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the art life

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

Seeing Is Disbelieving

Monday, October 22, 2007
Ian Houston writes from Sydney...


Neo Rauch's Mazernacht.


I have seen the future of painting and his name is Neo Rauch.

The Art Gallery of NSW has recently hung two works by the East German painter Neo Rauch, Gebot and Mazernacht.

These two works caught my eye quite some time ago, but I dismissed them initially for what ever shallow prejudice that happened to be running through my embittered mind at the time. Yet they would not be ignored. Every time I have visited the gallery since, they have tugged at my eye, the flat colours, just back from gaudy, their muddied brilliance, disdainful of any obvious pleas for attention eventually seduce with their wilful obstinacy.

But it is the forms they take on the paper that truly captures your heart. What strange men and women inhabit this world? What beast is this, so loosely sketched, so bizarre in form and manner, with its human face and blue fur? Yet despite its ludicrous invention it insists that it be taken seriously, its depiction almost cursory, as if its existence were commonplace and need only be briefly alluded to. It stands there like a creature from a dream, appearing at every juncture, its melancholy face, sphinx-like, inferring the possibility of a secret knowledge, a codex for an impossible world. And on its side, its name, “Hirst” the stag. The creature stands on all fours in a boxing ring. A fighter sitting on his haunches grabs the creature’s front legs and stares at the ground as if contemplating some great truth that he’s been told.

Standing behind the creature is another boxer, who holds a painter’s palette, its colourful pigment dripping down to land on another palette that seems to be there by chance, though it seems ridiculous that that should be so. The boxer’s hands are ungloved though it seems as if the two have just been fighting. The ropes of the boxing ring closest to the viewer are broken and sheer toward the picture’s surface in abstract loops and skeins. Has the referee been ejected? Above the ring, folded sheets of colour drift in the wind whilst in the background arcs of paint stain the night sky and there amongst them is the word – “Marznacht”, the painting's title.

Neo Rauch’s work seems always to be swollen with meaning and yet opaque and resistant to interpretation, his figures so complex, the allegories so arcane and personal as to confound the possibility of explanation. Yet it is this that makes them compelling, like the dream that one turns over in your mind as you move through the day puzzled as to its meaning but reluctant to let it drift away losing the beauty of its secret. I think it may be this possibility of meaning that has made his work so popular.

In an artworld as vast and diverse as the contemporary milieu it is ridiculous to make universal claims, yet there is some truth to the idea that “meaning” has become either the object of derision in the wake of Buren-styled nihilistic post modernism or else tied more directly to causes, or ideals (often curator driven). The notion that an artist, particularly a painter, should develop a language of imagery and iconography that is personal and in a certain regard consistently applied (figures such as the “Hirst” stag make regular appearances) seems old fashioned and yet Neo Rauch’s work is startlingly fresh. Perhaps the reason lies in the fact that he seems to have incorporated all of the ideologically driven discourse that has politicised the act of painting over the years and then incorporated it into the figurative play of his work. If the boxers in Marznacht have fought, then it was art that was at stake. His ouvre has such a sophisticated sense of the painting’s surface, of composition and colour that you cannot doubt the integrity of his thought. Just trace the manner in which the figures in Marznacht are rendered, the immediacy of paint and line and the way in which marks trail off from representation to expressive gesture. The work achieves a wholeness that is not just a matter of balance across the surface and the elements of the composition but an acknowledgement of the problem of painting itself.

And then there is the question of semiology. Rauch’s works are redolent with symbols, each figure seemingly standing in a careful relation with others as if they were part of a sentence. If the unconscious is structured as a language, then Rauch understands its grammar, elegantly mobilising a surreal sublimity that inveigles even as it confounds. Perhaps such talents arose in his time as a painter in East Germany. We have seen before the manner in which totalitarian governments tend to improve their artists, who, forced to rely on subtle gestures, heavy coding and the repression of revolt become adept at suggestion rather than statement. Rauch revel’s in this coded gesture, yet without the strictures of a despotic government to test, he has instead turned to his own identity, as if he were trying to find some outer limit of meaning, the creation of artworks whose worth is undeniable yet inexplicable. They are machines for implication, drawing your attention into a world of allusive play, suspending you above the ordinary dynamics of the work-a-day world and challenging you instead with your desire to understand the inexplicable.


Neo Rauch's Gebot


Beside Marznacht, is Gebot, a later picture from 2002. Three men and a woman are in a room. One appears to be a labourer. He wears shorts and a blue singlet and stands on a square of turf that sits on the floor. A small tree grows from the turf; its leaves rendered as expressive squirts of red. In the labourer’s hands is a strawman or scarecrow whose head has been removed. Across from him a man stands behind a bench. He appears to be quite stern and in his left hand he brandishes the head of the strawman. In his right hand is a hammer. In front of him sits "the accussed", his hands bound, his feet covered over with sacking as if he has just been released from a bag. To his side is a women. She touches his shoulder and shows him what could be a Stanley knife. The walls are decorated in a checkerboard fashion the centre panels of which seem to contain speech balloons. In the “speech balloon” directly behind the "judge", there is the drawing of a jawbone. Just as with Marznacht, there is an immediacy in the imagery that seems to suggest that the allegory is in some way obvious, that demands you participate with these figures and try to understand this narrative. But just as with Duchamp’s bride stripped bare, meaning is constantly deferred, slipping away from you like the meaning of a dream.

It is interesting to think of these paintings as part of a German tradition that trace, in their absurd profundity and surreal meta criticism, a line through the actions of Beuys back to Grosz, Dix and even onto the late pessimism of the Blau Reiter's post war paintings by Kirchner and Beckman. They are ultimately sad songs, paen's to the loss of innocence but with no understanding of the crimes, like Kafka's Mister K. A haunted visionary who tries to chase away sin only to find that the blood is on his own hands. You should see them before they go back to the warehouse. You never know, it might even make you want to paint again.

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Where We Have Been & What We Have Seen

Tuesday, October 09, 2007
Where have we been? Unfortunately we can’t tell you. Let’s just say that we have been working to make the world a better place, free from sadness and want, indeed, a broadband nation dedicated to education and the advancement of, you know, whatever… Our mission has taken us to Brisbane there times, once to Adelaide and innumerable trips around Sydney. None of this will make sense to you now but take our word for it – it will very soon.

We have seen some art and some it was good too. The exhibition Cross Currents on at the Museum of Contemporary Art is the third in their series of shows featuring the work of mid-career artists. This one has been curated by John Stringer and has the advantage over its predecessors of being good. Yes, it’s true, it’s a far more conservative selection as far as the kind of art on show – lots of painting, a tiny bit of sculpture, photography and installation - but what a refreshing change. The smell of paint wafts through the MCA like baking day at the bread shop. Mmmm.

Elisabeth Cummings is an artist who a lot of people that like good quality art really admire. And we admire her work too because whenever we look at it, you can just feel the goodness and the quality oozing off the canvas, or in the case of the works in Cross Currents, wafting off the oil based inks on paper. Ah Xian’s celebrated ceramic heads – the Bust series - offer a similar sort aesthetic reassurance. Both artists’ work is like taking some money you won at the track and investing it in real estate.


Gareth Samson, The Keep [detail], 2004.
Oil and enamel on linen.
Private collection.

Two artists work who we haven’t given much thought to for a long time are Gareth Samson and Dale Hickey. Samson kept entering garish and unlovable photos into the Citigroup Photo Prize at the Art Gallery of NSW, yet kept producing supple paintings for that benighted Sulman comp. His big paintings in Cross Currents marry both strands of his practice and we can say this about Samson; he’s a dirty, dirty, dirty boy. If he isn’t dolled up in leather he’s got a lady’s part between his legs. Doesn’t he know the MCA is a family institution? Hickey’s work meanwhile shows that artists can get a second, third or fourth wind and make paintings just as alive and vital as they did 40 years ago.


Glenn Sloggett, 666, 2006. Type C Print.
Courtesy Stills Gallery. Copyright the artist.

Across town at Stills Gallery Glenn Sloggett’s solo show Decrepit finds the artist making an unexpected trip out into the country, but just like his big city work, he finds the same bleak ennui in tree stumps as he finds in Melbourne shop windows. As beautiful as they are despairing, the quietness of the work is overwhelming. The show’s saving grace is its sense of humour. Like his stable mate Roger Ballen, Sloggett’s stock in trade are surrealist shocks that trip you up every time no matter how familiar they feel. Perhaps it’s that very familiarity that creates the fuel for the images. When we went to interview Sloggett for The Art Life TV show, we had imagined the artist to be a Shaun Gladwell-esque skater who maybe took his shots with an expensive digital camera, perhaps selling editorial work to the likes of Vice. How wrong could we have been? Instead, Sloggett had a framed poster of Ran on the wall and a DVD of Barton Fink on the coffee table. He’s living the dream.


Shaun Gladwell, Woolloomooloo Night [Production still], 2004.
Courtesy the artist and Sherman Galleries.

Speaking of Sean Gladwell, you may have noticed the artist is having a major show- In A Station At The Metro - at Artspace. The show got a glowing write-up by Sebastian Smee in last weekend’s Australian. The review was remarkable for two things – Smee got through the entire thing without mentioning Matthew Barney, his favourite all-purpose point of reference for video and performance art - while he waxed lyrical about the associations of the exhibition’s title - noting the lift from a poem by Ezra Pound - but neglecting to mention anywhere that Pound, an expatriate American who lived in Italy before and during World War 2, was both an apologist for Mussolini and an arch anti-Semite.

We mention these unsavory facts about Pound because no one else seems to have thought it apt to do so in relation to Gladwell’s work, and not in keeping with the usual litany of reference points - le flanuer, old skool sk8, interventions into architecture, the dance nature of everyday movement, etc, etc, etc. Certainly, Gladwell certainly wasn't making reference to Pounds shady past, it’s just that Gladwell's work is so open to interpretation it’s just as reasonable to conceive that the artist is making an anti-fascist statement as he might be saying something about something else.

It is a rare feeling to be in agreement with Sebastian Smee. Artspace should be congratulated for mounting the show, and doubly so for what is the handsomest installation we’ve ever seen there. The place sparkles with video screens, iPods and Playstation PSPs mounted to the wall, multiple bodies moving, mirror images and endless repeats. The galleries hum with the low tones of immaculate electronic soundtracks. Suddenly, all those clichés of video art that Gladwell has made his own make sense. Individually or in group shows, Gladwell’s work doesn’t really shine. But collected together the work is genuinely arresting. More importantly, however, it doesn’t matter what any of it means. It doesn’t matter what anyone says about the work. It doesn’t matter if the subcultural signifiers are as relevant as winkle pickers. What matters is that it is. And that’s all anyone should care about.

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Darkness of the Stack

Wednesday, September 19, 2007
They come in with requests. They want to use the photocopier for free. Some of them want blank paper to write down their filthy secrets. Most of ‘em just sleep in the reading room. Yes, it’s your local library and that long haired guy behind the counter, the bloke with the smile on his face ready to help you sort out the mysteries of quarto non-fiction, well, he’s itching to do you some harm. Or maybe do himself. Or both. It’s the local library murder suicide pact. Such is the fetid place from which What’s show Casual Library Assistant at Gallery 9 springs.

What’s work, as far as we can tell, has been about a very conscious and deliberate attempt at ordering experience of the world into categories of representation. The first show we saw were his big paintings in Wollongong of pixilated images from the web put together at immense scale. The next show, OK Commuter at Firstdraft, had the artist’s old SAAB parked in the gallery space inscribed with excerpts from the artist’s diary. The ‘space filler’ paintings came next where the artists emulated the look of abstract paintings by filling up old picture frames with white goo. Then there are other works we’ve seen, including lovely photos of clouds, a drawing of the background radiation of the universe, paintings made using syringes, a buried truck and a very impressive picture of What’s penis. No wonder the guy works in a library, he was born to order the world.


What's Casual Library Assistant, Gallery 9, installation view.

But order breaks down as noise plagues the system. Although What has tried to get things together, his personal, emotional self gets in the way of the process and so we end up with the work in Casual Library Assistant. In one room is the Self Check Out Terminal, a hospital bed with a chainsaw attached at just the right position for auto-decapitation. On the facing wall a body is hung in silhouette with the words "New Years Resolution" on its chest. That one is the title piece. Another room has a body floating face down in a pool [dummy, blow up pool, a restriction-busting megalitre of water]. That’s called Ability To Communicate With Others. Are we happy yet? In the other two rooms a change of formal pace: a wall of drawings of library patrons varying in style from ersatz-brut to Euro-minimal, and the final room – a million lines attesting to the artist’s belief that death is the only option.


What, Self Check Out Terminal, 2007.
Various materials and dimensions.
Courtesy Gallery 9.

This is half of a great show. But which half? It depends on how you respond to the obvious. Normally, obvious is a synonym for bad, but a bluntly stated idea can be as effective as cutting your own head off to get attention. It tends to work but it’s very short lived. If you prefer your incipient insanity cut with a good dose of irony and humor, then What is also your man. His million lines of I-hate-myself-and-I-want-to-die scribbling was actually made with a crude print so not a lot of time was really spent there. It’s more of a special effect. And the drawings of the patrons – priced to sell – are gorgeous. We came away from the show impressed as hell but wanting What to drop the obvious stuff that plays well in an artist-run space and go for the aesthetic prize-winning cha cha cha that he can do so well. But then he’d probably be a very different kind of artist.


Huseyin Sami, Welcome to Tomorrow, 2007.
Acrylic on canvas, 101x76cms.
Courtesy of Sarah Cottier Gallery


The artist Huseyin Sami has very impressive hair. He is pictured on the cover of the publication that accompanies his latest show at Sarah Cottier Gallery getting a trim. He looks both surprised and disgruntled. Sami is part of a group of artists who we have decided to call Eccentric Systemists that would include all those artists who put some sort of system on top of their creative endeavours but can’t resist messing with it at the last moment. Early works by Sami were elaborate painting machines, stacked layers of perforated plastic or boards, held in a frame, through which paint dripped down on to plastic sheets. In other works, he stretched and warped paint in as many ways possible - brightly coloured cocoons, web-like strings, turd like lumps, stretchers hung from balloons. Where could paint go next?

Sweet Days Wilderness finds Sami back again with a few of the previous methods of ‘painting’ returning [lumps, piles, strings, festive trees] but with a brave new step in an unexpected direction – to the canvas. The detritus of his previous painting experiments has been a collection of dried films of acrylic paint that, since they’re plastic, can be peeled off the floor and stuck on to other surfaces. And so, the dozen or so canvases in Sweet Days Wilderness, are constructed rather than painted, painstakingly glued together while giving the impression they are the result of an incredible series of happy accidents. The paintings look like a three way tussle between Miro, Hans Arp and Takashi Murakami, lots of weird creatures lost in a hyper colourful landscape. The similarity is only superficial, however, as we suspect Sami is on a much more serious trip breaking down the barriers of painting, indeed, heading off into the expanded field like many of other illustrious alumni of Sydney College of the Arts. What a joy he’s doing it with a sense of humour too.

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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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John Mangos Likes My Art Shock

Monday, August 20, 2007


Ben Frost Painting Furore, from YouTube

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1968 And All That

Tuesday, July 17, 2007
The end must have really been something to see. Right on the edge of real radical political change, the period from ‘67 to ‘72 was a period of world wide dissent and ferment. Paris, sure, beneath the streets the beach and all that, but Mexico, Brazil and Japan too. It was a global resistance to the forces at the frozen heart of Cold War politics. In that bygone era lines of communication were incredibly slow and the local versions of international radical politics and art that suddenly sprang up couldn't’t be ignored. Small cultural moments such as a protest rally, a song, a film, a stage play or a magazine had an effect far beyond their physical limitations. Culture was important and independent of the forms that delivered it. A magazine might be sold for profit but that wasn’t its motivation, and it might have had only 1,000 copies printed, but each one had such importance that it was valued beyond mere newsprint.


Reuben Keehan, A Farewell to Photography. Installation view.
Courtesy Sarah Cottier Gallery.


When the Cold War melted and consumers were pacified with better products and fewer options, the ferment turned to soda. The 68-72 period formed a kind of cultural bedrock on which the Marxist late 70s, the Post Modern Period, and Hyper Capitalist Now, would be built. The collateral cultural – the books, the magazines, the movies -took on fetish qualities for the survivors and everyone else who followed, some, like us, people who were taught by comrades, and for others, the students of students of students. And that’s where Rueben Keehan comes in.

His debut solo show with Sarah Cottier Gallery is called A Farewell to Photography, a series of paintings memorializing long lost detritus from the Golden Age. Provoke was published in Japan from late 1968, a magazine dedicated to radicalizing the practice of photography not just in its subject matter – down and outs, underground culture– but also in its approach using distressed, torn and overexposed images. Perversely perhaps, the magazine cover didn’t actually feature photographs, just an artfully designed masthead in English, a line of explanatory text in Japanese and an issue number.


Reuben Keehan, Autumn 1968, 2007.
Acrylic on canvas, 91x91cms. Courtesy Sarah Cottier Gallery.


Keehan’s work is also an act of perversity taking such an obscure starting point for what is essentially a homage to a lost of era. The title of the show makes the relationship between the object, the painting, and the source – an imageless image source – an ironic launch pad for unhealthy obsession between object-subject relationships. The paintings are beautifully done and reinforce the homage element to the point of emotional piquancy. The other unsettling element to this series of works isn’t all that apparent, and certainly not so when viewed in an opening crowded with well wishers and nouveau pioneers. And that’s silence. When you look at these paintings it feels like the world is crashing down in slow motion. A silent end that never stops ending.

A similar kind of silence can be found in Nigel Milsom’s work in his show with Chris Hanrahan called Living On Luck at the National Art School. The silence in Milsom’s paintings may be because, like Keehan, he’s also using photography as a starting point. Milsom was looking at the work of Disfarmer [1884-1955], a self-taught photographer who did portraits of neighbours, towns folk and passersby in Herber Springs, Arkansas during the early 20th century.


Nigel Milsom, Untitled (spirit ditch), 2007.
Oil on Linen, 50 x 60cm. Private collection.
Courtesy of the artist.

Milsom has taken on Disfarmer’s front-on, photo portrait style and created a stunning series of paintings. Like his last show at Firstdraft, Milsom’s used a multiple approach to laying out the equally-sized images end to end as a continuous line around the walls. But where the experiment at Firstdraft didn’t really work, the collection of images that Milsom has painted here, from self portraits to images of weird and anonymous ‘70s people and Charles Bronson look-a-likes, the paintings are eerie and as silent as the tomb. Maybe it’s all the black he’s used?

Living On Luck is a two-fer show, a dialogue between two artists – Milsom the painter, and Hanrahan, a guy who does a lot of things. Hanrahan is a former student at the National Art School, the publicity is at pains to point out, as if this scruffy contemporary artist may embarrass and frighten the venerable school’s more conservative staff or students. One can only imagine what his former NAS lecturers would have had to say about the things he got up to at Gallery Wren, smashing holes in walls, jumping into swimming pools, playing the intro to the theme from Hogan’s Heroes on the kazoo.

The NAS staff shouldn’t have worried as Hanrahan’s work has never really strayed far from classic sculpture ideas – form, space, material. It’s true, Hanrahan also lays the soft velvet of self portraiture over the top of the objects, but if you just walk around and luxuriate in the artist’s love of wood, there’s enough aesthetic and intellectual egg nog to keep you going all day long.

For Living On Luck
Hanrahan has tapped into the a la mode style for constructing a little house in the middle of a bigger space, but he's built a shack in which one might view the artist singing country and western songs, drawings tacked up on the walls, the whole deal surrounded by smaller sculptures rather like stretchers propped up on lighting fixtures. It may well be al la mode, but it works. Harahan’s love of the absurdity of language frames the discourse, substituting song lyrics and Hank Williams crooning for confessional. We have always been attracted to the way Harahan uses objects as language, the use of text, writing and drawing finding parallels in the objects themselves, as though the three-dimensional pieces were derived from Pictionary clues.

This show is promoted as a dialogue between the artists, an exhibition that “examines conventions of portraiture and considers the complex mechanisms through which our personal and public identities [are] constructed.” We’re not sure if this show really does that, but what we can definitely vouch for is it demonstrates the way seemingly opposite practices are complimentary. Not only that but out there, beyond the high walls of any given educational institution, the borders between practices start to dissolve seconds after graduation.

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The Name of That Artist Was

Wednesday, June 27, 2007

Del Kathryn Barton, A is for... [beauty before beauty], 2006.
Acrylic, gouache, watercolour and pen on polyester canvas, 220x180 cm.
Courtesy Kaliman Gallery.



It seems some of you people just about missed it - the name of that artist was ...Del Kathryn Barton. You can see her work at Kaliman Gallery.

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You Be The Attorney, I'll Drive

Tuesday, June 19, 2007

"Revered … but Benjamin has questioned the value of his landscapes."
Photo: Quentin Jones, SMH.


Not everyone can write like Jack Marx. And fewer still can do it for The Sydney Morning Herald. Commissioned to write the text for a book published to coincide with Jason Benjamin's new solo show at Melbourne's Metro 5, Marx siezed the opportunity to unleash his inner Gonzo. Here are the first two paragraphs of the SMH front page story:

"SOMETIME in the winter of 2006, I became quite convinced that the Sydney artist Jason Benjamin was not long for this earth.

He had hired me to write the text for his monograph, What Binds Us, and thus I'd spent weeks in his pocket, during which time I had witnessed the 35-year-old's descent into a mine of inexplicable neurosis and despair that would surely end with death. The only question was whether it would be by his own hand or mine. I'd have been happy with either."


Near death! Everything is on the line!! The artist may die!!! Unfortunately, the story that followed didn't quite live up to this corker of an opening. Given the tough job of writing about Benjamin, Marx went to the painter's studio, asked some questions, then sat around for few hours. At one point things got quite tense:

"One day, after I'd commented positively on one of his works in progress, he took up his brush and, with nary a word, destroyed the picture - surely the most self-sacrificial "f--- off" in the history of either art or journalism. During another difficult evening, Jason doodled my likeness on the back of a beer coaster as he answered my questions. The monstrous result left no doubt as to how he viewed his interrogator at that point in time."


The "monstrous result" was a picture of a guy wearing a hat... One can easily sympathise with Benjamin, suddenly struck with the realisation he's got a lot of work to do before the show and a bloke in a hat turns up to ask him questions. As the deadline for the show loomed, Benjamin started to have second thoughts about the book - did he really need a text after all? Couldn't it all just be pictures? Meanwhile, the artist was going through Van Gogh-like emotional turmoil:

"More worrying, however, was his diminishing enthusiasm for Jason Benjamin, a creeping self-loathing that tumbled out in an increasingly fraught and shapeless series of late-night telephone conversations, during which he revealed he'd been sleeping in his studio ("the chamber", as he was now calling it), going days without seeing his wife or children."

Luckily for Benjamin, he's a professional and got the job done, but sadly for Marx, this also meant in the end there was no story, no suicide and no murder. Instead, the SMH story concludes with Mrs. Benjmain ruminating on her husbands obsessions:

"Jason's wife, Annie, speaks of "the bad time" last year, as if referring to some beaten disease. She still wishes he saw more of his family - he's in the studio from the crack of dawn to the dead of night. Not even she is allowed in there."

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Noh New York

Wednesday, May 23, 2007
Regular Art Life reader Ian Houston is now our semi-official New York correspondent. For a follow up to his previous postings, Mr. Houston writes to us on the exhibition High Times Hard Times New York Painting 1967 –1975 at National Academy of Art NYC, curated by Katy Siegel.

Where did it all go wrong? There was a time when canvas painting was the highest expression of contemporary art. We knew this because Clement Greenberg told us so. But nothing lasts forever. The history of Greenberg’s theory of formalism and the extraordinary hold it took on world art is well known. What is not so widely discussed is what happened to painting in the aftermath of Greenberg’s fall from grace, as it faced the challenges of minimalism, conceptualism and the rise of sculpture as the critically acknowledged “pre-eminent” art form. Which is a shame, because as we all know, most parties are much more interesting once the last wine cask bladders have been emptied and people start eyeing the cooking sherry. Desperation takes hold and people try things they would never have dreamed of at the start of the evening. That’s the way it was at the end of the sixties, as painters, freed from the straightjacket of Greenbergian formalism and in response to the political foments of Vietnam, Kent state and the Summer of Love™, tried to make painting matter again. Sure they failed, but what a glorious failure it was. High Times Hard Times is an exhibition devoted to examining this explosion of method, technique and theory as painters and painting tried to make sense of a “new world order” that seemed to have left it behind.


Alan Shields, Whirling Dervish, 1968-70.
Acrylic and thread on canvas over wood, 38x107" d.


The National Academy of Art on Park Ave is the loneliest place on museum mile. No surprise really, given that its across the road from the Met, next door to the Guggenheim and a block away from about half a dozen other galleries, all showing blockbuster artists with mega million dollar paintings whilst its rooms are filled with a bunch of paint stained rags by some drug addled hippies. Which is why the staff here are probably all so surprised to see me. Once they have ascertained that I am actually here to look at a lot of very obscure abstract art from the seventies, they practically fall over themselves to make my trip as comfortable as possible, stuffing my hands with brochures, discount cards and maps whilst privately shaking their heads at the foolishness of my passion.


Cesar Paternost, El Sur, 1969.
Acrylic on canvas, 48in x 48in x 4 3/4".

Sadly, despite the help offered by the staff, the venue itself is wildly inappropriate for these kind of works, with the curves of its neo baroque walls leaving larger canvases jutting uncomfortably from the surface and the rooms being too small to give some of the more expansive works the kind of space they’re insane aesthetics require. But that’s alright I tell myself, because many of these pieces would have been completely forgotten, stuffed in the archive warehouses of public and private collections across the land, were it not for this show.

The exhibition is arranged in a rough chronology grouped around responses to general themes, be that political interventions, abstract formalism or the impact of video as a new medium, though the sheer randomness of some of the work makes them close to unclassifiable. But this is the least we should expect from the “Brown acid” generation. After all this crazy group of kids were working in the shadow of one of the great flowerings of American culture, from the development of Be Bop, free jazz, the poetry of the beats right through to the New York school of abstraction, New York had become the cultural capital of the world. Yet this legacy had been secured through a series of shattering academic shifts that, at the same time as ensuring the avant garde’s legitimacy, would have to be paid for with a kind of theoretical end game that would eventually herald the nihilism of Post Modernism. So it is easy to view this collection, with the benefit of hindsight as a kind of last gasp art of desperation by people who had become marginalised by theories ascent to instigation rather than investigation.


Ree Morton, Untitled (stretcher piece), 1971-73.
Mixed media 21in x 21 1/2 in x 66in.


The first room starts gently enough. Here we see the initial stirring of dissent at the strictures of Greenbergian formalism. Unsurprisingly, given the literalness of the theory they seek to usurp, they are a very literal form of rebellion. Cesar Paternosto refused to paint on the front surface of the canvas instead decorating the edges of the stretcher frame with hard edge compositions. As juvenile as it at first seems, this refusal to dignify Greenberg’s ideal of the flat picture plane leads to works such as El Sur whose oblique beauty is found as you negotiate its “four sides” (though I would have needed a step ladder to see the upper side). This attack on the ideal of “flatness” was continued vigorously through a variety of modes. There are tent like canvases erected on the floor such as Alan Shield’s Whirling Dervish, or his Put a Name on it Please which consists of string, cotton belting and beads tied in fragile netting that maps the space of a canvas painting. Then there are paintings that refute the ideal notion of the canvas space by using stretchers that are made of things such as rough untreated pine logs – #13 by Peter Young or are literally hospital stretchers, Ree Morton's Untitled (stretcher piece) 1971. Other canvases feature punctures, cuts, bare stretchers or paint and medium applied directly to the wall or floor. Indeed every possible means of refuting Greenberg’s idea of purity seems to have been taken. Which must have made Clement feel kind of angry.


Harmony Hammond, Floorpiece V, 1973.
Fabric and Acrylic 59" d.

Feminism, naturally enough, was one of the primary motivational forces in this reappraisal of painting. Greenberg and the New York school painters were rightfully considered a bunch of prigs from the patriarchy, so the sisters would take any chance of upsetting the apple cart they could. To begin with many of these efforts were concerned with “flatness” and the Greenbergian ideal. But they soon took in a whole host of other concerns, including notions of gendered craft, the feminine body, the phallus and the materiality of the work. Harmony Hammond’s work was created from rags blankets and hand me downs. This included “Paintings" that were made from twisted rags woven into circular mats and then left to lie on the floor in a manner that looked very like a rug. Mary Heilman also used rags sewn together to make a “book” which she then spray painted black, The Book of the Night 1970, a particularly beautiful piece. Dorothea Rockburne, sought to make work that was intensely sensual and emotive as a revolt against the perceived intellectual rigour of Abstract Expressionism’s Platonic ideals. Her Intersection 1971, is a standout, crude oil is sandwiched between two very large sheets of plastic and left to lie on the floor. The smell of the crude fills the room whilst the oil lies inscrutable and black, bubbling with rainbow sheens at the edges of the work.


Carol Schneeman performing Body Collage in her loft on west 29th st NYC.


Film was also used as a means of inspiring and recontextualising painting’s practise. Painting performances were filmed in which tribalism, ritualistic behaviour, Dionysian frenzy and wah wah guitar were all encouraged in the kind of psychedelic frenzy that has kept “the summer of love” alive in the minds of teenage boys everywhere. Carol Schneeman’s Body Collage is emblematic of the period’s values. Schneemann paints her body with wall paper paste and molasses, runs, leaps, falls into and rolls through shreds of white printer's paper to create a scary hippy monster, which she relates to the moving image of a flayed body as standing for the devastation of Vietnam. Interestingly, she remained intent on holding onto these pieces of filmed art as “paintings”. She refers to this work as “as an exploded canvas, units of rapidly changing clusters.” Similarly Yayoi Kusama’s 1967 film Self Obliteration made with Jud Yalkut is a collection of scenes from indoor “happenings” cut through with footage filmed in New York’s central park, the whole being brought together with Kusama’s signature use of dots, which cover people and objects. The film features the orgiastic sexuality of the hippie peace and love culture in a performance of “painting” in which the bodies gestures and movement is linked to the notion of the abstract painting.


Roy Colmer, no 102, 1973.
Acrylic on canvas 75x60 inches.


The impact of video was huge. Not only in terms of its possibilities as a new medium but in terms of the aesthetic its grainy pixelated screen could reveal. A number of painters experimented with recreating these colours and tones with a painting that used “interference fields”, spray painted tonal works that replicate the texture of the video screen and its strangely luminous hypnotic appeal. Roy Colmer’s work explored the abstract qualities of video feedback both in video installation and on the canvas with a series of spray painted works that sought to replicate the “flow” of this phenomenon. Michael Venezia painted enormous canvases with Aluminum pigments and black enamel that resemble television static. Lawrence Stafford used spray guns to paint horizontal stripes across the canvas that would “interfere” with each other as they spread across the surface, creating bands of “static”.


Richard Tuttle, Diagram of 11th paper octagonal, 1973.

Perhaps my favourite work in the exhibition, if such a hegemonic perspective can be allowed, is Richard Tuttle’s 11th Paper Octagonal 1973, a piece of paper that has been cut out according to the instructions he had sent to the gallery and then stuck to the wall in a place that the curators found pleasing. There it was, a piece of white bond paper in a pleasing octagonal form, sitting peacefully on the wall, unaware of the ferment of ideas and politics that had elevated it to that place. It seemed to me to truly be an ineffable signifier, a white on white hole that led to a space of sublime implausibility. A rabbit hole to 1968, a world where ideas mattered in ways that we can no longer understand, though we wear their clothes, play their guitars and smoke their drugs.

It is peculiar to think of how this sentimentality for the idea of the painting, and the desire of these artists to hang onto it co-existed with a tremendous surge of rebellion in which the same artists would do whatever they could to contest the idea of it. It was as if, through the simple idea of making the term “Painting” all encompassing, they could ensure its legitimacy as a practise. This contested site could then become the metaphorical extension of their “thinking through” of the world. The work itself mattered less than its expansion into the theoretical domain and from there, into what could almost, be understood as a “praxis”. A place where their actions mattered because they had politicised the theoretical underpinnings of their practise. This perhaps is the great irony of Greenberg’s work, by invoking teleology he actually wakes Hegel from his slumber and gives birth to a whole generation of artists, who in a frenzy of antithetical gesture contradict Greenberg’s conclusions, yet make the dialecticism of his premise seem sound. If only I had of been there, with some flowers in my hair. Peace man.

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This Is Modern Art

Thursday, May 03, 2007
Radio National’s arts program Art Works recently asked The Art Life to contribute to their series of essays on paintings that have had an influence on writers. We didn’t have to think for very long to know exactly which painting we wanted to write about. Here is an expanded version of the piece which will go to air in the very near future:


George Stubbs A Lion Attacking A Horse was painted sometime around 1765. The title describes exactly what’s happening in the picture - a white stallion is being torn apart by a ferocious lion. The action takes place in a starkly theatrical landscape of willowy, wind swept trees and distant hazy mountains. The horse is majestic but doomed, the lion, a ravaging monster. It’s Claude Lorraine meets Lord of The Rings. The painting is in the collection of the National Gallery of Victoria and that’s where we first encountered it in the early 1980s.



George Stubbs, A lion attacking a horse, c. 1765.
Oil on canvas, 60x100 cms.
Collection of the National Gallery of Victoria.


A Lion Attacking A Horse isn’t a masterpiece and it’s not the greatest Stubbs. The famed equestrian artist – who lived between 1724 and 1806 - painted this scene 17 times over the course of three decades while working on his bread and butter jobs of painting his patron’s horses, dogs and families. These somewhat atypical paintings were an attempt by Stubbs to tackle a serious subject - and to be taken seriously by the English art world of the Enlightenment. A Lion Attacking A Horse was intended as an elaborate metaphor of the sublime - an artful deployment of 18th century special effects. Upon looking at this scene the viewer was supposed to experience feelings of dread, apprehension and fear - and from this a further sensation of guilty pleasure - rather like watching the Titanic sink on the cinema screen, the audience experiencing a weird mixture of horror and sick fascination. As the catalogue for the exhibition Stubbs - A Celebration explained:


"Edmund Burke’s popular concept of the Sublime [was that] the thrill engendered by violent subjects [...] were awesome in their terrible beauty. When it showed terror, the horse — powerful, beautiful, and noble as man himself — exemplified the Sublime. The horse’s shock at encountering the lion reflected the viewer’s own. [...] In Stubbs’s time, the horse was regarded as a noble creature, closest to man in physical perfection and sensibility. The lion symbolized the primeval forces of unbound, often brutal nature. Stubbs’s series unusually presents a moral theme: it is the struggle, not the inevitable defeat that matters. Because he fights to the end, the noble, unyielding horse ultimately prevails."


Meaning in an artwork isn’t fixed –it changes over time as one idea or concept drops out of fashion as another takes over. For us, when we first saw it, A Lion Attacking A Horse, was a fantasy picture, a literal Surrealist nightmare. Now we look at it as a picture with a wealth of hidden meanings and metaphors. It was created partly in the tradition of Enlightenment painting, looking to classical subjects for inspiration and moral guidance, yet it has strong Romantic overtones. Stubbs is said to have been inspired by an ancient pre-Hellenistic sculpture he had seen on a visit to Rome. But some art historians have suggested his picture is more likely the result of something he had seen in reproduction. In that regard, A Lion Attacking A Horse is a precursor of modern painting, an idea or concept given form without regard to reality, even if - by coincidence - the landscapes in his horse and lion paintings comes from a real place called Creswell Crag in Nottinghamshire. Stubbs mixed Romanticism and Neo Classicism together to come up with his signature image, a hybrid picture that doesn’t fully belong to any single tradition but instead betrays the peculiar imagination of an artist who wanted to be part of the bigger picture of concept and fashion.


George Stubbs, A Horse Frightened by a Lion, 1770.
Oil on canvas.
Collection: Walker Art Gallery.
National Museums Liverpool

Stubbs was an artist with whom many contemporary artists working today could identify. His work was unfashionable because although he was recognised as a master craftsman, his work didn’t properly conform to the Royal Academy’s hierarchy of genres – which was basically history painting at the top, pictures of animals and nature at the bottom. If you were to prove yourself as an academy artist, then you would need to not only paint in a particular style to demonstrate you had the skills, you would also need to include a set of prescribed visual cues such as a suitable historical subject chosen to metaphorically illustrate a contemporary event, and you would need to populate your paintings with people, not animals. Stubbs and his horses just didn’t rate.

The artist had made a number of career gaffs too. Stubbs didn’t live in London because his patron’s were out in the country so he was far from the action of the art world. He didn’t belong to the Royal Academy because although he had been technically accepted as a member, he just couldn’t bring himself to send in an example of his work for final approval. Instead, he chose to remain a member of the Society of Artists which was more like a trades union than a club for art world aristocracy. Stubbs was unfashionable in both art and attitude, and seems more like a loveable maverick more interested in doing things his way than the goofy country bumpkin he’s so often portrayed as having been. For artists working today who find themselves outside the fashionable art world, the parallels between Stubbs’s time and now are remarkable.


George Stubbs, White Poodle in a Punt, c. 1780.
Paul Mellon Collection


Stubbs has proven enduringly popular with the punters. Although he couldn’t break out of his commercial success – his career did offer him the dividends of loyal and generous patrons – he struggled to create much besides his equestrian art and his lions and horses. Although Stubbs made forays into quasi-Romantic subjects it’s interesting to note how his work and life were interpreted in the time after his death. He died without having had a biography written during his life time so much of his life’s detail was a speculative feast for future writers. The counter Romantic sentiment of the 19th Century cast Stubbs as a “real man” [read – not gay, not a fop] who not only painted horses, but he was a man who could carry a horse carcass on his back up three flights of stairs to his studio to draw it in various stages of dissection. His work was thought to have had a sort of utilitarian realism that eschewed frippery and metaphor. A horse was a horse in a Stubbs painting, or in the case of his paintings of pets, a dog was a dog. One biographer valorizing Stubbs’s ability to 'realistically' portray an animal without recourse to metaphor remarked “[Stubbs] never found an immortal soul in a poodle’s eye.” Oh dear, good dogs don’t get into heaven.


George Stubbs, Horse Attacked by a Lion. 1763
Oil on canvas.
Collection of Tate, London.

Postcards of the NGV’s version of A Lion Attacking A Horse have been on offer since it was purchased in 1949 and takes pride of place in the racks of the newly renovated NGV bookshop. Stubbs’s work still reaches out to people who like their art accessible and figurative. And this was more or less the way the painting was thought of when it was bought. The NGV had, in the late 19th and 20th century, gone on a purchasing program aimed at buying as many masterpieces as they could get their hands on. Thus works by Tintoretto, Van Dyck, Tiepolo, Reynolds, Gainsborough, Turner, Constable, Monet, Pissarro and Modigliani would up in Melbourne [along with the fake Rembrandt… oops.] The Felton Bequest – named for the rich Melbourne pharmaceutical dealer and art gallery benefactor Alfred Felton – used agents in Europe to spot works as they came up for sale. Working for the NGV in the late 1940 was none other than Lord Sir Kenneth Clarke who wrote to the then director of the NGV Daryl Lindsay saying that he had a purchase to recommend. "Pursuing our policy of buying minor English pictures,” Clarke wrote, “I have persuaded [gallery agent] A.J. L. McDonell to buy the Stubbs...There is rather too much space round the central group, but the group itself is marvellous, and had a great influence on the Romantic Movement; Gericault actually did a copy of it. I think it was cheap at 500 pounds, and personally would rather have it than a second rate Braque at 2,000 pounds.”

We were raised as devout Modernists, but A Lion Attacking A Horse has been for us a window through which we could discover the vast landscapes of pre-20th century art. When we tell people we love Stubbs they think we’re insane – isn’t he the guy who just painted horses? Sure, he was, but A Lion Attacking A Horse is a work of art whose metaphors are just as relevant now as they were in 1765. The metaphor of civilisation being destroyed by nature is about as topical as it gets. Oh – and one last thing: masterpieces are boring. Their meaning is circumscribed, your enjoyment of them overly determined by others. Non-canonical art works – modest works like A Lion Attacking A Horse – offer another history of art that’s waiting to be discovered. Forget Picasso, forget Rembrandt – go Stubbs.

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There Is No God

Friday, March 02, 2007

Got any fennel?


Sydney artist John Beard has won the 2007 Archibald Prize for his painting of Janet Laurence. The Archibald Prize is now in its 86th year. John receives a prize of $35,000

Janet Laurence is an installation artist whose work extends from the gallery into urban spaces. A former AGNSW trustee, she has undertaken numerous public commissions. Her work is held in public and private collections in Australia and internationally.

It has been said that Laurence’s work echoes architecture and yet retains a sense of the instability and transience found in nature; John Beard’s monochromatic portraits of fellow artists share similar qualities. While painting the structure, or architecture, of his friends’ heads and faces, he also aims to capture the sense of fleeting, ever-changing expression.

From this collaboration of artist and artist-as-subject, a kind of double portraiture emerges. If a viewer knows the work of the artist portrayed, another visual layer resonates. Without the use of colour – that might highlight the differences or similarities between his subjects – Beard focuses the viewer's attention not just on the individual sitter but on the structure of the painting itself. Light plays an important role in the visual dynamic of the image as we literally move around these sculptural works to fully appreciate their form and making.

Born in Wales in 1943, John Beard has been represented in group and solo shows at galleries including the National Portrait Gallery and National Gallery in Canberra, the Art Gallery of New South Wales, the Art Gallery of Western Australia, National Gallery of Victoria, and in London at the Tate, Whitechapel Gallery, Royal Academy, Science Museum and National Portrait Gallery. Most recently Beard held a solo exhibition at The Gulbenkian's Centro De Art Moderna in Lisbon.

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Archibald Winner 2007

Monday, February 26, 2007
Here we are, once again, at the rough end of the Archibald season - the only time of the year when we stick our necks out and make the big call. In the absecence of the SMHs traditional form guide, The Art Life proudly gives punters our completely subjective assessment. This year, however, there can only be one.



McLean Edwards, Martin Browne


Pros: After Edwards' close call with last year's difficult and odd portrait of Cate Blanchett, this painting is far more accessible while still being just as adventurous. It's his second shot with a protrait of his dealer but for this one Edwards reins in the quirky stuff. All the traditional skills are there to be seen - composition, colour, background - and the radical contemporary stuff as well - composition, colour,background.

Cons: Have the Trustees finally forgotten the ill-fated guest lecture?

Percentage Chance of Win: 99.999999999% *

* All percentages quoted exist only in perfect world.

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Archibald #2: So Close...


Del Kathryn Barton's
Vasili Kaliman and contained familiar together within the Dreaming.


Pros: Strikingly different, immaculately painted, spooky witchcraft!

Cons: No one ever admits Archi voting is political, but it is...

Percentage Chance of Win: 87%




Cherry Hood's Ben Quilty


Pros: Clean and drippy!

Cons: Recent previous winner.

Percentage Chance of Win: 73%





Abbey McCulloch's Toni Collette


Pros: Weird, painted over a photo, different influences from most other painters...

Cons: Weird, painted over a photo, different influences from most other painters...

Percentage Chance of Win: 60%

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Archibald #3: Middle Ranking


Robert Hannaford's Tubes


Pros: A nice change from wearing a t-shirt.

Cons: He's a big sexy bastard.

Percentage Chance of Win: 40%



Chris O’Doherty aka Reg Mombassa, Self portrait with high pants


Pros: Lovely nod to John Brack, not a picture of a house.

Cons: There can only be one Rodney Popel.

Percentage Chance of Win: 37%




John Beard's Janet Laurence

Pros: Looks just like the artist as seen at Fratelli Fresh.

Cons: Skill sure, but to what purpose?

Percentage Chance of Win: 30%



Kevin Connor's Portrait of a quiet man, Robert Eadie, painter.


Pros:
He can't go on winning the Dobell Drawing Prize forever, can he?

Cons: Dobell Prize a good six months away.

Percentage Chance of Win: 29%



Rodney Pople's Stone cold sober (self portrait)

Pros: The best self portrait as Yves Klein done in the style of Marc Chagall ever painted, Kerrie Lester not in this year...

Cons: He'll never bloody win it poor bastard.

Percentage Chance of Win: 25%

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Archibald #4: More To Do But...


Carmen Di Napoli's
Go for it

Pros: The only bastard left standing... and who else are Archibald judges going to vote for??

Cons: Painted from photo [nice flash feature in background!], chair sticking out of head.

Percentage Chance of Win: 12%




Evert Ploeg's George Ellis

Pros: The greatest painting of the century!

Cons: That century is the 18th Century.

Percentage Chance of Win: 11%



Jenny Sages' Irina Baronova (handing on the baton)

Pros: Sages a sentimental favourite with judges.

Cons: Hideous, may have been painted from photo, other subject not named.

Percentage Chance of Win: 5%



Jasper Knight's Bob Carr

Pros: Accurately depicts Bob Carr's blood lust and the missing part of his head

Cons: Larger than life size, shocking chin.

Percentage Chance of Win: 2%

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Mad Villainy

Tuesday, November 21, 2006
Canberra based art duo The Contextual Villains have published a limited edition artists book that deals with the way we shape the past through our stories and envision the future through our dreams. The 74 page full colour case bound picture book, includes a CD soundtrack and the combined work of over 25 visual, sound and text based artists. The book will be launched in conjunction with an exhibition of original works at The Front Gallery on Wattle Street Lyneham at 6.30pm, Thursday the 23rd of November by Dr. Martin Jolly head of the Photomedia Department at the Canberra School of Art.



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Hi Art Life, Changing nature/06 The greenpeace exhibition is on from the 13th to the 30th of November at Darling Park, 201 Sussex St Sydney CBD. The "Gala" opening is on 22 of November at 7pm. I am sure you must have been sent something about this but I am just being thorough, cheers, Sean O'Keeffe.

In a blatant piece of self promotion I have attached a still image from my work at the show called 5am, its got emus in it and everything.




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Rachel Scott: Walk the line
James Dorahy Project Space
Exhibition dates: 21 November – 3 December
Opening night drinks Wednesday 22nd November 6-8pm
Suite 4, 1st Floor, 111 Macleay St (enter via Orwell St), Potts Point


James Dorahy Project Space is excited to announce a new exhibition by emerging Sydney artist, Rachel Scott. Walk the line is a mixed media installation that includes painting, video, photography and detritus from the painting process, investigating the inherent struggle between control and chaos within the human subject. The project operates within the expanded field of painting, examining the controlled gesture in 20th century painting modes and the role of process in experimental art practices.

The process of making the multi-layered hard edged paintings includes the use of many rolls of blue masking tape. After they have served their purpose, the painted strips of tape become piles of gestural excess: the messy, rubbishy, alter ego of the finished paintings – usually discarded and unacknowledged. Operating as a counterpoint to the control and precision of the paintings, the video work and related masking tape detritus offer a behind-the-scenes exposé of the everyday anxieties and banalities of making art.

Rachel’s practice is invested with self-deprecating humour, honesty and pathos. In her low-fi, reality-style performances, she exposes her fantasies, failures and weaknesses via the voyeuristic eye of the camera. For the audience, the work is simultaneously uncomfortable and compelling.

Having completed a Master of Visual Arts at the Sydney College of the Arts in 2004, Rachel was a co-director of artist run gallery Phatspace in 2005, and is one of the editors of contemporary art magazine, runway. She has won numerous university scholarships and has exhibited widely in Australia and overseas. In June 2006 her video work I’m waiting for my real life to begin (2005) was screened in Digital Narratives, curated by Per Platou, in conjunction with the Norwegian Short Film Festival.


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It's time for Pecha Kucha Volume 02

6:30 Thursday 30th November - Commercial Travellers Association - Under the mushroom on Martin Place

The first Pecha Kucha was the radness, so we hope to see you all again for a second helping. If you would like to present something, email marcus[at]gravestmor.com

A summary of the first Pecha Kucha night may be found here

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The Perfect Future Game

Arrive at 7pm to catch the live performance of a closet drama I've written, "The Perfect Future Game". The script will be available at the Gertrude CAS counter and online at Lilyhibberd.com

Studio Artist Exhibition 2006
Gertrude Contemporary Art Spaces
200 Gertrude Street, Fitzroy, VIC 3065

Opening 5.30 - 8.30pm
Dates 24 November - 16 December 2006
Hours Tues - Fri 11-5.30pm Sat 1-5.30pm
T: +61 3 9419 3406 F: +61 3 9419 2519
www.gertrude.org.au


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firstdraft
Natalie Woodlock - Hand Powered
Tori Ferguson - It's OK
Sarah Newall - Abstraction and Representation

Exhibition open: Wednesday November 22 to Saturday December 9, 2006

Opening night drinks: Wednesday November 22, 2006 6-8pm

Firstdraft opening hours: Wednesday - Saturday 12-6pm





Natalie Woodlock - Hand Powered

Natalie Woodlock is Firstdraft’s fifth studio resident for 2006. Firstdraft’s Emerging Artist Studio Program is supported by the Australian Government through the Australia Council, its arts funding and advisory body.

Tori Ferguson - It's OK

Old handkerchiefs and napkins, collaged and hand embroidered with text.
Natalie Woodlock is intrigued by these largely overlooked domestic objects, and their potential as metaphors for the interior. They have, with time and use, acquired a flimsiness reminiscent of a layer of skin: the membrane that endeavours to keep our inner selves enclosed, safe from the outside world. What is it these objects have witnessed, literally absorbed? What conversations can be played out on their surface?
Language bridges the lacuna between idea and matter. Her words are thoughts not yet spoken. These memories, fantasies and anxieties are a meditation of our internal private selves in the public, social realm.

Sarah Newall - Abstraction and Representation

Sarah Newall fabricates nature from everyday domestic culture by creating paintings out of pooled acrylic house paint and floral bouquets from crocheting acrylic yarn. Newall's monochromes are continuing to simplify and unify experience from the chaos and clutter that is daily life; tapping into the idea that identity is a socially constructed idea that is formed out of interaction with ones community. The everyday thus becomes central to the ongoing process of acquisition or invention of signifiers to align and indentify with. By reproducing the everyday (and everyday objects) with pooled paint and crochet, a new layer is added through the handcraft process - the world is abstracted and recreated in Newall's own terms. What is experienced, interpreted, becomes an ongoing feed back loop of input, reflection, and assimilation.

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DICK WATKINS

13 LANDSCAPES

18 November–14 December 2006

LIVERPOOL STREET GALLERY







Dick Watkins, “the chameleon of Australian art” according to the recently published catalogue of the Art Gallery of New South Wales’ Contemporary collection, reveals the mercurial scope of his talents in his new solo exhibition, 13 Landscapes at Liverpool Street Gallery.1 13 Landscapes will be on view from 18 November to 14 December 2006. It is a unique opportunity for audiences to view figurative landscapes; a rarely exhibited genre from Watkins.

Dick Watkins is one of Australia’s most significant and uncompromising abstract painters. He is widely regarded for his large scale abstractions in vivid and daring colours, seen in the bold yellow and black composition, 5AM in the Art Gallery of New South Wales’ collection. Yet 13 Landscapes shows a distinct stylistic departure, revealing the accomplished breadth and diversity of Watkins’ oeuvre.

The exhibition consists of thirteen canvases that move from abstraction to figuration. Watkins effortlessly oscillates between these artistic genres. His subject matter ranges from French villages and hilltop castles set in the Umbrian countryside to Australian coastal headlands or quiet estuaries with a single skiff nestled in the riverbank. In Early light (2006) Watkins captures the still and tranquil qualities of day breaking over a misty seascape. The surface of the painting is unusually pared-back with subtle tones of vivid colour. Similarly, Castello di Reschio (2005) is intensely evocative (illustrated above). Here, Watkins captures all things Italian; tall green pencil pines, sweeping hills covered in leafy vineyards, castles impossibly perched over cliffs and fields of bright sunflowers. With these elements combined, the viewer experiences a distinct longing to smell, taste and touch.

Influenced by the painters Jackson Pollock and Picasso, and often painting while listening to jazz, Watkins works daily – prolifically and intensely - capturing the dynamic qualities of what paint can do on a canvas. For Watkins, colour is the essence of his paintings and dictates the fluidity of form and content.

Watkins states: “what comes out onto the canvas is not preconceived. It is never a conscious attempt to emulate. It just happens”.2

Dick Watkins is a pioneer of colour-field painting in Australia and was a key participant in the National Gallery of Victoria’s landmark exhibition, The Field in 1968. In the late 1960s Watkins was a driving force amongst the artists of the Central Street Gallery and in 1985 he represented Australia at XVIII Biennial de Sao Paulo in Brazil. In 1993 the National Gallery of Australia mounted the exhibition Dick Watkins in Context, a show of work drawn from the Gallery's collection. Dick Watkins is represented in the collections of the National Gallery of Australia, National Gallery of Victoria, Art Gallery of New South Wales, Art Gallery of South Australia, Art Gallery of Western Australia, Queensland Art Gallery, numerous Australian regional gallery collections and distinguished corporate art collections.

1.Contemporary: Art Gallery of New South Wales Contemporary Collection, Art Gallery of New South Wales, 2006, p. 56
2. Grazia Gunn, “Dick Watkins”, Art and Australia, vol. 21, no. 2, Summer 1983, p. 210


For more information and high resolution images please contact Liverpool Street Gallery on 02 8353 7799 or email [email protected]

Image: Castello di Reschio (2005) acrylic on canvas 122 x 167 cm

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2007 Samstag Scholarships


The University of South Australia has announced the 2007 Anne & Gordon Samstag International Visual Arts Scholarships.


Sarah CrowEST, The joy of beauty, 2004.
Stills from digital video, duration 11 minutes,11 seconds.
Performed and directed by Sarah CrowEST

Six artists from around Australia have been presented the prestigious awards for study overseas in the visual arts, commencing in 2007. They are: Paul Knight and Nick Mangan (Victoria); Anthea Behm and Jess MacNeil (NSW); Sarah CrowEST (South Australia); and Kirra Jamison (Queensland). Each artist will receive a twelve months living allowance of US$32,000 (approximately $42,000 Australian) as well as travel expenses and the cost of institutional study fees, commonly in excess of $30,000 a year at leading international art schools. A total of 111 Samstag Scholarships have been awarded since 1992.

Now in their fifteenth award year, the Samstag Scholarships are renowned for identifying artists of genuine talent and exciting promise. Commenting on this year’s awards, Samstag director Ross Wolfe notes that very significant numbers of past ‘Samstagers’ have enjoyed major – and often quite rapid – professional success following their announcement as Samstag Scholarship recipients. These, for example, include Anne Wallace, Shaun Gladwell, Deborah Paauwe, John Kelly, Megan Walch and Timothy Horn, to name only a few. Meanwhile, Samstag alumni Callum Morton and Daniel Von Sturmer have recently been selected to represent Australia at the 2008 Venice Biennale, signalling the high-level attention the Samstag name attracts from the profession, especially among curators, dealers, collectors and art magazines.

This year’s catalogue essayist is Brisbane-based curator and writer, Timothy Morrell, who has contributed regularly to periodicals on Australian art for the past 20 years. A former curator at the Art Gallery of South Australia and the Queensland Art Gallery, his freelance curatorial work has included exhibitions in Australia, Asia and Europe, as well as public art projects in Brisbane.

The Class of 2007 catalogue also includes the innovation of a DVD insert. With half of the 2007 scholarship recipients presenting digital video work, the DVD acknowledges the growing shift towards technology-based mediums among the new generation of visual artists.

Judges for the 2007 Samstag Scholarships were Professor Kay Lawrence, head of the South Australian School of Art, Paul Hoban, artist and lecturer at the School of Art, and Jon Cattapan, the prominent Melbourne-based painter.

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Just Beautiful

Wednesday, May 24, 2006
Nothing beats quality. You can feel it when you walk into a shop that sells expensive items, arranged just so, under special lights, perhaps with music playing somewhere in the background and [this being the future] the rich scent of just-made coffee in the air. It’s no use resisting the allure of the majestic shopping experience because the entire environment has been designed to capture your senses and lure you into an extended, sleepy reverie, a narcosis akin to lying under a warm blanket as you wait to be wheeled into surgery. Thoughts like these entered our heads as we encountered the beauty of the new Kaliman Gallery.


Kaliman Gallery as seen from space...

Our knowledge of the new Kaliman premises stretches back the final few years of Coventry Gallery when the entire place was as still and as quiet as the grave, an eerie isolation perfectly captured in Nigel Thompson’s portrait of the late Chandler Coventry. In the picture, the wheelchair bound gallery owner is marooned in vast polished wooden floor, the dull light of the outside world beckoning like a portal to the next life. Downstairs, the old second smaller gallery was a completely different experience as the entire room seemed to be carpeted with sea grass matting. For those of you who have never experienced sea grass matting, you are very lucky, as the smell is what you’d call ‘funky’ – bong water mixed with sweat and joss sticks. Fast forward into the 1980s and the highly polished sheen of Coventry gave way to the dull grey era of Gitte Weise Gallery. Nothing kills a work of art like florescent tube lighting, rendering everything pallid and spectral. Shoving a bunch of really unremarkable art into the gallery does nothing for the experience either.


Tim Mcmonagle, When good times turn sour #2, 2006.
Oil on linen, 77x77cms.
Courtesy of Kaliman Gallery.
[click on image to enlarge]


Now, some millions of dollars later, Kaliman Gallery emerges. The outside is painted black with the words “Kaliman Gallery” rendered 3D with the same font as the one on the home page of the gallery’s web site, making it feel like the Gem Saloon of the Paddington art belt. But instead of whores, drunks and a proprietor who could swear the hind leg off Jesus H Christ himself, the interior is a designer drug for the senses – naked wood, freshly painted walls, museum grade lighting, a low ceiling and a gleaming chromium coffee machine.


Tim Mcmonagle, Yuho, 2006.
Oil on linen, 122x122cms.
Courtesy of Kaliman Gallery.
[click on image to enlarge]


The challenge for any artist in this new space is to look good, and the paintings by Tim Mcmonagle certainly look good. Big, sketchy pictures done over creamy backgrounds, the paintings are narratives of sublimated sex. With rather odd echoes of the 1980s work of American figurative painters like Eric Fischl and Alex Katz or perhaps a more sober Stewart McFarlane, Mcmonagle’s pictures attempt to present one story while really being about another. It’s a world of bourgeois luxury, decadence, grey hounds and back yard bbqs. As The Esteemed Critic noted in his grudging review in the Sydney Morning Herald, the artist’s double play is most evident in a pair of paintings called When Good Times Turn Sour #1 and #2 in which a tomato sauce splattered sausage lays bereft next to a man’s bethonged feet. Ok, yeah, castration – but a sausage on the ground is just as tragic and so long as you declare the 5 second rule, you’d could probably stick it back on and no worries. Elsewhere there are a couple of paintings of people reclining in hammocks covered in goo [maybe spaghetti, but maybe something else] but the pick of the bunch, and by far the most obviously perverse picture, is the mammoth Yuho [122x122cms] a painting of a naked Japanese woman in a bath wearing rubber gloves. Do we have to draw you a picture? Actually we do…


Syd Ball, Saxon Conquest, 1974.
Acrylic and enamel on cotton duck, 181x241cms.
Courtesy Sullivan & Strumpf Fine Art.
[click on image to enlarge]


Another gallery with sumptuous spaces – albeit on a smaller scale to Kaliman – is Sullivan & Strumpf. Their big draw card at the moment is a series of paintings by Syd Ball from the 1970s. Just as to why they should be so popular now is not that hard to guess – it’s kind of like when Apocalypse Now Redux got a run in the cinemas when it was re-released – it was kind of barmy, big, magnificent and probably a little flawed, but it was so far ahead [and out] of anything else going on you just had to go and have a look. And so it is with Ball’s Stain paintings, seven large scale pictures beginning in 1973 and going through to 1979. Our attention was really taken by the earlier works in the series which were far denser and layered. The latter works became a lot looser with the artist happier to let the canvas show through. Ball obviously wasn’t taught by our Year 6 art teacher who insisted that every bit of the white paper was covered – didn’t she realise that the white bit is just as important as the paint?!! Ball has obviously taken that lesson and applied it across the whole series, playing the sort of canny perceptual games of spatial relations he investigated in his much more strictured Canto series from the 1960s, which was all tense circles and complimentary colours. These works from the 1970s is a cross section of a decade when the artist let loose, got free and you can feel the joyous experimentation leaping off the canvas.


Peter Atkins, Brunswick Journal, 2005.
Mixed media suite of 20 works, 43 x 43 cm each. Private Collection.
Courtesy the artist and Sherman Galleries, Sydney.
[click on image to enlarge]


Nobody does quality quite like Sherman Galleries. If Kaliman Gallery is the Gem Saloon, then Sherman’s vast space is the top floor of David Jones. It’s just so perfect in a casual way, from the polished cement floor to the invisible roof – it’s Zen baby. Back once again for his bi-yearly outing is Peter Atkins. We reviewed his show last time in 2004 and remarked that while we enjoyed his paintings it was his smaller Journal pieces that took our attention. It’s good to see that he agrees with that assessment because while Atkin’s paintings are beautifully judged, immaculately executed and things of great desirability, they lack the same kind of personal urgency that his Journal works possess. The Journal is an ongoing series in which the artist collects detritus found on the streets during his travels around his local suburb, on his overseas trips and through the darkest recesses of eBay. He puts everything he finds into plastic bags and then mounts them on boards, mounted one after the other on the gallery wall. They are fascinating, ranging from found notes [a list of things in a house that have never been fixed] to photographs, handkerchiefs and just abut everything else you can fit in a plastic. In a first, Atkins has included actual drugs found in a baggy outside his house. We were trying to work out what the white powder in the bag might be and how much you’d have to pay to find out, but at $22,000 for the whole series, you’d be paying over the odds no matter what it was. Still, it’s a pleasant mystery to ponder.


Sigalit Landau, Barbed Hula, 2001.
DVD, 1:53 mins.
Courtesy the artist and Sherman Galleries, Sydney.
[click on image to enlarge]

In the back gallery at Sherman Israeli artist Sigalit Landau has an installation of video and photographic works. In the past, Sigalit’s work tended towards some rather unlovely installation pieces that, while conceptually rigorous and as tight as a Matron’s bun, were neither as sumptuous nor as provocative as the new work. The suite of plasma screens arranged around the walls of the gallery space offer visually startling and provocative images that cycle around and around. One video reveals the artist in the Dead Sea trying to walk sideways on a spiral of watermelons floating in the water, perhaps in playful echo of Robert Smithson’s Spiral Jetty, maybe suggesting the ephemeral nature of the endangered sea. The toughest work in the show is Barbed Hula, in which a naked female torso suffers through the pain of keeping the self inflicted pain going. One cannot help but be swayed by work like this, boiled down as it is to the essence of an idea, presented so gorgeously on state of the art TV sets. Now that’s quality.

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Yeah Painting

Thursday, July 28, 2005
Boo sculpture, blah blah video, la la la photography – but yeah, painting. It always feels like the pressure is off when we’re looking at a painting: we know the limits, know the borders, the history and are thrilled at the possibility of something new. We can’t explain it - we just love the smell of oil paint in the morning and a whole lot of canvases in an exhibition by people we don’t know is just about the most fun you can have in a gallery. We are of course prepared to be disappointed and so often are but the experience of painting is palpably different to just about everything else. It was once said that the piano was the king of the orchestra because, within its range timbres and tonalities from the faint whisper to the crescendo, it embodied everything that could be done with an orchestra. If the art world is a bunch of people in dickie bows and nightgowns bashing symbols together, then painting is the piano of all the forms.

OK. Something ‘new’. It’s always a disappointing illusion, a receding fad located just over the horizon. Video is dead, forget video. Sculpture is just so dull. Works on paper? Pfft, yeah right. Photography? We’ve got a problem with photography. The next time someone says “it’s not what it is, it’s what you do with it…” please remember that Gary Sweet may be a good actor but it doesn’t make his penis any larger [cf. Alexandra’s Project]. On the other hand, video art is cool and sculpture is the new video and works on paper return a hefty premium on a wise investment and photography – hey, the world is made of photography!


Seraphine Pick, Open Secrets, 2004, oil on linen, 60x50cms.
Courtesy: Kaliman Gallery.


Which brings us back to painting. Could it be, we ask tremulously, whispering, that something is happening in painting? Looking around at exhibitions, as we do, we have started to notice [let’s call it a tendency] towards a loose, pictorial figurative painting that has its roots in a lot of different places – loose drawing, crafty, simple colours, naïve elements, fake childish, images often sourced from vintage magazines and books. Yes, saying that something is happening is the clarion call of the complete bastard – “painting is back, people, and it’s time to get in on the action”. Bullshit. Painting has never been away but at the same time it’s like Austria. You’re thinking Germany but it’s a completely different place.

Sometimes when we have a public thought we can already hear people speaking inside our heads – oh bullshit Art Life, get your shit together and all that – but aside from the voices, this seems really real. It’s possible that it’s been going on for ages and we just didn’t realise [we thought that Neo Rauch was just a new version of Rauchism] but on top of the Mike Parr selected Sulman Prize, Tim Schultz at Kaliman, the Sally Ross show at Gertrude Street and Nell’s show at Oxley we’re starting to see a very clear and interesting development that marks a move away from seemingly endless permutations of Post Grunge and the last gasps of Conceptual Abstraction and the generally untutored mess of most painting you see in artist run spaces [if in fact you see any].

We don’t know what you’d call it but the most interesting time for anything is before it gets named, turns into a genre and promptly dies. Whatever it might be called, there seems to be some prime examples of it at Kaliman Gallery. We mentioned Schultz and Ross shows there as well, and now there’s a show by Sérpahine Pick called Shared Air. Like Ross and others, Pick uses old magazine images for her pictorial source material and, for her, it’s the life aquatic that appeals most; flipper chicks, vulva shaped shells, pearl eyes and a goodly dose of cheap horror mixed in for kicks. Her work has the familiar flatness that much of this kind of painting has but unlike the work of artists who copy direct from photos as their entire image, the flatness is obscured by the way she treats the canvas like a piece of paper in a manner similar to the work of her stable mates David Griggs and Adam Cullen. One section of the Pick’s paintings may be a close up of a shell or a flower while another section is a sweeping underwater playground.

The paintings have a sense of humour and a palpable creepiness. Although you can see that these sightless women and aquatic princesses are jokey, there is something decidedly darker at work. Setting up a figure without eyes is as hoary a joke as you can find, something straight out of Hammer Horror, but it undeniably works. Like Nell’s show, this is suburban horror, but without the panel vans and sea monkeys instead. Instead of the blank fascination of all those artists who mangle photo images together for no other reason than that they like them, artists such as Pick offer something else. It’s the kind of amalgam of fascination, intention, subject and ambiguity that offers an alternative to overtly conceptual practices or subject-free formalism. We don’t know if it’s new, but it is different.

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Yeah Painting II

John Peart’s show at Watters Gallery is a demonstration of what you might call ‘painters logic’. That’s a painter making a mark on a canvas and then asking themselves “what next?” The logic is the next line, the next gesture, the next colour. You can tell just by looking at a lot of older painter’s work that the logic gets solidified into a series of rote gestures that, while pleasant, aren’t progressing anymore, they’re just circling around the same thing over and over.



John Peart, Palette Painting IV, oil on board, 120x150cm.

Courtesy of the artist.



Peart has been on the move, perpetually it seems, since the 1960s, going back and forth, patterns, no patterns, gestures, micro tonalities, big splashes, back to the start and around again. Some people suggested that there’s no such thing as a “Peart painting” and maybe there isn’t, but sometimes you get this idea in your head about what an artist does and when you see it, you think, yeah painting! It was like that when we went down to the concrete edifice that is Watters Gallery for Peart’s show of big paintings. They sure looked like his work to us and found those lines, colours and layered screens that we associate with the whole John Peart experience.


But curiously, after looking at the show and liking the Palette Paintings a lot, we went back and had a peruse through the 2003 exhibition images and realised that they were much different. Shurley shome mishtake? The move from one show to the next was phenomenal and, realising we’d come in late, we did further research. Peart’s latest work seems resolutely old school and somehow more so when compared to that last body of work and we wonder with some incredulity if had really been that way all along? To be that adventurous, to be that questing and forward thinking with each new show must be just suicide commercially but absolutely inspiring to see.

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Movie of The Week

Monday, July 18, 2005
One of our favourite art movies [movies about or by artists] is Martin Scorsese’s Life Lessons, a short film that makes up the first third of the 1990 portmanteau project New York Stories. Unlike the chapters by Woody Allen and Francis Ford Coppola, Life Lessons is set in something akin to real life, albeit the New York City art world as imagined by the director and his scriptwriter Richard Price. This an art world populated by artists, dealers and sycophants and would-be “assistants”.

The main characters is Lionel Dobie [played by Nick Nolte], a late comer to the school of impasto figurative expressionism and although the film doesn’t mention the reigning school of Post Modernist painters like David Salle and Robert Longo, there is a distinct feeling that Dobie is a man out of time, someone who would have been more comfortable drinking at the Cedar Bar with De Kooning and Pollock. His live-in assistant Paulette is his also his lover and a painter in her own right but crippled with self doubt and suffering in the shadow of the egotistical Dobie [who calls himself “the Lion’]. Forced to accompany Dobie to frigid art world get-togethers where dinner suited businessmen throw around bon mots [“Pollock did more for New York real estate than any other artist”] Paulette escapes into an affair with the noted performance artist Gregory Stark [Steve Buscemi].


Humbled in the face of his own enormous creativity.


As the story opens, Dobie has a visit from his dealer who wants to see the new paintings. Assuring the dealer that he’ll meet the looming hree week deadline, Dobie is humbled in the face of his own enormous creative talent and is literally dwarfed by massive blank canvases. Fuelled by Remy Martin VSOP and paint spattered cassettes of The Band, Bob Dylan and Procol Harem played at full blast, Dobie shoots hoops in his warehouse and frets about his relationship with Paulette.



Paint porn.


Scorsese experimented with many visual effects and styles that he would go on to perfect in Goodfellas and Life Lessons is packed with iris wipes, multiple exposures and editing trickery that was a foretaste of what was to come in the gangster epic. For Life Lessons, Scorsese went the whole hog with loving close-ups of paint being applied, mixed and shot out of tubes in a sly parody of Dobie’s masculinity and a celebration of paint porn. Most films about painters usually feature expressionists as director’s are in love with the cliché of paint but few have done it quite so well as Scorsese. [We can only think of one film called An Unmarried Woman that featured Alan Bates as a paint pouring 70s abstractionist that is a film about a contemporary painter who isn’t an expressionist.]

Life Lessons is full of art world clichés but the director and script writer are clever enough to ridicule them at the same time as celebrating them. Dobie’s entire artistic persona is supported by his own delusions and those of people around him. Although Paulette is suffocating under his egotism, there is a great scene in which she watches the great man at work is entranced by his handiness with a brush and paint.

Sometimes the clichés are verbal. In an effort to convince Paulette to stay with him, Dobie tells her that if she gives up art she wasn’t an artist to begin with. Appalled by the horror he has just uttered, Dobie goes off and furiously mixes paint on a garbage bin lid while muttering to himself. In another scene when Paulette tells him that she isn’t just leaving him, but leaving New York as well, Dobie gives her a mini-speech that is both a cliché but a foundation stone upon which almost all of the art world is founded – the idea that New York is an exciting place to be and that you owe it to yourself to stay:

Dobie: But what about your painting? Huh? You’re going to make a little studio in your parent’s garage – with the hedge clippers hanging on a nail and the pool stuff laying in a corner, a broken sled, mice… You work for Lionel Dobie. You work for ‘The Lion’ baby. You stretch canvases, you run a few errands. You’ve got your own room, studio, life lessons that are priceless. Plus a salary. […] Look, I’m not kidding. It kills me you leaving. It’s a suicide. This is a time… and a place… at your age! You’re right at the heart of the heart Paulette. I swear you walk now and you’ll curse yourself for the rest of your days.



Performance art Steve Buscemi style.


The film takes a detour when Paulette and Dobie venture out to see Gregory Stark’s latest performance piece. The world of performance art has yet to have a film that knows very much about it or does it a service rather than using it as a punch line. In Life Lessons, the performance takes place on what appears to be abandoned railway tracks with search lights, a theatrical blue light bulb and a tape playing air raid sirens. Stark’s performance is a series of anecdotes about being assaulted be people in the street and the artist’s neurotic inability to respond. Written by Steve Buscemi, the “performance piece” is more like a stand up comedy routine and the audience laughs along with the jokes. When the light bulb unexpectedly explodes as a full stop to the work you get the feeling that Buscemi’s influence was more avant garde theatre of the Wooster Group style than anything you might have seen in an art gallery.

Following the performance is a great sequence in which Paulette goes up to Stark to congratulate him on his work but is cut off by none other than Peter Gabriel glad-handing Stark. As Dobie is eyed off by Debbie Harry [“Isn’t that Lionel Dobie over there?”] the pair make their exit. [Hovering in the background is Illeana Douglas, a Scorsese regular, who also has made a career in appearing in art related films. Alonmg with her role as a film director in David Salle’s Search and Destroy, she also appeared as a pretentious video artist in Ghost World].


What every artist can expect - a packed opening.


The film concludes three weeks later with Dobie at his gallery opening alone, Paulette long since departed back to the art-void that is American suburbia. With well wishers crowding the gallery and posing for a series of photographs [Scorsese among them], the artist is approached by a beautiful woman working behind the bar. It turns out she too is an artist and when Dobie offers her a job as his assistant, it’s clear that the cycle of self delusion – both for Dobie and the rest of the art world – will begin again.

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