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the art life

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

Andy Warhol's Silver Screen

Monday, November 05, 2007


Andy Warhol, TDK, from YouTube

[
Click here to view]

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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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Roadrunner Once, Roadrunner Twice

Monday, October 08, 2007


Todd McMillan, Back In Your Life [2007], from YouTube

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Pants To That

Monday, September 17, 2007
Shaun Gladwell's pants: Or how I learned to love Pataphysical Man

A FIVE-minute DVD of a lone man skateboarding against an angry sky at Bondi Beach is the first digital video artwork to be auctioned in Australia.

The artwork, titled Storm Sequence, by Sydney artist Shaun Gladwell, was sold by Sotheby's for the price of $84,000 when auctioned on August 27

Shaun Gladwell's work has always troubled me, trapping me somewhere between love and fear. It's easy enough to understand people's attraction to it - and the artist's rapid rise to prominence in a scene that lusts for innovation and the imprimatur of cool - but for all its smooth edges and sleekly formed logic, there seems to be a marble rattling on the inside of the tank.

Which is not to say I don't think the guy is a first-rate artist, he's got some pretty good ideas, and they're generally superbly executed, so what's not to like? Think of Tanagara, the first of his works to come to my attention. He films himself hanging upside down from the centre bars of the Tanagara train's passenger aisle. A simple idea, the conceit, lies in the fact that the camera is upside down, so in the video he seems to be floating magically weightless in the midst of this most suburban of situations. It is a lovely piece, sweetly filmed, mysterious, resonant. It takes a lot of energy to be troubled by it. And yet I'm up for it. What could drive me to this?



Shaun Gladwell, Storm Sequence, 2000. Digital video.
Videography: Techa Noble, Original Soundtrack: Kazumuchi Grime.
Courtesy Sherman Galleries


So much of what Gladwell does seems to flow naturally from what he is, a young man fully engaged with the bourgeois, fashion-conscious artistic fringe of his city. An attractive boy, well connected, doing what he loves and being well rewarded for it, both monetarily as well as socially and spiritually, no doubt as well. You'd need to have a strong resolve not to feel the odd twinge of jealousy. Just think of his stock in trade, skateboarding. Scores of young men are out there filming themselves tumbling down the steps of St Mary's cathedral while wearing t-shirts that describe their outsider status, yet none of them have been able to create DVDs of their efforts that sell for nearly 100k that get exhibited at major international festivals of art, that are dissected with forensic intensity by people like myself. How did he manage to turn his simple, commonplace obsession with doing a series of perfect "Ollies" into highly regarded art?

The short answer to that is, "if I knew, I'd do it myself". Which of course is where the jealousy comes in. The longer answer is as complicated as the very question of art. Indeed, it may centre around that dreary old chestnut "what is art?". Heaven preserve us, Duchamp shot that one in the head seventy years ago. We don't need any of that talk. But still, something worries me. And, to pose a rhetorical question - do you know what it is? Answer - Shaun Gladwell's pants. Yes, indeed. His pants. Well at least in the work in question. And if you'll allow me to describe my fixation, it may give you an insight into why I have difficulties with his project.

In one of the "scenes" from the video installation Storm Sequence, we see Shaun skateboarding in the rain at the north end of Bondi Beach. The footage is quiet, beautiful, textured and toned, with the movement slowed to reveal the balletic quality of Sean's athleticism. The work is true to his oeuvre, with its "emphasis on the city (Sydney) as a stage for choreographed performances and interventions" that seeks to usurp "the strict rules (that) increasingly determine the use of public space / transport / art / architecture". An admirable aim indeed, even though in practice it seems to mean something more along the lines of "I’ll skateboard where ever the fuck I want". But the work, whilst absolutely delicious, was spoiled for me by one small, but rather telling detail. The first thing I noticed on a recent viewing was his pants. You see, he is wearing ultra baggy jeans as favoured by young sk8ters at the time he made the video. Now of course, as is the way with the extreme dialecticism of youthful fashion, such pants are considered deeply "uncool". Hence my first thought on seeing the video was, "Shaun Gladwell is daggy". That’s a bad reaction for many reasons. Not least of which being the idea that Sean's work is strongly associated with the idea of "cool". Skateboarding, performance, video, installations, all bleeding edge, all making claims to the "validity of now" that is at the centre of the cool aesthetic. But there is the rub. Only a few years later and your work has been "tagged" by time. You have become a period piece and people think about your clothes rather than your work.


Shaun Gladwell, Tangara, 2003.
Digital video. Videography: Gotaro Uematsu & David Griggs

Is this a problem? Well, no, except that one would hope that the power of the work would render such concerns mute within the overall grasp of it's ambitions. And herein lies my concern, that all we have is surface, glistening and seemingly soulful, but heading quickly toward antiquity. His work becomes less a video contemplating the intersection of nature's sublimity and the performative appropriation of the urban environment and more about the idea that "youth culture" is included within the gamut of contemporary art thereby each validating the other in a "circle jerk" of "cool". In ten years time as skateboarding heads towards one of its periods of irrelevance the video will seem as quaint as if someone had decided to do yo-yo tricks in front of a gathering storm. Though I'm sure Duchamp would have considered such an idea as the very quintessence of art practice.

Yet despite such criticism he has a talent with video that renders simple ideas magical. Pataphysical man for instance is as transcendent as Tangara. Again (worryingly) he relies on the inversion of the camera, transforming a dancer doing the "old skool" B Boy trick of spinning on his head into a bizarre feat of gravity defying, ceiling high shenanigans. The trick this time lies in the mirrored surface upon which the work is performed. The reflection gives us both a sense of the original axis alongside the more pleasing inversion. Its all very sweet if a little dizzying and quite compulsive viewing, as far as contemporary video art goes. And this time there can be no damning him with accusations of cool hunting (though the B-Boy reference does nag). The work communicates effectively with a whole range of concepts, from Leonardo's "vitruvian man", to the notions surrounding pataphysics and others who have dealt with the subject such as Imants Tillers. And the performer's clothes don't attract undue notice. So if I'm going to damn it then how?

I suppose the difficulty I have lies in the gloss and glib ease of the work. Its energy inhabits the surface so completely that one doesn't even bother to look for depths. You note the conceit, how elegantly it has been achieved and how gorgeous it looks and then you move on, assured that his aesthetic accords with your own and consequently the whole of the first world's at this moment in time. Zeitgeist rules! But for how long? One can easily imagine such things turning up in parodic pastiches of the era in whatever the 2020's version of Austin Powers will be.

So if we're going to say no to skateboards because we fear for the future, what shall we say yes to? Are there ideas in contemporary video art that will be looked at as groundbreaking formulations that will go on to shape our appreciation, apprehension and understanding of what this relatively new medium will come to be? Or is video simply a momentary blip on the face of art soon to be overshadowed by interest in newer technological forms such as immersive, 3D and interactivity (blech). Well, I'm just a punter writing on an obscure bitchy Sydney blog, and I can feel your attention span being stretched even as I write this or to put it more properly - the limits of this forum don't allow for a thorough examination of the topic so I'll keep my comments to a few obvious instances.

We need to begin by saying that it’s a vexed question, since the relationship between technology and medium within video is more deeply felt than other media. Work that relies on technological innovation at the expense of concept, inspiration or idea is more likely to become judged on its dated technique than its artistic potency. In that regard its interesting to think of say a Susan Norrie next to a Patricia Piccinini. Which is not to say that either is less warranted in the contemporary milieu but it would seem that the elegiac beauty of Norrie's images, redolent as they are with romantic sublimity are more likely to be revered as "art" in a few decades than Picinnini's clever self referential plays on software derived images. Which is not to say that her work is unnecessary or irrelevant. Quite the contrary. Piccininni's satiric conceptualisations play as much on the technology that creates them as the societal impulses upon which they comment. They are necessarily of their time. Yet it is their contemporaneity that makes you wonder how they will be received in decades to come.

Which brings us back to Shaun, his skateboarding and the Sotheby's auction. If the market is investing so heavily in his work, will they be getting their money's worth? Could I give a fuck? But if you're the dude that fronted with the 80g, why not share and upload it to Youtube?

From Ian Houston
. A major retrospective of Gladwell's work In A Station of A Metro, opens this Thursday at Artspace.

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2 X Stelarc

Tuesday, August 07, 2007


Stelarc, from YouTube



Excerpt from Heaven for Everyone, from YouTube.

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Auto Destruct Sequence

Thursday, July 26, 2007
Who ever said ideas had to be subtle? If you want cut through, why even bother with artistic ambiguity? Just say what you have to say and off you go. This seems to be Joan Fontecuberta’s concept for his show Googlegrams at the Australian Centre for Photography. Taking his cue from those image collage programs where lots of tiny pictures make up one really big picture, Googlegrams uses a bit of software that trawls through images found on the web for the building blocks of the bigger pictures. For example, Fontecuberta uses tiny images of politicians who decided to invade Iraq to make up a really big picture of a body with its head blown apart or an image of UFOs made up of tiny images the people who claimed to have seen them.



If this idea reminds you of anything it should be those photo mosaic pictures using exactly the same idea that you can buy in poster shops and tourist souvenir stores. Fontecuberta hasn’t really done anything different to the commercial application of the work and can be at least credited with a brutal sort of simplicity that takes all the subtlety out of a process. Unfortunately it’s not really a process that has much room for irony. In the gallery there’s a computer set up which visitors can test out their own ideas with a series of basic templates – the Australian flag, John Howard’s face, an outback landscape. If you decided to use Fontecuberta’s program to create an Australian flag out of – say – Indigenous art – you might be saying something about Australia and it’s relationship to its Indigenous people. If on the other hand you enter “Teletubbies” + “Thomas The Tank Engine” + “Anal Porn” [as we did] you get an Australian flag made up of La La, Po, Tinky Winky, Dipsy, Thomas and Friends, and hot back door action. What does it mean? Probably nothing.

The room sheet claims that the tension in the image is not between the scale of the images, or that the small images have some sort of conceptual interplay with the large image, but that the real interest here is the interplay between different flows of information from the “fundamentally uncritical space of the internet” from which the images are derived. It’s an interesting proposition to consider that the image is invested with criticality when we would have thought the criticality is the context, and more importantly, in the way in the image is interpreted, that is, by the audience, without whom Fontecuberta’s work would be meaningless. This is the connection between Googlegrams and d/Lux/MediaArts d/art/07. You can tell by all the capitalization and forward slashes that d/Art/07 is a new media exhibition and, if you a hankering for a video wall, an online virtual Pony Club, and some almost random seeming video works, it doesn’t disappoint. If on the other hand you expect your ‘post cinema’ experience a little more substantial than a room of monitors and some wall texts that escaped proof reading, avoid.


Tracey Moffatt, Roslyn Oxley is my dealer in Sydney, 2007.
Archival ink on rag paper, 74x53cms. Edition of 5 + 2AP.
Courtesy Roslyn Oxley Gallery.


There’s nothing much good to be said about Tracey Moffatt’s show Portraits & Doomed at Roslyn Oxley Gallery [until Saturday], a suite of almost identical portraits of friends, family, fellow artists and people she met at parties. Moffatt continues her fascination with celebrity, the logical connection between this slim body of work and her previous shows Under The Sign of Scorpio and Fourth. It may be that some of these people are well known – Eubena Nampitjin, Roslyn Oxley, Marina Abramovic - or others are unknown – her brother Lloyd for example - but Moffatt treats them all as if they were destined for the pages of New Weekly. She’s given the titles of the work jokey by-line style bios such as Anne Slater is a New York Socialite or Francisco Costa is a designer for Calvin Klein Fashions in New York and Eubena Nampatjin is a painter who lives in the desert. The idea is there for all to see, the images are garish and so another year and another show by Tracey Moffatt.


Tracey Moffatt and Gary Hillberg, Doomed, 2007.
10 mins dur. continuous loop, edition of 499.
Courtesy of Roslyn Oxley Gallery.


Moffatt has a new DVD for her show made with her long time video art collaborator Gary Hillberg. Following on from similar compilation videos Doomed is a series of frenetically edited clips from disaster movies set to a never ending build up on the score. Doomed shows that anyone with access to a video archive and iMovie can make a video art – the problem is that it’s not very good. One need only take a cursory look at what younger video artists are doing with this set of tools to see that Moffatt’s working is lacking – as a video it has no logical construction, it blasts along with its bits and pieces assembled ad hoc style, no build up or let down. Sure, the world ends, but the world ends every day. Meanwhile we have to admit to being mightily impressed with artist’s chutzpah. The DVDs – in an edition of 499 and selling fast – are available for USD$800 each. There has to be a law suit in there somewhere.


Michael Landy, H.2.N.Y. Self-Constructing, Self-Destroying Sculpture, 2007.
Oil stick on paper, 152 x 244 cm.
Copyright the artist.
Courtesy Sherman Galleries, Sydney and Thomas Dane Gallery, London.


Michael Landy is the UK artist famous for destroying everything he owned as part of an art work called Breakdown. Staged in a disused shop on Oxford Street in London in 2001, the set up was like a factory, with a moving production line of yellow plastic boxes in which each of Landy’s possessions were placed – his passport, personal papers, clothing, books, art works – weighed, recorded and the destroyed, literally everything the guy owned. Not even his childhood bear survived [Teddy, nooooo!!!]. Since then Landy has no doubt been building up his possessions again, or at least his passport, as he has a show called Man In Oxford Street Is Auto-Destructive at Sherman Galleries and he’s been out here for the opening and an artist talk.

Man In Oxford Street Is Auto-Destructive is an exhibition of large oil stick drawings in which Landy pays homage to Jean Tinguely’s Homage to New York, 1960, a sculpture that was supposed to auto-destruct in a performance in the sculpture court of the Museum of Modern Art, but instead shook a bit, then caught on fire, then was put out. Auto-not-destructing if you will. The connection between the title of Landy’s show at Sherman refers to both his own now infamous Breakdown and yr standard art historical antecedents.

The show at Sherman is set up as a kind of mirror image of Landy and Tinguely. Up the front of the gallery is a looped screening of a documentary of the 1960 event made by legendary documentary maker D.A. Pennebaker and a shorter version made by Robert Beer, then there are the big drawings of the Tinguely machine in reverse white on black in the main space, and then down the back of the gallery a looped screening of a documentary of Breakdown. The symmetry of the show is close to perfection. The problem we found with this otherwise excellent show is that it doesn’t leave much room for the imagination, impressive and as tight as the whole concept is. We like a bit of wiggle room for the audience to move about in, but Landy’s whole project - despite its low key razzamatazz - is far and away the best thing going on right now, so hell, we’ll take it without reservations.

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Barney Not A Purple Dinosaur II

Tuesday, July 10, 2007


Matthew Barney's Cremaster III [excerpt], from YouTube.

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Doc At The Radar Station

Saturday, June 23, 2007
What a farrago. After our trip to Venice and the wonders of the art there our return to Sydney has been …well, difficult. The Art Life office was nearly blown away in last week’s storms and when we should have been out seeing art we were tag teaming it, cutting up tree branches, replacing windows and filling sand bags. But we got out, as we always say we will, and we’re starting to feel like we’ve stuck a small spike in a very large mountain… So we decided to get back into it a little slowly.


Newell Harry, Untitled (anagram) Che Fare / Her Face, 2006/07.
Neon, found vessels, spade, dimensions variable. [Detail]
Courtesy Roslyn Oxley 9 Gallery.


Newell Harry’s show Views From The Couch at Roslyn Oxley 9 Gallery looks like an accident in a font factory. There are words on the wall, on bits of paper, in a book, some words – fragments of phrases and word plays – are rendered in neon and have fallen into a bucket. After his Oxley debut in Amanda Rowell’s superb curated group show Rectangular Ghost early in 2006, Harry has made the transition to Oxley with confidence and élan.

The show is relatively modest – 18 works in total – and run the gamut of more or less familiar iterations for text based work. However, the main point of difference between Harry and all those other artists out there using text is his fascination with Bislama, the pidgin dialect of the South Pacific island of Vanuatu. The most interesting turn in the show is the inclusion of a series of hand woven mats - about 100 x 200 cms each – made in collaboration with the women weavers of Mataso Island. The mats, mounted on the gallery wall declare Cape Malays/Cape Malaise or Pick and Drive Pick and Play and Stone Cold Turkey Cape Flats Shacks – each presented with the vaguely studious air of an ethnographic museum display mixed with the mystery of a cryptic crossword clue.


Newell Harry, Untitled (gift mat #IV) Fuck Knuckle Uncle Pat, 2007.
Pandanas and dye,
111 × 210cm.
Courtesy Roslyn Oxley 9 Gallery


There is also an air of comedy to Harry’s work. As his barrel rolling performance/photographs from Rectangular Ghost suggested, the artist likes to let the words do their own thing, small collisions of homonym, alliteration and metaphors. That the act of weaving also subtly suggests a material manifestation of the way language is constructed, and especially the way in which words and phrases from one language migrate across cultural barriers, Harry’s mats are concise little wonders.

Up the hill from Oxley Ms. & Mr. [a.k.a. Richard and Stephanie nova Milne] are making a commercial gallery debut of their own at Kaliman Gallery with a show called Heavy Sentimental. Long time stalwarts of Sydney’s artist run scene, the duo are a perfect example of the adage ‘the harder you work the luckier you become’. Each passing show by the pair in various galleries around town demonstrated that they were quietly honing their beguiling and romantic take on art making.

We remember well the Ms.& Mr. video piece in Turning Tricks at Firstdraft in 2005 and we were confused to say the least. Please no, we thought, not another quirky plasticine animated video installation, but despite an over familiarity with the style and the humour, there was indeed something there that we liked. We just couldn’t figure out what it was. Later in 2005 the duo won the Helen Lempriere scholarship and off they went to New York proving once again we don’t know what we’re talking about. So two years later the Nova Milnes are back from the family’s typewriter manufacturing business in Canada [makers of the famous ‘Beat Special,’ the Clark Nova] and have put together a show that significantly simplifies all of the artists special effects for something remarkably more straight forward but still containing a multitude of suggestive details.


Ms. & Mr., Videodromes for the alone: The Love Cats [1991-2007], 2007.
3.02 mins. Ed 1 of 5.
Courtesy Kaliman Gallery


The duo trade in a very a romantic and nostalgic depiction of their ongoing matrimonial love affair, imagining each other to be present at significant moments in their individual past lives – moments caught on tape and preserved in their personal archives. Videodromes for the alone: The Love Cats [1991-2007] for example, is a video of Ms. doing a dance routine to the famous Cure song at her high school, the event captured on crappy VHS tape. On the right hand side of the screen, Mr. is present via some basic special effects video pasting, dancing and singing along to the Cure song as Ms’s slightly clumsy yet adorable moment of fame reaches its climax. There is a undeniably creepy edge to the work that remains unresolved but adds a certain frisson to the whole experience. It’s a flavour that runs through the whole show.

Ms.& Mr. explore many different facets of nostalgia, ranging from the editing and temporal disruptions of the video works based on their own and family members archival material, to the creation of a massive VHS box lying in the middle of the gallery space. One work is a mass of home move footage stuck on permanent rewind. Videodromes for the alone: Grounded Encounters 1988/2007 conflates similar material with sound grabs from Close Encounters of the Third Kind and perhaps even a sideways reference to Tron.

The effect is disquieting, not so much because the cultural reference points come from a time when we were adults, but because despite this, the works still carry such an emotional charge. It can be extremely dull looking at other people’s home movies, but Ms. & Mr., with their freewheeling attitude to messing with their own memories, their pillaging of ‘precious moments’ for pathos and comedy, and the low key way in which the whole show is presented, this trip into their lives is worthy of more than just a passing glance. Got any more photos?!!

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Say What

Monday, May 28, 2007


Pulp Fiction In Typography by Jarratt Moody. From YouTube.

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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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"I'm Sorry, I Made A Mistake"



A 'film clip' was an ancient form of promotional video for pop groups. This film clip for David Byrne/Brian Eno's 's Mea Culpa [1981] is by the grandpappy of the found footage film, Bruce Conner. From YouTube.

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Mash Up Goes Mainstream

Wednesday, April 25, 2007


10 Things I Hate About Commandments, by Mike Dow, via Youtube.

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Who You Gonna Call?

Monday, March 19, 2007
Ladies and gentlemen, please put your hands together for the second in our series of guest blogs, this week courtesy of The Artswipe. Known affectionately as "The Swipe", this energetic, gender non-specific blogger has been rocking since June 2006. Please to enjoy...


Ghostbusting Video Art


Is video art only interesting these days if it's installed with multiple screens? For some time I've been deeply suspicious that video artists use more screens to distract you from the crappy content. In search of the truth, I watched Mythbusters a few times hoping they'd road-test my myth. But it became clear after a few episodes that they were too busy seeing whether mobile phone usage at Caltex stations causes spontaneous human combustion. Realising, however paradoxical, that TV can never answer perennial questions about video art, I thought I'd set out on a mythbusting journey across Sydney's current video shows.

En route I passed a shop window display featuring heaps of TVs showing sexy MTV-like fashion models glamour-fitting down a catwalk. Resisting the temptation to review the window display as some Art Express homage to Nam June Paik, I soldiered on to the Art Gallery of NSW, in search of this thing we call 'video' art, however packaged by the digital vibe of DVD technology or computer media applications like Quicktime. Boy do I miss the good old days when the artkids used VHS, or Super VHS if they were, like, being really top shelf. The days before we suffered in silence as viewers coming to grips with the new media 'c word': convergence.

Surely Anna Munster and Michele Barker, currently exhibiting at the AGNSW, know a lot about convergence. In addition to being artists, Munster and Barker are new media experts and lecturers at the College of Fine Arts. Last year Munster published a book called Materializing New Media: Embodiment and Information Aesthetics. I'd love to have it in my bookcase for some good old fashioned cultural capital, but what's the point when it'll sit there alongside every unread Marshall McLuhan book I'm proud to announce I own.

Munster and Barker's Struck (2005), a three channel DVD installation, examines the disorienting experience of being diagnosed with a neurological disease. Accompanied by a soundscape of eerie instrumentation underscored by muffled cries, heartbeats and breathing, we see a naked woman, out of focus and captured in grainy black and white tones. She steps into the light - or a lit bit of flooring. It's all very moody. Three screens document the experience, incorporating medical and scientific imaging techniques. Overlaid are fragments of text describing the woman's experience, but from a seemingly institutional gaze, vacuum-sealing her subjectivity. It's all very phenomenological.

So far, I'm not sure if the three screen endeavour makes it any more interesting. Actually, it felt like I could be watching an impenetrable short film on Eat Carpet – the now defunct SBS program showcasing arty shorts. And only one screen is needed to watch that. But new media types love their 'immersion.' Apparently the way to achieve immersion is with big screens, more than one, and preferably a checklist of media on the converge … of my nervous breakdown. Struck, therefore, makes the grade if we follow that criteria. But, did it "draw the audience into the turbulence and confusion of the emotional experience of disease" as the AGNSW press release claimed? I was about to experience a twitch of "turbulence" when the AGNSW loudspeaker announced a guided tour around the Archibald exhibition was about to commence. Sadly, my own cognition, subjectivity, phenomenological and perceptual processes - to use some of my fave Scrabble words this week - were just dulled to the point of boredom. This ménage-à-trois of screens simply didn't do the trick this time. My next episode of mythbusters will revolve around this question: Is it possible to be a new media artist and lack seriousness?


© Olaf Breuning production still from Home 2003.
Courtesy Australian Centre for Photography.


Mixed media artists are rarely serious. How can they be when they're so damn promiscuous with their media? Entering Olaf Breuning's mixed media circus at the Australian Centre for Photography was just the tonic needed to rouse my narcoleptic stupor. Go the ACP! They really know how to entertain. That pet show they did was so fucking cute. They put the 'pop' back in popular, they put the 'go' back in the Go-Gos. And really, their exhibition of work by Swiss artist Olaf Breuning is as good as any of the Belinda Carlisle incarnations (the "so Frenchy, so chic" comeback included). All tacky z-grade gimcrack, with shiny C-type resolution, Breuning's photos stylise the freakish through fairly demented references to trashy pop cultures. But before you get to them, one must enter the gallery space, only to be confronted by a motionless party of spooky ghosts. You know, white sheets draped on probably hat stands. Basically like a David Griggs painting if you were wearing 3D glasses. Better call the Ghostbusters – a mythbuster may not make it out alive. Sandwiched between the ghost install and the C-types glossies is a two-screen video installation called Home. So, I ask myself at this point: are two screens better than three (with or without the 3D glasses)?

Shot in black and white, the right hand screen of Home features a guy spinning a few aimless yarns, while the screen on the left illustrates the narration in digital video colour. In one tale, a stranded desert island couple spear fish and grow Z.Z. Top beards. In another, a guy vomits the words "I Exist" on a snowy mountain top. Then there's a gang of thugs who assault an Amish guy by stripping him bare and placing an E.T. mask on his head. In an inspired turn, a group of teenage girls pop pills and are molested seconds later by the same ghosts installed at the ACP. Two screen action is by far winning the competition so far. Maybe Breuning's work is doing it for me, simply because it's so entertaining. Is that so wrong? Art that entertains is my idea of March multitasking. Like his characters, it appears Breuning has been taking some serious drugs. Maybe he wouldn't mind spiking a few drinks at new media exhibition openings?


Issac Julien, True North Series, Ice Project Work No. 7. 2007.
Courtesy Roslyn Oxley Gallery.


But wait, over at Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery is a single screen video work called True North (2004) by British artist Isaac Julien. Only one screen, surely it can't be? What a day: I've had a screen threesome at the AGNSW, some missionary two-step at the ACP, and now a solo session at RO9 – how handy!

Settling back in a gallery for the number nine inclined, counting backwards three to one, while rarely checking my watch for the time, I really started to wish I'd brought a calculator - numbers have never been my forte. The room notes by Shaheen Merali say True North is "loosely inspired by black American explorer, Matthew Henson (1866-1955) who accompanied Robert Peary and was one of the first people to reach the North Pole, later writing an account of his experience." The background info does little to explain the "loose inspiration" and it doesn't really matter. Set in a natural glacial sublime, a black woman treks through the ice and very little happens. A crisp soundscape punctuated by the occasional poetic voiceover adds to the drama, making the 14 minute duration an experience to behold. "Death comes from all directions at once," utters the disembodied voice and electrical currents shoot through my spine as I contemplate its meaning. The combination of image and sound is just so arresting, its visual power heightened through suggestion rather than statement.

Glancing at the room notes again momentarily, the spell of suggestion is ruptured: "The installation contests binaries which are present in many notations of the expedition and of adventure that clutter the history of discovery - here reason, order and stability are replaced by irrational meanderings, symbolic gestures from shamanistic tropes and the constant seeping inertia of the ice." Not sure I saw that on screen, but if you say so. What I did see - to get back to my mythbusting escapade - took place on a single screen and it worked. Less is definitely more. But in addition to being an artist, Issac Julien is a noted filmmaker who has made avant-garde shorts, feature films and documentaries. True North was shot on 16mm film, so maybe it's not really a video work after all. Semantics aside, the filmic quality is exactly why True North is a breath of fresh Arctic air: it expertly channels the old fashioned immersion of cinema over the gimmicky lure of multi-channel distractions.

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Culture of Complaint

Monday, March 12, 2007


Helsinki Complaints Choir, from YouTube, courtesy of Grant Beran

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Video Flag

Monday, February 26, 2007


Nam June Paik, from YouTube

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Satan's Cheerleaders

Monday, February 12, 2007


Special Report
by Bryan Boyce, from YouTube.

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Signal To Noise

Friday, February 09, 2007
Many years ago when we were students we saw a video compilation of [then] recent video work from various well known artists of the day. One guy whose name has been lost to us was approaching the whole video-sculpture nexus in a very literal way – he was breaking down VCRs, cameras and video projectors into their constituent parts while trying to keep the machines operating even when they were in pieces.. A video feed from a still working video camera relayed a jittery image to projector that threw an image on to a wall. Asked what he was doing with his ‘project’, the artist – surrounded by the gizzards of machines - fumbled for words eventually stating “What I’m trying to do is… I’m… taking it all back to signal.” The whole project was slightly crazed, as if the artist was trying to get down to electricity itself, imbuing crappy 1980s video tech with the same essentialist sculptural quality you imagine is found in metal or wood or stone. Beyond all questions of form, content, approach, language or narrative there lays the brave world of pure SIGNAL.

 
Andrew Gadow @ Firstdraft


The work of Andrew Gadow at Firstdraft and his show Techne – Auxons deals with similar territory. Like that long forgotten artist, Gadow is working with feed as the essential element of his project, creating a three gallery daisy chain that begins with a vintage Fairlight CVI - an 80s era video synthesizer that creates patterns and distorts images – producing an image which then feeds the audio output of the CVI into an audio synth in the next gallery which in turn creates audio that in turn is fed into another CVI before going through another iteration into the final gallery space. The sound is like static and the images are a cold colorful blitz of shapes and patterns. Beyond the signal is the artist’s technological fetishism. Since this technology is virtually Stone Age Digital you really have to go looking to find it. Gadow’s been fishing CVIs out of skips, bargain bins, institutional rejects and EBay and god knows where he got the synthesizers from. It all looks kind of crappy, which is actually good too since that’s an aesthetic that really needs a light shone on it. After such reductionism, the question is - where to next? We predict an analogue cult around the Roland JUNO 6. [Remember, you read it here first!]

Compared to Gadow Sam Smith’s show at GrantPirrie [just finished] Scale Set looked positively baroque in comparison. Smith’s work over the last couple of years has investigated the spatial relationships between the virtual world and real world while trying to find conceptual cross over points between the two – sometimes in the form of 2001 style floating rectangles of shimmering green and blue. Many artists claim their work “investigates” this or that, but what they usually mean is that they are just playing on the edges of something probably more interesting than what they themselves are doing. Smith however has a much more developed sense of engagement, taking the aesthetics of signal [the blue and green colours being the Chroma Key process of removing backgrounds in video] and creating a Cronenberg-esque distortion between realties.

In Scale Set, the artist created an elaborate installation of an outsized camera body, a Plasma screen, a miniature set and a video loop on another screen. The loop was a single shot wandering around a street in Surry Hills in which bits of architecture [doors, windows, grating etc] had solid blocks of green and blue inserted electronically and made to look as though these digital invasions might have actually been there when Smith did the shoot. Although seemingly more elaborate, Smith’s work shares something of Gadow’s back-to-signal aesthetic but where Gadow has boiled one element of sound/video production to its essence, Smith was looking at the entire spectrum of broadcast as his play set. Much of Smith’s installation was constructed in beautiful IKEA timbers and it seemed as though the sculptures had taken on schematic, quotational qualities, as if the artist was saying “this construction here is merely a quote of other real world constructions” – and which, coincidentally, is where the solo work of Sam Smith meets the hyper quotational delirium of his collaborations with Soda_Jerk.

The cynical among our readers might claim that both Smith and Gadow represent a certain, how shall we say? – “boy aesthetic” – the makers of train set art that comes from brainiac kids with no dress sense but whose heads are full of amazing facts. Well, that’s just cynical, but it’s good to recognise such cynicism within yourself because it helps you attenuate your own reactions to things. Such was the internal dialogue as we went through Domestic Love, a group show at COFA’s Kudos Gallery. The gallery space is a church hall that has some walls put up for showing art and, as the years have gone by, we have come to love its low key approach to showing art. For some shows it works a treat, for others, not so great. For this full-to-bursting groups show, it seems to suit it very well indeed.

Domestic Love is a group show of work by artists who are exploring the parodic aesthetics of queer art. Straight society is a bunch of clichés too [you know] and how better to question, parody and undermine it than by taking those clichés and turning them inside out? Tina Fiveash has a photo called A Gay Morning Tea in which two women done up in vintage clothing have decided to skip the Arrowroot bickies and tea and get down to business with one woman mounting the other, her huge tongue on the other lady’s nipple. It’s like a regular morning tea, you see, only this one is gay. In another work by Fiveash, some ladies who have gone on a motoring holiday to Canberra are going the grope, one lady on the bonnet of an FJ Holden, the other between her legs. There are many works like these throughout the rest of the show and it makes you wonder why, in the course of this willful inversion of clichés, so few artists aren’t trying to undermine the hetro clichés of today. And it’s not as though straight society itself hasn’t woken up to the fact that the bloke in the cardigan and the pipe who stands in for the 1950s ear “father” probably isn’t in some torrid homosexual affair with his straight acting mate anyway? Hell, you can buy exactly that kind of campery on a postcard down at Ariel Bookshop. The problem with trying to deal with the contemporary world is trying to untangle the signifiers from one another. So it’s much easier to resort to clichés of the distant past to talk about the clichés of identification. It’s not exactly subtle. Caterina Pacialeo has a work [unhelpfully called Untitled] which is a naked woman lying on the counter of the Ticket Box behind a metal grill at The State Theatre. It’s an image that will no doubt come back to haunt us next time we’re there to buy tickets for the Sydney Film Festival – one for the stalls please!

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Art Life Podcast Episode #4

Tuesday, November 21, 2006

Click here to get your own player.


Monika Tichacek's 'controversial' Anne Landa Award winning video The Shadowers; Tony Schwensen and the big medicine ball; Daniel Crook's time bending video work and Philip Brophy's haircut and his busted installation; Kristian Burford's Melissa and Robert at Sullivan & Strumpf; is it real, too real or not real enough? How expressing yourself is neither sexy nor fun... RJD2 - Ghostwriter; Robert Hughes memoir Things I Didn't Know - the minutiae of his life from childhood, the 1960s, Etruscan pottery and getting plastered with Noelene Brown in Kings Cross; what's on and what's happening - Dick Watkins at Liverpool Street Gallery Rachel Scott and Gallery 9; Fink [Feat. Frank Chickens] We Are Ninja.

Podcast Image: Tony Schwensen, Weighty Weight Wait, 2006. Video performance, 3 channel video installation, 11 hours duration. Courtesy of the artist.

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For the People, By The Government.

Wednesday, November 15, 2006
Last weekend, one of our neighbours, the happy island city-state of Singapore, finished hosting its very first Biennale. Eschewing the all-expenses-paid-for press junkets and glitzy launch parties of early September, we chose instead to cover the final days of the event with consideration and a clear-mind to survey what the neighbours do, and, more crucially, how they do it.

The Biennale grew out of Singapore’s annual arts festival which had been eagerly promoted throughout the region as a proper, grown up visual art event, but graduating to the ranks of serious ‘biennale’ has been an entirely new concept for a country with little artistic identity or contemporary art credentials to speak of, and which was micro-managed by a government which proudly controls so much in the lives of its 4 million citizens, not least of whoch is through censorship. With no commercial gallery scene comparable to Australia, Europe or the UK - and with most art dealing taking place discreetly behind closed doors [appointment only you understand] – the only commercial ‘contemporary art’ accessible to the visitor is strictly of the tourist kind.

The local arts festivals of the recent past have tended towards the wincingly mainstream. This time, however, with the highest level government approval, close cooperation between its various institutions (as well as with two other, concurrent biennales in Shanghai and Gwangju) and an imperial ton of cash, Singapore has given its people the chance to see contemporary art from around the world in the flesh; pretty much uncensored it seemed and presented with great imagination.


Tang Maohong, Sunday, 2006.
Digital animation (detail).


For its debut biennale Singapore’s National Art’s Council imported a team of highly experienced curators headed up by Fumio Nanjo [whose day job is deputy director of Tokyo’s Mori Art Museum] but the seed for the whole enterprise came from within Singapore. The construct of the Biennale was the display of the work of some 90-odd artists with a 60 percent presence of Asian artists from around the world and the heavy artillery included Jenny Holzer, Mariko Mori, Barbara Kruger, Mark Wallinger and Xu Bing.


Jane Alexander, Verity, Faith and Justice, 2006.
Mixed media installation

For the Biennale the entire city was annexed; not just the public Art Gallery and Museums but places like City Hall, opening the very heart of Singaporean politics and justice to artists and allowing the public to wander through courtrooms and even judges' chambers. Site specific installations were also to be found in a number of churches, a mosque, a synagogue, and Chinese and Hindu temples. The disused army barracks of Tanglin Camp was transformed along with the main focus of pretty much everything that happens in Singapore – the shopping drag of Orchard Road.


Suwage & Tita Rubi's Crossroad 2006 at Tanglin Camp


Jumping on the thematic bandwagon that just about everyone else seems to be abandoning, Singapore’s Biennale came with the timely, thumping-big theme of Belief – chosen, we’re sure for many reasons, but ostensibly to reflect the cultural diversity of the Chinese, Malay, Indian and Eurasian populace. Someone is trying to make a point. Typically the Singapore State goes about anything via cheerily Orwellian dictates - Have a baby! Have three! Tax breaks available! - while it routinely enforces draconian laws with regard to ‘congregation’ and the right to protest. In this context it seemed that Belief was there to actually encourage the Singaporean people to, well, believe..


Ana Prvacki, Leap of Faith, 2006.
Super-magnetic wall, metallic vest installation (video still).


The Singapore dream is a mantra to consumerism - the 5 C’s of Success - career, credit card, condominium, car, and country club. Education, while free, is primarily a head-downs rote learning system with a big leaning toward ‘measurable’ subjects like math and science. These and other factors in combination create a problem. Singapore has bred a nation of obedient, largely well-off but unquestioning consumer citizens, while the country is experiencing a brain drain as a sizeable number of its young talent, many with a foreign education under their belt, choose to stay overseas. With all of that in mind, Director Nanjo says he didn’t want to create a biennale that was controversial, but rather one that created dialogue. And so, welcome to the brave new world of Art as Social Engineering!

In tandem with the Biennale, the NAC (National Arts Council) formulated an extensive education program. First, teachers were invited on a tour of the various venues where they were given education packs with the instruction to come back with their class. A series of collectable badges (in freebie, collectable mad Singapore) were also strewn throughout the various sites as added incentive. The School of the Arts, a brand new art school is set to open in 2008 and will offer six year courses for students from the ages of 13 to 18 to complement the two existing graduate art schools. To encourage the grown-ups, the small charge for a pass to the major sites was waived over the public holidays and eventually scrapped altogether in the final weeks. Local press coverage was flag-waving with a super-enthusiastic tone of ‘hey, this is art. It’s fun! Try it you might like it!’ And so we did.


YKON, M8 Summit Of MicroNations, 2006.
Mixed media installation.


YKON are a Finnish collective. This project is called M8 - Summit Of MicroNations, 2006. In one room, an octagonal table (i.e. not quite round) is venue to a summit of eight fictional mini-states with names such as Space Frontier Republic and NSK State In Time and one called, oh, The Republic Of Singapore – each represented by it’s own little flag but with nobody actually there. From another room emanates the sound of continuous, uproarious laughter and it’s here you could see a video of the summit’s representatives in action around the aforementioned table. And that’s what and all they do – piss themselves laughing. A little give-away booklet informs us further. The section about the Republic of Singapore introduces us to Lim Kong Soon (76) retired politician (who can they mean?), whose dream it is “to make sure every button in Singapore works” and who considers air-conditioning the ultimate invention, one which has brought “ control, comfort and prosperity to South-East Asia.”

The whole idea is wonderfully Swiftian but Singaporeans are not accustomed to satire, and certainly not directed at the State. Those we spoke with laughed along, though politely and a little sadly once the mockery sunk in. The point was certainly not lost on them, particularly as everyone is aware of the recent hosting of the IMF/World Bank conference here and the resounding silence of protest banned.


Tomas Ochoa, The Myth of Sisyphus, 2006.
Two channel video installation.

We spoke to a teacher (who asked to remain anonymous) who’d seen the following pieces - both labeled video installations but documentaries really - and had drawn her own interesting conclusion. First was The Myth of Sisyphus by Ecuadorian artist, Tomas Ochoa. In it, random people from Marrakech and from Zurich are asked what they think the last thoughts of a suicide bomber might be. And then there was The Last Supper by Swedish artists Bigert & Bergstrom. In this work we are taken on a meditation on the last meal served to those about to be executed from a number of perspectives- death row reprievees, the last-meal chef of a Texas Pen, executioners etc. The thrust of the argument built was that the last meal/last supper has lost its meaning in terms of symbolic absolution and redemption (in the Christ-like sense). Now, they argue, it’s become a kind of cruel contract by which the soon-to-die accept their guilt (and the punishment) by having their last act of free -will (in choosing their food) be served up as an act of generosity by the state.

The conclusion our teacher friend had arrived at was that the suicide bomber had offered his own life to a cause as ordained by God in pursuit of a better world – a self-imposed death penalty in the form of a sacrifice. The sacrifice the state had made however was to have to put someone to death in the cause of “maintaining society’s way of life”. The difference, as she saw it, was that “the bomber was willing, the state obligated.” Most people we tried to engage on the subject of the death penalty, of which Singapore is a leading proponent, were resolutely tight-lipped on the subject. But at least work like this is in the public arena, albeit niche.


Lim Tzay Chuen, The Opposite Is True #2, 2006.
Performance documentation.


Meanhwile, a Singaporean artist Lim Tzay Chuen whose nicely insidious, interventionist action in City Hall, was performed before any artworks even entered the building. Dressed in a full-protection chemical suit and face mask, carrying a Skyhawk Thermal Fogger, he sprayed the entire building with synthesised human pheromones (biochemicals that affect such things as mate choice, the recognition of one's own family members, and the ability to "smell" the difference between friend and foe). Because it wasn’t there as a work to be seen, we felt we couldn’t really talk to people about it as such. Instead we smiled at everybody. Most often they smiled right back. A job well done then.


Back l-r: curators, Roger McDonald, Fumio Nanjo and Sharmini Pereira.
Front: irate free-badge collector.


In the closing Q & A session last Friday, Roger MacDonald, one of the curators, said, “Even if the government has an agenda, we’ve planted seeds in the community which the community does with as it wishes…these things cannot be controlled fully” The rough, end-of-show figures claim 900,000 visitors to the various venues and events (though the inclusion of the pieces on mall-to-mall shopping stretch Orchard Road in shopaholic Singapore could be argued to have inflated that number).

So has the Biennale had the desired effect? Well, not yet. You don’t shift a people’s perspective that easily after 40 years of social engineering. If the problem of a lack of creativity is to be truly addressed it’ll take a lot more than a big art exhibition every two years to fix it. Open-mindedness and the willingness to engage in debate as a precursor to a more general ‘creativity’ has to be encouraged at a societal level and accompanied by certain freedoms of expression; including those of the press and the ability to voice dissent through protest. But perhaps a start has been made. Will there be another? Well, we hope so. While the next director wasn’t announced at the end, as happens in Sydney for instance, there’s no doubt this was an interesting event. As someone pointed out with a certain Singaporean logic, “You can’t call it a Biennale if there’s only going to be one.“

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The Art Life Podcast Ep #3

Wednesday, November 01, 2006

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Hello Pacific Northwest !!! Alex Kershaw's A Lake Without Water, - Tomorrow Again group show curated by Scott Donovan and Elastic Boundaries by Michelle Thieunissen @ Artspace. Tough guys and tougher talk - Two Birds with One Stone - Brendan Lee's install; @ The Art Gallery of NSW; Ken Nordine's My Baby; Koji Ryui all white on white, drinking straws and a ginormous paddle pop stick @ Sarah Cottier Gallery; James Angus - where do they make baloons? @ the Museum of Contemporary Art. Handsome Boy Modelling School Metaphysical; POLITICAL CONTENT WARNING - University of Western Sydney final year show, maybe ever! - Anne Landa Award - who will win? Thank you.

Podcast Image: James Angus, Rhino. Courtesy Museum of Contemporary Art.

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