the detective work is trying to work out who the people were, where the shots were taken and what the investigations were all about.


City of Shadows. Courtesy Historic Houses Trust.


The Sydney in these photos contains trace elements of the city we know today. Indeed, many of the buildings are still standing and, despite gentrification, huge high rise building programs and the complete razing and rebuilding of Surry Hills, the eerie familiarity of the locations is disturbing and unsettling. What is even stranger are the faces of the people in the photographs. This is an Anglo–Irish Australia that no longer exists, perhaps a little familiar from family photographs of long dead uncles and great grandmothers, but these are images of an alien race of suited and hated men, furred and jeweled women, well dressed gangsters, pimps, prostitutes and down-on-their-luck confidence tricksters. Their faces are open and smiling despite their misfortune. The Dark Places aren’t as dark as we imagined. For a public show in a public museum, we suspect that the worst images were held back but what we do see still holds a terrible aura. Using large glass plate cameras with a massive flash gun, the images in the video and on display in the galleries are ripe with exquisite period detail. Then there are traces of blood, an overturned chair, a dark black blood spatter on a door.

Which bring us back to Campbelltown Arts Centre. We were there to see Stars of Track and Field, a group show staged in the recently refurbished gallery. Why were we there? We’re not sure why the artist known as What has the ability to make us drive for a more than 3 ½ hours, but like the time we went to Wollongong to see his show in the regional gallery there, we were on the M5 heading south, listening to Bob Dylan on the radio and battling the rain.

The show has no theme – it’s just an exhibition of recent work by various artists and includes What, Brett East, Zahra Ahmed, Chris Firmstone, Hilton McCormick, Nigel Milsom, Sherna Teperson, Jaki Middleton and David Lawrey. It’s incredibly refreshing to see a show like this that lets the works speak for themselves. Hell, they don’t even have an essay, they don’t have a catalogue, and the room sheet is just some photocopied pages stapled together. The Campbelltown Arts Centre has apparently had $10 million spent on it, giving it a new lick of paint, some new carpet and a chance to show a bunch of artists usually only seen in ARIs with all the trimmings; lighting, air conditioning, wide open spaces to move around in, uncluttered sight lines. It’s almost like heaven out there.


Nigel Milsom, Untitled, twin bedrooms, 2005.
Ink, graphite and gouache on matteboard, 65x90cms.
Courtesy of the artist.


We’ve mentioned Nigel Milsom here a few times now and we’re a bit reticent to sing his praises once again but put it this way – the promise that Milsom has been shown in recent outings at Phatspace and Gallery Wren has been bettered many times over with a selection of drawings and paintings that display a real maturity and deftness of touch. There are a couple of his stunning drawings of houses and one of a highrise, a couple of works that mix figuration with abstraction and they are very handsome indeed. We were most taken with Untitled [Evenings and Weekends], a series of ten framed sheets of A4, a police statement by Milsom concerning the death of a flat mate alternating with scribbly biro ink drawings of distorted faces, doodles and abstract lines. What could have been a ghastly and gauche gesture somehow comes off.



What, Liquid Nails [detail], 2005. Courtesy of the artist.

What is another commanding presence in this show. Last time we saw his work, he was doing some pretty out there conceptual paintings of the universe and footy legends and using bits of porno web sites to create books. He’s jettisoned all that for a new series of work using Liquid Nails, which is a kind of molten plastic that you squeeze out of a gun. Using a series of found picture frames with old images still intact, What has disgorged a whole lava flow of plastic goop and by doing so he’s created a lo fi indie rock that’s to Grunge art what Wolfmother are to Prog.

Brett East’s incredible, painstaking oil on canvas pictures of pills done in faux Flemish landscape compositions are indistinguishable from digital print composites he’s put together somehow using a computer called Vanitas. We can’t say with any honesty that we get exactly what he’s on about but another series called 6 Degrees of Separation appear to be some sort of negotiation between what an artist can do in a painting and the kinds of landscapes and interiors that are generated by computers. In a similar fashion, Chris Firmstone’s densely locked abstract acrylics on aluminum are hermetic universes and without a way in we’re still wondering what they’re doing.

There are no such confusions with Hilton McCormick’s big paintings. Apparently something of a cause celeb out in Campbelltown, McCormick had approached the Gallery asking for a show only to be shown the door by the Gallery’s old management. McCormick makes images in hand decorated picture frames of Jesus and friends from the Stations of the Cross with coloured lights affixed and an accompanying soundtrack [courtesy of a hidden tape player] which features Enya and the artist’s own voice reading from the Bible. The work’s sincerity and naïve stylings are so persuasive that you wonder what cruel hearted apparatchik would have turned him away. Happily these eccentric beauties are right at home in Stars of Track and Field.

Creating something of an odd echo of McCormick’s piece is the biggest and grandest installation we’ve seen by David Lawrey and Jaki Middleton. Called The Sound Before You Make It, the installation takes up one large gallery. When you walk in, a trigger sets off a strobe light from the middle of the room which has raised platform about eye height under a silver dome. Shadows from the strobe flicker on to the walls and you can make out men dancing. Then the music starts – the opening bars of Michael Jackson’s Thriller pounding away and then you see on the little platform hundreds of tiny Michael Jacksons and accompanying dancers dancing to the music with classic moves from the film clip. The strobe and the movement of the figures are timed in such a way that it really looks like the tiny figures are dancing rather than just whizzing around at about 24 revolutions per second. We ran out of the room, went back in, tried to edge close to the platform without setting off the trigger, but nothing worked. In the end, we just ran away.

It’s Not The Heat That Gets You…

It must be the humidity, it must be. There’s an air of madness around town and the frenzied gallery going reminds one of scenes from Day of The Locust, a movie about people who go mad and kill celebrities, because they’ve had enough, it’s too hot, and they’re sick of standing in queues. Last week’s openings at Blank_Space and GrantPirrie demonstrated that with the right artists, people are desperate to go out to something decent in January. Since Todd McMillan was having a solo gig at GrantPirrie people turned out en masse, partly to celebrate the excellent debut solo show from McMillan, farewell gallery assistant Clare Lewis but to also get a cold, cold beer on a hot, hot night… As things began to get more convivial we realised that people were suffering from heat stroke. There a celebrated gallerist, here a senior artist, there a rival gallerist, here that gossipy lady from the AGNSW, there the chick with the handbag … No one would go home.


From This World by Sam Barr, opening at Spacejunk Gallery, January 27.


We thought all that sort of behaviour was just plain crazy until we heard from several people that night a story so insane it’s actually true. The popular idea is that December and January is a quiet time in the art world, but not so for the canny businessman. Case in point is Martin Browne, the art dealer and gallerist with the swanky pad in Potts Point. Back in 2003, Browne was one of four people to buy up the limited edition of Shaun Galdwell’s Storm Sequence DVD for a cool $3,500. It was a spectacular debut for Gladwell and the sell out edition was the beginning of the recent mania for video art.

Just before Xmas, Browne was approached by a collector with an offer to buy his DVD for $20,000. Sensing that there was more money to be made, Browne investigated the possibility of selling the work at auction. This move flushed out two more interested parties and a bidding war developed as a flurry of phone calls boosted the potential value of the DVD to an even cooler $50,000. After several rounds of private bidding – and flirting with the idea of putting the DVD up for sale on EBay – Browne let his Gladwell DVD go for $60,400. Sherman Galleries, meanwhile, fed the story around town claiming the final price was $65,000 and the work had been sold on Ebay – although the truth is just as spectacular, we were wondering how Gladwell feels about it. Bring on the resale royalty!

Elsewhere, the typical longueurs of January in Sydney seem to have passed more quickly than usual and there is a spate of openings and continuing exhibitions around town. The most conspicuous of course is Sculpture 2006, a multi-gallery event based in and around Danks Street with galleries staging shows by their sculptors. The line up of participating galleries includes Conny Dietzschold Gallery [Leo Erb and Willis Serber from Germany], Gallery Barry Keldoulis [Dan Templeman and Chris Fox], Brenda May Gallery [big group show] and Multiple Box [Dietzschold artist Walde Huth].

Most of the galleries in the centre will be taking part as well as ring-ins from elsewhere such as Louis Pratt showing his work in Depot Gallery courtesy of a hire by Australian Galleries getting in on the fun. The entire show opens tonight at 6pm and it’s the biggest ticket in town. If some recent openings of the last week are anything to go by, the humidity will be driving the crowd to drink and acts of madness [except Sandra Byron of course who’ll be inside her tiny gallery looking a little sad…]




Wednesday night is a big one with openings also on at Ivan Dougherty Gallery at the College of Fine Arts of contemporary miniatures and a big show called New Indonesian Visual Art at First Draft Gallery. There’s almost too much to choose from. If you decide to go to either of these shows, you can also buy tickets to another exhibition going under the collective ½ Dozen title – a big, one night only show of video art screening at the Hoyts Cinemas at the unlovely Cinema Centre on George Street next Wednesday the 25th of January at 9pm and 10.30pm [not 7pm as incorrectly noted here last Tuesday]. Featuring work by Daniel Askill, Stephen Fox, Emil Goh, Wilkins Hill, Brendan Lee, Tara Marynowsky, Ms & Mr, Sam Smith, Soda_Jerk, Grant Stevens and Matthew Tumbers, tickets cost $5. You can also buy tickets by emailing Soda_Jerk – the curators of the video nite – at soda_jerk04[at]hotmail.com. You must buy tickets in advance, but popcorn, ice cream and other confections will be available as ever at the Candy Bar. If all that isn’t enough, across town on Thursday, Peloton is having a sculpture exhibition of its own, curated by Lisa Jones and featuring work by Jones and Metro and SMH scribe and artist Tracey Clement along with work by Louise Palmer, Sara Shera and Nicholas Folland.

For our readers not “handy to the city”, photographer Sam Barr extends an invitation to all Art Life readers to come to his This World show at Space Junk Gallery, 30 Pittwater Road, Manly, opening on January 27. “Works will be for sale, and I have made an effort to include some more affordable pieces (under $100),” says Barr. We would encourage everyone to go, but that would be the kind of brown nosing we were accused us of last year – The Art Life, the place where people meet to make friends and vigorously promote one another!

He’s An Excellent Driver

During the Christmas/New Year period we were asked by an observant reader if a recent article by Sebastian Smee in The Australian made some oblique reference to The Art Life. We had a look and found a curious aside in the opening paragraph of an article called These Things I Have Learned, published on January 6th.

Art critics, like other critics, are paid to have opinions. That's their first duty. And if they can't rouse themselves to get off the fence, form an opinion and express it, they are surely in the wrong trade. And yet, opinions on their own can become banal: they are (as you quickly discover if you try reading blogs) the opiate of the insecure. The more you discover about art, the more interesting facts become. Facts give you something you can actually hang on to.


We wondered if he was having a go at us, but then decided we shouldn’t flatter ourselves that The Budding Critic even bothered to read our blog. Why would he? [The opiate of the insecure is opium, after all…]We read on and discovered that the article was actually a very revealing piece. Smee had arranged a series of unrelated factoids that he had gleaned from a year’s worth of research – for example:

I learned that Vivienne Westwood once said: "You have a much better life if you wear impressive clothes."

I learned that Edgar Degas once said: "What a delightful thing is the conversation of specialists! One understands absolutely nothing and it's charming."

I learned that an interchange at the southern end of the new Westlink M7 in Sydney is marked by a 25m-high pile of dirt, compressed into a triangle-based pyramid. Asked why he wanted to build a pyramid at Liverpool, its designer, Colin Palworth, replied: "Why build a pyramid at the Louvre?"

I learned from Alex Danchev, the biographer of Georges Braque, that "if an ism can be said to be invented by a person, then cubism was invented by Georges Braque. It was Braque who painted and exhibited the first cubist pictures. It was Braque who established cubist motifs. It was Braque who established cubist space It was Braque who set the tone. And it was Braque who led a second revolution - the move into 3-D, making the first paper sculptures in 1911 and the first papiers colles in 1912."

I learned that in Rajasthan in the 18th century, a maharaja's paraphernalia of power included a parasol, a peacock fan, a whisk made of yak tail hair and a sun disc, surrounded by black felt or feathers, on a pole.

We were amazed that The Australian would let an article like this go to print, it being a sort of mélange of “facts” without any real point, as though written by the art world’s very own Rain Man. Just when we were about to toss the article aside we noticed this unusual non-art related fact:

I learned that the notion that goldfish have an attention span that lasts just a few seconds is a slur on goldfish, whose memory is actually far more impressive.


Now that was weird because back in December when we were wrapping up 2005 – and made mention of The Budding Critic’s love of Old Masters – we described the art world as having a memory like that of a gold fish. Perhaps Smee was firing a shot back at us for all the rudeness we have dealt him over the last two years, and frankly we would deserve it. Unfortunately for Smee, his retort is rather misguided – apparently gold fish do have a memory longer than 3 seconds [contrary to popularly belief and common usage], but they do not have the capacity to move beyond instinctual reactions to reasoned reactions.

Smee is rather more gold fish like than we first imagined – simply arranging facts in your reviews may help contextualize information but it does not substitute for insight into the meanings of a particular work of art. You can recite all the amazing facts you like about Matisse but it doesn’t substitute for real understanding of his art, or indeed, have anything to say about it. No wonder Smee is left gasping for air when confronted by contemporary art – without those little flakes of facts sprinkled on the surface of his tank water he’s got nowhere to go.

As we mentioned before, we had wondered how a piece like Smee’s got published in The Oz, even if it was during the dog days of January. Reading in the same edition of the paper we found an article by Oz arts editor Miriam Cosic and it all became clear. In a very unusual stream of consciousness piece called The wilder shores of creativity in which Cosic talked about… well, we’re not exactly sure what she was on about, but it began like this:

The arts, viewed as something more than entertainment, cut across two branches of philosophy: aesthetics, or the study of the beautiful, and ethics, or the study of the good.

Visual artists create physical beauty. Musicians create aural beauty. Novelists, playwrights and poets evoke empathy and understanding, creating a moral framework within which we can come to understand the implications of our behaviour towards others and theirs towards us.

The definitions overlap, of course. Paintings and music can be morally persuasive: think of Goya and Picasso's protests against war, Bach's deep spirituality, Mozart's calm order, the emotional power of African-American spirituals. Indeed, think of the magnificent PR masterminded by the Christian church, with its ethereal masses and heart wrenching pietas, from the Middle Ages on.


The arts, “viewed as something more than entertainment”? Think of Goya? Think of Picasso? Erm… Cosic’s article delivered a report on research conducted by an American think tank called The Edge Foundation. Apparently artists have yet to come to terms with string theory and this weighty proposal gave ballast to Cosic’s criminally bad meanderings around second hand information and half arsed references to contemporary artists.

One is the multiple realities that physicists are beginning to think exist. The infinitely multiple realities. Worm holes and string theory have become layman's terms compared with the limitless worlds scientists are beginning to describe. It's a stretch of the imagination - an informed stretch of the imagination - which makes contemporary artistic vision seem cramped into immobility by comparison.

What will it mean for artists' exploration of our physical world? In the past two or three decades, avant-garde artists felt the physical world, and conventional media for portraying it, so exhausted that they turned back in on themselves to physically explore the human body, pushing aesthetic and ethical boundaries to grotesque limits. (Think Orlan and Marina Abramovich in Europe, Mike Parr and Stelarc here.)


Think about Orlan? Ok, we’re thinking, thinking...

Poll Shock: It's Rigged!

We never thought we'd live to see the day when a poll at The Art Life was subject to the biggest voting rort since Queensland in the 80s... Yes, agents working for Nigel Milsom staged a stunning electoral coup by working around our foolproof anti-multiple vote widget. Although the numbers never lie, in this case they do. We therefore declare a tie for first place between Christopher Hanrahan and Sarah Smuts Kennedy.


The Best Show of of 2005 was

Nigel Milsom at Phatspace 35% 101 [disqualified]

Christoper Hanrahan at Esa Jaske 15% 44

Sarah Smuts Kennedy at GBK 15% 44

Bill Henson at Art Gallery of NSW 9% 27

Tony Schwensen at Performance Space 4% 11

Ricky Swallow in Venice 4% 11

Interesting Times at the MCA 4% 11

Seven Beauties at Tin Sheds 2% 6

Kingpins at Kaliman 2% 5

David Haines at Scott Donovan 2% 5

Trent Parke at Stills 1% 4

Tracey Moffatt at Oxley 1% 4

Dont Look Now at Mori Gallery 1% 4

Monika Tichacek at Artspace 1% 4

Nell at Rosyln Oxley 1% 3

Situation at the MCA 1% 2

Sarah Parker at Mori 1% 2

Bleak Epiphanies at Virginia Wilson 0% 1

Halinka Orszulok at MOP Projects 0% 1

Lyndal Jones at Artspace 0% 0

total votes: 290

The Art Life

Wednesday, January 11, 2006

... returns next week