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18.4.10

shows, shows, shows!

a quarter turn on every screw


after that burst of blog activity last week, i dropped off the posts for a bit because there were a stack of shows i had to squeeze in. i'm now working full-time to earn some cashola, so my free time has been streamlined. which of course = less blogging time.


"hooray!"


anyway, there are a stack of great shows on in melbourne at the moment, which you should all go and have a look at. and there are more this week too!


grant nimmo and julia robinson
anna pappas gallery



it's quite exciting to see some of the new kids on the block at anna pappas. grant nimmo's paintings from if you are a big tree, we are a small axe are part of a new crew of artists making work that collages chronic colour symbolism, landscape and portraiture tradition with ITC language. think delaunay, and yahoo groups.

some of the works in the show i fell in love with immediately. others are really not my taste. and maybe that's because i'm too closely attached to language and symbols from online communication to have detachment from it (and therefor be able to see the beauty/irony/message/meaning in it).

julia robinson makes sculptural work that stylises the animal form by creating it using textile techniques. although i appreciated the work, i couldn't help but think about the work of melbourne artist natalie ryan who is currently making very similar work, albeit with a style and material (that deep, lush flock/velvet) that i like more. i felt like i had done julia an injustice by that instinctive comparison, like instantly comparing muse to queen, so i left feeling une petite remorse.


izabela pluta
nellie castan gallery



in the back project space, iz has a selection of subtle, but carefully selected series of photo and print-based work that map out the litoral edge and the point at which the place meets the urban architectural experience. the three projects are so quiet and clear and graceful and yet manage to pick up on a really interesting reflection of line: the line of the rushing canal, the line of the almost-dormant creek and the line of hardened ice and/or snowfall.

i've not been to this gallery before, and it was well worth the cross over the river, that's for sure.

simone slee
sarah scout presents



simone slee's action works have a similar process to my own and an obvious relationship to the difference between architecture and art practice and critique. are you true to your materials? is a modernist question. and a painter/sculptor's question at that. it is the question which plagues generations of artists and a question that seems to be justification for critique (as opposed to 'are you actually saying something interesting?'). simone has placed this question in front of a series of modernist residential architecture sites, apparently asking the same question of Architecture and highlighting it as a question that is, in my opinion, completely irrelevant to art.

i love the idea of this process. i would love to see some images of the actual process of these works and i was excited to see the signs in the gallery space. as i mentioned on the night - how much fun would it be to hire the signs out for the night and encourage the audience to ask that same question of whatever aspect of public life they felt needed critiquing.



the nothing
west space



as a whole, this show is fantastic. curated by kelly fliedner, i was instantly impressed with the breadth and quality and stoush of this show - a real range of works by melbourne artists who are all doing some amazing things right now:

damiano bertoli, lou hubbard, sanne maestrom, deborah ostrow, daniel price, matthew shannon and jackson slattery (who i keep calling slattery, jackson - channeling the teacher from ferris bueller's day off)

ok, so the whole idea of having a bunch of artists that sews a theme together is nothing all that new, but i still thought it was reassuringly cohesive.

my favourite work in the show was, unsurprisingly, the damiano bertoli video work, continuous moment: andandand - a video montage of empty residential/architectural spaces. i'm pretty sure it's cut together from other film works (i reckon there's a slice from the german film 'die fettern jahren sind vorbei' in it and a piece from a chantal ackerman work. but i'm probably totally wrong). it creates an almost-narrative, full of suspense from all that possibility, all that just-before-the-action context and lead-in. and the use of colour field had me literally ooh-ing and aah-ing. i think i gave my fellow viewers the shits very quickly.

other works of note (for me) included:

deborah ostrow's photo/video portaits (pictured), which - aesthetically speaking - surprised me into loving them. in fact, they have a similarity with the grant nimmo works (you know, the ones at anna pappas) - with their dutch renaissance, colour symbolism, nu-tech language mash-up.

lou hubbard's ET. nothing mind-blowing, in terms of concept, but still fuckin' fun. bring back art with a bit of fun on top, i reckon. of course, it doesn't hurt that i am immature and have a deep love for sue webster/tim noble. my first thought was, i wonder whether she figured that out by accident - like maybe someone through something at something and it made a shape that eventually became ET.

and of course sanné mestrom's a door opened and almost closed again conceptual work in the doorway of the gallery. the whole imagination/action/text overlap floats my little boat.


territorial pissings
utopian slumps



this is the opening group show for utopian slumps in its new form, as a commercial gallery. including a load of well-known hip young thangs:
sean bailey, dan bell, nathan gray, michelle hanlin, matthew hopkins, rob mchaffie saskia leek, toby pola (pictured), tom polo, tim price, mark rodda, gemma smith, masato takasaka,jake walker and amber wallis.

there are a couple of good works in this show, but if i'm terribly honest, i wasn't really taken with many. nor was i really in love with the new space. i haven't given up hope, but it might take me a few returns before i can really get in the groove with the new space.

now, you must forgive my lack of names in this mini review - all the room lists had disappeared and i couldn't jot any of the names down. you'll just have to go and see the works and match them to the room sheet when you get there.

i loved the sculpture piece on the shelf as you first walk into the space - i was like a bower-bird. all taken with the bright sparkly objects and the colour co-ordination.

and i also really liked the pair of paintings on the wall opposite the entrance - muted palette utopian cityscapes. like egon schiele mixed with gemma smith and danila vassilieff. he also made the work that was on the laptop on the floor - an unexpected joy for me, with surprisingly great combination of image, depth of field and selection of materials.

in the hype of the evening i missed out on seeing rob mchaffie's drawings, but i just know they would have been stunning too.

all in all, the new commercial version of utopian slumps will be a fascinating trip and i wish all the peeps involved a stack of success.

*just for the record, territorial pissings - the song by nirvana - was the song that turned me onto the joys of punk music. you can take that how you wanna, but goddammit, it's still my one of my alltime favourite songs.


epilogue

I didn't see this show when it opened last week and finally got to see it yesterday. it is such a perfect match for the show at west space that, if you are interested in either show, you must go and see both. it's like they are an echo of each other. the nothing and the something, anything. it is the lack and the desperation. the emptiness and the need to fill it. it is the wax and the wane of art making, of thinking, of doing and of the driven.

a quarter turn on every screw
kings ARI



another exhibition, based on a theme, with a stack of excellent artists from melbourne and beyond. a few more interventions into space, a couple of works that made me laugh out loud for real and this show is easily of my highlights for the year so far. and the essay by curator kel glaister is fantastic. sorry, it's FANTASTIC!!

this show is about the reasons - the compulsions about making art, or making something. filling in the gaps, filling up spaces and how/why/when artists make art: brad haylock, anthony johnson, yvette king, sanné mestrom (again), sanja pahoki, kiron robinson, jackson slattery (slattery, jackson - remember?), nedko solakov and lee walton.

i laughed myself silly at sleep transcript by anthony johnson - a record of an artist asleep on a laptop, i was flooded with thoughts about the irreverence and potency of this absurdity: challenging the weight of critical theory in publication with the weight of an artist's slumber, i was reminded of the highly inspiring text my cat produces when she decideds to parade across my keyboard and also loved his reflection that, even asleep, artists make work.

patti smith said, when she was here a few years ago: "artists are always artists. i could be taking a crap and i'm still an artist!". i loved this quote and have it written in my diary as a constant reminder. the sleep transcript connects me back to this idea in a way that encourages us to have a sense of humour about the dumb shit we do under the guise of art too.

sanné's signage and text-based badges were a great touch and, i guess in counterpoint to the omnipotence of artists production, her idea of artists and art as pawns (as opposed to kings) was poignant. this cynicism keeps us honest, although i guess articles in the herald sun damning art as a waste of money do that too, right?).

and i also really liked the video works of both lee walton (pictured) and nedko solakov.

the former - minor adjustments and personal modifications to public space was stunning. my mother, whenever we go away, rearranges the furniture of the hotel if it doesn't feel right and this work was reminiscent of that. the artist adjusts and intervenes into the objects of public space if they don't feel right.

the latter - the violent and open and not-subtle-at-all modifications to objects in public space was thrilling and exciting in its brazen display. and, in my opinion, the aesthetics of public space need both methods to produce great works and pleasant spaces: bold gestures and attention to detail; swinging mallets and 10 cms to the left.


image credits: all images pinched from the respective websites, except the one of the balloons. i took that.

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4 Comments:

At 18 April, 2010 14:45, Blogger Unknown said...

EPIC!

 
At 18 April, 2010 14:46, Blogger Unknown said...

I had to leave ANOTHER comment, because the WV is PONGA, and I thought that was funny x

 
At 19 April, 2010 01:22, Blogger dell said...

So many good shows on, so little time.

I have meant to go to most of these and only hope the Kings show is on this week too.

Nice to see you about miss.

 
At 19 April, 2010 01:24, Anonymous lauren said...

ha! jonesy - wtf does 'the WV is PONGA'mean?? am i out of the loop? is this a new phrase that i should be hip to?

and dell - it was lovely to see you out and about too!

 

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