The Internal Logic
- Authors: Mestrom, Sanne
- Date: 2013
- Type: Text , Visual art work
- Full Text:
The internal logic
- Authors: Mestrom, Sanne
- Date: 2013
- Type: Text , Visual art work
- Full Text:
- Description: Lady with Green Stripe, 1905; Black Painting, 1959; Black Painting, 1963; The Virgins, 1913; Soft Kiss; The Reclining Nude (Nyotaimori Coffee Table), Still life with nine objects, 1954; Weeping Woman
Untitled III
- Authors: Mestrom, Sanne
- Date: 2013
- Type: Text , Visual art work
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- Description: We exist not just as a brain that thinks but as a body that feels. Art’s gesture and trace is a good way of marking how a person lives in stuff and works on that stuff. The world though works on us too, pushing us, and shaping us with its pressures and forces. Art often embodies both sides of this being-in-the-world and how we explore it. The Bathysphere is a scientific invention, a submersible that similarly manifests this human drive; just as we thought we had mapped the world we used this machine to place our bodies at the bottom of oceans. In this show even the two-dimensional works are haptic in their way. James Kerr’s Desiccated Vases look like abstract painting and on one hand that is right. But they are also boxes filled with crushed petals which, fetish like, ask the “viewer” to pick up and shake the insides, even the static moves the things around. Petals are evocative of so much: Spring, love and (here dried) memories and keepsakes. Similarly Kate Mitchell’s Artist As Pooped archives the artist’s performance of using props to keep her eyes open. Like cartoon logic, or even Dali’s crutches, it is a fantastical image that talks of the artist’s body and the work that is done by and on that body for art. In the ceramic work of Sanne Mestrom and Addison Marshall both play on modernist tropes in certain ways, not with irony, but in a contemporary hybrid way where all valences of different art periods are at play. So perhaps most obviously in Mestrom’s work the totemic shapes speak to high modernism, the work of Picasso and Brancusi for example. They are declassed though, a little rickety, a little softer now, made in clay instead of marble or steel. The aesthetic of the irregular dots and the obviously hand painted glazes also undermine modernism’s minimalism. The work also seems very primal, with simple cups recalling their ancient forebears. This is not appropriation but the polyvalence many styles brought together. In fact a lot of the material in the show has a deep and long history (the petals, the twig, the eyelashes, the string) and the artists are knowingly playing with that. Marshall’s work has a similar disconcerting hybridity. The rainbow connection: bound and gagged is undoubtedly a curious collection. The rainbow piece is a little phallic and recalls the surrealist object. Gagged looks found, like a little test-piece picked up from the studio floor, but it also recalls a small pelvis or even a cloth. Bound seems cartoony in someway, a little fetish animal crawling on the floor. They are abstractly modern but with so many resonances these simple forms open up into many poetic possibilities (most obviously some sort of sexual play). Finally Jasper Knight’s Alley Oop is a totally found object, following in the surrealist tradition of the artist choosing objects that resonate for them. With its back to the viewer, shining into the corner like some naughty child, the work emits an otherworldly green glow turning the whole exhibition into an Aladdin’s cave. Again what makes this work a contemporary found object is that what is shown is its shipping crate. Somehow the LA neon has been stripped of its Californian sheen; the work is as much about global dislocation and loss as it is about cocktails. In all these works it is the material of the object that speaks most loudly to us. What is the seduction of neon? Of petals? It is something known as much through the body as through the eyes.
Utopian slumps and art basel
- Authors: Mestrom, Sanne
- Date: 2013
- Type: Text , Visual art work
- Full Text: false
- Description: Composition 1 -10; Untitled (8); Element 1-4
Weeping woman
- Authors: Mestrom, Sanne
- Date: 2013
- Type: Text , Visual art work
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Wes Walters: Realism & Abstraction
- Authors: Hinton, Shelley
- Date: 2013
- Type: Text , Visual art work
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- Description: Wes Walters: Realism and Abstraction exhibition the Post Office Gallery at the University of Ballarat between 19 December 2012 and 26 January 2012. The Research project sought to present one of the first comprehensives surveys of the variety of Wes Walters practice; spanning almost six decades of work across a variety of mediums. Whilst previous shows of the artists' work have focused almost exclusively on his portraits and figure studies , the exhibition staged at the Post Office Gallery sought to instead to couple these well know works with a range of the artist's abstractions and commercial designs; the latter including his famous 1955 Chicko Roll poster which, as David Thomas notes in his introductory essay to the accompanying catalogue, was once seen in every fish and chip shop in Australia.
Another kind of sublime
- Authors: Lawson, Rosalind
- Date: 2012
- Type: Text , Visual art work
- Full Text: false
- Description: 'Another kind of sublime' exhibition at Brunswick Street Gallery, Fitzroy from 24th August - 6th September, 2012. An exhibition of cast and manipulated handmade paper wall installations and sculptures by Rosalind Lawson.
Arboreal: Out on a limb
- Authors: Atkins, Rosalind
- Date: 2012
- Type: Text , Visual art work
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Arborescence
- Authors: Atkins, Rosalind
- Date: 2012
- Type: Text , Visual art work
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Arc at 30
- Authors: Forbes, Rodney
- Date: 2012
- Type: Text , Visual art work
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Chippo: A brush with the wal
- Authors: Forbes, Rodney
- Date: 2012
- Type: Text , Visual art work
- Full Text: false
Drawn to print: Recent works on paper
- Authors: Button, Loris
- Date: 2012
- Type: Text , Visual art work
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Gareth Sansom: Alternative Persona
- Authors: Wallis, Geoff
- Date: 2012
- Type: Text , Visual art work
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In a Mughal garden, Vanitas series
- Authors: Button, Loris
- Date: 2012
- Type: Text , Visual art work
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Island Relics
- Authors: Davidson, Stephen
- Date: 2012
- Type: Text , Visual art work
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- Description: 'Island Relics' exhibition at Post Office Gallery, University of Ballarat, 28 March - 28 April, 2012 (curator Shelley Hinton).
Land to light: Photo diaries
- Authors: Forbes, Rodney , Farrugia, Charles
- Date: 2012
- Type: Text , Visual art work
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Mates & Milkshakes : Corner shops in Ballarat
- Authors: Berry, Phillip
- Date: 2012
- Type: Text , Visual art work
- Full Text: false
- Description: Mates & Milkshakes : Corner shops in Ballarat Exhibition 2nd-13th May 2012 at Post Office Gallery, Ballarat. Phil Berry’s work brings to life the iconic Australian corner store - the local provedore selling everything from a bottle of milk or packet of cigarettes to a range of smallgoods. Once a hub and important landmark within the community, abuzz with conversation and ablaze with advertising slogans, they stood like social beacons amid the drab, dull endless sprawl of suburbia. Celebrating these abandoned often reused or reappointed places, Berry’s work not only highlights the disappearance of the personable local proprietors and their conjoined shop residences but also the sense of community that has disappeared with them.
New fillings
- Authors: Mestrom, Sanne
- Date: 2012
- Type: Text , Visual art work
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No coyotes no roadrunners
- Authors: Forbes, Rodney
- Date: 2012
- Type: Text , Visual art work
- Full Text: false
Ode to form
- Authors: Mestrom, Sanne
- Date: 2012
- Type: Text , Visual art work
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