Gentle reader, there's been alot on - artwise - in Sydney since we last met. I trust you have been out & about, enjoying The Biennale of Sydney and associated events, the opening of two new galleries in Chippendale, The Commercial and MCLEMOI, Shaun Gladwell's new work in AGNSW, lvl 2 Projects and experienced Contemporary Iranian Art at New Albion Gallery.
And there is more still to come. Spring is in the air, the season of unreliability, new beginnings and hay fever. You only need a decent map, a cardie, a couple claratyne to be set for an art afternoon.
Georgina Pollard Hearth (shape), produced through a residency at Kandos Projects in March 2012. 180x113cm, household acrylic paint and velcro image courtesy the artist |
Marita Fraser untitled (skirt painting), 2008 acrylic on canvas 150x100cm image courtesy the artist and James Dorahy Project Space |
The ATVP exhibition feels raw and developing;a bit gritty (it is King Street in springtime) and a bit of tearing and pulling at the edges. Fledgling artists need support and nurturing and places to show off and put out, to develop the confidence and finesse (however rough or smooth) to get them on a professional trajectory. I'm up for that this week, so why stop at only one space dedicated to emerging artists - there are plenty more.
Rochelle Haley
Bird on a rock, 2012, watercolour on paper, 24 x 19cm image courtesy the artist and Galerie Pompom |
Just as gritty in location, if not in feel, Rochelle Haley's exhibition Dead Precious in Galerie Pompom is a marvel. I felt like I'd stepped into a precious jewel box. Before me was a series of small, very finely and admirably rendered watercolours, laid out like trays of jewellery. The watercolours reveal glittering gemstones, some of which are set into animal skeletons, others laid bare with their fascinating facets. The gems and the skeleton imagery was literally dreamt-up, developed from a recurring dream the artist had of a gemstone sitting within the abdominal cavity of an animal skeleton. There is no Freudian analysis here, rather a deep and lengthy exploration of time, colour and light. Gemstones are cut to simultaneously entrap and project light and here, these stones sparkle against the chalky-ness of the bones, on the soft, textured paper. The 4 C's, colour, cut, carat and clarity, have been beautifully elucidated, juxtaposed against the lightness, texture and fragility of the animal bones. Time creates both these elements then you, as the spectator, add the stories. Each of us comes to gemstones and skeletons with our own memories, fascinations and dreams.
Rochelle Haley, Golden 2012
watercolour and white ink on tinted paper, 27 x 38cm image courtesy the artist and Galerie Pompom |
Rochelle Haley Gems, 2011, watercolour on paper, 30 x 30 cm image courtesy the artist and Galerie Pompom |
Haley is an interesting artist, working across different media, depending on her subject. Here the droplets of watercolours beautifully intensify colour and the feel of refracted light.
Check out the video of Rochelle talking about this body of work from Das Platform. It is a good body of work - not to be missed. Till Sept 22.
Fortune was on my side: a park right outside First Draft, in Surry Hills. As rare as the gorgeous pink sapphires I'd just admired in Galerie Pompom, it was a good omen and I had to seize it. I'm really glad I did.
Jack Condon Untitled (Card tower) 2011 pigment print 67 x 100cm image courtesy the artist and First Draft, Sydney |
This exhibition is more like four mini solo exhibitions, rather than a group show and it was great. I wouldn't have called the works experimental - rather ones which were fairly well resolved, both conceptually and technically. But I guess that should be expected from 4 artists who, between them, have several 1st class honours from respected tertiary art institutions, awards and residencies under their belts.
Jack Condon's large scale hyper-real photographs of the chaotic dregs of a uninspired suburban life were compelling. Each carefully staged, the tableaus hint at a frozen moment: a bunch of firecracker sparklers in full fizz; a house of cards tenuously bury someone; a couple caught in (an unerotic) mid-bounce on the bed, the only give away, a slight blurring of flyaway hair. The mess strewn everywhere reminded me of those "I Spy" kiddies books - look carefully at the detail and find the hidden objects and messages which tell the story. There seem to be many stories hidden just beneath the surface of these works.
Jesse Hogan's paintings were of floor talks. The endless adjunct to the conceptual exhibition is the often too conceptual, not always enlightening, floor talk. Here Jesse flips it around, with the floor talk within an exhibition space, as the subject. He alludes to ambiguities of language and authorship around the works by recreating the scene of other artists at work. Interesting.
Sara Morawetz Quanta
installation shot First Draft Gallery Sept 2012 image courtesy the artist |
Sara Morawetz Untitled from exhibition Quanta archival pen on paper image courtesy the artist |
Each of the artists promises potential. The works are for sale - this is the time and place to take a small risk and collect current work by a young, not-so-established artist.
Then to Peloton, also an artist run space, in Surry Hills. Not every artist-run-space is dedicated to emerging artists. Peloton offers itself to a broader spectrum. Opening last week was Derek Kreckler who is a well recognised, respected artist currently researching for PhD in Creative Arts at Wollongong University. This new work forms part of that continuum of research.
Derek Kreckler
Dootch taking a breather after showing Kelton the best fishing spots 2012 installation image image courtesy the artist. Photo credit Vincent Bicego |
Derek Kreckler Document two (car) 2012 37.2 x 59.3cm dye-based inks on archival paper images courtesy the artist |
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It feels very comfortable being back in the blogging chair. I will keep at it. Until next time.....
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