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the art life

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

Good Will Art Tour

Tuesday, August 28, 2007
The eternal question – where are we? We’re in Brisbane to talk to Queensland University of Technology students about careers in art writing. It’s raining and its cold and the people in the big mall in the centre of town look annoyed and feral, like a riot is going to break out. At QUT people look neater and less wild, and they are very attentive listeners. They ask perceptive questions and seem amused by the notion that writing about art is a sucker’s game – you can’t make a living out of it.


Digital art - pregnant with meaning.

The QUT event takes place in the campus art gallery and we take a gander at their digital art exhibition, The Vernacular Terrain. It’s not a very exciting show, and for some reason all the digital art has been printed out from a computer and stuck to the walls, just like old art. In QUT’s adjacent gallery space is the all-female Breaking New Ground: Brisbane Women Artists of The Mid-20th Century. The show features work by Margaret Cilento, Pamela MacFarlane, Margaret Olley, Joy Roggenkamp, Kathleem Shillam and Betty Quelhurst. Looking at the works is like taking a stroll through an old text book, perhaps something by Bernard Smith, all brown toned and sepia paintings of bunches of flowers and nudes. The juxtaposition between the two shows is slightly jarring, but a juxtaposition that’s pretty standard museum practice these days. It’s probably not fair to judge both shows by the same standards since they set out to do very different things but we come away from the digital art show thinking that it’s just as well we don’t.

The next day we head over to the Gallery of Modern Art to see if what we experienced at the opening back in 2006 wasn’t a hallucination. We remembered a vast permanent collection of little-seen Australian contemporary art in tall galleries filled with glorious light. When we get there the place is deserted and high winds howl through the sliding glass doors of the book shop sounding like the winds of Armageddon. We have to hold the edges of expensive international art magazines firmly lest they fly from our hands.

Inside the gallery proper, school groups wandered around and the permanent collection looked drab under grey light. Never mind, we thought, there was still the opportunity to see the temporary shows but one of them was the Howard Arkley retrospective touring exhibition that was featured in episode 1 of the Art Life TV series. We spent hours in the Art Gallery of NSW while shooting that show and the last thing we wanted to see was see Arkley’s thin oeuvre yet again. But always game for a reassessment we had a stroll through the show anyway and it didn’t look to bad so long as you didn’t look too long. Arkley’s strongest works – his suburban house exteriors - aren’t represented by his best examples in the retrospective and the urban tribal stuff looks as crappy now as it did back in the 1980s. We’d had some misgivings making the TV show of making Arkley’s biography a part of his artistic story, but standing in front of his picture of the disembodied arm shooting up, you had to at least concede that the artist had made the biography part of the work himself. If only there were a bit more to the story. If only the silly bastard was still alive.

GoMA’s major installation of the moment is by German artist Katharina Grosse. The blurb on the gallery’s website says that “The artist transform[s] GoMA’s long gallery into an extraordinary environment that confounds conventions of museum display and challenges our expectations of painting.” The actual installation is a gob stopper – right in the middle of the gallery’s main space, two massive mounds of dirt have been heaped up against one wall and two equally massive canvas stretchers have been stuck on top. On the opposite wall, from ground level going right up to the top floor, are a series of massive balloons. The mounds of dirt are nearly 20 meters high and the entire installation has been spray painted with various garish colours - green, red, orange and blue. The whole work is – to be blunt – about as dumb and ugly as it is possible to be. The only expectation confounded here is the notion of taste, and we’re not talking about the total lack of any redeeming painterly qualities, but the sheer impoliteness of the artist trying to pass off this hideous eye sore as a “work of art”. What a disgrace.




Outside the wind was even stronger as the effects of a sub tropical storm blasted bone dry Brisbane. We took shelter in the State Library of Queensland. Inside was an exhibition called Reel Rescues. Art shows in libraries tend to be pretty dull affairs but Reel Rescues turns out to be one of the best things we see on our good will tour of the art world. It’s a show of rare films made from the 1920s through to the 1970s, ranging from home movies to news reels. The set up for the show is fairly straightforward – each film is projected onto the wall next to another projection and the effect is like an exhibition of moving paintings. A discreet sound design chimes away in the background and it’s a small joy to walk around in the dark, taking a dip into the grain of the various films stocks, the twitter of Lorikeets and laughing children in the distance. Sometimes things that aren’t supposed to be art achieve the status of art through their sheer indifference to art. What a million pleasurable miles it feels from GoMA.

As we leave Brisbane, reports come in that the south east of Queensland is under water. Up above the clouds, once all the shaking of the plane passes, it is bright and lovely. The woman next door is reading about Katie Holmes and how close friends confide that she is at her wits end with Tom Cruise’s outlandish Scientological theories of child rearing. Not only that, but Katie Holmes is looking haggard while the Scientologists have built a UFO landing strip in Colorado.


Katie Holmes: friends confide the star is close to breakdown over Tom's demands.

A sense of profound unreality sets in as we descend back through the clouds and over the dot designated as our nation’s capital. Canberra airport is an armed camp. Federal cops are conspicuous by their presence; short, bald guys in blue jumpsuits, Glocks on hips and their arms folded sternly as they watch travelers just off the intercity flights looking for their bags. Big rear-lit pro Work Choices ads sit next to large cut away images of amphibious ships that can – according to the image – carry loads of tanks, landing craft, helicopters and assault ‘copters. It’s the logical choice says the advert.


John Brack, Portrait of Kym Bonython 1963.
Oil on canvas.
Collection: National Portrait Gallery.
Canberra Gift of Kym Bonython AC 2007 © Helen Brack


We’re in Canberra to open the John Brack show at the National Portrait Gallery. Our brief is to talk about Brack’s relevance today. The crowd is huge for the opening – four hundred punters crowding around inside Old Parliament House, glasses of excellent merlot being quaffed as various art world, business and social luminaries greet each other. How are we going to explain that John Brack’s work is still relevant, indeed, has always been relevant? We remember our high school art text book – the one written by Kim Bonython – and Brack’s Collins Street 5pm picture staring out at us from the page. No one could have mistaken that image for anything other than art with texture, with history, with an eccentric and idiosyncratic vision. That seems like contemporary art to us, no matter when it was made.


John Brack, Barry Humphries in the character of Mrs Everage, 1969.
Oil on canvas.


The exhibition itself is a beauty. The halls of the NPG are hard to hang works in, but their fusty atmosphere seems perfect for the weirdness that is Brack en masse. His work is reminiscent of graphic art of the 50s, and of Warner Bros. cartoon backgrounds in particular. It’s the black line over green and brown that does it, a sensation rather like the distant ringing of an alarm bell from a bank robbery gone wrong. Brack’s portraits have unexpected echoes – his portrait of Bonython for example is eerily reminiscent of Philip Guston, the lines of the plaid jacket looking like a bag full of oranges threatening to burst, his portrait of Helen Brack recalling Grant Wood and James McNeill Whistler while the acidic portrait of Mrs Edna Everage have little indications within the orange and green folds of the dress the later work of Arkley. Yep, it’s all there.

Contemporary art is obsessed with the meaning and agency of the art object – how it relates to the world and how the art object transmits meaning to an audience. In a lot of contemporary art the idea of the work, its subtlety and nuance, gets lost in that obsession. Brack’s work offers a multi-layered meaning, one that contains humour and irony and deftly deploys those qualities within a painting, that much valued and vaunted of all art objects. Brack’s irony always set him apart from the angst and sincerity of Australia’s expressionists, and if his lack of wins in the bog standard art competitions of the day is any measure, he wasn’t hugely valued by the establishment either. Irony is now in plentiful supply but its cheapness has also devalued its bite. While you can find irony just about anywhere from American sitcoms to redundant political ads, but it takes a real skill to use irony to its richest and fullest variety. It’s a difficult notion to express but if artfully done seems as simple and natural to understand as the act of looking. Brack’s work has it and its effect is like falling into the pull of a giant magnet. You may not like it but it’s mesmerizing.

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From Here To Eternity

Monday, August 27, 2007


Powers of Ten by Charles & Ray Eames, 1977. From YouTube

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Help Skanky Jane to Help You To Help Skanky Jane to Help You To Help Skanky Jane to...

Skanky Jane of the world-famous Skanky Jane's Ruses of Pleasure blog has written to The Art Life to announce the birth of her latest
blogging project - Skanky Jane's Bargain Box. It's a project that welcomes all visual art themed contributions. Jane writes:

SJ's B.Box will publish your images and (visual culture oriented) opinion pieces, rants, exhibition reviews and promos, academic essays, posers, poetry, creative prose, humour, and blog reviews and promos. You name it - it's a veritable Bargain Box full o' art! Whether you're a newbie blogger wanting to test the water before diving deep into your own publishing pool, or a seasoned blogger wanting to play... Skanky Jane's Bargain Box can accommodate! Be it anonymity or a personality cult you're after and whether it be for exposure, fun, Google-juice, or just for the hell of it, Skanky Jane has the box for you. When you're fresh outta joy juice and the punters are brash schlep down to the B.Box and jostle the trash, hustle a bargain, or angle for cash, it's time for a big-mouthed, big-hearted, Bargain Box slash!


So how do you put something in her box? First of all you must submit to Jane by sending her material. Visit the blog, click on the link and do the rest. Simple.

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RE: Pleasure of Knowing Your Mindset



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I AM DR. RENOSI MOKATE DEPUTY GOVERNOR OF RESERVE BANK OF SOUTH AFRICA, MY OFFICE MONITORS AND CONTROLS THE AFFAIRS OF ALL BANKS AND FINANCIAL INSTITUTION IN SOUTH AFRICA CONCERNED WITH FOREIGN CONTRACT PAYMENTS.

I AM THE FINAL SIGNATORY TO ANY TRANSFER OR REMITTANCE OF HUGE FUNDS MOVING WITHIN BANKS BOTH ON THE LOCAL AND INTERNATIONAL LEVELS IN LINE TO FOREIGN CONTRACT SETTLEMENT.

I HAVE BEFORE ME LISTS OF FUND, WHICH COULD NOT BE TRANSFERRED TO SOME NOMINATED ACCOUNTS AS THESE ACCOUNTS HAVE BEEN IDENTIFIED EITHER AS GHOST ACCOUNTS, UNCLAIMED DEPOSITS AND OVER-INVOICED SUM ETC...

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gregory richards / daniel moynihan
august 29 - september 15 . 2007
opening wed august 29 . 6 - 8 pm

frontspace



autopilot
gregory richards



What goes up must come down. However what if that that goes up costs in the order of 40 million dollars and is an unmanned high-altitude spy plane with a sixty metre wingspan and a payload of cutting edge monitoring technology? And where does it come down? The project Autpilot considers this question with a model of the high-tech drone, the global hawk, which the Australian government has been considering for purchase to use as a front line maritime surveillance tool. Here, however, the drone finds itself wrecked and impotent as though it has plummeted out of the sky and crashed nose down, embedding itself into the wall of the gallery.

French essayist, Paul Virilio in the catalogue for the exhibition Unknown Quantity presented at the Fodation Cartier pour l’art contemporain in Paris, 2003, discusses the notion of the invention of the accident, not as an unexpected unforeseen outcome, but as an inevitable and essential condition. To invent the train is to invent the derailment, furthermore, to invent the Very Fast Train is to invent a very fast derailment – a catastrophe.

Autopilot freezes this moment. The accident becomes strangely approachable, a comic book calamity, a Lichtenstein kaboom. The surveyor becomes the surveyed exposing its other state – oversight, fault. Autopilot, through its pop sensibility, acknowledges an earlier global hysteria, the McCarthy era ‘reds under beds’. However, will our high flying xenophobic eye perform to all expectations, and even if it does what might be the outcomes?

backspace



one small step for dan
daniel moynihan


One Small Step for Dan - a saw and a suitcase, the anticipation of amusement captured in the static moment before the punchline. Exploring notions of vulnerability behind a false bravado. A sculptural self-portrait combining elements of hand made and ready made objects. Hey everyone come and watch the arse fall out from under me yet again….oh yeah you can laugh!





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I am khalid mahmoud, A Bahrain national I have been diagnosed with Oesophageal cancer .It has defiled all forms of medical treatment, and right now I have only about a few months to live.I am very rich,but was never generous, I have given most of my assets to my immediate family members. I have decided to give alms to charity organizations.I cannot do this myself anymore because of my health.I once asked members of my family to give some money to charity organizations,they refused and kept the money.I have a huge cash deposit of Eighteen Million dollars with a finance House abroad. I will want you to help me collect this deposit and dispatch it to charity organizations.You will take out 20% of this funds for your assistance.DO REPLY ME VIA MY PRIVATE EMAIL([email protected]) TO ASSIST ME.

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DAMP
SEPTEMBER 1 - 29

OPENING SATURDAY 1 SEPTEMBER, 6 - 8 PM,
UPLANDS GALLERY
STUDIO 3
249 - 215 CHAPEL STREET PRAHRAN VIC 3181
AUSTRALIA
TELEPHONE 61-3-95102374



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Compliments,

I am the manager of bill and exchange at the foreign remittance department of BANK OF AFRICA. I am writting to seek your coperation over this business deal.

In my department, I discovered an abandoned sum of$15million USD(Fifteen million US dollars)only , in an account that belongs to one of our foreign customers who died along with his entire family in a plane crash that took place in Kenya,East Africa,the Late DR. GEORGE BRUMLEY,a citizen of Atlanta,United States of America but naturalised in Burkinafaso,WestAfrica and contractor with ECOWAS,(ECONOMIC COMMUNITY OF WEST AFRICAN STATES)...

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Dear friend

I am pleased to introduce a business opportunity to transfer to your overseas account the sum of($ 47.600 USD) United States Dollars from one of the Prime Banks here in Dakar Senegal. I am Mr Mohammad Musa (Bsc,Msc) the Auditor General of one of the prime banks here in Dakar Senegal , during the course of our auditing , I discovered a floating funds in an account opened in our bank since 1982 and till date no body has operated on the account and after going through old files in the records, I discovered that the owner of the account died long ago in a plane crash along with his family without leaving a[His/WILL], hence the floating of the funds and if I do not remit this money out urgently it will be forfeited for nothing
Therefore ,with a personal conviction of trust and confidence ,I wish to contact you as a foreigner, to stand as a relative because you share thesame surname with the decease's , thus I can work out the release of the funds , No other person in the office knows about the account , please be assured of the risk free , I'm the one that will work it out , all I need is your co-operation because the account content can not be approved to an indigen here as his next of kin...


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Well Fancy That #13

Monday, August 20, 2007
"We all know children need to be educated. But sometimes they don't want to know more.

"They just want to stand back and marvel. Critics, alas, are expected to speak about art like adults, not like children. Once in a while, however, even a critic sees something that makes maintaining the usual front seem pointless.

"I had an experience like this in Venice in June, in a large gothic palazzo, the Palazzo Fortuny, that faces a campo a little back from the Grand Canal. It houses an exhibition that opened in the same week as the biennale and includes work by artists as famous as Pablo Picasso, Francis Bacon, Andy Warhol and Alberto Giacometti. But it has been written about by almost no one. I don't know why. I can only think that those journalists who saw it felt as I did: that here was something that defeated criticism, that was instead something to hold close, to lose oneself in and -- evidently -- to shut up about."

Sebastian Smee, An Elegant self-sufficiency, Review, The Australian, August 18-19, 2007.

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John Mangos Likes My Art Shock



Ben Frost Painting Furore, from YouTube

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Well Fancy That #12

"Conventional genres such as landscape or still life are excluded, giving the impression that contemporary Latin American art is largely conceptual. One could put together a travelling show of Australian art with the same bias but it would probably not be as convincing as many of these pieces. For although The Hours has its share of one-liners and flat moments, many of the works are clever and even funny, albeit in a black and bitter way. It is a show that stays in one's mind and improves with reflection."

John McDonald, Inside the Latin quarter, Spectrum, The Sydney Morning Herald, August 18-19, 2007.

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Mr Softie

Wednesday, August 15, 2007
The corpses continued to pile up in the Art Cemetery last week. Erik Jensen’s obituary in the Sydney Morning Herald on Wednesday Angry young artists get the brush-off - farewelled someone you could be forgiven for thinking might have been pushing up daisies for a while now: the Angry Young Man of Australian art. It was a decent send off: a whole half page in the general news section with fancy colour reproductions and accompanying tributes from two Sydney art stars.


Jake Walker, Soft Cock, 2007.
Acrylic on canvas, 65cmx63cm.
Courtesy of the artist


It’s clear these Bad Boys, Adam Cullen and Ben Quilty, feel the loss keenly. Here’s Cullen on the new generation of art students:

“They’re boring and dumb and weak, very weak. They have no endurance…I met students who weren’t aware, and I just thought what’s the problem? Aren’t you angry, aren’t you in pain? Don’t you know what pain is?”

Quilty is apparently so pissed off he’s picking up his palette and leaving the Chardonnay-sipping Sydney art scene for a potato shed in the country.

Of course, it would be easy to dismiss Cullen’s early-opener ravings by simply pointing up the fact that it is awfully girlie of him, as an artist firmly entrenched both critically and commercially in recent Australian art history, to be whingeing in a middle-class broadsheet about the decline of moral commitment in art from the safety of his mountain retreat. And, pressing the point a little further as an Art Life reader did in a letter to this blog last week:

“Please explain to me what is so “angry” about Quilty’s paintings???carefully considered and technically proficient paintings of skulls and cars??”


Point taken.

Another approach might be to dispatch the whole sordid affair with the bloodless precision of Joanna Mendelssohn in her published letter in the Herald on Friday:

“That angry old artist Adam Cullen should use his eyes…Most art students were women in the 1890s, most were women when Cullen was a student. And most art students are still women.There are other constants. Ageing radicals whose macho fantasies with dead animals hang in designer collections still complain about the young.”


Ouch.

But that would just be shooting fish in a barrel (and everyone knows guns are for cowards). More importantly, it might mean missing an opportunity to generate a meaningful conversation about some of the key issues that significant artists like Cullen and Quilty who, by having their say, manage (sometimes in spite of themselves) to raise in the popular narrative about what art is, what it should be and do, and what the place of the artist is in all this.

Jensen’s article is a veritable dictionary of received ideas about art. It maps shifting trends in the art market – away from rude, crude, hard and fast picture-making towards refined, considered, quieter work – along gender lines. It relies on embarrassingly romantic ideas about labour in relation to style and substance. It assumes an awful lot about the political role and the ethical commitment of the artist. And it is largely blind to the specific history in which such ideas became received wisdom in the first place.

None of this is the journalist’s fault. It’s pointless to get too uppity about how mainstream media continues to be reductive in relation to art culture. For one thing, younger generations see the SMH as a self-evident, cultural irrelevancy. And Jensen’s article does raise some important practical concerns that plug directly in to the broader ideological framework in which more nuanced art discourse takes place. For example, as Quilty rightly points out, there are real socio-political problems associated with the recent closure of the UWS art school that need to addressed.

Judging from the visceral reaction to Jensen’s piece (my own included) it seems lots of us actually care about this stuff. (According to Cullen, the phrase ‘white, macho, Nazi pig’ was bandied about a fair bit.) And what a good thing that is. I think it’s heartwarming.

From Carrie Lumby.

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Color Me In And Win A Prize

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Blog Kameraden

Tuesday, August 14, 2007


"Tunnel – self portrait - is part of a series that focuses on the notion of stranger in a strange place; the challenges and outcomes of spending time in new and foreign lands. I am interested in exploring concepts of disengagement from place and self, and the notion of homesickness, and familiarity..."

The Carrot Joke

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"for those who haven't heard me bitching about this damned social network, have i got a blogpost for you!

"everybody's on facebook now. it's no news. all my friends are hassling me to join, the suit walking down liverpool st is pontificating about why facebook is better than myspace, hell, even time magazine is writing about it. and and yet i dig my heels in. why?

"because it totally shits me that facebook has just gentrified online social networking and suddenly, hey, it's OK!! myspace has been around for years and while i'm not one of those 'i've been doing it for years' type folks when it comes to this crap, what shits me about it is that all the 'adults' who didn't understand myspace, took the piss out of it, or just plain avoided it, are now on damned facebook. yes, myspace is rubbish. i know that. it fucks up a lot and is full of posing teenagers. but same goes for facebook - just posing adults and slightly better designed! it's just bloody AOR for online social networks, for fucks sake! huey lewis and the news for digital civilisation."

Bastard Facebook, She Sees Red

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Found Ely Street, Angel Park, Skanky Jane's Ruses of Pleasure

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"After reading the news report at the Internet Movie Database, titled Queen Storms Out of Photo Shoot, The Artswipe made the artwork you see before you..."



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"to put the following review in some reflexive perspective I'll admit that i'm feeling just a lttle mentally fragile.

"OK more than usual.

"My major form of stress management consists in reading obscure bits from "the Logic of Sense" and then posting random shit on various people's myspaces – of which the absolute highlight has to be ‘the motel sisters’ – well – my favourite bit is the britney Spears song – and recently I found myself singing along to ‘toxic love’ thinking of evil vicious ex-girlfriends and then I started reciting bits of the logic of sense about alcoholism splitting the eidetic into a permanent fissure from the present……

"And then I thought – shit I really need to see some art..."

Unheimlich Art & Mayhem

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"The idea of an infinite road, of perpetual traffic forever does not seem so far fetched. I am stunned whenever I happen to be out on the road during peak hour where people wait patiently for the traffic to crawl through the latest bottleneck. What happens when a 45 minute wait turns into a 2 hour wait? Then a 6 hour wait? You may as well set up camp at this point. Which is what happens when there is a brake-down outside of Sydney at the end of a long weekend just outside of sydney. Traffic slowly coming to a stop, passengers eventually overcome by boredom and curiosity get out of their cars and have a look around. Wander up the street trading speculation with neighbouring cars on the reason for the gridlock."

The Perpetual Traffic Machine of New New York, Super Colossal

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"The explanatory texts supporting conceptual art are often evocative, sometimes hilarious, but seldom illuminating. A dialect of mainstream ‘Academese’, they can seem to the outsider like a secret code, with their own rules and absurdities. What was it that the SMH’s ‘esteemed critic’ unkindly said of Charles Merewether’s Biennale 2006 (Zones of Contact) catalogue introduction? “A flotilla of clichés adrift on a sea of jargon” or something like that. An esteemed blogger’s recent SMH article about 2008 Biennale Director Christina Christov-Bakargiev’s exposition on her theme ‘Revolutions that turn’ was equally funny, if more benign..."

The Beauty of Incomprehension, Le Flanuer


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"Even for our most successful artists, art income is never regular, and most will need to access welfare at some stage. Indeed, a well defined and sympathetic welfare policy can benefit artists more than even government grant systems. Unlike many countries (most notably New Zealand) Australia has no welfare policy designed specially to assist artists, or to get them out of welfare and into their unique line of work. Often when artists receive government grants, Centrelink officers themselves do not know what to do. In 'Work for the Dole' schemes, the greatest community benefit people come up with for artists seems to be as bus-shelter painters, when our artists today work in many media, such as video or sound, and in sophisticated ways. And unlike actors - who can look for acting related jobs for the first year of professional practice - artists have to choose between lying on their forms or compromising their long term work prospects. Art and Dole exists to collect our personal tips, to help get around these basic problems. Art and Dole also supports lobbying initiatives, to help change the current out of date welfare system."

Art & Dole

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Notional Museum

Wednesday, August 08, 2007
Curiosity drove The Art Life to the National Museum of Australia. How has it weathered the storm of the history wars? Did it survive the intense criticism of its so-called “black armband” view of Australian history and which led to Dawn Casey being “let go” in 2003? In short, have things changed on Acton Peninsula?



The ways in which any of our national cultural institutions use art to tell their stories, and how the history of art fares in the process, is a cultural narrative often as interesting as the contents of such institutions. The way their collections are presented to curious visitors like the Art Life is worthy of some forensic commentary...

Inauspicious is the best we can say about our approach to the NMA. This must be the most exhausted example of fin-de-siecle PoMo architecture in the southern hemisphere. The sign out front tells you how successful it’s been in pulling the tourists, but the peeling pathway (the designer sculpture which supposedly points to Uluru) has had to be modified to save tourists from hurting themselves.



The clunky concrete forms (on which you’re not allowed to skate, ride or board) have been filled in with even clunkier bits of steel. Clearly there’s been no artist involved in its execution, and therefore no Moral Rights at stake.






As you close in, you see how tired is the six year old fabric of the building and its surrounds. It’s visibly rusting, peeling, fading, rotting, and leaking before you ever get to see inside.










And when we looked over the wall at the Garden of Australian Dreams we saw its faded paint and stagnant pool surrounded by features which have been rendered “safe” by other OH&S; concerns, thus neutralising its original, sophisticated in-jokes...



...such as the poor Italian alder trees planted at an angle, now struggling to straighten themselves. Or then there’s a forest of other leaning “trees”, poles painted blue, (get it?) outside the Backyard Café, and the new fences strategically installed to prevent the elderly slipping and suing. And yes, even the “water feature” makes it into the pantheon of designer jokes!




This expensive playground is another fertile field for architectural moral rights disputes of the future. No doubt it will prove to be a DIY superannuation scheme for the designers (Room 4.1.3, a.k.a. Richard Weller and Vladimir Sitta) when, in the not so distant future, the Dream fades even more and the whole lot needs to be refurbished.

So we began at the beginning, walking up the stairs to a gallery titled Horizons: the peopling of Australia, which purports to tell the story of first contact, settlement and immigration. Around the first corner we find lots of images which look like Art. Dominant in this ensemble is a portrait of William Dampier, heavily wooden-framed, looking just like the real thing.



But alas we read the plaque on the frame that it's a copy. The snazzy metal plaque tells us:

Captain William Dampier (the first Englishman to land in Australia) Copy of Portrait in the National Portrait Gallery. Presented by John Masefield (Poet Laureate).

So the original must be in the NPG in London, not the one across the Lake. But the NMA label at the front of the display tells us:




Mysterious. Apparently it's a 19th century copy on loan from the NLA. But it's located so far back in the diorama amongst the forest of plaques and display items, you couldn't tell whether or not it's a copy or not, so the authenticity effect works for most viewers. There's another (admitted) replica beside it, an astrolabe, and on either side (yes!) there's real bark paintings. One is by Wanungwamagula Nandjeewara (no date given) a Groote Island artist, and the other is by the great East Arnhem Land painter, Mathaman Marika (Rirratjingu language group, 1965). Phew! So there is real art here after all.



But wait! What’s this in front? Perhaps moral rights are not a problem for anyone at the NMA, for here is a life size replica of another bark painting from the NMA collection (0750.20.23), by “Mungurraway Yirrkala” (sic) also of 1965. But in this case it’s a very good facsimile (they credit the photographer), and the explanatory plaques are screwed straight into it, and little wire frames drilled into it which support (actual) fragments of Chinese export ceramics and other artefacts discovered in Arnhem Land from the time of the Macassan beche-de-mer trade. My goodness, we think, where do the values of authenticity lie hidden in such sophisticated curatorial subterfuges?

So we look to the labels. As you do. Asking, how should a National Museum account for the relation between authentic artefacts, and replicas? Ambiguously, as it turns out…

We move across the gallery towards the section which describes colonial settlement, past various archaeological artefacts, images of explorers, and illustrations derived from contemporaneous paintings, prints and other images, as well as some things not identified at all.



Here, with relief, we recognise some old favourites, images by the Port Jackson Painter, William Westall, Thomas Watling, and Robert Cleveley, all hung together and neatly framed with a nineteenth century ambience.





While the label suggests authenticity (quote: Port Jackson: a Native by William Westall, National Library of Australia), should they be framed like that without mattes, their paper squished up against the glass? No, but it doesn’t matter, because when you look really closely, you see that they’re only photographic reproductions. Does it say so on the label? No it doesn’t…



Alarmed, we ask ourselves, are there any works of art at all in this Museum? Well, we remember, there were those funny looking painting-like things hanging on that curvy ceilings on the way in – but they had no labels, no attribution, so we didn’t take them seriously. They are, we discovered later, “ceiling banners”, commissioned designs by four contemporary artists. We assumed (correctly its seems) they were décor, ambience building, suggesting the presence of art, without the risk of the real thing. Maybe they were sound baffles, or maybe installed to distract from the appalling lighting fixtures…



So off we go looking for works of art. We find lots of historical artefacts, coins, medals, tools, stuffed animals, clothing, cars, and millions of labels, plinths, and display devices everywhere. Actually, we guessed there are about three or four display objects or images for every authentic artefact. But that’s about normal for an effective theatre of display in such institutions.

But we find no art, in the sense that a work of art usually connotes originality, authorship, authenticity, the idea of art in the mind of its originator. Except we do find a small ceramic sculpture by the Adelaide funk artist Margaret Dodd FJ Holden Pretending to be an Australian Native Porcupine (1982), on loan from the Art Gallery of South Australia, sitting on a plinth next to a real FJ Holden. A strange inversion of contextualisation to be sure.


Margaret Dodd, FJ Holden Pretending to be an Australian Native Porcupine, 1982.
Loan from the Art Gallery of South Australia.


Around the corner, illustrating the theme of suburbia, there’s a handkerchief-sized reproduction of a Howard Arkley painting of 1994 (courtesy of Tolarno Galleries). And a little further on there is an example of what appears to be folk art, a life-sized emu made of barbed wire, with a label: "Barbed Wire Emu. Made by Laurie Nilsen, cast aluminium, Barbed wire, and steel, National Museum of Australia", but giving no time or place of production or other attribution.

But once we turn into the West Wing (the museum is a horseshoe shaped building) where we’ve entered the Gallery of the First Australians, we see artworks everywhere, from all historical periods, forms, materials and functions. Here we encounter a myriad of Indigenous objects, artefacts, and works of art from the earliest known examples, to the recent past. There’s a contemporary exhibition in the Focus Gallery "70% Urban: an exhibition exploring the growth of Urban Indigenous culture across Australia", and a Gallery of Torres Strait and Islander art. Each example of indigenous artefact or work of art is surrounded, as before, with a multitude of exhibition devices, images, and interpretive texts, providing the contexts, origins, and indigenous identity of the artist. As we would expect of works of art in a national museum. And, while in this wing facsimiles are identified as such, other attributions are not as accurate as they might be.

As we walk back through the Museum, a powerful sense of ennui overwhelms us. How, we ask ourselves, are we expected to understand the rich examples of authentic Indigenous art forms when they are so profoundly decontextualised by the absence of other (actual) works of art in the rest of the Museum?

Perhaps, we speculate, this is a bizarre consequence of the unusual circumstances of the Museum’s creation, and the events which followed? The motivation for a national Museum was built, opportunistically, on a set of existing collections inherited by the Federal Government, brought together under one roof as a project to celebrate the Centenary of Federation. Unlike other State Museums, or the Powerhouse Museum, it was put together in a hurry, without the long histories of up to a century of collecting history of the other institutions.

In every other review or report on the nature of the NMA collection, the richness of the collections of Indigenous art, the core collection of which was once housed in the (then) Institute of Anatomy just up the road, plus the Aboriginal Arts Board collection, has been celebrated for its depth and distinctiveness. In a relatively short period of time in the 90s it was brought up to date by collecting urban Aboriginal art, some of which was produced in the Sydney Art Schools of the eighties. The overall museological context is, however, one of a discordant mix of historical artefacts, replicas, subterfuges, jokes, props, entertainment, too-clever architectural conceits and distracting design devices.

The effect is devastating for both Indigenous and non-Indigenous art. Without an appropriate cross-cultural context to demonstrate the care, consideration, interpretation, recognition and presentation of works of art, by which a national history might be told, the treasures of the Indigenous collection have been reduced to the status of historical artefacts. Just like the FJ Holdens, stuffed kangaroos, Victa lawnmowers, or worse, the ambiguously identified facsimiles, the implicit claim for all the Indigenous artefacts as “works of art” is thrown into question. Or, conversely, the status of all the Indigenous works of art is reduced to that of the historical artefact.

Thus the desired historical national narrative falls apart, not through a “black armband” account of history, but through an imaginative blindspot, a series of theatres of charade, resulting in a cultural incommensurabilty unwittingly constructed across the racial divide.

The Art Life is despondent. As our National Museum, we conclude that the place is an embarrassment. The presentation of its collections of artefacts, and the historical or national narrative it affirms, has lurched from controversy to farce through ideological correctness, through subsequent political interventions, to an complete absence of curatorial imagination and the resultant museological sleights of hand. Unfortunately, the loss is ours.

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2 X Stelarc

Tuesday, August 07, 2007


Stelarc, from YouTube



Excerpt from Heaven for Everyone, from YouTube.

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Art - all you need is cash.

Flags fluttered along Macquarie Street down to the Opera House, the brightly coloured banners read like a who’s who of contemporary art, Warhol, Freud, Sherman etc. They were also the names of artists whose works belong to the UBS collection and were part of the exhibition An Incomplete World at the Art Gallery of New South Wales.



UBS acquired the financial organization PaineWebber in 2000 and along with it their art collection. The PaineWebber collection was no ordinary collection but "one of the greatest contemporary collections in America". Arguably, the UBS art collection now rivals the contemporary collection of nearly any public museum around the globe. An Incomplete World is was a small, tightly curated selection of works from the larger UBS collection. The works in the exhibition were more impressive examples of the works of the same artists held by the AGNSW.

It's interesting to examine the scope of big business, which now has both the financial clout and more importantly, the ‘passion’ to acquire major artworks . The UBS collection is typical of the evolution of corporate collections: from a policy of private ownership and private viewing to showcasing collections in the public domain. The UBS corporate sponsorship program is both international in scope and has extensive public support. UBS - a major supporter of Art Basel and Art Basel Miami Beach, the Tate Modern in London and MOMA in New York - support an array of other public projects including the Australian artists exhibiting at the Venice Biennale. This of course sits well with their tag line ’You & Us’ - a promise to deliver individual person-to-person service while at the same time providing enough global scope to manage and create your wealth.

The inevitable impact of such major financial commitment to contemporary art by corporations means that pivotal and exemplary works of contemporary ar belong to global corporations rather than national museums. The Saatchi Gallery is another good example of this shift. The question which then needs to be asked is : will it matter, or how will it matter? . Increasingly, it would seem that the art works are still being shown in public museums and galleries but now they belong or are donated by corporations rather than having been acquired through the collection policies of a public institutions. Whether this makes any difference to the viewing public or to the kind of works that are acquired is yet to be fully understood.

Art is big business – Australian art sales are always reaching record highs each financial year. The benefits to the arts of purchases, patronage, sponsorship and philanthropy from business are well known and the pay–off to business is just as beneficial as they become associated with ‘art and culture’ by buying into it. Today, most major Australian business own or rent contemporary art.

In this current climate of a growing number of sophisticated and challenging corporate collections, it is interesting to reflect on the continuing popularity of The Archibald Prize at the Art Gallery of New South Wales which still rates as the most popular Australian art event . The Archibald is one of the top 100 exhibitions in the world. This extraordinary fact seems only possible because the public have embraced the Archibald as their show, an annual event on the nation’s calendar like the Melbourne Cup and just like the Cup we await the (live radio) announcement of the winner each year. We expect the annual a beat-up of some controversy or other over what constitutes a "portrait" to find its way to the its tabloid headlines each year. However it is the ‘idea’ that the show is ‘owned’ by the general public that has fuelled its popularity.

Everyone has an opinion, this is of course because portraiture provides a comfortable platform for debate, and we all think we know what a person looks and is like and what we expect to see/experience in the painted representation.

Ownership is a key factor in the process of expanding art audiences. It is not always necessary to actually buy, or possess the physical object/work but it is none the less essential to feel a sense of identification with it that in a much broader sense is called ownership.

Public galleries and museums do this as a matter of course – after all it’s the business they’re in and their success is reflected in the ever-increasing visitors numbers. Thirty years ago it was a few enlightened high schools that took their students to the galleries – now the snaking crocodiles or melee of school students outside these public institutions are just as likely to be kindergarten kids as senior students.

Commercial galleries have an inherently different agenda – one that balances two seemingly opposed positions- on one hand they want to increase their audiences and their buying public yet on the other they need to appear to be part of an elite. The ownership you buy into here is not just the physical artwork but the participation in ‘high’ culture.

Business has long recognised value of art as a means of reflecting these complex ideals. You just put it on your walls and it speaks all these complexities to anyone who steps into your offices. As the popularity and accessibility of contemporary art increases, the means of differentiating art works becomes increasing difficult. Value adding, art for investment, the role of public museums, government funding, critical reviews and international exhibitions all are keys to determining the future success and longevity of an artist’s career and resale value.

To avoid the pitfalls art consultants, and in-house curators are often employed by larger businesses to manage their art collections. These experts, who usually hold degrees and often have had commercial or large public gallery experience, aim to keep the collections ‘on track’. It is easier to follow their recommendations and safer too than blindly plunging into the art world. Through its art collection a business has not only the benefits of an enhanced public profile but also allows its employees to ‘buy’ into the ownership of the works within the collection as well as developing the vocabulary to engage in the broader art world.

The prediction is that art and business are just beginning to recognise just how much they can benefit each other without compromise. Art is everywhere - all we need to do is claim it. Whether it’s in our public galleries and museums or on our office walls it’s ours to ‘own’. Banking on Art might be the name of UBS’ investment service but it seems like a sound policy to me. Contemporary art mirrors the world and “expresses the ‘Zeitgeist’ of society”. It is a reflection that is not always the comfortable image we wish to see, but no matter who pays for it art of value continues to exert its ownership on us.

From Isobel Johnston.

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An Evil Petting Zoo?

Monday, August 06, 2007
Invitation to help make green history in Sydney


A team of visionaries and planning experts have come together to create a high profile "City Farm" and Sustainable Living Centre in Sydney's historic, and controversial, Callan Park (in Rozelle) - all on a voluntary and pro-bono basis. Visit our holding page with photo gallery



We are looking for a film-maker who would like to document the process of creating the City Farm, which involves:
  • brainstorming and creative meetings,
  • public meetings with inspiring speakers,
  • heated political debate between grass roots, local and state government players,
  • political lobbying meetings
  • and eventually the nuts and bolts of turning an abandoned park land and disused buildings into a vibrant showcase of sustainable living, teeming with community involvement
  • modelled on the successful CERES environment centre in Melbourne


Ideally such a film-maker would join us on a pro-bono basis, and help us to create some short videos of highlights for our website and YouTube.

If we are ultimately successful, there is a high likelihood that such a documentary could be of interest to TV networks. If you're willing to take a chance with us for your chance to add another chapter to green history in Sydney, contact us by Monday August 23.

Carolin Wenzel [email protected] mo: 0417 668 957

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Jade Pegler - proscenium machinium

Exhibition 2 - 25 August 2007


Gallery 9 presents an exhibition of work by young Wollongong artist Jade Pegler.

Jade has shown work previously in a group show at Gallery 4A in 2006, however this will be her first solo exhibition in Sydney.



PROSCENIUM MACHINIUM presents itself as a theatre of forlorn and slightly comical beings crafted from textiles and paper. Books are used as raw materials in the sculptures: they are built from language, histories and fiction, appearing as a misshapen and contorted sideshow decayed and neglected.


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Seasons in the Abyss

Marita Fraser and Alex Lawler

MOP
9 – 26 August 2007
Thursday - Saturday 1 - 6, Sunday 1 - 5 pm
(02) 9699 3955

2/39 Abercrombie St Chippendale Sydney, NSW, 2008 Australia


We are pleased to announce ‘Seasons in the Abyss’ at MOP Projects, an exhibition presenting the work of Marita Fraser and Alex Lawler, two Australian artists currently living and working in Vienna, Austria.

For this exhibition, the Abyss firstly refers to the ‘over there’ of having been away and about the space that is constructed when we imagine the world that exists behind the photographs from art magazines and printed catalogues. This mental projection of the other side and the act of leaving the known to go the other side is one position from which to read the work in this exhibition.

But more importantly, the Abyss refers to conditions inherent in conceptual painting.



Alex Lawler has used the Austrian Pop singer Falco as a departure point for creating Geometric/ Industrial Abstract paintings that create a synthesis of colour and sound.

In his work a tension is exploited between the dialectical, conceptual strategies of a work on one hand and addressing a work in terms of its potential as ‘pure’ abstraction on the other. It is here that Alex posits the Abyss: the potential for ‘pure’ abstraction, the non-objective drive which looms large behind each of the works in this exhibition, it is something that is always present, often referred to but never revealed. This potential for ‘pure’ abstraction is perhaps very related to the painter’s mind, that framing up of the world into smaller chunks of abstraction that comes when one sees the world through painting.

It is also possible to consider the Abyss as a condition of conceptual painting’s reference to some other space outside the non-objective, whether it is addressing notions of reproduction and representation, or referential to the history, framing systems, materiality and means of production of painting itself.



Marita Fraser’s explores the Aybss, via a circular negation of pictorial space in painting.

Marita Fraser’s work addresses the notions of the possibilities of painting, using paint as a physical structural material as well as exploiting paintings’ other material and representational properties. She examines ideas of the tension between representation and abstraction presenting a series of works that examine painting as diagram. The Abyss is invoked through the works’ reference back to the conceptual space of painting itself. The paintings refer to the problem of what a painting might be, presenting a number of different framing systems through which images and paintings might be produced or understood.

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