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the art life

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

Holiday Season Turkeys

Tuesday, December 19, 2006
Six hundred and twenty nine posts, 250,000+ visitors since 2004, 25,000 podcast downloads, hundreds of exhibitions visited, hundreds of artists mentioned, thousands of works of art in the file, posts from our correspondents in Rome, Venice, London, Singapore, Shanghai, Melbourne, Adelaide, Perth, Brisbane, Sydney... Can we continue?

A very special thank you to readers who made donations to The Art Life in 2006 - most don't want to be named and shamed, but we know who you are and you go on our list of Special Friends. You too can help us celebrate the holiday season [please note our PC avoidance of naming Christian holidays] by making a donation - all you need is a credit card. Follow the PayPal instructions.




Some things we got wrong: It's isometric projection, not isomorphic which is apprently some kind of Star Trek thing, not anything to do with architecture, or James Angus. Susan McCulloch writes for The Australian Financial Review [or at least did so when covering the opening of Gallery of Modern Art], not The Austrian. Dr. Joanna Mendelssohn , writes for Stage Noise with Diana Simmonds, a new arts web site that some are calling "the new Art Life". Katrina Schwarz is now the editor of Art & Australia, certainly not just 'with' and has been so for some months - she is currently gently kicking arse. We're sure we probably got some other so called "facts" wrong along the way, and had them pointed out to us. We hope you understand.


Some Things That Almost Happened:
Our bid to curate Primavera 07 was knocked on the head almost before it even began. We're hoping for 2008 and are sure that our thematic grouping idea of selecting artists by their inventive use of goauche and interest in relational aesthetics will be as relevant two years from now as it is today. Mid-year, we were nominated for the Geraldine Pascall Prize for Critical Writing. It's an annual award worth $15,000 and we fantasised for months about how we were going to spend the money. We'd even got as far as writing an acceptance speech that began "On behalf of TEAM Art Life, the Commonwealth Bank and the good people at American Express, we'd like to say thank you..." Our fantasy evaporated when it was announced that Robert Forster, ex-Go Between and rock critic for The Monthly, had got the prize. Normally we'd have become incredibly bitter, but there were three mitigating facts. 1] Forster is a very good writer 2] he's had a really tough year and 3] our work is littered with ill conceived jokes, factual inaccuracies and is nothing if not uncritical. So, good on you Forster.

Media News: Posted below is our final podcast for 2006. Please enjoy it. The podcast also marks the final appearance of our Art Life spokesperson in that role. The individual concerned has now left TEAM Art Life as it became obvious to all that things were starting to "slip". After a long and frank discussion, an "agreement was reached" and we're looking forward to a "new begining" in 2007.

More Media News: For those of you who can't be arsed listening to the podcast [and why would you?] we're pleased to announce some other exciting media news. In 2007 The Art Life will be coming to the screens of Your ABC in a three-part TV series. We were approached by the ABC at the begining of 2006 to see if we were "interested". Of course we said, yes, we are interested and so began an exhaustive series of "talks" aimed at developing what is called an "idea". People think that the ABC will take any old crap hurled at them so long as it involves an English detective and so we proposed The Art Life Murders, a hybrid art documentary/detective show to star Richard Griffiths as an "art detective" who goes around solving crimes such as who stole a certain George Stubbs painting from an English country estate. The ABC said the idea was "great" and that everyone was "very excited", but perhaps it was aimed at the "wrong demographic". We then proposed a TV series called The Art House aimed at "young people" while retaining art credentials. The show, set in the late 60s and early 70s, took place inside the rambling house in Double Bay shared by Brett Whiteley and Tim Storrier. Brett, wild and crazy, Tim, sensible and sober, both chasing their dreams - and girls! "It's The Odd Couple meets the McCullochs Encyclopedia of Australian Art!!" No go on that one. So we came back with Art Life Fixits!, a panel discussion show with two regulars - Diana Simmonds and John McDonald - and a guest judge - who look at the work of emerging artists and tell them how to "fix it". The ABC said "Look, we've already got twenty of those, can't you come up with something else?" We had Monkey Tennis ready to propose but instead said "How about a three part documentary on certain aspects of contemporary art?" Voila! And so, sometime around August 2007, The Art Life will make its debut [and hasty exit] from television schedules. For those of you who can't be arsed watching TV [and why would you?] we are negotiating to vodcast the episodes.

El Morte: We managed to get through the year with only one death threat, or more precisely, a series of threats that escalated to a death threat. But whatever form it took, the great thing about people putting their wishes in writing is that we get to keep them in our back pockets for later. In the words of a famous fish and chip shop owner, 'in the event of our deaths', you will know who is responsible.

Are We Really Dead? We have been contemplating the end of the blog. Three years is a long time on the "blogosphere" - in human time that's about 150 years, and as someone remarked to us "it's not as though you killed a child!" meaning, we don't have to save our souls by doing this. At first we thought, that's right, we haven't done anything wrong. But then our minds inevitably go back to that night. Sure, we'd been drinking a little, and we should have called a taxi - but we didn't. We got into the car and drove into the night... And then we see the moist eyes looking, a keening voice, "noooooo!"... We blog to forget.

The Art Life will return in 2007.

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The Art Life Podcast Holiday Special


Click here to get your own player.


Art Life Podcast Holiday Special! Xmas with JC... The winner of The Art Life Vote for Best Exhibition 2006 announcement... Other Best Shows; The Worst Show of 2006 - do we dare go there?; Johnny Cash - Rowboat; Outdoor Art - what's the deal? Sculpture by The Sea, TropFest, Festival of Sydney... Why Sydney isn't Stuttgart; Big hART's Junk Theory reduces us to tears; Johnny Cash - Solitary Man; Pick of the summer shows for Sydney at the MCA and the Art Gallery of NSW, Penrith Gallery & Lewers Bequest; What's On in Tokyo & Reykjavik; A VERY SPECIAL ANNOUNCEMENT - will The Art Life return in 2007? And if so, in what form? Johnny Cash - The Mercy Seat.


Podcast Image: TEAM Art Life.

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Best Show of 2006 Deathmatch Results


Download and fill in to win!





Rectangular Ghost @ Roslyn Oxley Gallery 10% 61

Del Kathryn Barton @ Kaliman Gallery 36% 216

Stars of Track & Field @ Campbelltown City Gallery 54% 324

601 votes total

Congratulations to What and fellow artists who participated in the official best show of 2006.

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Things That Didn’t Happen: 2006 in Review

Wednesday, December 13, 2006
January

Continuing a long tradition at the Sydney Festival of featuring art that’s accessible to the general public – and involves bright lights, loud noises and is sited in a park – 2006’s Sydney Festival Art Project is by the Austrian video artist Karl Scheithaus. The artist collected together hours of family archival footage, much of it featuring the faces of his mother and father openly weeping at their son’s career choices, other images of his sister being brutally ignored at Christmas and yet more out of focus shots of hands and ears, all of which are projected by concealed video projectors on to garbage bins, lamp posts and inert winos in Sydney’s Regent Park. Scheithaus says the work “inverts the social apparatus of looking from the private to the public, allowing the casual passerby to interact with persons caught in the act of sorrow.” The work is projected after dark, from 7pm to around 12 midnight, or until security guards chase people from the vicinity. [Sponsored by Radio Rentals].

Super successful Glossy Art Magazine launches its controversial Sex In Art issue. With a titillating series of cover the issue proves to be something of a disappointment with a lot of talk about sex, but very little in the way of actually putting out. In a special sealed section, academic gadfly Fred Trellis writes rapturously on the work of “undiscovered” Sydney artist Salo Viczxnecz and her penchant for using cunnilingus in her videos as a metaphor for commodity festishisation.

At Established Art Magazine, the first in a seven part series on performance art in Vietnam and Laos is published. Written by academic/housewife Hedley Werthit, the article kicks off with some brave attempts at writerly scene setting [“the artist has big, soft hands…”] but soon becomes a blizzard of art speak and tedious footnotes, accompanied by glossy images that are good to look at for a few minutes before you flip the page to look at the ads.


February

Harvard O’Brien finally leaves the Astrid Weller Gallery to join Galleries Feldspar after a dispute concerning his November 05 exhibition. According to inside sources at Weller, O’Brien objects to the comma inserted into his invitation that altered New Works on Paper to New, Works on Paper.

The new artist run initiative Sport Space opens above a Mick Simmons store run by a committee of seven artists and two curators including Salo Viczxnecz, John Mallett and Joanna Fairley-Ghirly. Their aim, they state on their blog, is to “create a venue for emerging artists to exhibit work not usually seen in other galleries including abstract painting, sculpture, installation, digital photography, performance art and video.” Sport Space debuts in February with Director’s Group Show, a group show featuring work by Sport Space committee members including abstract painting, sculpture, installation, digital photography, performance art and video works. Numbers swell to double figures on the second weekend of the show after it scores a mention in Gail Reporter’s column in the SMT’s Hetro Life section.

Well known art world philanthropist and pioneering collector Dr. Richard Love buys Bite Me, a DVD by Viczxnecz for $200.

Cheeky anonymous Sydney art blog The Art Shite is outed as the work of Gordon “Bosco” Tabs, Daniel “Undiscovered” Smith and Michael “Spiv” Norman in the Sydney Morning Telegraph’s Out of Touch column. Doubts are raised about this claim however when Art Shite writers are confirmed for a ‘personal appearance’ at the Adelaide Festival of The Tedious Arts and arrive in a bus, wearing white robes and number at least 20 individuals. Further confusion reigns when the “group” – instead of delivering a lecture on the “crisis in contemporary art criticism” - instead performs songs by The Polyphonic Spree.

Emerging video artist IQ Lowly, sculptor Terry von Sturműndrang and the very difficult-late-middle-aged-woman/potter/conceptual artist Helena R. Hankart are announced as the trio to represent Australia at the Moose Jaw Quadrennial of Contemporary Art.

Slightly askew toupee-wearing arts writer Gary Thyme reveals in Blimey.com that Lowly and Sturműndrang were chosen by curator Betty Bettram because they were “good fucks” and had consequently been favoured way beyond apparent talent and worthiness. Hankart meanwhile was included – it is claimed – because Bettram once had a thing with Hankart’s Sydney dealer Stephen Hairy, or possibly owned work by Hankart [a photograph of a ball of wool made from Hankart’s hair exhibited in the late 70s], but either way, what an outrage! The deafening silence in the art world following Thyme’s revelations only seems to underscore their plausibility.

John Cuntish-Browne’s 2x5 meter long Seven Circles of Hell – first exhibited in Sydney in 1966 - is sold for just $100,000 by Botherby’s to noted Paddington art spruiker Barry Hastings. Other lesser works by Cuntish-Browne are snapped up by a bevy of anonymous buyers.


March

Painter, sometime poet and all round bon viveur John Cuntish-Browne is admitted to hospital for treatment for advanced bloat. Plans for a retrospective of his work at Paddington’s Barry Hastings’s Gallery of Secondary Market Leftovers picks up pace with the years “1940-2006” hastily stuck on the bio page of the upcoming show’s glossy catalogue.

The Victorian art world is plunged into chaos when intrepid Blimey.com reporter Gary Thyme reveals that Harry Toff - Head of Painting at the Victorian Gallery of National Art – once worked in a commercial gallery and now, as a senior member of staff at VGNA, is punting on deals to his ex-boyfriend’s gallery, buying works of dubious provenance, or just for massively inflated prices, and he probably slept with Charles Sampson, the cravat-wearing VGNA director as well.

Despite promises to investigate, Toff leaves with his superannuation, a gold watch and enough cash and contacts to start his own “consultancy”. The deafening silence in the art world following Thyme’s revelations only seems to underscore their plausibility.

Sydney Morning Telegraph’s art critic Jack McDuff writes a glowing review of the exhibition Me Frocks! – a collection of stage gowns worn by pop diva Epernay staged at Sydney’s Powerhaus Museum. McDuff asks readers to consider the gowns as valid art objects in their own right. McDuff declines to mention that his newspaper is the exhibition’s media partner. Letters to the editor complaining about McDuff’s conflict of interest are not published.

The inaugural Gosford Art 06 opens at Erina Fair with galleries, art workshops and individual artists operating stalls. With affordable art available to all comers, the show is savaged by the art critic for The Peninsula News Anne Roxley as a “waste of time and money” and said to feature “work with as much aesthetic appeal as a chimpanzee printed on a bath towel.” Despite the critical dismissal, Gosford Art 06 is a massive commercial success with plans for another in 07, expanded exhibitions halls and a special “collectors’ area” where you will be able to purchase art, sip coffee and admire novelty chimp-related Manchester.


April

John Cuntish-Browne [1940-2006] dies. Mourners at his funeral include his long time dealer Lloyd Caruthers, his fifth and final wife Barbara Dawson-Jones, children from fromer marriages Jasper and Emily Cuntish-Browne and former friend and long time rival Carl Withers. The Sydney Morning Telegraph publishes an eighth-of-a-page obituary in its glossy Dining Style liftout.

Artist-run initiative Sport Space collaborates with fellow ARIs Gallery Vague and Lens Cap New Media for the inaugural Tri-Ars Festival, a Saturday afternoon get together where punters are invited to wander between the galleries, look at art, drink wine and eat hot dogs. The day is considered a qualified success after the directors of Lens Cap lose the keys to their gallery front door. Undeterred, the crowds assemble at the nearby Duke of York Hotel to continue drinking until they are sick. Later in the week, the residual good vibes of the day are shattered when Sport Space directors John Mallett and Salo Viczxnecz are the only artists from the event to score a mention in Gail Reporter’s art column in the SMT’s Hetro Life section.

A letter writing and email campaign to save the SMT’s Hetro Life’s slim art coverage is met with hostility and outrage by beleaguered HL editor Ken Jobswerth who claims reports of the end of their extended coverage are an outright fabrication. The next issue however reveals the reports were true. Cheeky Sydney art bloggers The Art Shite write to Jobswerth asking for an apology but are met with silence.

Meanwhile, at Nues Corp. flagship The Austrian’s resident art critic Bartholomew “Bart” Bombastic declares Me Frocks! at the Powerhaus Museum to be “the greatest show of the year, possibly ever, providing a sure model for other curators to follow”. Bombastic also claims that Epernay’s breasts are “pneumatic wonders of architectural construction upon which one might rest one’s head, or perhaps a pearl necklace.”

At Paddington’s Gallery of Secondary Market Leftovers, the posthumous exhibition of work by John Cuntish-Browne sells major paintings Seven Circles of Hell and Poor Bugger Me for $675,000 and $453,750 respectively. The show sells out on the opening night.


May

Barney Rubble, head of historical curiosity The Notional Art School, uses his access to Sydney’s A-List glitzerati to gather support to stop State Government plans to turn the school’s buildings into a car park and the deportation of teaching staff to Nauru. A tireless campaigner, Rubble enlists the support of brain addled Margaret Oldlady - who suggests male students wear ties to compulsory drawing classes – Carl Withers – a senior artist who once had lunch across the road from the school – and a list of signatories to a petition featuring many lawyers, architects and art critic Jack McDuff, who also just happens to work at the school. The campaign reaches the pages of The Sydney Morning Telegraph under the bemused byline of Lisa Gullible.

Following the success of his three galleries – the JCB Gallery flagship space on Paddington’s Elizabeth Street, a separate works on paper gallery on Queen Street and a secondary market dealership on Oxford Street - Jasper Cuntish Browne launches the Annex Annex, a gallery devoted to exhibitions of his other three galleries GST paperwork.

The Sydney Museum of Art Gallery’s annual Solstice exhibition opens to a lukewarm response. The show - an annual showcase of mid-career artists with middling work done in a so-so manner curated by Ricky Tintin - comes with an enormous catalogue that many admire, flip through but do not actually read. Bart Bombastic at The Austrian dismisses the show out of hand, preferring instead the work 20-something performance artist Fiona Italianate, describing the all-nude performance as “ejaculatory”. The opening of the show, meanwhile, is a massive success with many artists, friends and museum staff admitted to hospital due to alcohol poisoning. One artist – emerging sculptor Tom Chrysalis - manages to stay upright for hours, drinking mechanically, his eyes just eerie sliver pools of uncomprehending ennui.

After more than six months cultivating inside contacts and working undercover, Blimey.com’s Justin Thyme reveals that Victorian Gallery of National Art and The Art Gallery of Contemporary Art in Sydney are working in concert to distort the art market by using prejudicial purchasing practices including buying works by members of staff for their permanent collections while trustees and board members are exposed as blood thirsty Satanists who kill children for fun. Thyme manages to actually shoot a photograph of the fiends in action, a hooded figure seen centre frame with a raised hand holding a blood dripping scimitar, his face distorted with murderous glee. The deafening silence in the art world following Thyme’s revelations only seems to underscore their plausibility. Thyme resigns from Blimey.com in disgust.

Well known art world philanthropist and pioneering collector Dr. Richard Love sells his DVD Bite Me by Salo Viczxnecz – bought for $200 – to an art dealer for $5,000.


June

Tensions simmering since the “disastrous” Tri-Ars Festival lead to the departure from ARI Sports Space directorial collective of rising art star Salo Viczxnecz. Rumours persist that Viczxnecz is being courted by the Galleries Feldspar although the artist denies any connection saying she is leaving to get back to her “practice”. Meanwhile fellow Sport Space director John Mallett continues to work on his upcoming My Little P-Ness performance video show while being tipped by Glossy Art Magazine as “next year’s next big thing.”

Jack McDuff returns to his weekly column at The Sydney Morning Telegraph after six weeks overseas touring galleries in Canada, Newfoundland and Alaska courtesy of sponsor John West. McDuff lauds the Moose Jaw Quadrennial of Contemporary Art while saving his highest compliments for Canned Tuna, an exhibition of dolphin friendly art at the Edmonton Gallery of Fish.

Barney Rubble, head of historical curiosity The Notional Art School, is arrested at the Sydney CBD offices of well known businessman Alan Chivers –who also happens to be the head of trustees at The Art Gallery of Contemporary Art in Sydney. Rubble bursts into Chivers office demanding “cash and cheques” and refuses to leave until Chivers agrees to save NAS. Security officers overpower Rubble, prising his fingers away from a trigger leading to a bundle of TNT beneath his coat. Rubble is later released on bail.

The University of Sydney’s College of Phine Arts Plinth Gallery stages a major retrospective of Howard Fitzgerald, an apparently minor figure in the art scene of Sydney in the 1960s and 70s. Starting with paintings done in high school, taking a detour through his tinkering with computers and scribbling on paper bags in the 80s before returning to painting in the late 90s, it becomes apparent that, rather than being a marginal figure, Fitzgerald was actually at the centre of everything. Further proof of his relevance to young people today is supported by a reprint in the catalogue of comments he left on cheeky Sydney art blog The Art Shite.

Major international auction house Christoby's announces it’s cheaper to close down its entire Australian operation than pay out soon-to-depart CEO Johnny Cravat. Twenty staff are laid off on Friday and by Monday Christoby’s palatial Paddington offices are on the market – ironically administered by chief rival Botherby’s. Industry insiders deplore the company’s callous decision but note with alarm that the closure also means the sudden appearance of twenty new “art advisers” on the market. Cravat, meanwhile, leaves the country to head off to a gambling convention at the stylish Casino Royale in Montenegro.


July

Salo Viczxnecz’s debut show with prestigious commercial dealers Galleries Feldspar is a sell out. Dirty Birds - a series of 12 large scale lambda prints - “investigates notions of gender signification while playing games of free association that trade on the stereotypical motifs of women’s erotica” and includes frank depiction of cunnilingus. Mild controversy follows. Flush with cash from the show Viczxnecz also wins the Women’s Weekly Travelling Art Scholarship, a prize worth $50,000. At the opening Viczxnecz is complemented by a stranger who tells her she “looks really nice tonight.”

Conservative broadsheet The Austrian steps up its campaign for a return to the “three Rs” in education. Launching another series of blistering articles by resident education buff Peter Parker, the paper claims that teacher’s are beholden to “theory” instead of teaching “proper subjects about Australian history” [and confusingly ropes recent art exhibited at Solstice into the argument]. Concerned teachers worried that Parker’s articles misrepresent their profession, teaching methods and philosophy, attempt to get Parker to define exactly what he means by “theory” but to no avail. The teachers request that The Austrian’s editors allow a right of reply are refused. An article WTF Is Peter Parker On About? is published in Teacher’s Gazette only to be republished in radically edited form in The Austrian allowing Parker another go around.

Desperate State Opposition leader Peter Hopeless announces that, should a miracle occur and the Liberals win the next election, he will personally guarantee funding for The Notional Art School for as long as he is leader of New South Wales. Hopeless boasts that’s a promise “you can take to the bank.” Barney Rubble, head of NAS, rejoices that at last, someone will save his beloved art school.

Noted Fijian art dealer Gary Slim-jim sells his DVD of Bite Me by Salo Viczxnecz for $25,000. The Australasian Review of Cash notes that this makes Viczxnecz the “most collectable” new media artist in the country, “possibly the world”. They produce a graph to prove it.


August

The artist duo Cola_Jam working in collaboration with artist Craig Editor finally reveal their four-years-in-the-making Big Video Collage. Although enthusiastically received by older artists happy that their work is being carried on by a younger generation [even if said younger generation has no idea who they are], contemporaries of Cola_Jam dismiss the work as “derivative”, “clichéd” “nothing but hype” while missing the point that that is exactly the whole point.

Despite promising overtures from Astrid Weller Gallery, John Mallett decides not to join the prestigious commercial dealer. Instead, he flies to Singapore to re-stage his performance video My Little P-Ness, before flying on to Rammstein in Germany for the conference Sheer Obviousness In Contemporary Art before flying back to take up a three month stint at the Perth Museum of Distant Art’s Ivory Tower Residency Program. My Little P-Ness meanwhile is glowingly reviewed in Little Funded Art Magazine three months after it is staged at Sport Space.

Following a series of well received art documentaries screened at 11.45pm on Sundays after The Christian Guilt Show, the Australasian Corporation for Broadcasting approaches cheeky Sydney art bloggers The Art Shite with the offer of their own TV series. Starved of cash and desperate to avoid being called “cheeky Sydney art bloggers” forever, they quickly agree. ACB producers suddenly go on strike for the foreseeable future, leaving Art Shite writers, editors and contributors with little more than a promise and a tantalizing possibility.

At Botherby’s annual mid-year sale major works by John Cuntish-Browne Seven Circles of Hell and Poor Bugger Me sell for $1.8 million and $1.25 million respectively. In The Australasian Review of Cash, Browne’s last wife Barbara Dawson-Jones is quoted as saying “It’s what John would have wanted.” In unrelated news, secondary market stalwart Barry Hastings jets off to Lake Como for an extended holiday.


September

Joanna Fairley-Ghirly receives $20,000 from OzCo™ to produce a series of winsome drawings of “pretty things”. The artist is one of 75 artists to receive grants including mid career stalwarts like Harvard O’Brien [works on paper], up and comers such as Ana Ng [yurt design] and John Mallett [performance video]. Despite the best efforts by OzCo™ to leak the list to Andrew Blot - right wing blogger and TV idiot - Blot remains uninterested in the art world due to something he read in magazine somewhere has given him enough fuel for weeks of poorly argued nonsense. Blot promises to get back to the art world when there’s nothing else on TV.

Plans to save the Notional Art School by Liberal Opposition Leader Peter Hopeless are thrown into chaos when it is revealed that Hopeless was arrested by police in March for driving 150kms over the speed limit outside a hospital while drunk and fondling a small boy. Hopeless is ousted by his party as leader while his replacement Tina Chick says the future of the NAS is “low on my list of priorities.” NAS head Barney Rubble goes apoplectic suspecting the news was leaked to the media by Ian Whome, the mild mannered dean of the University of Sydney’s College of Phine Arts. Rubble announces that he can’t prove Whome was involved, but he will even the score, oh yes, he will!

Confusingly published three times a year when no one cares, Yet Another Art Magazine appears with its Performance Art Focus: Vietnam & Laos theme issue. Written by whatshername – that one who used to be a journalist at The Daily Herald – it’s aimed at those who want to know but don’t want to be told. Incredibly, the theme issue fails.

The much loved Little Funded Art Magazine goes glossy with extra funds from Oz-Co™ enabling it to pay its contributors and triple its cover price. Very few copies are sold.


October

Lens Cap New Media - in conjunction with The Centre for the Funded Arts - stage Things You’d Really Rather Forget About, a retrospective of “old media” works screened on “new media”. The show is planned to be accompanied by a 50 page glossy catalogue - including essays and photographs and a DVD - but is rescheduled for publication sometime in 2008 when it becomes apparent the old women at the factory won’t get it made it time for the opening. Meanwhile, works shot on Super 8 are screened on cheap TVs [although they were made to be seen in a cinema] in black and white [although they were made in colour] and up to five seconds out of sync. Everyone involved feels pretty good about it.

The Sydney Museum of Art Gallery proudly announces that senior curator Ricky Tintin has been named to the “curatorium” of the next Moose Jaw Quadrennial of Contemporary Art. Tintin will fly to Canada to advise organisers of the event on how to advise curators and other advisers on how to advise. Tintin plans to advise the MJQCA not to include artists next time as “it’s just so much easier that way”.

With a “shit load” of funding from Brisbane Council, Brisbane Whingers Almanac conducts a “round table” discussion with leading writers, curators and bloggers concerning the “this so-called crisis in art criticism.” Art Shite bloggers are openly insulted by an Almanac editor who begins a question thus: “You guys are a bunch of fucking arseholes – what do you think about that?”


November

Charles Done finally makes it into McGonagall’s Big Book of Aussie Artists after a museum finally buys one of his paintings. Life continues as per normal.

In an email sent out to supporters, friends and select media contacts remaining Sport Space directors announce the closure of the much-loved artist run gallery. Citing a need to “expand horizons and pursue opportunities” Sport Space will no longer be a gallery “tied to exhibiting” but will become a “curatorial project” with events happening “when you least expect them” at “undisclosed locations”. The Sport Space Video Library – mostly consisting of overdue loans from Video Ezy - is passed on to fellow ARI Lens Cap New Media who will exhibit the tapes on a “rotating basis”. Although a performance night is planned for late November, nothing more is heard from Sport Space.

By a quirk of timing, Jack McDuff and Bart Bombastic review the same show on the same day – the New Works on Paper exhibition by Harvard O’Brien. Both critics note the following: the artist is talented; he is sometimes difficult to work with; the gallery has done a great job mounting the show; many have sold. The Sydney Morning Telegraph and The Austrian even use the same art work to illustrate the articles, although the former is slightly smaller than the latter. Readers of both newspapers weep.

Head of the Notional Art School Barney Rubble is arrested late at night in the grounds of the Sydney College of Phine Arts while altering the university’s signage with a spray can to read “Sydney College of Phucking Arseholes”. Rubble is later released into the care of relatives.

At Botherby’s final auction of the year, works by the late John Cuntish-Browne are offered to an enthusiastic buying public – large works such as Your Hair Is Beautiful [1976] fetches $760,000 while smaller works on paper such as 1982’s Drawing of A Bottle of Booze go for around $25,000. Although the vendors attempt to remain anonymous, The Australasian Review of Cash reports that Browne’s children Jasper and Emily Cuntish-Browne are offloading a life time’s worth of Christmas and birthday presents.


December

Tickets sell fast for 2007’s Festival of Sydney’s annual Big Headlining Avant Garde Theatre Production from America - Peter Sellar’s The New Testament. The marathon four hour production features a libretto by Tom Stoppard based on the Gospel of St. Paul to a score by Sigur Ros and Philip Glass, and starring Jake Gyllenhaal as Jesus, Sinead O’Conner as Mary Magdalene, Tom Waites as Judas and a special appearance by Iggy Pop as Pontius Pilot. The New York Times describes the production as “one of the most significant new theatre productions of the last half century” and described its music as “surely one of the most mesmerizing and audacious collaborations of recent memory… nothing short of astonishing”. The Washington Post says Gyllenhaal “proves that not only is he one of the best young film actors around, he proves [in The New Testament] that he has both emotional depth and maturity and turns what must be one of the most thankless parts into a tour de force of charismatic intensity”. The Sydney Festival proudly presents a pared down version of the production, featuring at least 75 per cent of the music, most of the stage settings and bravely substituting Craig McLachlan as Jesus, Little Patty as Mary Magdalene, Bert Newton as Judas and Angry Anderson as Pontius Pilot. [Proudly Sponsored by Australia Post].

Cheeky Sydney art bloggers The Art Shite unveil their Things That Didn’t Happen in 2006 post after weeks of work. Unimpressed readers decide TAS [as it is lovingly referred to] is no longer “funny” and has “lost it”. Readers leave comments to that effect. Life continues as per normal.

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Best Shows of 2006

Monday, December 11, 2006
The vote is in and we now have our Round 2 winners - the group show Stars of Track & Field at Campbelltown City Gallery and Del Kathryn Barton's show at Kaliman Gallery. They now join Rectangular Ghost in a three-cornered death match vote off. Three shows enter, only one leaves!

The Results of Round Two


Exhibitions of The Year 2.0

Stars of Track & Field @ Campbelltown Art Gallery 37% 62
From Space To Place @ Gosford Regional Gallery 1% 2
Syd Ball @ Sullivan & Strumpf 0% 0
Dashanzi Art Festival Shanghai 2% 3
Ian Milliss @ Macquaire Uni Art Gallery 15% 26
Hany Armanious @ Oxley 26% 44
Rob McLeish @ Esa Jaske 8% 14
Linda Ivimey @ Martin Browne 2% 3
Art Movement @ UTS Gallery 3% 5
Terminus 2006 5% 9

168 votes total

Analysis: The one sure thing can say about democracy is that it doesn't work. If you want something to happen you have to make it happen. Thus Stars of Track & Field streaked ahead from the start with only Hany Armanious's excellent show Intelligent Design at Oxley making any headway against the organised voting supporting the front runner. One curious aspect of this round was that the rather excellent Syd Ball show at Sullivan & Strumpf scored nul points, as the French say. You'd have thought someone would have voted for it. It might have had something to do with the show being by an old codger doing abstract paintings no one is really bothered with - but then Ian Milliss scored well with his show at Mac Uni so there's goes that reasoning. Meanwhile Art Movement at UTS Gallery scored only a few votes too and that was one of the best shows we saw all year. In a complete reversal, fans of Rob McLeish's work at Esa Jaske early in the year once agin prove that our opinion counts for little - if you like you like it!

Exhibitions of The Year 2.1

Ten[d]ancy @ Elizabeth Bay House 2% 3
Christopher Hanrahan @ MOP 19% 34
Pam Aitken @ SNO 2% 4
Stephen Birch @ Kaliman 1% 1
Tim Silver @ GrantPirrie 9% 17
Benedict Ernst @ Platform 12% 22
Hayden Fowler @ Gallery Barry Keldoulis 12% 21
ReFrame @ Ivan Dougherty Gallery 1% 2
Lionel Bawden @ GrantPirrie 2% 4
Adventures in Form and Space @ AGNSW 5% 9
Primavera @ MCA 3% 6
John Hoyland @ Michael Carr 1% 2
Singapore Biennale 0% 0
Del Kathryn Barton @ Kaliman 20% 37
Tim Storrier @ Sherman Galleries 2% 4
Noel McKenna @ Darren Knight 9% 16

182 votes total


Analysis: Unlike voting in 2.0, the 2.1 vote wasn't swayed by a voting block - the votes for Del Kathryn Barton's show were consistent and wide spread. Christopher Hanrahan's show at MOP [no "Projects" anymore and that's official]was just as good and was pipped at the final post. Hanrahan dops out of contention but can happily spend the holiday season wondering if he has or hasn't been picked up by Oxley Gallery [we asked but have yet to get an answer from the gallery itself]. One show in this section scored no votes at all - the unlovely Singapore Biennale - a well deserved ignominy. Incredibly, Tim Storrier's dog's breakfast of a show at Sherman Galleries got four votes, but we suspect, like John Hoyland's outing with Michael Carr Art Dealer, it was a guilty pleasure.

The final vote off will finish at 9.30am Tuesday December 19th and be announced on Eastside Radio 89.7FM at 10am.

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Monday Night Brain Fry



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Bird in the Hand
Paintings by Tony Clark and John Wolseley

Curated by Robyn McKenzie





Opening at the Art Gallery of New South Wales,
Wednesday 13 December, 6-8pm

Exhibition Dates: 14 December 2006 - 28 January 2007

Level 2, Art Gallery of New South Wales
Art Gallery Road, The Domain, Sydney



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MEDIA RELEASE
December 11, 2006
ARTS WELCOMED BACK TO THE FRONT BENCH



ARTS WELCOMED BACK TO THE SHADOW FRONT BENCH



“We are pleased to see that the recent reshuffle of the Labor Party’s Front Bench includes the reinstatement of the Arts as a Shadow Ministerial portfolio, and that Peter Garrett will continue to take this responsibility”, commented Tamara Winikoff, Executive Director of The National Association for the Visual Arts (NAVA).

“The status of Arts within Labor's agenda has been rightfully returned to a Shadow Ministry portfolio, not backgrounded as a Parliamentary Secretary position”, Winikoff continued today.

NAVA, as the peak body representing the professional interests of the Australian visual arts and as a member of ArtsPeak (the body representing the wider arts sector), is looking forward to continuing co-operation with Peter Garrett, who also takes on the portfolios of Climate Change, Environment and Heritage.

“We support Labor’s commitment to policy development through consultation with arts sectors representatives, as demonstrated through its work on a National Arts Policy. We also valued the access provided through a recent all day meeting held by Labor with key representatives from across the arts and other not-for-profit sectors”, Winikoff continued.

Winikoff has indicated that NAVA, in partnership with other arts organisations, will be asking all political parties to address a variety of issues in their policies for the upcoming federal election in 2007.

Winikoff elaborated, “Genuinely supporting living artists and contemporary art organisations will be a major step towards ensuring a dynamic and sustainable Australian cultural environment. This can be done by acting on the arts sector’s recommendations, including those contained in the Myer Inquiry into the Contemporary Visual Arts and Craft Sector.”

Some recommendations being proposed include:

- continuation and expansion of the Visual Arts and Craft Strategy (VACS) funding with an additional $3 million for artists’ fees and extra funding for new technology needs;

- implementation of all outstanding Myer Inquiry recommendations;

- a commitment to providing effective visual education in schools and beyond;

- the development of an artists’ resale royalty scheme similar to that afforded musicians and writers;

- ensuring artists’ freedom of expression through excising “Sedition” from Anti- Terrorism legislation, as recommended by the Australian Law Reform Commission;

- providing tax incentives for purchase of new art work and R & D (research and development) investment in art;

- boosting Australia’s cultural profile internationally with grants for artists and establishing an international exhibition touring agency.

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PLEASE JOIN US

MOP @ hazelhurst 9 December 2006 - 4 February 2007
opening night Friday 08.12.06? from 6 pm

our lucky country? (difference)






In partnership with Hazelhurst, MOP Projects presents Our Lucky Country
It is the first of two exhibitions that 'bookend' an innovative Artist-In-Residence project planned for 2007.

Dealing with the many layered issues associated with cultural difference, artists from different walks of life, cultural backgrounds and sexual preferences will examine and respond, in their own humorous way.

They will respond to the big picture issues highlighted by the race riot in Cronulla and other parts of Sydney last December.

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The Art Life Podcast Episode #5

Wednesday, December 06, 2006

Click here to get your own player.


NSW University College of Fine Arts - end of year show; cute puppies, lovely ponies - the work of Vivienne To and Melissa Mai. Figuration - what's it all about? Skills to pay the bills; National Art School vs COFA - why must they fight? Resin Dogs - Ra-Fizzla; Art Life deny 'junket' charge; Gallery of Modern Art Brisbane - why $100 million can't hide the fear! The Reels - Quasimodo's Dream; What's On - 2006 The Year in Art @ SH Ervin Gallery The Everlasting World of Martin Sharpe - decades in the making; 'Bass In The City' - feel the old man's carbunkles!

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GoMA Pile

Monday, December 04, 2006
The brand new and just opened Gallery of Modern Art in Brisbane is a lovely place. It’s huge, with a sequence of stunning, high ceiling spaces, polished wood floors, natural wood features, lots of light, flat roof and paved outside areas. It’s relaxing like a Better Homes and Gardens beach house, the kind of place where Peter Beattie can invite a few Labor mates over for a barbeque on a hot Saturday arvo next to the river. The art isn’t bad either. Doug Hall’s collection policy of concentrating oncontemporary art has resulted in a destination collection the envy of many state galleries. In GoMA’s palatial spaces you’ll find work by Imants Tillers and Dale Frank next to Georg Baselitz and Sigmar Polke, Robert Macpherson and Fiona Hall next to Rachel Whiteread and Yayoi Kusama. Pieces purchased from past Asia Pacific Triennials adds considerable weight and breadth to the collection. Taskashi Murikami’s Mr. DOB character smiles out from its super flat surface, a grinning mascot for GoMA’s delirious collection of contemporary treasures.





The problem for the thousands of punters who turned up for the GoMA grand opening on Friday night was to find something that was wrong with it. The fun of attending soon turned to green envy for Southerners checking out GoMA’s amazing facilities – a fully wired and set up New Media gallery, three beautiful cinemas making up the body of the gallery’s cinematheque. Taken as an idea for a gallery rendered in three dimensions, it appears to be flawless, even if the gallery’s lifts and escalators failed over the weekend as 11,000 people tramped around the building. GoMA is Queensland announcing to the rest of the country and the region that it is to be taken seriously. Part of that seriousness is Beattie’s preferred successor to Hall. In The Sun Herald last weekend William Petley – a man who looks like he was invented by Evelyn Waugh - disclosed that Beattie had flown down to Sydney to convince Elizabeth Ann Macgregor to take over. It must be a tempting offer – you could easily fit the MCA into GoMA many times over and with a State Government committed to using contemporary art as evidence of its cultural maturity, Macgregor would pretty much have a blank cheque to do whatever she likes.

They certainly know how to have a good time in Brisbane and the media preview of GoMA and APT was superbly organised. With laminates flashing and name tags akimbo, mobs of art media were given lightening-fast tours by GoMA curators. Our smiling guide was none other than Julie Ewington who took us around so fast we had to run to keep up. Qin Ga! Some Thai artist! Some English woman! Sima Urale! A Korean artist! Someone from Sydney! Kids APT! Cinemas! The media packs were light on for solid information but they did come with a bottle of water, for which we were thankful, and at the end of the tour we were given a lunch that consisted of egg sandwiches, wine, beer, juice, and delightful chocolates. Kicking off at 10.30am, it was all over by 11.45. but with another couple of hours to go you could wander around and take in the majesty of the magnificence of the general awesomeness of it all. We sat on a bench and took a breath.

We saw Katrina Schwarz from Art & Australia, Tracey Clement, the tireless art reporter for the SMH’s Metro, Susan McCulloch reporting for The Oz, Joanna Mendelssohn representing The Bulletin and Lily Hibberd from Un Magazine conscientiously taking notes. John McDonald wandered around trying to talk to people. Julie Rigg, Radio National’s film critic was also there, for no apparent reason. But actual arts journalists were in short supply as it soon became apparent that the tour was mainly for interstate and international gallery and cultural institutions staff on an all-expenses paid junket. [Staff of The Art Life paid our own way to the opening, staying at a hotel no one had ever heard of and that was packed with OAP’s in uniform shorts and long socks.] We saw Nicholas Chambers, ex-Cottier Gallery assistant, who had left Sydney to work at the Queensland Art Gallery. He looked like the cat that’d got the cream – a few years at QAG and now he’s got best curatorial gig in the country. There were curators from all over the place – Perth, Sydney, Adelaide, Darwin, Melbourne, Auckland, Dunedin, Hawaii, and Tokyo – Australia Council head Anna Waldman, Alasdair Foster from the ACP, Blair French and Reuben Keehan from Artspace, Wayne Tunnicliffe and Natasha Bullock from the AGNSW, Craig Judd from Hobart’s Art Gallery and Museum. Some woman in the company of artist Tony Twigg walked and said “I’m going to write something, but it depends on what I respond to…” We knew what she meant.

The opening at 7.30pm was of a different order completely. Chatting with Brisbane artist Gemma Smith – and there were a few artists around, official participants and innocent bystanders – we were told that the QAG doesn’t normally have openings for their shows. They just open on the first day and that’s it – no parties, no speeches and no big deal. This may be the reason why, with the opening of GoMA and APT on at the same time, a once-every-three-years fever gripped the city and the guest list for the opening was said to be in excess of 4,000 names. By 7.45pm GoMA was packed with blonde Queensland chicks on the arms of befuddled old men with snappy suits and silver grey hair – it was like the set of a big budget disaster movie. Hell upside down!

Speeches were given at the media preview so none were forthcoming on the evening. Instead, Mercury Prize winning UK DJ Talvin Singh was the cross-culturally acceptable entertainment for the night. His set started well with some thunderous drum and bass breaks before spending the next four hours drifting along into ambient wash. We kept coming back to the stage area to see if things had improved, but instead they got progressively worse. At one point, late in the night, the audience pissed up on Crown Lager [official sponsor] displayed all the worst excesses of people trying to prove their club credentials at an art event. Here is a quick sample of approaches:

1. Not Actually Dancing – Just Standing There. Self explanatory non-body moving body movement where culturally curious tourists ogle the action.

2. Wave One Hand In the Air as Though Pointing – not completely committed to actually dancing, but still “with it” enough to move one’s body to “the beat”.

3. Moving Legs in Rubbery Fashion While Walking – last seen performed by Edmund Capon at the final Perspecta opening, can also be performed while eating or drinking, and looks a lot like Grouch Marx’s gait, except rhythmic.

4. Talking About The Set While Set Is On – plainly, people talking about it while it’s actually happening are either curators or have spent their entire lives at the back of rock gigs, probably both.

5. Dancing At Twice the Tempo of The Music with All Limbs Moving – performed by people in their late 50s and early 60s, they are hearing different music to the music actually being played and look as though they are being repeatedly electrocuted.

6. I Have Actually Been To A Club/Dance Party/Parklife – people who can dance and are not afraid to show it, yet dancing in an art gallery is nevertheless tragic.


The opening of GoMA mixed all of these approaches into one big crowd of drunken fools. Turning away, we tried to replay Aquasky’s Red Out in our heads to erase to horribleness, yet we couldn’t. We decided to set out and tour the halls and galleries, see all the people and record the names, drink plenty more beer and have fun. It became an impossible task very quickly as so many people were there, so many art world celebrities wandering about. Should we record that Jon Cattapan was looking happy that one of his fine paintings was in the inaugural hang? Or that Anna Schwartz used the opening to wear an architecturally inspired creation in fabric decorated with the family tartan? Or should we say we saw a man with one very small eye and one very large eye, like a famous monster of movie land? Let us simply say this – everyone was there…

GoMA is an incredible creation, born in part from a deep seated cultural insecurity and in part from the result of forward thinking political triumphalism. Had Beattie lost the last state election it would have created an unprecedented situation where a Liberal government opened what was a Labor party sponsored cultural initiative. Normally it’s the other way around. In a state enjoying the cream from the resources boom and a lion’s share of GST revenue, untold riches of the sort alien to Sydney can be spent on museums and galleries. GoMA doesn’t appear to have much of a meaningful relationship with the Brisbane art scene. That may come in time but what one can’t deny is that GoMA is massively out of scale with Queensland’s art community.

People in Brisbane like to call their city Briz-Vegas and we’ve never really understood it. Our visits there have always given the impression of a rollicking Wild West town with people falling out of saloon doors, a guy being bashed at the bus stop as someone rides the bonnet of a car down Edward Street. This time it all became clear. GoMA is a lot like a casino in Las Vegas – an out of the way tourist destination like the Bellagio - with an incredible collection of art that has as much to do with the rest of the Australian art world as a casino has to do with international monetary markets. It’s a nice place to visit and when you’re next there, see if you can fit it in between Warner Bros. Movie World and Sea World.

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Carry Over Champs

The vote for the first part of our quest to discover what was 2006's best show came in quick and fast - especially since we encourage multiple votes. There were some strong contenders - Vicky Browne's show at Pelt, which we thought very few had seen, scored well. The fatastic City of Shadows at the Police and Justice Museum also registered a strong vote. In the end, however, it was a race between Todd McMillan and Rectangular Ghost, a group show at Oxley curated by Amanda Rowell. At the conclusion of voting this morning Rectangular Ghost was the Kevin Rudd of the art world:


Vicky Browne @ Pelt 9% 18
Cullen/Brown @ MOP 9% 17
Tim McMonagle @ Kaliman 8% 16
Paul Knight @ ACP 8% 15
McLean Edwards @ Matin Browne 2% 3
Mark Heatherington @ Ray Hughes 10% 19
Ghosts of The Coast @ 4A 4% 8
Lindy Lee @ Oxley 5% 10
Rectangular Ghost @ Oxley 16% 31
Hannah Furmage @ Artspace 3% 6
Todd McMillan @ GrantPirrie 12% 24
Zanny Begg @ Mori 3% 5
City of Shadows @ Police & Justice Museum 5% 10
Biennale of Sydney 8% 16
Louis Pratt @ Depot Gallery 1% 2

200 votes total


With Rectangular Ghost now our carry over champ from Round 1, we announce part two. This will be in two parts, leading to a three cornered vote off commencing December 11.

Questions: What? Sydney only? Actually no, as you can see from the second two polls, we've included two exhibitions Art Life covered overseas, two in regional areas. We left The Adelaide Biennial of Australian Art out of the vote mainly because we forgot about it, even though we had been there. That might seem like a strange reason, but on reflection, a very good one.

Bah humbug, there's nothing but art in commercial galleries here. We covered a lot of shows in 2006 in a variety of exhibition spaces - commercial, artist run, public, museums, regional, window spaces, even some shows staged on the street. The exhibitions we've selected - and we couldn't put up everything we covered on the blog and on the podcast - have been chosen to reflect the variety of what we've covered and the range of art out there.

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