Review: ‘Unforced Intimacies’ by Patricia Piccinini at Tolarno Galleries, Melbourne

Exhibition dates: 22nd October – 21st November 2009

 

Patricia Piccinini (Australian, b. 1965) 'The Strength of one Hand (With Canadian Mountain Goat)' 2009 from the exhibition 'Unforced Intimacies' by Patricia Piccinini at Tolarno Galleries, Melbourne, Oct - Nov, 2009

 

Patricia Piccinini (Australian, b. 1965)
The Strength of one Hand (With Canadian Mountain Goat)
2009
Silicone, fibreglass, human hair, clothing, Canadian Mountain Goat

 

 

We are the clouds that veil the midnight moon;
How restlessly they speed, and gleam, and quiver,
Streaking the darkness radiantly! – yet soon
Night closes round, and they are lost forever:

Or like forgotten lyres, whose dissonant strings
Give various response to each varying blast,
To whose frail frame no second motion brings
One mood or modulation like the last.

We rest. – A dream has power to poison sleep;
We rise. – One wandering thought pollutes the day;
We feel, conceive or reason, laugh or weep;
Embrace fond foe, or cast our cares away:

It is the same! – For, be it joy or sorrow,
The path of its departure still is free:
Man’s yesterday may ne’er be like his morrow;
Nought may endure but Mutability.

Mutability by Percy Bysshe Shelley

 

 

When human imagination takes flight, as it does in this exhibition, the results are superlative. Piccinini is at the height of her powers as an artist, in full control of the conceptual ideas, their presentation and the effect that they have on the viewer. Witty, funny, thought-provoking and at times a little scary Piccinini’s exhibition (paradoxically entitled Unforced Intimacies) is an act of revelatio: the pulling aside of the genetic curtain to see what lies beneath.

Featuring hyperrealist genetically modified creatures and human child figures Piccinini’s sculptures, drawings and video seem passionately alive in their verisimilitude (unlike Ricky Swallow’s resplendently dead relics at the NGV). In The Strength of one Hand (With Canadian Mountain Goat), the title perhaps a play on the traditional Zen koan The Sound of One Hand Clapping, a meditation on the nature of inner compassion, a walrus-child balances on one hand on the back of a Canadian Mountain Goat. The walrus-child has extended eyes, a voluminous lower lip with whiskers under the nose; the hyperreality of the hand on the back of the goat makes it seem like the hand will come alive! A mane of hair flows down the walrus-child’s back to feet that are conjoined – like an articulated merman – ending not in flippers but in toes complete with dirty, cracked and broken nails. Here the natural athleticism of the mountain goat, now dead and stuffed, is surmounted by the mutated walrus-child’s natural athleticism, poignantly suspended like an exclamation mark above the in-animate pommel horse.

In Balasana (The Child’s Pose) a child reposes in the yoga position on a tribal rug. Balanced on top of the child is a stuffed Red-necked Wallaby that perfectly inverts the concave of the child’s back, it’s front feet curled over while it’s rear feet are splayed. The luminosity of the skin of the child is incredible – such a technical feat to achieve this realism – that you are drawn to intimately examine the child’s face and hands. The purpose of The Child’s Pose in yoga is that it literally reminds us of our time as an infant and revives in us rather vivid memories of lying in this position. It also reminds us to cultivate our inner innocence so that we in turn may see the world without judgement or criticism. The paradoxes of the ‘unforced’ intimacy between the child and the wallaby can be read with this conceptualisation ‘in mind’.

With The Bottom Feeder (2009) Piccinini’s imagination soars to new heights. With the shoulders of a human, the legs and forearms of what seems like a marsupial, the lowered head of a newt with intense staring blue eye (see photograph above), luminescent freckled skin covered in hair and a rear end that consists of both male and female genitalia that forms a ‘face’, the hermaphroditic bottom feeder is a frighteningly surreal visage. Inevitably the viewer is drawn to the exposed rump through a seemingly unforced interactivity, examining the folds and flaps of the labia and the hanging scrotum of this succulent feeder. Here Piccinini draws on psychoanalysis and Lacan’s theory of the mirror stage in a child’s development – where the child wants to merge with the mother to erase the self / other split by fulfilling the mother’s desire by having sex with her – thus erasing the mother’s lack, the idea of lack represented by the lack of a penis.1

As Jean Baudrillard notes of the mass of bodies on Brazil’s Copacabana beach, “Thousands of bodies everywhere. In fact, just one body, a single immense ramified mass of flesh, all sexes merged. A single, shameless expanded human polyp, a single organism, in which all collude like the sperm in seminal fluid … The sexual act is permanent, but not in the sense of Nordic eroticism: it is the epidermal promiscuity, the confusion of bodies, lips, buttocks, hips – a single fractal entity disseminated beneath the membrane of the sun.”2

An so it is here, all sexes merged within the anthropomorphised body of The Bottom Feeder, a body that challenges and subverts human perceptions of the form and sexuality of animals (including ourselves) that inhabit the world.

In Doubting Thomas (2008), my favourite piece in the exhibition, a skeptical child with pale and luminous skin is about to put his hand inside the mouth of a genetically modified mole like creature that has reared it’s hairy snout to reveal a luscious, fluid-filled mouth replete with suckers and teeth. You want to shout ‘No, don’t go there!’ as the child’s absent mother has probably already warned him – to no avail. Children only learn through experience, I suspect in this case a nasty one.


The terrains the Piccinini interrogates (nature and artifice, biogenetics, cloning, stem cell research, consumer culture) are a rematerialisation of the actual world through morphological ‘mapping’ onto the genomes of the future. Morphogenetic fields3 seem to surround the work with an intense aura; surrounded by this aura the animals and children become more spiritual in their silence. Experiencing this new world promotes an evolution in the way in which we conceive the future possibilities of life on this earth, this brave but mutably surreal new world.

This is truly one of the best exhibitions of the year in Melbourne.

Dr Marcus Bunyan

 

1/ Klages, M. Jacques Lacan. Boulder: University of Colorado, 2001 [Online] Cited 09/10/2009 no longer available online

2/ Baudrillard, Jean. Fragments: Cool Memories III, 1990-1995. London: Verso, 1997, p. 74

3/ “A morphogenetic field is a group of cells able to respond to discrete, localised biochemical signals leading to the development of specific morphological structures or organs.” Morphogenetic field definition on Wikipedia [Online] Cited 05/05/2019

     

     

    Patricia Piccinini (Australian, b. 1965) 'The Strength of one Hand (With Canadian Mountain Goat)' 2009 from the exhibition 'Unforced Intimacies' by Patricia Piccinini at Tolarno Galleries, Melbourne, Oct - Nov, 2009

     

    Patricia Piccinini (Australian, b. 1965)
    The Strength of one Hand (With Canadian Mountain Goat)
    2009
    Silicone, fibreglass, human hair, clothing, Canadian Mountain Goat

     

    Patricia Piccinini (Australian, b. 1965) 'The Strength of one Hand (With Canadian Mountain Goat)' 2009 (detail) from the exhibition 'Unforced Intimacies' by Patricia Piccinini at Tolarno Galleries, Melbourne, Oct - Nov, 2009

     

    Patricia Piccinini (Australian, b. 1965)
    The Strength of one Hand (With Canadian Mountain Goat) (detail)
    2009
    Silicone, fibreglass, human hair, clothing, Canadian Mountain Goat

     

    Patricia Piccinini (Australian, b. 1965) 'The Bottom Feeder' 2009

    Patricia Piccinini (Australian, b. 1965) 'The Bottom Feeder' 2009

     

    Patricia Piccinini (Australian, b. 1965)
    The Bottom Feeder
    2009
    Silicone, fibreglass, steel, fox fur

     

    Patricia Piccinini (Australian, b. 1965) 'The Bottom Feeder' 2009 (detail)

     

    Patricia Piccinini (Australian, b. 1965)
    The Bottom Feeder (detail)
    2009
    Silicone, fibreglass, steel, fox fur

     

     

    Exploring concepts of what is “natural” in the digital age, Patricia Piccinini brings a deeply personal perspective to her work.

    Rachel Kent notes: “Since the early 1990s, Piccinini has pursued an interest in the human form and its potential for manipulation and enhancement through bio-technical intervention. From the mapping of the human genome to the growth of human tissue and organs from stem cells, Piccinini’s art charts a terrain in which scientific progress and ethical questions are intertwined.”

    Text from the Tolarno Galleries website [Online] Cited 05/05/2019 no longer available online

     

    Patricia Piccinini (Australian, b. 1965) 'Doubting Thomas' 2008

     

    Patricia Piccinini (Australian, b. 1965)
    Doubting Thomas
    2008
    Silicone, fibreglass, human hair, clothing, chair

     

    Patricia Piccinini (Australian, b. 1965) 'Doubting Thomas' 2008 (detail)

     

    Patricia Piccinini (Australian, b. 1965)
    Doubting Thomas (detail)
    2008

     

    Patricia Piccinini (Australian, b. 1965) 'Doubting Thomas' 2008 (detail)

    Patricia Piccinini (Australian, b. 1965) 'Doubting Thomas' 2008 (detail)

     

    Patricia Piccinini (Australian, b. 1965)
    Doubting Thomas (detail)
    2008

     

     

    “Time and again my work returns to children, and their ambiguous relationships with the (only just) imaginary animals that I create. Children embody a number of the key issues in my work. Obviously they directly express the idea of genetics – both natural and artificial – but beyond that they also imply the responsibilities that a creator has to their creations. The innocence and vulnerability of children is powerfully emotive and evokes empathy – their presence softens the hardness of some of the more difficult ideas, but it can also elevate the anxiety level.”


    Patricia Piccinini quoted on the Kaldor Public Art Projects website [Online] Cited 05/11/2009 no longer available online

     

    “I am interested in the way that contemporary biotechnology and even philosophy erode the traditional boundaries between the artificial and the natural, as well as between species and even the basic distinctions between animal and human.”


    Patricia Piccinini quoted in Sarah Hetherington. “Patricia Piccinini: Related Individuals,” on the Artlink website [Online] Cited 05/05/2019. No longer available online

     

     

    Patricia Piccinini (Australian, b. 1965) 'Balasana' 2009 (detail)

     

    Patricia Piccinini (Australian, b. 1965)
    Balasana
    Silicone, fibreglass, human hair, clothing, Red-necked Wallaby, rug
    2009

     

     

    Tolarno Galleries
    Level 4, 104 Exhibition Street,
    Melbourne, Vic, 3000
    Phone: +61 3 9654 6000

    Opening hours:
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    Saturday 1 – 5pm

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    Review: ‘Nocturnalians and Shadow Eaters’ by Vera Möller at Sophie Gannon Gallery, Richmond, Melbourne

    Exhibition dates: 20th October – 14th November 2009

     

    Vera Möller (Australian, b. 1955 Germany arrived Australia 1986) 'Rabinova' 2009 from the exhibition 'Nocturnalians and Shadow Eaters' by Vera Möller at Sophie Gannon Gallery, Richmond, Melbourne, Oct - Nov, 2009

     

    Vera Möller (Australian, b. 1955 Germany arrived Australia 1986)
    Rabinova
    2009
    Oil on linen
    82 x 76cm

     

     

    “I am interested in this border between the real and the imagined, the constructed and the natural.”


    Vera Möller quoted in “Artist earns her stripes” on The Age newspaper website May 28, 2005 [Online] Cited 23/06/2022

     

     

    There is a lot of mutability floating around current exhibitions in Melbourne at the moment. At the National Gallery of Victoria we have the deathly, eloquent freeze frame mutability of Ricky Swallow; at Tolarno Galleries we have the genetic hyper-realist mutability of Patricia Piccinini; and at Sophie Gannon Gallery we have the surreal, spatial mutability of Vera Möller.

    In this exhibition the real meets the imagined and the constructed encounters the natural in delicate sculptures and beautiful paintings. Coral snake and mutated striped hydras float above Phillip Huntersque backgrounds, looking oh so innocent until one remembers that hydras are predatory animals: the stripes, like the strips of a prisoners uniform not so innocent after all.

    These ‘portraits’ (for that is what they strike me as) emerge from the recesses of the subconscious, rising up like some absurd alien fish from the deep. The sculptural forests of mutated specimens waft on the breeze of the ocean current. This detritus of biotechnology, living in the dark and the shadow, emerges into the light and space of the gallery – genetic recombinations in which a strands of genetic material are broken and then joined to another DNA molecule. In Möller’s work this chromosomal crossover has led to offspring (called ‘recombinants’) that dance to a surrealist tune: genetic algorithms that use mutation to maintain genetic diversity from one generation of chromosomes to the next.1

    Spatially there is a lightness of touch and a beauty to their representation that brings the work alive within the gallery space. However, Möller’s recombinants are as deadly as they are beautiful. I really liked these creatures narcoleptic shadow dances.

    Dr Marcus Bunyan

     

    1/ Definition of mutation (genetic algorithm) in Wikipedia.


      Many thankx to Sophie Gannon Gallery for allowing me to publish the art work in the posting. Please click on the photographs for a larger version of the image.

       

       

      Vera Möller (Australian, b. 1955 Germany arrived Australia 1986) 'Martinette' 2009 (installation view)

       

      Vera Möller (Australian, b. 1955 Germany arrived Australia 1986)
      Martinette (installation view)
      2009
      Modelling material, acrylic and enamel paint, MDF, perspex cove

       

      Vera Möller (Australian, b. 1955 Germany arrived Australia 1986) 'Veronium' 2007 from the exhibition 'Nocturnalians and Shadow Eaters' by Vera Möller at Sophie Gannon Gallery, Richmond, Melbourne, Oct - Nov, 2009

       

      Vera Möller (Australian, b. 1955 Germany arrived Australia 1986)
      Veronium
      2007
      Oil on canvas
      167 x 199cm

       

      Vera Möller (Australian, b. 1955 Germany arrived Australia 1986) 'Shapinette' 2009 from the exhibition 'Nocturnalians and Shadow Eaters' by Vera Möller at Sophie Gannon Gallery, Richmond, Melbourne, Oct - Nov, 2009

       

      Vera Möller (Australian, b. 1955 Germany arrived Australia 1986)
      Shapinette
      2009
      Oil on linen
      101 x 101cm

       

      Vera Möller (Australian, b. 1955 Germany arrived Australia 1986) 'Telenium' 2009

       

      Vera Möller (Australian, b. 1955 Germany arrived Australia 1986)
      Telenium
      2009
      Oil on linen
      165 x 135cm

       

      Vera Möller (Australian, b. 1955 Germany arrived Australia 1986) 'Rubella' 2008-2009

       

      Vera Möller (Australian, b. 1955 Germany arrived Australia 1986)
      Rubella
      2008-2009

       

      Vera Möller (Australian, b. 1955 Germany arrived Australia 1986) 'Bureniana' 2008 (installation view)

       

      Vera Möller (Australian, b. 1955 Germany arrived Australia 1986)
      Bureniana (installation view)
      2008
      Modelling material, acrylic and enamel paint, MDF, perspex cover
      60 x 61 x 61cm

       

      Installation photo of 'Nocturnalians and Shadow Eaters' by Vera Moller at Sophie Gannon Gallery, Melbourne

      Installation photo of 'Nocturnalians and Shadow Eaters' by Vera Moller at Sophie Gannon Gallery, Melbourne

       

      Installation photographs of Nocturnalians and Shadow Eaters by Vera Möller at Sophie Gannon Gallery, Melbourne
      Photos: Marcus Bunyan

       

       

      Interested in the boundaries between the real and the imagined, Vera Möller creates paintings and sculptures by placing fictional hybrid plants in existing terrains. Bright colours and patterns, coral-like and succulent-plant forms and toadstool shapes describe her depictions of dreamt-up specimens that evoke the natural world. Möller’s ‘fantasy specimens’ demonstrate the way in which her science background and art practice have steadily converged.

      After training as a biologist in Germany, Möller migrated to Australia in 1986. She later completed a Bachelor of Fine Art at the Victorian College of the Arts and a PhD at Monash University. Her work has been exhibited in the USA, Japan, Finland, France, Germany and the UK, as well as throughout Australia.

      Text from the Sophie Gannon Gallery website [Online] Cited 03/05/2019

       

      Vera Möller (Australian, b. 1955 Germany arrived Australia 1986) 'Benthinium' 2008-2009

       

      Vera Möller (Australian, b. 1955 Germany arrived Australia 1986)
      Benthinium
      2008-2009
      Oil on linen
      140 x 220cm

       

      Vera Möller (Australian, b. 1955 Germany arrived Australia 1986) 'Tokyana' 2009

       

      Vera Möller (Australian, b. 1955 Germany arrived Australia 1986)
      Tokyana
      2009
      Oil on linen
      137 x 107cm

       

       

      Sophie Gannon Gallery
      2, Albert Street, Richmond, Melbourne

      Opening hours:
      Tuesday – Saturday 11am – 5pm

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      Review: ‘Long Distance Vision: Three Australian Photographers’ at The Ian Potter Centre NGV Australia, Federation Square, Melbourne

      Exhibition dates: 28th August, 2009 – 21st February, 2010

       

      Max Pam (born Australia 1949, lived in Brunei 1980-1983) 'Road from Bamiyan' 1971 from the exhibition 'Long Distance Vision: Three Australian Photographers' at The Ian Potter Centre NGV Australia, Federation Square, Melbourne, Aug 2009 - Feb 2010

       

      Max Pam (born Australia 1949, lived in Brunei 1980-1983)
      Road from Bamiyan
      1971
      Gelatin silver photograph
      20.1 x 20.1cm
      National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne
      Purchased, 1979

       

       

      Long Distance Vision is a disappointingly wane exploration of travel photography at NGV Australia. With the exception of the work of Max Pam the exhibition lacks insight into the phenomena that the curators want the work to philosophically investigate: namely how photographs shape our expectations of a place (even before we arrive) and how photographs also serve to confirm our experience – the picture as powerful mnemonic tool.

      Firstly a quick story: when travelling in America to study at the Kinsey Institute I boarded a train from Chicago to what I thought was Bloomington, Indiana only to arrive many hours later at Bloomington, Illinois. Unbeknownst to me this Bloomington also had a motel of the same name as I was staying at in Indiana! After much confusion I ended up at the local airport trying to catch a single seater aircraft to Bloomington, Indiana with no luck – at the end of my tether, fearful in a foreign country, in tears because I just had to be at this appointment the next morning. Riding to my rescue was a nineteen year old kid with no shoes, driving an ex-cop car, who drove me across the Mid-West states stopping at petrol stops in the dead of night. It was a surreal experience, one that I will never forget for the rest of my life … fear, apprehension, alienation, happiness, joy and the sublime all rolled into one.

      I tell this story to illustrate a point about travel – that you never know what is going to happen, what experiences you will have, even your final destination. To me, photographs of these adventures not only document this dislocation but step beyond pure representation to become art that re-presents the nature of our existence.

      Matthew Sleeth‘s street photographs could be taken almost anywhere in the world (if it were not for a building with German writing on it). His snapshot aesthetic of caught moments, blinded people and dissected bodies in the observed landscape are evinced (to show in a clear manner; to prove beyond any reasonable doubt; to manifest; to make evident; to bring to light; to evidence – yes to bring to light, to evidence as photography does!) in mundane, dull, almost lifeless prints – ‘heavy’ photographs with a lack of shadow detail combined with a shallow depth of field. His remains, the people walking down the street and their shadow, are odd but as as The Age art critic Robert Nelson succinctly notes in his review of this exhibition, To become art, the odd cannot remain merely quaint but has to signify an existential anomaly by implication.”1

      If we look at the seminal photographs from the book The Americans by Robert Frank we see in their dislocated view of America a foreigners view of the country the artist was travelling across – a subjective view of America that reveals as much about the state of mind of the artist as the country he was exposing. No such exposition happens in the works of Matthew Sleeth.

      Christine Godden‘s photographs of family and friends have little to do with travel photography and I struggle to understand their inclusion in this exhibition. Though they are reasonable enough photographs in their own right – small black and white photographs of small intimacies (at the beach, in the garden, at the kitchen table, on the phone, on the porch, on the float, etc…) Godden’s anthropomorphist bodies have nothing to do with a vision of a new land as she had been living in San Francisco, New York and Rochester for six years over the period that these photographs were taken. Enough said.

      The highlight of the exhibition is the work of Max Pam. I remember going the National Gallery of Victoria in the late 1980s to view this series of work in the collection – and what a revelation they were then and remain so today. The square formatted, dark sepia toned silver gelatin prints of the people and landscapes of Tibet are both monumental and personal at one and the same time. You are drawn into their intimacies: the punctum of a boys feet; the gathering of families; camels running before a windstorm; human beings as specks in a vast landscape.

      “If the world is unfair or beyond our understanding, sublime places suggest it is not surprising things should be thus. We are the playthings of the forces that laid out the oceans and chiselled the mountains. Sublime places acknowledge limitations that we might otherwise encounter with anxiety or anger in the ordinary flow of events. It is not just nature that defies us. Human life is as overwhelming, but it is the vast spaces of nature that perhaps provide us with the finest, the most respectful reminder of all that exceeds us. If we spend time with them, they may help us to accept more graciously the great unfathomable events that molest our lives and will inevitably return us to dust.”2

      The meditation on place and space that the artist has undertaken gives true insight into the connection of man and earth, coming closest to Alain de Botton’s understanding of the significance of sublime places. Through a vision of a distant land the photographs transport us in an emotional journey that furthers our understanding of the fragility of life both of the planet and of ourselves.

      While the National Gallery of Victoria holds some excellent photography exhibitions (such as Andreas Gursky and Rennie Ellis for example) this was a missed opportunity. The interesting concept of the exhibition required a more rigorous investigation instead of such a cursory analysis (which can be evidenced by the catalogue ‘essay’: one page the size of a quarter of an A4 piece of paper that glosses over the whole history of travel photography in a few blithe sentences).

      Inspiration could have easily been found in Alain de Botton’s excellent book The Art of Travel. Here we find chapters titled “On Anticipation”, “On Travelling Places”, “On the Exotic”, “On Curiosity”, “On the Country and the City” and “On the Sublime” to name but a few, with places and art work to illustrate the journey: what more is needed to excite the mind!

      Take Charles Baudelaire for example. He travelled outside his native France only once and never ventured abroad again. Baudelaire still dreamt of going to Lisbon, or Java or to the Netherlands but “the destination was not really the point. The true desire was to get away, to go, as he concluded, ‘Anywhere! Anywhere! So long as it is out of the world!'”3

      Heavens, we don’t even have to leave home to create travel photography that is out of the world! Our far-sighted vision (like that of photographer Gregory Crewdson) can create psychological narratives of imaginative journeys played out for the camera.

      Perhaps what was needed was a longer gestation period, further research into the theoretical nuances of travel photography (one a little death, a remembrance; both a dislocation in the non-linearity of time and space), a gathering of photographs from collections around Australia to better evidence the conceptual basis for the exhibition and a greater understanding of the irregular possibilities of travel photography – so that the work and words could truly reflect the title of the exhibition Long Distance Vision.

      Dr Marcus Bunyan

       

      1/ Nelson, Robert. “In blurred focus: le freak c’est chic,” in The Age newspaper. Friday, October 23rd 2009, p. 18

      2/ de Botton, Alain. The Art of Travel. London: Penguin, 2002, p. 178-179

      3/ Ibid., p. 34

       

      Max Pam (born Australia 1949, lived in Brunei 1980-83) 'My donkey, our valley, Sarchu' 1977 from the exhibition 'Long Distance Vision: Three Australian Photographers' at The Ian Potter Centre NGV Australia, Federation Square, Melbourne, Aug 2009 - Feb 2010

       

      Max Pam (born Australia 1949, lived in Brunei 1980-1983)
      My donkey, our valley, Sarchu
      1977
      Gelatin silver photograph
      20.1 x 20.1cm
      National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne
      Purchased, 1979
      © Max Pam

       

      Max Pam (Australian, b. 1949) 'Sisters' 1977 from the exhibition 'Long Distance Vision: Three Australian Photographers' at The Ian Potter Centre NGV Australia, Federation Square, Melbourne, Aug 2009 - Feb 2010

       

      Max Pam (born Australia 1949, lived in Brunei 1980-1983)
      Sisters
      1977
      Gelatin silver photograph
      20.1 x 20.1cm
      National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne
      Purchased, 1979
      © Max Pam

       

      Max Pam (Australian, b. 1949) 'Tibetan nomads' 1977

       

      Max Pam (born Australia 1949, lived in Brunei 1980-1983)
      Tibetan nomads
      1977
      Gelatin silver photograph
      20.1 x 20.2cm
      National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne
      Purchased, 1979
      © Max Pam

       

      Christine Godden (Australian, b. 1947) 'Bobbie and Amitabha at the beach' c. 1972

       

      Christine Godden (Australian, b. 1947)
      Bobbie and Amitabha at the beach
      c. 1972
      Gelatin silver photograph
      13.2 x 20.1cm
      National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne
      Purchased from Admission Funds, 1991
      © Christine Godden

       

      Christine Godden (Australian, b. 1947) 'Elliot holding a ring' 1973

       

      Christine Godden (Australian, b. 1947)
      Elliot holding a ring
      1973
      Gelatin silver photograph
      15.0 x 22.8cm
      National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne
      Purchased from Admission Funds, 1991
      © Christine Godden

       

      Christine Godden.Christine Godden (Australian, b. 1947)kitchen table' 1973

       

      Christine Godden (Australian, b. 1947)
      Joanie at the kitchen table
      1973, printed 1986
      Gelatin silver photograph
      20.1 x 30.6cm
      National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne
      Purchased from Admission Funds, 1991
      © Christine Godden

       

      Christine Godden (Australian, b. 1947) 'With Leigh on the porch' 1972

       

      Christine Godden (Australian, b. 1947)
      With Leigh on the porch
      1972, printed 1986
      Gelatin silver photograph
      20.2 x 30.5cm
      National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne
      Purchased from Admission Funds, 1991
      © Christine Godden

       

       

      “The National Gallery of Victoria will celebrate the work of Christine Godden, Max Pam and Matthew Sleeth in a new exhibition, Long Distance Vision: Three Australian Photographers opening 28 August.

      Long Distance Vision will include over 60 photographs from the NGV Collection exploring the concept of the ‘tourist gaze’ and its relationship with the three artists.

      Susan van Wyk, Curator Photography, NGV said the exhibition provides a fascinating insight into the unusual perspective brought by the three photographers to their varied world travel destinations.

      “There’s a sense in the works in the exhibition that the photographers are not from the places they choose to photograph, and that each is a visitor delighting in the scenes they encounter.

      “What is notable about the photographs in Long Distance Vision is that rather than focussing on the well known scenes that each artist encountered, they have turned their attention to the ‘little things’, the details of the everyday,” said Ms van Wyk.

      From the nineteenth century, photography has been a means by which people could discover the world, initially through personal collection and albums, and later via postcards, magazines, books and the internet.

      Dr Gerard Vaughan, Director, NGV said that both contemporary photographers and tourists use the camera as a means to explore and capture the world.

      “Through their photographs, the three artists featured in Long Distance Vision show us highly individual ways of seeing the world. This exhibition will surprise and delight visitors as our attention is drawn to not only what is different but what remains the same as we travel the world,” said Dr Vaughan.

      Born in Melbourne in 1949, Max Pam began his career in various commercial photography studios in the 1960s. After responding to a university notice for assistance to drive a Volkswagen from Calcutta to London in 1969, Pam got his first taste of being a traveller. The body of Pam’s work in this exhibition is from the series The Himalayas, which was photographed over a number of early visits to India.

      Christine Godden also travelled the popular overland route between Europe and India in the early 1970s, returning to Sydney in 1978. In 1972, after a period of travelling, Godden found her home in the US where she remained for six years. Godden’s photographs in this exhibition were taken between 1972 and 1974 during her stay in the US.

      Born in Melbourne in 1972, Matthew Sleeth is another seasoned traveller. During the late 1990s, Sleeth settled in Opfikon, an outer suburb of Zurich, Switzerland. The series of photographs in Long Distance Vision were taken during this time, showing Sleeth’s interest not only in street photography, but also in the narrative possibilities in everyday scenes. Dotted with garishly coloured playhouses, naive sculptures and whimsical arrangements of garden gnomes Sleeth’s photographs go beyond the ‘picture-perfect’ scenes of typical tourist photography.

      Long Distance Vision: Three Australian Photographers is on display at The Ian Potter Centre: NGV Australia, Federation Square from 28 August 2009 to 21 February 2010.”

      Text from the National Gallery of Victoria press release

       

      Matthew Sleeth (Australian, b. 1972) From the series 'Opfikon' 1997

      Matthew Sleeth (Australian, b. 1972) From the series 'Opfikon' 1997

      Matthew Sleeth (Australian, b. 1972) From the series 'Opfikon' 1997

      Matthew Sleeth (Australian, b. 1972) From the series 'Opfikon' 1997

      Matthew Sleeth (Australian, b. 1972) From the series 'Opfikon' 1997

       

      Matthew Sleeth (Australian, b. 1972)
      Photographs from the series Opfikon
      1997, printed 2004
      Type C photograph
      43.2 x 43.0cm
      National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne
      Presented through the NGV Foundation by Patrick Corrigan, Governor, 2005
      © Matthew Sleeth courtesy of Sophie Gannon Gallery, Melbourne

       

       

      The Ian Potter Centre: NGV Australia Federation Square
      Corner of Russell and 
Flinders Streets, Melbourne

      Opening hours:
      Every day 10am – 5pm

      National Gallery of Victoria website

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      Exhibition: ‘William Christenberry: Photographs, 1961-2005’ at the Morris Museum of Art, Augusta, Georgia

      Exhibition dates: 12th September – 8th November, 2009

       

      Many thankx to the Morris Museum of Art for allowing me to publish the photographs in the posting. Please click on the photographs for a larger version of the image.

       

      William Christenberry (American, 1936-2016) 'Green Warehouse, Newbern, Alabama' 1997 from the exhibition 'William Christenberry: Photographs, 1961-2005' at the Morris Museum of Art, Augusta, Georgia, Sept - Nov, 2009

       

      William Christenberry (American, 1936-2016)
      Green Warehouse, Newbern, Alabama
      1997
      Dye coupler print

       

       

      Widely recognised as a pioneer in the field of colour photography, William Christenberry has used this expressive medium to explore the American South for forty years. While pursuing this artistic quest he has drawn inspiration from Walker Evans, and influenced a generation of emerging photographers. William Christenberry: Photographs, 1961-2005 surveys his poetic documentation of southern vernacular architecture, signage, and landscape using a wide range of cameras, from his earliest Brownie photographs of the early 1960s to his later work with a large-format camera. Combining never-before-seen photographs, both old and new, with images that are now iconic, this exhibition comprises fifty vintage photographic works and one sculpture. Together, they convey the breadth of his singular photographic vision. Discuss the artistic objectives of his long-term interpretation of the Southern landscape with Michelle Norris of National Public Radio, Christenberry explained: “What I really feel very strongly about, and I hope reflects in all aspects of my work, is the human touch, the humanness of things, the positive and sometimes the negative and sometimes the sad.”

      Text from the Morris Museum of Art website [Online] Cited 15/10/2009. No longer available online

       

      William Christenberry (American, 1936-2016) 'House and Car, near Akron, Alabama' 1981 from the exhibition 'William Christenberry: Photographs, 1961-2005' at the Morris Museum of Art, Augusta, Georgia, Sept - Nov, 2009

       

      William Christenberry (American, 1936-2016)
      House and Car, near Akron, Alabama
      1981

       

      William Christenberry (American, 1936-2016) 'Kudzu with Storm Cloud, near Akron, Alabama' 1981

       

      William Christenberry (American, 1936-2016)
      Kudzu with Storm Cloud, near Akron, Alabama
      1981

       

       

      “William Christenberry Photographs, 1961-2005, a phenomenal retrospective exhibition of Christenberry’s photographs, opens to the public at the Morris Museum of Art on September 16, 2009. The Morris Museum is the only Georgia venue hosting this exhibition.

      “‘William Christenberry Photographs, 1961-2005’ is an overview of the career of one of the South’s most important living artists,” said Kevin Grogan, director of the Morris Museum of Art. “Organised by the Aperture Foundation, this exhibition brings to Augusta a body of work like no other. No one has so scrupulously and attentively captured a sense of place and time in quite the way that Bill Christenberry has. He is a remarkable artist, as is proven by this extraordinary body of work. He is America’s Proust.”

      Since the early 1960s, William Christenberry has plumbed the regional identity of the American South, focusing his attention primarily on his childhood home, Hale County, Alabama. Widely recognised as a pioneer in the field of colour photography, Christenberry draws inspiration from the work of Walker Evans, while paralleling the work of such international practitioners as Bernd and Hilla Becher. Ranging from his earliest Brownie photographs to his later work with a large-format camera, William Christenberry Photographs, 1961-2005 is a survey of the artist’s poetic documentation of the Southern landscape and vernacular architecture that surrounded him as he grew up. The exhibition, coupling never-before-seen photographs with images that are now iconic, reveals how the history, the very story of place, is at the heart of Christenberry’s ongoing project. While the focus of his work is the American South, it touches on universal themes related to family, culture, nature, spirituality, memory, and ageing. Christenberry photographs real things in the real world – ramshackle buildings, weathered commercial signs, lonely back roads, rusted-out cars, whitewashed churches, decorated graves. Dutifully returning to photograph the same locations annually – the green barn, the palmist building, the Bar-B-Q Inn, among others – he has fulfilled a personal ritual and documented the physical changes wrought by every single year. Straddling past and present, Christenberry’s art suggests the gravity and power of the passage of time.

      The exhibition is accompanied by a stunning monograph entitled William Christenberry, published by Aperture in cooperation with the Smithsonian American Art Museum. The book, a comprehensive survey, presents all aspects of the artist’s oeuvre as he intended it to be viewed and considered. More than half the work reproduced has not been previously published.”

      Text from the press release on the Morris Museum of Art website [Online] Cited 15/10/2009. No longer available online

       

      William Christenberry (American, 1936-2016) 'Sprott Church in Alabama' 1971

       

      William Christenberry (American, 1936-2016)
      Sprott Church in Alabama
      1971

       

      William Christenberry (American, 1936-2016) 'T.B. Hick's Store, Newbern, Alabama' 1976 from the exhibition 'William Christenberry: Photographs, 1961-2005' at the Morris Museum of Art, Augusta, Georgia, Sept - Nov, 2009

       

      William Christenberry (American, 1936-2016)
      T.B. Hick’s Store, Newbern, Alabama
      1976

       

      William Christenberry (American, 1936-2016) 'Farmhouse, Hale County, Alabama' 1977

       

      William Christenberry (American, 1936-2016)
      Farmhouse, Hale County, Alabama
      1977

       

      William Christenberry (American, 1936-2016) 'House and Car, near Akron, Alabama' 1978

       

      William Christenberry (American, 1936-2016)
      House and Car, near Akron, Alabama
      1978

       

      William Christenberry (American, 1936-2016) 'Palmist Building, Havanna, Alabama' 1980

       

      William Christenberry (American, 1936-2016)
      Palmist Building, Havanna, Alabama
      1980

       

      The Palmist Building is one of the most iconic structures in Christenberry’s extensive body of work. When he was a child, the clapboard building was a general store operated by his great uncle, but it was later home to a palm reader. The inverted hand-painted sign that covers a broken window initially enticed him to photograph the building in 1961. His earliest photographs pinpoint the sign itself and the peeling whitewash around it. As he became more engrossed in the project, Christenberry carefully examined the relationship of the building to its surroundings, particularly the chinaberry tree that eventually engulfed it.

      Text from the High Museum of Art website

       

      William Christenberry (American, 1936-2016) 'Rabbit Pen, near Moundville, Alabama' 1998

       

      William Christenberry (American, 1936-2016)
      Rabbit Pen, near Moundville, Alabama
      1998

       

      William Christenberry (American, 1936-2016) 'Old House, near Akron, Alabama' 1964

       

      William Christenberry (American, 1936-2016)
      Old House, near Akron, Alabama
      1964

       

       

      Morris Museum of Art
      1 Tenth Street
      Augusta, Georgia 30901
      Phone: 706-724-7501

      Opening Hours:
      Tuesday – Saturday: 10.00am – 5.00pm
      Sunday: 12 – 5.00pm
      Closed Mondays and major holidays

      Morris Museum of Art website

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      Review: ‘October 2009’ jewellery by Carlier Makigawa at Gallery Funaki, Melbourne

      Exhibition dates: 6th October – 31st October, 2009

       

      Carlier Makigawa (Australian, b. 1952) 'Brooch' 2009 from the exhibition 'October 2009' jewellery by Carlier Makigawa at Gallery Funaki, Melbourne, October 2009

       

      Carlier Makigawa (Australian, b. 1952)
      Brooch
      2009
      Silver, paint

       

       

      Jewellery as art; is art

      Brooches, objects

      Robust/delicate

      Holistic body of work

      Affirmation of line and form

      Simplicity/complexity of shapes

      Span ______  (meta)physical

      [Interior] exterior!

      elemental | articulation

      Volume ((( ))) form

      &

      arch-itecture

      SPACE

      √

      beauty

      ……………………….

      Dr Marcus Bunyan


      Many thankx to Gallery Funaki for allowing me to publish the photographs in the posting. Please click on the photographs for a larger version of the image.

       

       

      Carlier Makigawa (Australian, b. 1952) 'Brooch' 2009 from the exhibition 'October 2009' jewellery by Carlier Makigawa at Gallery Funaki, Melbourne, October 2009

       

      Carlier Makigawa (Australian, b. 1952)
      Brooch
      2009
      Silver

       

      Carlier Makigawa (Australian, b. 1952) 'Brooch' 2009

       

      Carlier Makigawa (Australian, b. 1952)
      Brooch
      2009
      Silver

       

      Carlier Makigawa (Australian, b. 1952) 'Brooch 1a' 2009 from the exhibition 'October 2009' jewellery by Carlier Makigawa at Gallery Funaki, Melbourne, October 2009

       

      Carlier Makigawa (Australian, b. 1952)
      Brooch
      2009
      Silver

       

       

      “A spiritual and private space. Ritual object, jewellery. Linear structures appear fragile and monumental to cradle the internal spirit. They appear to float in space, hovering, penetrating, a temporary existence. Nature is the reference, and the geometry of nature and architecture inform this world.”


      Carlier Makigawa

       

       

      Carlier Makigawa explores the parameters of small spaces in her new exhibition October 2009. Her spare, exacting constructions in silver wire have a monumentality that defies their scale and delicacy. Her new work consists of brooches and objects which move beyond the botanical inspiration of her earlier work to engage with more abstract notions of movement, compression and spatial manipulation.

      Text from the Gallery Funaki website [Online] Cited 01/05/2019 no longer available online

       

      Carlier Makigawa (Australian, b. 1952) 'Object' 2009

       

      Carlier Makigawa (Australian, b. 1952)
      Object
      2009
      Silver

       

      Carlier Makigawa (Australian, b. 1952) 'Object' 2009

       

      Carlier Makigawa (Australian, b. 1952)
      Object
      2009
      Silver

       

      Carlier Makigawa (Australian, b. 1952) 'Brooch 1' 2009

       

      Carlier Makigawa (Australian, b. 1952)
      Brooch
      2009
      Silver

       

      Carlier Makigawa (Australian, b. 1952) 'Geometric Neckpiece' 2009

       

      Carlier Makigawa (Australian, b. 1952)
      Neckpiece
      2009
      Silver

       

       

      Gallery Funaki website

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      Exhibition: ‘The Abstracted Landscape’ at the Laurence Miller Gallery, New York

      Exhibition dates: 24th September – 14th November, 2009

      Exhibition artists: Peter Bialobrzeski, Stephane Couturier, DoDo Jin Ming, Toshio Shibata

       

      Many thankx to Laurence Miller Gallery for allowing me to publish the photographs in the posting. Please click on the photographs for a larger version of the image.

       

      DoDo Jin Ming (Chinese, b. 1955) 'Behind My Eyes 2nd Movement, Plate I' 2002 from the exhibition 'The Abstracted Landscape' at the Laurence Miller Gallery, New York, Sept - Nov, 2009

       

      DoDo Jin Ming (Chinese, b. 1955)
      Behind My Eyes 2nd Movement, Plate I
      2002

       

      DoDo Jin Ming (Chinese, b. 1955) 'Behind My Eyes 2nd Movement, Plate VIII' 2003 from the exhibition 'The Abstracted Landscape' at the Laurence Miller Gallery, New York, Sept - Nov, 2009

       

      DoDo Jin Ming (Chinese, b. 1955)
      Behind My Eyes 2nd Movement, Plate VIII
      2003

       

      DoDo Jin Ming (Chinese, b. 1955) 'Free Element, Plate XXX' 2002

       

      DoDo Jin Ming (Chinese, b. 1955)
      Free Element, Plate XXX
      2002

       

      Stéphane Couturier (French, b. 1957) 'Olympic Parkway No. 1' 2001 from the exhibition 'The Abstracted Landscape' at the Laurence Miller Gallery, New York, Sept - Nov, 2009

       

      Stéphane Couturier (French, b. 1957)
      Olympic Parkway No. 1
      2001

       

      Stéphane Couturier (French, b. 1957) 'Proctor Valley No. 1' 2004

       

      Stéphane Couturier (French, b. 1957)
      Proctor Valley No. 1
      2004

       

       

      Laurence Miller is pleased to present, as its opening show for the fall, The Abstracted Landscape, featuring the work of four midcareer international artists: Peter Bialobrzeski, from Hamburg; Stephane Couturier, from Paris; DoDo Jin Ming from Beijing and New York; and Toshio Shibata, from Tokyo.

      These four photographers each translate the landscape into a poetic and abstract vision, utilising techniques and processes unique to photography to create scenes that remain sufficiently recognisable yet unobtainable through the naked eye. Peter Bialobrzeski, in his series Lost in Transition, photographs rapid urbanisation and industrialisation by taking very long exposures, which create other-worldly colours and lighting not visible to the naked eye. Stéphane Couturier embraces the camera’s monocularity in his series from Havana to flatten our normal reading of space and render totally ambiguous the walls of a decaying interior. DoDo Jin Ming, in her series Behind My Eyes, applies the technique of negative printing to render mysterious and foreboding fields of sunflowers. And Toshio Shibata wields his large view camera, with multiple tilts and swings, to look straight down the side of a dam, creating a vertigo-inducing viewpoint we would be unable (and perhaps unwilling) to see directly with our own eyes.

      Abstraction in the landscape has a rich tradition within the history of photography. Felix Teynard’s Egyptian views from the mid-1850’s are wonderfully abstract, as are those of J.B. Greene and August Salzmann. Timothy O’Sullivan, Carlton Watkins and William Henry Jackson each made views of the American west from the 1806’s through the 1880’s, that were equally rich in detail and minimal in composition. In the 20th century there are many examples, from George Seeley to Paul Strand, through Moholy Nagy and the Bauhaus to Edward Weston’s glorious sand dunes.

      Text from the Laurence Miller Gallery website [Online] Cited 12/10/2009. No longer available online

       

      Toshio Shibata (Japanese, b. 1949) 'Kashima Town, Fukushima Prefecture' 1990

       

      Toshio Shibata (Japanese, b. 1949)
      Kashima Town, Fukushima Prefecture
      1990

       

      Toshio Shibata (Japanese, b. 1949) 'Grand Coulee Dam, Douglas County, WA' 1996

       

      Toshio Shibata (Japanese, b. 1949)
      Grand Coulee Dam, Douglas County, WA
      1996

       

      Peter Bialobrzeski (German, b. 1961) 'Transition # 33' 2005

       

      Peter Bialobrzeski (German, b. 1961)
      Transition #33 from the series Lost in Transition
      2005

       

      Peter Bialobrzeski (German, b. 1961) 'Transition # 20' 2005

       

      Peter Bialobrzeski (German, b. 1961)
      Transition #20 from the series Lost in Transition
      2005

       

      Peter Bialobrzeski (German, b. 1961) 'Transition #23' 2005

       

      Peter Bialobrzeski (German, b. 1961)
      Transition #23 from the series Lost in Transition
      2005

       

       

      Laurence Miller Gallery

      Laurence Miller Gallery is now operating as a private dealer and consultant.

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      Exhibition: ‘Proud Flesh’ by Sally Mann at Gagosian Gallery, New York

      Exhibition dates: 15th September – 31st October, 2009

       

      Sally Mann (American, b. 1951) 'Memory's Truth' 2008 from the exhibition 'Proud Flesh' by Sally Mann at Gagosian Gallery, New York, Sept - Oct, 2009

       

      Sally Mann (American, b. 1951)
      Memory’s Truth
      2008
      Gelatin silver print
      Contact print from a wet-plate collodion negative

       

       

      “I can think of numberless males, from Bonnard to Callahan, who have photographed their lovers and spouses, but I am having trouble finding parallel examples among my sister photographers. The act of looking appraisingly at a man, making eye contact on the street, asking to photograph him, studying his body, has always been a brazen venture for a woman, though, for a man, these acts are commonplace, even expected.”


      Sally Mann

       

       

      Many thankx to Gagosian Gallery for allowing me to publish the photographs in the posting. Please click on some of the photographs for a larger version of the image.

       

      Proud Flesh is for me an emotionally exhausting work about withering. It has elements of 19th century clinical photography done with absolute loving care for the subject. Its factual surface is quickly replaced by metaphor and the haze of imperfection from the wet-plate collodion negatives she employs. In a few of the images, due to the choice of striped bedding on which the figure lays, we might be looking at a historical photograph take from Auschwitz or Bergen Belsen. With Larry’s thin and seemingly weak legs dangling over the edge of a wooden cot, the soiled bedding following the contour of his legs, it is difficult for me to see this image without this harsh historical reference. The following image in the book, he is turned into a martyr – arms out stretched – the sheet underneath him now sharply crinkled like a bed of straw (or an imagined crown of thorns).

      The surface texture plays such a strong role in these photos much of the seduction of these photos comes from the beauty of those imperfections. At times they can be nauseating, for their liquid streaks ooze over the images of aged flesh keeping viscera and bodily fluids as a second metaphoric subject. On the cover image, the disturbed collodion emulsion leaves a pattern which seems to be both looking at, and looking inside, the torso standing before the camera. Like Lee Friedlander’s shadow self-portrait (see the cover of Like a One-eyed Cat) where his organs are replaced with a jumble of rocks and his head is filled with straw, Mann’s image turns Larry’s insides into a mix of man and machine – collodion cogs and gears. This is the most wishful, as it portrays the strongest sense of life and the perhaps even the possibility of escaping its mortality. He stands at table’s edge with a steadying hand and a closed fist.

      The most remarkable image for me appears as plate 20 and is captioned Time and the Bell (2008). Like the aforementioned cover image, this is an ideal as Mann has turned her husband’s head and shoulders into a profile bust of marble – the washed out light tones give way to a few angular shapes of rich shadow. It could be a still life of artefacts from an artists work space, a table and a sculptural work in progress. The surprise of the photographic description, which is present in most of the photos in Proud Flesh, is so complex and engaging for me it is difficult to not have it outshine all of the rest.

      Text from 5B4: Photography and Books blog October 1, 2009 [Online] Cited 28/04/2019. No longer available online

       

      Sally Mann (American, b. 1951) 'Semaphore' 2003

       

      Sally Mann (American, b. 1951)
      Semaphore
      2003
      Gelatin silver print
      Contact print from a wet-plate collodion negative

       

      Sally Mann (American, b. 1951) 'Hephaestus' 2008 from the exhibition 'Proud Flesh' by Sally Mann at Gagosian Gallery, New York, Sept - Oct, 2009

       

      Sally Mann (American, b. 1951)
      Hephaestus
      2008
      Gelatin silver print
      Contact print from a wet-plate collodion negative

       

      Sally Mann’s poignant image of her husband, Larry, symbolises both his illness and his skill as a blacksmith.

       

      Sally Mann (American, b. 1951) 'The Nature of Loneliness' 2008

       

      Sally Mann (American, b. 1951)
      The Nature of Loneliness
      2008
      Gelatin silver print
      Contact print from a wet-plate collodion negative
      15 x 13 1/2 inches

       

      Sally Mann (American, b. 1951) 'Somnambulist' 2009

       

      Sally Mann (American, b. 1951)
      Somnambulist
      2009
      Gelatin silver print
      Contact print from a wet-plate collodion negative

       

       

      Gagosian Gallery is pleased to present “Proud Flesh”, a series of new photographs by Sally Mann.

      Children, landscape, lovers – these iconic subjects are as common to the photographic lexicon as light itself. But Mann’s take on them, rendered through processes both traditional and esoteric, is anything but common. From the outset of her career she has consistently challenged the viewer, rendering everyday experiences at once sublime and deeply disquieting.

      In previous projects, Mann has explored the relationships between parent and child, brother and sister, human and nature, site and history. Her latest photographic study of her husband Larry Mann, taken over six years, has resulted in a series of candid nude studies of a mature male body that neither objectifies nor celebrates the focus of its gaze. Rather it suggests a profoundly trusting relationship between woman and man, artist and model that has produced a full range of impressions – erotic, brutally frank, disarmingly tender, and more. While the relation of artist and model is, traditionally, a male-dominated field that has yielded countless appraisals of the female body and psyche, Mann reverses the role by turning the camera on her husband during some of his most vulnerable moments.

      Mann’s technical methods and process further emphasise the emotional and temporal aspects of these fragile life studies. The images are contact prints made from wet-plate collodion negatives, produced by coating a sheet of glass with ether-based collodion and submerging it in silver nitrate. Mann exploits the surface aberrations that can result from the unpredictability of the process to produce painterly photographs marked by stark contrasts of light and dark, with areas that resemble scar tissue. In works such as Hephaestus and Ponder Heart, the scratches and marks incurred in the production process become inseparable from the physical reality of Larry’s body.”

      Text from the Gagosian Gallery website [Online] Cited 10/10/2009. No longer available online

       

      Sally Mann (American, b. 1951) 'Kingfisher's Wing' 2007

       

      Sally Mann (American, b. 1951)
      Kingfisher’s Wing
      2007
      Gelatin silver print
      Contact print from a wet-plate collodion negative

       

      Sally Mann (American, b. 1951) 'The Quality of the Affection' 2006

       

      Sally Mann (American, b. 1951)
      The Quality of the Affection
      2006
      Gelatin silver print
      Contact print from a wet-plate collodion negative

       

      Sally Mann (American, b. 1951) 'Ponder Heart' 2009

       

      Sally Mann (American, b. 1951)
      Ponder Heart
      2009
      Gelatin silver print
      Contact print from a wet-plate collodion negative

       

      Sally Mann (American, b. 1951) 'Was Ever Love' 2009

       

      Sally Mann (American, b. 1951)
      Was Ever Love
      2009
      Gelatin silver print
      Contact print from a wet-plate collodion negative

       

       

      Gagosian Gallery – Madison Avenue Gallery
      980 Madison Avenue
      New York, NY 10075
      Phone: 212.744.2313

      Opening hours:
      Tuesday – Saturday 10am – 6pm

      Gagosian Gallery website

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      Review: ‘Sweet Complicity’ by eX de Medici at Karen Woodbury Gallery, Richmond, Melbourne

      Exhibition dates: 30th September – 24th October, 2009

       

      eX de Medici (Australia, b. 1959) 'Tooth and claw' 2009 from the exhibition 'Sweet Complicity' by eX de Medici at Karen Woodbury Gallery, Richmond, Melbourne, Sept - Oct, 2009

       

      eX de Medici (Australia, b. 1959)
      Tooth and claw
      2009
      Pen, ink and mica on archival paper
      114.0 x 521.0cm

       

       

      Is it sinful to say that an Armalite rifle can be voluptuously seductive? Not in the hands of artist eX de Medici!

      Taking a variety of contemporary military high-powered weapons (Armalite AR30 Tactical .308 Sniper, Modified AK 47, Blackwater AR15, Patriot Ordinance P45 .223 for example) eX de Medici’s armaments have a steely presence softened and consumed by multitudinous garlands of traditional tattoo ‘flash’ iconography (flowers, skulls, bows, stars, Chinese dragons, waves and swallows repeated in Escher-like patterns) and contorted skeletons. Using individual colour palettes for each of the three large pen, ink and mica on paper works in the exhibition, eX subverts the masculine symbology of gun culture and decomposes it within an ornamentation of deathly desire – new compositions in the dance of death: ‘U hurt me Baby, U Fkd me up gd, the hole tht u made (cross) me Ded …’

      In other less skilled artist’s hands the subject matter could become cliched and trite but here de Medici balances the disparate elements in her compositions and brings the subject matter alive – sinuously jumping off the paper, entwining the viewer in their delicious ironies, all of us sweetly complicit in the terror war (send more meat, send more meat!), fighting tooth and nail to keep urban realities at arm’s length. The dark desires that these works contain possess an aesthetic beauty that swallows us up so that we, too, become ‘Barbarians All’. Highly recommended!

      Dr Marcus Bunyan


      Many thankx to Karen Woodbury Gallery for allowing me to publish the art work in the posting. Please click on some of the photographs for a larger version of the image.

       

       

      eX de Medici (Australia, b. 1959) 'Tooth and Claw' 2009 (detail) from the exhibition 'Sweet Complicity' by eX de Medici at Karen Woodbury Gallery, Richmond, Melbourne, Sept - Oct, 2009

       

      eX de Medici (Australia, b. 1959)
      Tooth and claw (detail)
      2009
      Pen, ink and mica on archival paper
      114.0 x 521.0cm

       

      eX de Medici (Australia, b. 1959) 'Tooth and claw' 2009 (detail)

      eX de Medici (Australia, b. 1959) 'Tooth and claw' 2009 (detail)

       

      eX de Medici (Australia, b. 1959)
      Tooth and claw (details)
      2009
      Pen, ink and mica on archival paper
      114.0 x 521.0cm

       

      Installation view of 'Sweet Complicity' by eX de Medici at Karen Woodbury Gallery, Melbourne showing at left, 'Send more meat' (2009) and at right, 'Tooth and claw' (2009)

       

      Installation view of Sweet Complicity by eX de Medici at Karen Woodbury Gallery, Melbourne showing at left, Send more meat (2009) and at right, Tooth and claw (2009)
      Photo: Marcus Bunyan

       

      eX de Medici (Australia, b. 1959) 'Send more meat' 2009

       

      eX de Medici (Australia, b. 1959)
      Send more meat
      2009
      Pen, ink and mica on archival paper

       

      eX de Medici (Australia, b. 1959) 'Send more meat' 2009 (detail)

       

      eX de Medici (Australia, b. 1959)
      Send more meat (detail)
      2009
      Pen, ink and mica on archival paper

       

       

      Sweet complicity is eX de Medici’s first and much anticipated exhibition at Karen Woodbury Gallery. The exhibition will comprise of three monumental pen, ink and mica works on archival paper. These works examine recurring themes in her practice such as power, war, death and violence via a decorative feminine veneer and aesthetic.

      The recurrent use of symbolism in the form of weapons, skulls and garlands in her work re-appear with the addition of Chinese imagery (Imperial golden dragons, China’s five-pointed star, and the use of chrysanthemums). These potent works display a latent interest in scientific illustration and allude to de Medici’s characteristic stylised tattoo motifs that stems from her work as a tattooist. The almost obsessive repetition of pattern and immense detailing display eX’s dedication to her practice through the strong mental and physical commitment required to complete such awe-inspiring artworks that seduce the viewer.

      There is an unmistaken polemic tone in de Medici’s practice that cannot be ignored. Different cultures, identities, actions and consequences are represented and centred on objects of warfare, allowing for disguised and layered political and moral statements.

      de Medici lives and produces much of her work in the nation’s capital Canberra. Streams of influences inform the work; Canberra’s political and physical agendas, research resourced from various national institutions such as the CSIRO Entomological and Taxonomy Division, the National Library of Australia and the Australian War Memorial. She has recently returned from the Solomon Islands where she was chosen as an official war artist.

      Text from the Karen Woodbury Gallery website [Online] Cited 05/10/2009. No longer available online

       

      The defining theme in eX de Medici’s paintings is a consistent interrogation of power. The notion of ‘the personal’ doesn’t interest the artist. Instead she investigates authority and dissent through paintings of guns, surveillance devices and gas masks.

       

      eX de Medici (Australia, b. 1959) 'American Sex/Funky Beat Machine' 2009

       

      eX de Medici (Australia, b. 1959)
      American Sex/Funky Beat Machine
      2009
      Pen, ink and mica on archival paper
      Diptych, 114.0 x 249.0cm

       

      eX de Medici (Australia, b. 1959) 'American Sex/Funky Beat Machine' 2009 (detail)

       

      eX de Medici (Australia, b. 1959)
      American Sex/Funky Beat Machine (detail)
      2009
      Pen, ink and mica on archival paper
      Diptych, 114.0 x 249.0cm

       

       

      Karen Woodbury Gallery

      This gallery is now closed.

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      Review: ‘Ivy’ photographs by Jane Burton at Karen Woodbury Gallery, Richmond, Melbourne

      Exhibition dates: 2nd September – 26th September, 2009

       

      Jane Burton (Australian, b. 1966) 'Ivy #1' 2009 from the exhibition 'Ivy' photographs by Jane Burton at Karen Woodbury Gallery, Richmond, Melbourne, Sept, 2009

       

      Jane Burton (Australian, b. 1966)
      Ivy #1
      2009
      Pigment print
      89 x 75cm

       

       

      This is another outstanding body of photographic work on display in Melbourne. Featuring 10 large and 2 small sepia toned, vignetted pigment prints Burton’s work creates dark enchanted worlds of faceless female figures placed in the built environment that balance (meta)physical light and shade creating ambiguous narratives of innocence tinged with a darker edge.

      The eponymous photograph Ivy #1 (above) is the seminal image of the series: a dark brooding house, hunched down positioned low in the photographic space, covered in ivy with black windows and dark eves has an ominous almost impenetrable presence and sets the tone for the rest of the work.

      There are wonderful references to the history of photography if one cares to look (not simply generic references to Victorian daguerreotypes, postcards and family photographs). Ivy #2 (below) is a powerful photograph where the female figure is blindfolded, unable to see the encroaching tumescence of vegetation that surrounds and is about to engulf her. The placement of the hands is exquisite – unsure, reaching out, doubting her surroundings – with the 3-bladed fan hovering behind ready to devour the unwary. This photograph has resonances of the magical photographs of the garden by the Czech photographer Josef Sudek.

      Ivy #3 (below) has echoes of the work of the American photographer Ralph Eugene Meatyard and his placement of masked people within built environments. In Burton’s photograph the broken umbrella becomes like insect wings, the faceless whiteness of the three-legged and three-armed creature cocooned among the overhanging predatory ivy, the luminescent sky offering the possibility of redemption. Other photographs such as Ivy #6 (below) and Ivy #7 with their wonderful colours, depth of field, heavy shadows and elegiac romantic feel have references to Eugene Atget and his photographs of the parks of Versailles (see photograph below).

      Still further references to the history of photography can be found in the photographs Ivy #9 and Ivy #10 (below). In Ivy #9 the intersection of the two female bodies through double exposure forms a slippage in (photographic) reality and the disappearance of original identity in the layering of the photographs and into the empty non-reflection of the mirror. This non-reflection is confirmed in Ivy #10 where the faceless nude woman holds a mirror with no reflection. These photographs remind me of the photographs of New Orleans prostitutes in the early years of the 20th century by the photographer Bellocq with their masked faces and the ornamentation of the wallpaper behind the figures (see below).

      I feel that in these photographs with their facelessness and the non-reflection of the mirror investigate notions of ‘Theoria’ – a Greek emphasis on the vision or contemplation of God where theoria is the lifting up of the individual out of time and space and created being and through contemplative prayer into the presence of God.1 In fact the whole series of photographs can be understood through this conceptualisation – not just remembrances of past time, not a blind contemplation on existence but a lifting up out of time and space into the an’other’ dark but enlightening presence.

      The greatest wonder of this series is that the photographs magically reveal themselves again and again over time. Despite (or because of) the references to other artists, the beauty of Burton’s work is that she has made it her own. The photographs have her signature, her voice as an artist and it is an informed voice; this just makes the resonances, the vibrations of energy within the work all the more potent and absorbing. I loved them.

      Dr Marcus Bunyan


      Many thankx to Karen Woodbury Gallery for allowing me to publish the photographs in the posting. Please click on the photographs for a larger version of the image.

       

       

      Installation view of 'Ivy' by Jane Burton at Karen Woodbury Gallery, Melbourne

      Installation view of 'Ivy' by Jane Burton at Karen Woodbury Gallery, Melbourne

       

      Installation views of Ivy by Jane Burton at Karen Woodbury Gallery, Melbourne
      Photos: Marcus Bunyan

       

      Jane Burton (Australian, b. 1966) 'Ivy #2' 2009 from the exhibition 'Ivy' photographs by Jane Burton at Karen Woodbury Gallery, Richmond, Melbourne, Sept, 2009

       

      Jane Burton (Australian, b. 1966)
      Ivy #2
      2009
      Pigment print
      75 x 75cm

       

      Jane Burton (Australian, b. 1966) 'Ivy #3' 2009 from the exhibition 'Ivy' photographs by Jane Burton at Karen Woodbury Gallery, Richmond, Melbourne, Sept, 2009

       

      Jane Burton (Australian, b. 1966)
      Ivy #3
      2009
      Pigment print
      75 x 75cm

       

      Jane Burton (Australian, b. 1966) 'Ivy #5' 2009

       

      Jane Burton (Australian, b. 1966)
      Ivy #5
      2009
      Pigment print
      75 x 75cm

       

      Jane Burton (Australian, b. 1966) 'Ivy #7' 2009

       

      Jane Burton (Australian, b. 1966)
      Ivy #7
      2009
      Pigment print
      75 x 75cm

       

       

      Jane Burton’s exhibition, Ivy comprises a series of photographs captured in black and white. The final prints are rendered with a sepia, peach-champagne tone, with many displaying a mottled hand-coloured effect in faded pastels of pink and green. These works hope to suggest an era past, perhaps Victorian. The imagery is evocative of old picture postcards from Europe and old photographs from the pages of family albums.

      Central to the series is an image of a house covered with ivy. Depicted as dark and malevolent, the house is ‘haunted’ by the traces and stains of family history, habitation, and the buried secrets of all that occurred within.

      Anonymous female figures are seen in garden settings where the foliage is rampant and encroaching and the shadows deep. There is an air of enchantment perceived with unspecified darker edge. The figures are innocent and playful. The viewer is asked to question if the and girls aware of the camera capturing their activity? Are the poses staged or caught spontaneously. In another photograph, a dilapidated male statue stands broken and armless, the texture of stone worn, and bruised with dark lichen and moss.

      In the interior photographs, several nudes are depicted in the style of 19th century French daguerreotype photographs. These vignetted images display women against wall-papered backdrops with theatrical props reminiscent of earlier works by Burton such as the series ‘The other side’ (2003). Posed suggestively for the camera and the viewer’s gaze, the subjects themselves are faceless, their own gaze and features hidden behind dark hair. The surface and texture of these particular works suggests the patina of decay and the damage and wear of time.

      Text from the Karen Woodbury Gallery website [Online] Cited 20/09/2009. No longer available online

       

      E. J. Bellocq (American, 1873-1949) 'Untitled [prostitute of Storyville, New Orleans]' 1912

       

      E. J. Bellocq (American, 1873-1949)
      Untitled [prostitute of Storyville, New Orleans]
      1912

       

      Jane Burton (Australian, b. 1966) 'Ivy #10' 2009

       

      Jane Burton (Australian, b. 1966)
      Ivy #10
      2009
      Pigment print

       

      Eugene Atget (French, 1857-1927) 'Versailles, France' 1923

       

      Eugene Atget (French, 1857-1927)
      Versailles, France
      1923
      Albumen print

       

      Jane Burton (Australian, b. 1966) 'Ivy #6' 2009

       

      Jane Burton (Australian, b. 1966)
      Ivy #6
      2009
      Pigment print
      75 x 75cm

       

       

      Karen Woodbury Gallery

      This gallery has now closed.

      Jane Burton website

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