Review: ‘Night’s Plutonian Shore’ by Julia deVille at Sophie Gannon Gallery, Richmond

Exhibition dates: 28th July – 21st August 2010

 

Installation view of 'Night's Plutonian Shore' by Julia deVille at Sophie Gannon Gallery, Richmond

 

Installation view of Night’s Plutonian Shore by Julia deVille at Sophie Gannon Gallery, Richmond
Photo: Marcus Bunyan

 

 

This is an excellent exhibition by Julia deVille at Sophie Gannon Gallery in Richmond. Compared to last year’s ‘shock and paw’ exhibition Cineraria reviewed on this blog, this exhibition shows a commendable sense of restraint, a beautiful rise and fall in the work as you walk around the gallery space with the exhibits displayed on different types and heights of stand and a greater thematic development of the conceptual ideas within the work. There are some exquisite pieces.

From the bejewelled Golden Gosling (2010), the goose that wears the gold not lays it to the cute stillborn fawn Lenore (2010), named after Edgar Allan Poe’s poem of the same name that discusses “the proper decorum in the wake of the death of a young woman, described as “the queenliest dead that ever died so young”,” (Wikipedia text) there is a delicacy to these sculptures that seemed absent in the last exhibition. The sleeping fawn wears a little golden bridle and is covered in golden hearts, the harness bringing in the element of control (of life, of death, of the body, of identity) into the pieces not seen in the earlier work. This sense of control is reinforced in other pieces in the exhibition including the three pieces Charon (2010), Nevermore (2010) and Kitten drawn hearse (2010, see photographs below).

In Charon the kitten has an amazing beaded saddle and stirrups to allow the occupant to control the dead stead because in Greek mythology Charon is the ferryman who carries the souls of the newly deceased across the river Styx. Nevermore also features the saddle and bridle whilst the standout piece of the whole exhibition, Kitten drawn hearse just wows you with it’s delicacy and showmanship – the plume atop the harnessed kitten’s head faithfully replicating the dressage of a Victorian horse drawn funeral cortege.

In these pieces there is a simplification of the noise of the earlier works and in this simplification a conversant intensification of the layering of the conceptual ideas. Playful and witty the layers can be peeled back to reveal the poetry of de Sade, the stories of Greek mythology and the amplification of life force that is at the heart of these works.

Good stuff.

Dr Marcus Bunyan


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

Another well considered response to the exhibition can be found on Karen Thompson’s Melbourne Jeweller blog.

 

 

Julia deVille (Australian, b. 1982) 'Nameless here for evermore' 2010 from the exhibition 'Night's Plutonian Shore' by Julia deVille at Sophie Gannon Gallery, Richmond, July - August, 2010

 

Julia deVille (Australian, b. 1982)
Nameless here for evermore
2010
Emu egg, black garnet beads, sterling silver, bronze, enamel paint, egret feathers
31 x 16 x 16cm
Courtesy Sophie Gannon Gallery

 

Julia deVille (Australian, b. 1982) 'Golden Gosling' 2010 from the exhibition 'Night's Plutonian Shore' by Julia deVille at Sophie Gannon Gallery, Richmond, July-  August, 2010

 

Julia deVille (Australian, b. 1982)
Golden Gosling
2010

 

Julia deVille (Australian, b. 1982) 'Ghastly grim and ancient raven' 2010 from the exhibition 'Night's Plutonian Shore' by Julia deVille at Sophie Gannon Gallery, Richmond, July-  August, 2010

 

Julia deVille (Australian, b. 1982)
Ghastly grim and ancient raven
2010

 

Julia deVille (Australian, b. 1982) 'Nevermore' 2010 from the exhibition 'Night's Plutonian Shore' by Julia deVille at Sophie Gannon Gallery, Richmond, July - August, 2010

 

Julia deVille (Australian, b. 1982)
Nevermore
2010
Still-born fawn, black garnet beads, sterling silver, coque feathers, chain mail, glass
27 x 41 x 59cm
Courtesy Sophie Gannon Gallery

 

Julia deVille (Australian, b. 1982) 'Charon' 2010

 

Julia deVille (Australian, b. 1982)
Charon
2010
Kitten, hematite beads, mystic spinel beads, sterling silver, chain mail, glass
30 x 12 x 19cm
Courtesy Sophie Gannon Gallery

 

Julia deVille (Australian, b. 1982) 'Lenore' 2010

 

Julia deVille (Australian, b. 1982)
Lenore
2010
Stillborn fawn, black garnet beads, sterling silver, gold plate, glass
35 x 17 x 12cm
Courtesy Sophie Gannon Gallery

 

Julia deVille (Australian, b. 1982) 'Kitten drawn hearse' 2010

 

Julia deVille (Australian, b. 1982)
Kitten drawn hearse
2010
Kitten, black garnet beads, sterling silver, egret feathers, wood, glass
83 x 30 x 15cm
Courtesy Sophie Gannon Gallery

 

Julia deVille (Australian, b. 1982) 'Bird or beast' 2010

 

Julia deVille (Australian, b. 1982)
Bird or beast
2010
Ostrich skeleton, ostrich feathers, smoky quartz, sterling silver, leather and wood
Courtesy Sophie Gannon Gallery

 

 

Sophie Gannon Gallery
2, Albert Street, Richmond, Melbourne

Opening hours:
Tuesday – Saturday 11am – 5pm

Sophie Gannon Gallery website

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Exhibition: ‘Robert Mapplethorpe’ at NRW-Forum Dusseldorf

Exhibition dates: 6th February – 15th August, 2010

 

Robert Mapplethorpe (American, 1946-1989) 'Phillip Prioleau' 1980 from the exhibition 'Robert Mapplethorpe' at NRW-Forum Dusseldorf, Feb - August, 2010

 

Robert Mapplethorpe (American, 1946-1989)
Phillip Prioleau
1980
© Robert Mapplethorpe Foundation
Used by permission

 

 

Robert Mapplethorpe was a classical photographer with a great eye for form and beauty, an artist who explored the worlds he knew and lived (homosexuality, sadomasochistic practices, desire for black men) with keen observations into the manifestations of their existence, insights that are only shocking to those who have never been exposed to these worlds. If we observe that our history is written as a series of interpretive shifts then perhaps we can further articulate that the development of an artist’s career is a series of interpretations, an “investigation into the events that have led us to constitute ourselves and to recognise ourselves as subjects of what we are doing, thinking, saying.”1 Mapplethorpe was such an artist.

The early work is gritty and raw, exposing audiences to sexuality and the body as catalyst for social change, photographs the “general public” had never seen before. Early photographs such as the sequence of photographs Charles and Jim (1974) feature ‘natural’ bodies – hairy, scrawny, thin – in close physical proximity with each other, engaged in gay sex. There is a tenderness and affection to the sequence as the couple undress, suck, kiss and embrace.

At the same time that Mapplethorpe was photographing the first of his black nudes (Mapplethorpe’s photographs of black men come from a lineage that can be traced back to Fred Holland Day who also photographed black men), he was also portraying acts of sexual progressiveness in his photographs of the gay S/M scene. In these photographs the bodies are usually shielded from scrutiny by leather and rubber but are revealing of the intentions and personalities of the people depicted in them, perhaps because Mapplethorpe was taking part in these activities himself as well as depicting them. There is a sense of connection with the people and the situations that occur before his lens in the S/M photographs.

As time progresses the work becomes more about surfaces and form, about the polished perfection of the body, about that exquisite corpse, the form of the flower. Later work is usually staged against a contextless background (see photographs below) as though the artefacts have no grounding in reality, only desire. Bodies are dissected, cut-up into manageable pieces – the objectified body. Mapplethorpe liked to view the body cut up into different libidinal zones much as in the reclaimed artefacts of classical sculpture. The viewer is seduced by the sensuous nature of the bodies surfaces, the body objectified for the viewers pleasure. The photographs reveal very little of the inner self of the person being photographed. The named body is placed on a pedestal (see photograph of Phillip Prioleau (1980) below) much as a trophy or a vase of flowers. I believe this isolation, this objectivity is one of the major criticisms of most of Mapplethorpe’s later photographs of the body – they reveal very little of the sitter only the clarity of perfect formalised beauty and aesthetic design.

While this criticism is pertinent it still does not deny the power of these images. Anyone who saw the retrospective of his work at the Museum of Contemporary Art in Sydney in 1995 can attest to the overwhelming presence of his work when seen in the flesh (so to speak!). Mapplethorpe’s body of work hangs from a single thread: an inquisitive mind undertaking an investigation in the condition of the world’s becoming. His last works, when he knew he was dying, are as moving for any gay man who has lost friends over the years to HIV/AIDS as anything on record, are as moving for any human being that faces the evidence of their own mortality. Fearless to the last, never afraid to express who he was, how he felt and what he saw, Mapplethorpe will long be remembered in the annals of visual art.

Dr Marcus Bunyan

 

1/ Foucault, Michel. “What is Enlightenment?,” trans. C. Porter in Rabinow, Paul (ed.,). The Essential Works of Michel Foucualt, 1954-1984. Vol.1. New York: New Press, 1997, p. 315.


    Many thankx to NRW-Forum Dusseldorf for allowing me to publish the photographs in the posting. Please click on the photographs for a larger version of the image.

     

     

    Robert Mapplethorpe. 'Parrot Tulips' 1988 from the exhibition 'Robert Mapplethorpe' at NRW-Forum Dusseldorf, Feb - August, 2010

     

    Robert Mapplethorpe (American, 1946-1989)
    Parrot Tulips
    1988
    © Robert Mapplethorpe Foundation
    Used by permission

     

    Robert Mapplethorpe (American, 1946-1989) 'Ajitto' 1981 from the exhibition 'Robert Mapplethorpe' at NRW-Forum Dusseldorf, Feb - August, 2010

     

    Robert Mapplethorpe (American, 1946-1989)
    Ajitto
    1981
    © Robert Mapplethorpe Foundation
    Used by permission

     

    Robert Mapplethorpe (American, 1946-1989) 'David Hockney' 1976 © Robert Mapplethorpe Foundation. Used by permission

     

    Robert Mapplethorpe (American, 1946-1989)
    David Hockney
    1976
    © Robert Mapplethorpe Foundation
    Used by permission

     

     

    Robert Mapplethorpe, who was born in 1946 and passed away in 1989, is one of the few artists who truly deserve to be known far beyond the borders of the art world. Mapplethorpe dominated photography in the late twentieth century and paved the way for the recognition of photography as an art form in its own right; he firmly anchored the subject of homosexuality in mass culture and created a classic photographic image, mostly of male bodies, which found its way into commercial photography.

    In 2010, the NRW-Forum in Düsseldorf will organise a major retrospective of Robert Mapplethorpe’s photographs. His work was first shown in Germany in 1977 as part of documenta 6 in Kassel and then in a European solo exhibition in 1981 with German venues in Frankfurt, Hamburg and Munich. In addition to various museum and gallery exhibitions the largest museum exhibition in Germany of Mapplethorpe’s work took place in 1997 when the worldwide Mapplethorpe retrospective, which opened at the Louisiana Museum of Modern Art in Denmark, traveled to the Staatsgalerie in Stuttgart. The last time Robert Mapplethorpe’s works were shown in Düsseldorf was in the exhibition ‘Mapplethorpe versus Rodin’ at the Kunsthalle in 1992.

    Both during his life and since his death, Mapplethorpe’s work has been the subject of much controversial debate, particularly in the USA. Right up until the end of the twentieth century, exhibitions of his photographs were sometimes boycotted, censured, or in one case cancelled. His radical portrayals of nudity and sexual acts were always controversial; his photos of sadomasochistic practices in particular caused a stir and frequently resulted in protests outside exhibitions and in one instance, a lawsuits was brought against a museum director.

    In 2008, the Supreme Court in Japan ruled that Mapplethorpe’s erotic images did not contravene the country’s ban on pornography and released a volume of his photographs that had been seized and held for over eight years. As far as the American critic Arthur C. Danto was concerned, Mapplethorpe created ‘some of the most shocking and indeed some of the most dangerous images in modern photography, or even in the history of art.’

    In Germany, on the other hand, Mapplethorpe’s photographs were part of the ‘aesthetic socialisation’ of the generations that grew up in the 1980s and early 1990s. Lisa Ortgioes, the presenter of the German women’s television programme frau tv, notes that during this time, Mapplethorpe’s photos were sold as posters; his ‘black’ portraits in particular being a regular feature on the walls of student bedrooms at the time.

    The curator of the exhibition, Werner Lippert, is quick to point out that ‘this exhibition needs no justification. Mapplethorpe was quite simply and unquestionably one of the most important photographers of the twentieth century. It is an artistic necessity.’

    The exhibition in the NRW-Forum covers all areas of Mapplethorpe’s work, from portraits and self-portraits, homosexuality, nudes, flowers and the quintessence of his oeuvre the photographic images of sculptures, including early Polaroids. The photographs are arranged according to themes such as ‘self portraits’, which includes the infamous shot of him with a bullwhip inserted in his anus, as well as his almost poetic portraits of his muse, Patti Smith, the photographs of black men versus white women, the body builder Lisa Lyon, the juxtaposition of penises and flowers (which Mapplethorpe himself commented on in an interview: ‘… I’ve tried to juxtapose a flower, then a picture of a cock, then a portrait, so that you could see they were the same’), and finally those images of classical beauty based on renaissance sculptures, and impressive portraits of children and celebrities of the day.

    Despite the obvious references to the Renaissance idea of what constitutes ideal beauty and the history of photography from Wilhelm von Gloeden to Man Ray, this exhibition shows Robert Mapplethorpe as an artist who is firmly anchored is his era; his contemporaries are Andy Warhol and Brice Marden; Polaroids were the medium of choice in the 1970s, and the focus on the body and sexuality was, at the time, for many artists like Vito Acconci or Bruce Nauman a theme that was key to social change. Above all, Robert Mapplethorpe developed his own photographic style that paid homage to the ideals of perfection and form. ‘I look for the perfection of form. I do this in portraits, in photographs of penises, in photographs of flowers.’ The fact that the photographs are displayed on snow-white walls underpins this view of his work and consciously moves away from the coy Boudoir-style presentation of his photographs on lilac and purple walls a dominant feature of exhibitions of Mapplethorpe’s work for many years and opens up the work to a more concept-based, minimalist view of things.

    The selection of over 150 photographs covers early Polaroids from 1973 to his final self-portraits from the year 1988, which show how marked he was by illness and hint at his impending death, and also includes both many well-known, almost iconic images as well as some never-before seen or rarely shown works. The curators delved deep into the collection of the New York-based Robert Mapplethorpe Foundation to create this retrospective.

    Press release from the NRW-Forum Dusseldorf website [Online] Cited 02/08/2010 no longer available online

     

    Robert Mapplethorpe (American, 1946-1989) 'Greg Cauley-Cock' 1980 © Robert Mapplethorpe Foundation. Used by permission

     

    Robert Mapplethorpe (American, 1946-1989)
    Greg Cauley-Cock
    1980
    © Robert Mapplethorpe Foundation
    Used by permission

     

    Robert Mapplethorpe (American, 1946-1989) 'Patti Smith' 1975 © Robert Mapplethorpe Foundation. Used by permission

     

    Robert Mapplethorpe (American, 1946-1989)
    Patti Smith
    1975
    © Robert Mapplethorpe Foundation
    Used by permission

     

    Robert Mapplethorpe (American, 1946-1989) 'Self Portrait' 1988 © Robert Mapplethorpe Foundation. Used by permission

     

    Robert Mapplethorpe (American, 1946-1989)
    Self Portrait
    1988
    © Robert Mapplethorpe Foundation
    Used by permission

     

    Robert Mapplethorpe (American, 1946-1989) 'Lowell Smith' 1981 © Robert Mapplethorpe Foundation. Used by permission

     

    Robert Mapplethorpe (American, 1946-1989)
    Lowell Smith
    1981
    © Robert Mapplethorpe Foundation
    Used by permission

     

    Robert Mapplethorpe (American, 1946-1989) 'Thomas' 1987 © Robert Mapplethorpe Foundation. Used by permission

     

    Robert Mapplethorpe (American, 1946-1989)
    Thomas
    1987
    © Robert Mapplethorpe Foundation
    Used by permission

     

     

    NRW-Forum Kultur und Wirtschaft
    Ehrenhof 2, 40479 Düsseldorf
    Phone: +49 (0)211 – 89 266 90

    Opening hours:
    Tuesday – Sunday 11.00 am – 6.00 pm
    Closed Mondays

    NRW-Forum Dusseldorf website

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    Text: ‘Across’ by Peter Handke

    July 2019

     

    As a follow up to my posting ‘How to Understand the Light on a Landscape’ by Pablo Helguera, my friend and photographer Ian Lobb sent me this text from the first few pages of the novel Across by Peter Handke (1986). In the novel the narrator, Andreas Loser, knocks down a stranger in the street, takes a leave of absence from his post as teacher of ancient languages and leaves his family to move to a drab flat in a housing development.

    “Handke’s novel tells the story of a quiet, organised classics teacher named Andreas Loser. One night, on the way to his regularly scheduled card game, he passes a tree that has been defaced by a swastika. Impulsively yet deliberately, he tracks down the defacer and kills him. With this act, Loser has crossed an invisible threshold, and will be stuck in this secular purgatory until he can confess his crime.”

    Text from Amazon website


    In this wonderful piece of text the first paragraph sets the scene before one of the most inspired pieces of writing, a meditation on story, on nothing, on light, joy and emptiness – a story of “Emptiness” that is fullness.

    Marcus

     

     

     

    Text from the novel Across by Peter Handke

     

     

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    Review: ‘Simryn Gill: Gathering’ at Heide Museum of Modern Art, Melbourne

    Exhibition dates: 22 April – 18 July 2010

     

    Simryn Gill (Singapore, b. 1959) 'Pearls' 1999 from the exhibition 'Simryn Gill: Gathering' at Heide Museum of Modern Art, Melbourne, April - July, 2010

     

    Simryn Gill (Singapore, b. 1959)
    Pearls
    1999
    Private collection

     

     

    This is a strong survey exhibition of the work of Simryn Gill at Heide Museum of Modern Art. Like most survey exhibitions it suffers from a slightly piecemeal approach, dipping in and out of various bodies of work to try to make up a holistic whole. Conceptually this is not a problem as the thematic development of Gill’s work, her narrative arc if you like, is evident throughout. Visually this causes some work to seem isolated and left me wanting more connection between pieces and rooms as you walk around.

    Highlights included May 2006 (2006), Pearls (1999 – ongoing), Untitled (interiors) 2008 and Throwback (2007).

    In May 2006 (2006) 817 silver gelatin photographs are mounted in columns of images, each column making up one of 30 rolls of film, one shot every day of a month photographing the artist’s immediate neighbourhood in Marrickville, Sydney, in the month in which the film expiration date occurred. Each column has a different number of images and are mounted along the one of the largest walls in the Heide galleries, producing an effect almost like a DNA sequence. Abstract scenes of pathways, fences, cars in streets, broken gutters, planes flying houses, trees, people walking, abandoned telephone directories, Hills hoists, coffee shops, windows, rooftops and factories inhabit the frame of reference – the environment seeming to be abandoned both literally and metaphorically. Empty chairs move from picture to picture. No Parking here!

    There are some great angles in these photographs a la Robert Frank The Americans with excellent use of short depth of field shooting across tabletops for example. Above all there is a sense of abandonment, desolation and isolation in the intersection of spaces. Even in strong sunlight there is a strange, haunting melancholy present – an innate understanding of the subconsciously known archetype of space and place, that sense of belonging – and an absolute recognition in the viewer of that.

    In Pearls (1999 – ongoing, see photograph above) friends provide Gill with a book of personal value, which she then transforms into beads of paper and then strings them together as necklaces which she then returns to the owner as a gift. The colours, length and heaviness of the necklace depends on the book chosen – the reconstructed text lying like pearls of wisdom against the skin of the giver / receiver, the meaning of the book transformed through the process. What a beautiful gift to receive.

    Untitled (interiors) (2008), my second favourite work of the day, features bronze sculptures cast from the empty spaces created by dry cracks in the ground found near Nyngan and Lake George, New South Wales. The sculptures present the cracks inverted so they become like miniature mountain ranges, the cracks in the earth filled and metamorphosing until they thrust into the air, the empty spaces of the earth uplifted, negative / positive spaces interchangeable. This is a simple but beautifully resolved work. Unfortunately I do not have any photographs to show you of these sculptures.

    Other work includes My own private Angkor (2007, see photograph above), photographs taken at a housing estate in Port Dickson that is becoming overgrown and returning to the surrounding landscape that Gill has made into her own Angkor Wat in reverse, featuring the detritus of a vanquished, constructed environment; four black and white photographs from Forest (1996) featuring text on leaves; a glass case of curiosities like the Victorian cabinet of curiosities that includes a jar of plastic cowboys and indians, a bowl of Mindanao pearls, found and made spherical objects, cast tin and mango seeds (Some of my best friends suck mangoes, 1998) and different noses of cast tin (Bouquet 1994); Untitled (1998 – ongoing), a glass case full of found and blunt objects arranged like a seismograph recording, small at the ends and big in the centre featuring scissors, clubs, spoons, knives, bottle top openers, tweezers, letter openers and salad servers!; and Paper boats (2008, see photographs below), table and floor covered by paper boats made from the torn out pages of Encyclopedia Britannica 1968 with the invitation to “Please make boats” with no explanation as to how, exactly, to make them – human knowledge as text, detritus, object, place, manufacture and commission.

    The absolute star of the exhibition is the installation Throwback (2007, see photographs below). The installation features the interior parts of a Tata truck (the engine and axles) recast in termite mound soils, river clay, laterite, sea shells, fruit skins, coconut bark, resin, and fibre laid on a huge dissecting table (much like the body in Rembrandt’s painting The Anatomy Lesson of Dr Tulp (1632)) – the layout of the engine and axles evoking the spine and interior skeleton of the body. Unfortunately I do not have an overview photograph of the whole work but parts of the work can be seen in the photographs below. The Tata truck spent its working life plying the roads of the forests of Malaysia:

    “With the rise of China and India, a voracious market for scrap metal has developed, hastening the disappearance of particular objects, Gill recovers the modern forms of the truck parts by casting them in natural materials found near her studio in Port Dickson.” (Wall text from the exhibition)

    .
    This is an outstanding work that left me stunned with it’s beauty and insightfulness. It literally took my breath away and for that reason alone a visit to this exhibition at Heide is well worth the journey.

    Dr Marcus Bunyan


    Many thankx to Jade Enge and the Heide Museum of Modern Art for allowing me to publish the photographs in the posting. Please click on the photographs for a larger version of the image.

     

     

    “The work of Simryn Gill considers questions of place and history, and how they might intersect with personal and collection experience … Using objects, language and photographs, her work conveys a deep interest in material culture, and in the ways that meaning can transform and translate in different contexts. Through the reinterpretation or alteration of existing objects, the photographing of specific locations, and the forming of collections, Gill contemplates how ideas and meanings are communicated between people, objects and sites.”


    Wall text from the exhibition

     

     

    Simryn Gill (Singapore, b. 1959) 'Untitled' 1999 from the exhibition 'Simryn Gill: Gathering' at Heide Museum of Modern Art, Melbourne, April - July, 2010

     

    Simryn Gill (Singapore, b. 1959)
    Untitled
    1999
    Gouache on National Geographic magazine pages (1970s)
    Courtesy of the artist, BREENSPACE, Sydney and Tracy Williams Ltd, New York

     

    Simryn Gill (Singapore, b. 1959) 'Untitled' 1999 from the exhibition 'Simryn Gill: Gathering' at Heide Museum of Modern Art, Melbourne, April - July, 2010

     

    Simryn Gill (Singapore, b. 1959)
    Untitled
    1999
    Gouache on National Geographic magazine pages (1970s)
    Courtesy of the artist, BREENSPACE, Sydney and Tracy Williams Ltd, New York

     

    Simryn Gill (Singapore, b. 1959) 'My own private Angkor' 2007

     

    Simryn Gill (Singapore, b. 1959)
    My own private Angkor
    2007
    Courtesy of the artist, BREENSPACE, Sydney and Tracy Williams Ltd, New York

     

    Installation view of the exhibition 'Simryn Gill: Gathering' at Heide Museum of Modern Art, Melbourne showing the work 'Throwback' 2007

     

    Installation view of the exhibition Simryn Gill: Gathering at Heide Museum of Modern Art, Melbourne showing the work Throwback 2007

     

    Simryn Gill (Singapore, b. 1959) 'Throwback' 2007 (detail)

     

    Simryn Gill (Singapore, b. 1959)
    Throwback (detail)
    2007
    Interior parts of Tata truck, termite mound soil, river clay, laterite, seashells, fruit skins, leaves, bark and fibre, flowers, glue, resin, milk
    Buxton Collection Melbourne
    Courtesy of the artist

     

    Simryn Gill (Singapore, b. 1959) 'Throwback' 2007 (detail)

     

    Simryn Gill (Singapore, b. 1959)
    Throwback (detail)
    2007
    Interior parts of Tata truck, termite mound soil, river clay, laterite, seashells, fruit skins, leaves, bark and fibre, flowers, glue, resin, milk
    Buxton Collection Melbourne
    Courtesy of the artist

     

     

    This exhibition (22 April – 18 July) presents the work of leading Sydney-based Malaysian artist, Simryn Gill. Featuring objects, books, collections, photographs and text pieces from the last six years of Gill’s practice, it explores the artist’s pursuit of meaning through materials, forms and ways of working, such as collecting, reading, archiving, arranging, casting and photographing.

    Described in 2009 in the New Yorker as ‘quietly dazzling’, Gill’s work is internationally recognised. She has been honoured with solo exhibitions at the Tate Modern, London and the Smithsonian Institution, Washington DC, both in 2006. Born in Singapore in 1959, Gill lives and works in Sydney and Port Dickson, Malaysia, and has participated in significant exhibitions internationally, including documenta 12 in Kassel, Germany (2007), the Singapore Biennale (2006), the Biennale of Sydney (2002 and 2008), the São Paulo Biennial (2004) and the Venice Biennale (1999).

    An MCA touring exhibition curated by Russell Storer, it has been expanded by Heide to include the Australian premiere of Gill’s major work Throwback, originally produced for the documenta 12 exhibition in Kassel, Germany, in 2007. Throwback reworks the inner machinery of a 1985 Tata truck that plied the roads of Malaysia. With the economic rise of China and India, a voracious market for scrap metal has developed, hastening the disappearance of particular objects. Gill recovers the modern forms of truck parts by casting them in natural materials – found near her studio in Malaysia – including river mud, coconut husks, reconstituted termite mounds and fruit skins.

    Gill has also produced a new work, an artist’s book reflecting on the gardens at Heide.

    Gill’s practice considers how we might experience place as an intersection of personal and collective histories and geographies. Through the reinterpretation or alteration of existing objects, the photographing of specific locations, and the forming of collections, Gill contemplates how ideas and meanings are communicated between people, objects, and sites.

    Several works in the exhibition invite audience participation. Paper Boats invites visitors to add their own unique paper boat to the installation by tearing pages from a 1968 Encyclopaedia Britannica and using the sheet to make an origami boat. Another work, Garland (2006) encourages us to hold, touch and rearrange objects collected by Gill on the beaches of Port Dickson, Malaysia, and the islands off Singapore – fragments reshaped by sea and sand that take on almost organic form.

    A selection of books, sketches, collections and experimental pieces from the early 1990s to the present, some produced for exhibitions and others never intended as artworks will also be presented as part of the exhibition. Together they offer an insight into Gill’s artistic processes and her interest in art-making as an active engagement with the world.”

    Press release from the Heide Museum of Modern Art website [Online] Cited 01/10/2010 no longer available online

     

    Simryn Gill (Singapore, b. 1959) 'Paper boats' 2008

     

    Simryn Gill (Singapore, b. 1959)
    Paper boats
    2008
    Encyclopaedia Britannica (1968 edition)
    Courtesy of the artist and BREENSPACE, Sydney

     

    Simryn Gill (Singapore, b. 1959) 'Paper boats' 2008 (detail)

     

    Simryn Gill (Singapore, b. 1959)
    Paper boats (detail)
    2008
    Encyclopaedia Britannica (1968 edition)
    Courtesy of the artist and BREENSPACE, Sydney

     

    Addendum: A Pencil for Your Thoughts

     

    Heide pencil

     

    Heide pencil, the confounding pencil

    I love to visit Heide, the elegant buildings, the art, the cafe, a stroll in the gardens looking at the sculpture. What I don’t like is being accosted by gallery attendants on my last three visits, twice on the last visit alone to review the Simryn Gill exhibition – accost being not too harsh a word for some of the approaches. The request: to not write in the gallery with a pen but to use a pencil (rushed to the scene of the crime post haste!)

    I don’t like writing with a pencil, they go blunt and I can’t read my notes. I like writing with a pen.
    This is a ridiculous state of affairs, the only gallery in Melbourne that I know of that has such a ‘nanny state’ rule.

    Do they think that I am going to:

    a) spear the pen into the gallery wall
    b) attack the attendant with the pen (after this last visit the thought did cross my mind!) or
    c) scribble all over the art work like a child …

     
    The more we are treated like children the more child-like we become.

    “Put the pen on the ground … Step away from the pen.”

     

     

    Heide Museum of Modern Art
    7, Templestowe Road
    Bulleen, Victoria 3105

    Opening hours:
    (Heide II and Heide III)
    Tuesday – Sunday 10.00am – 5.00pm

    Heide Museum of Modern Art website

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    Review: ‘Jill Orr: Vision’ at Jenny Port Gallery, Richmond, Melbourne

    Exhibition dates: 2nd June – 3rd July, 2010

     

    Jill Orr (Australian, b. 1952) 'Megan' 2009 from the exhibition Review: 'Jill Orr: Vision' at Jenny Port Gallery, Richmond, Melbourne, June - July, 2010

     

    Jill Orr (Australian, b. 1952)
    Megan
    2009

     

     

    A huge gallery crawl on Wednesday last saw me take in exhibitions at Nellie Castan Gallery (Malleus Melficarum: strong sculptural work by James and Eleanor Avery; Broken Canon: vibrant mixed media collages by Marc Freeman); Anita Traverso Gallery (Peristereonas: sculptures, photographs and mixed media by Barry Thompson); John Buckley Gallery (Perpetua by Emma can Leest, beautiful cut paper works; rather mundane paintings by Christian Lock); Karen Woodbury Gallery (Every breath you take: wonderful galaxy-like paintings, perhaps as seen by the Hubble telescope, with a geometric / cellular base by Lara Merrett); The Centre for Contemporary Photography (Event horizon: a group exhibition that “engages the horizon as a means to establish a physical locality with relation to the Earth’s surface and more broadly to the universe of which it is a miniscule component.” An exhibition that left me rather cold); and ACCA (Towards an elegant solution by Peter Cripps, again a singularly unemotional engagement with the precise, contained work: interesting for how the work explores spatial environments but in an abstract, intellectual way).

    The stand out work from this mammoth day was Jill Orr: Vision at Jenny Port Gallery. Simply put, it was the strongest, most direct, most emotionally powerful work that I saw all day.

    Dr Marcus Bunyan


    Many thankx to Amelia Douglas and Jenny Port Gallery for allowing me to publish the photographs in this posting.

     

     

    Jill Orr (Australian, b. 1952) 'Megan' 2009 from the exhibition Review: 'Jill Orr: Vision' at Jenny Port Gallery, Richmond, Melbourne, June - July, 2010

     

    Jill Orr (Australian, b. 1952)
    Megan
    2009

     

     

    Jill Orr’s new participatory performances are photographs of children from Avoca Primary School painted with white clay from the area, displayed in pairs. The children are photographed once with eyes open, once with eyes closed. Orr asked the children to imagine their future life when they had their eyes closed. The key to the work is a group photograph of the ghostly children outside the primary school where everyone is isolated from each other (see photograph below).

    “White faces loom up out of a dark ground, described by Orr as a void. On the surface these portraits are finely crafted, the skin of masked face becomes one with the digital file to create a facial landscape. The materiality of the face and the photographic file are exposed for the viewer. Titling the series ‘vision’ Orr ventures into a ‘haptic visuality’ where “vision itself can be tactile, as though one were touching a film with one’s eyes.”


    From the catalogue essay by Professor Anne Marsh, Monash University

     

     

    In the performance, the ritual of being photographed, Orr instructs the children who are placed under the surveillance of the camera. “We are confronted with the pose, the conscious composition of the image to be photographed, the inherent constructedness of the posed photograph.”1 The child assumes the pose by which they wish to be memorialised. The gaze (of the camera, of the viewer) is returned / or not in this spectacle.

    Something happens when we look at these photographs. The text of the photographs becomes intertextual, producing as Barthes understands a “plurality of meanings and signifying / interpretive gestures that escape the reduction of knowledge to fixed, monological re-presentations, or presences.”2 This is because, as Foucault observes, texts “are caught up in a system of references to … other texts, other sentences: it is a node within a network …  Its unity is variable and relative.”3

    The photographs invite us to share not only the mapping of the surface of the skin and the mapping of place (the history of white people living on the land in country Australia) and identity but the sharing of inner light, the light of the imaginary as well – and in this observation the images become unstable, open to reinterpretation. The distance between viewer and subject is transcended through an innate understanding of inner and outer light. The photographs seduce, meaning, literally, to be led astray.

    As American photographer Minor White, who photographed in meditation hoping for a revelation in spirit though connection between person > subject > camera > negative > print, observes in one of his Three Canons

    When the image mirrors the man
    And the man mirrors the subject
    Something might take over
    4


    Here the power of the photographer acting in isolation, the modernist tenet of authorship, is overthrown. In it’s place, “White supposes a relationship with subject that is a two way street: by granting the world some role in its own representation we create a photograph that is not so much a product solely of individual actions as it is the result of a negotiation in which the world and all its subjects might participate.”5 The autobiography of a soul born in the age of mechanical reproduction. This is the power of these photographs for something intangible within the viewer does take over. I found myself looking at the photographs again and again for small nuances, the detail of hairs on the head, the imagining of what the person was thinking about with their eyes closed: their future, their fears, their hopes, the ‘active imagination as a means to visualise sustainable futures’ (Orr, 2010).

    These photographs seem to lengthen or protract time through this haptic touching of inner light. As Pablo Helguera observes in his excellent essay How To Understand the Light on a Landscape that examines different types of light (including experiental light, somber light, home light, ghost light, the light of the deathbed, protective light, artificial light, working light, Sunday light, used light, narrated light, the last light of day, hotel light, transparent light, after light, the light of the truly blind and the light of adolescence but not, strangely, inner light)

    “Experience is triggered by light, but not exclusively by the visible light of the electro-magnetic spectrum. What the human eye is incapable to perceive is absorbed by other sensory parts of the body, which contribute to the perception that light causes an effect that goes beyond the merely visual …

    There is the LIGHT OF ADOLESCENCE, a blinding light that is similar to the one we feel when we are asleep facing the sun and we feel its warmth but don’t see it directly. Sometimes it marks the unplace, perhaps the commonality of all places or perhaps, for those who are pessimists, the unplaceness of every location …

    We may choose to openly embrace the darkness of light, and thus let ourselves through the great gates of placehood, where we can finally accept the unexplainable concreteness of our moments for what they are.”6


    In the imagination of the darkness that lies behind these children’s closed eyes is the commonality of all places, a shared humanity of memory, of dreams. These photographs testify to our presence and ask us to decide how we feel about our life, our place and the relation to that (un)placeness where we must all, eventually, return.

    Dr Marcus Bunyan

     

    1/ Feiereisen, Florence and Pope, Daniel. “True Fiction and Fictional Truths: The Enigmatic in Sebald’s Use of Images in The Emigrants” in Patt, Lise (ed.,). Searching for Sebald: Photography after W.G. Sebald. Los Angeles: The Institute of Cultural Inquiry, 2007, p. 175.

    2/ Barthes, Roland. “From Work to Text” in Image, Music, Text. trans. S. Heath. New York: Hill and Wang, 1977 quoted in Thumlert, Kurt. Intervisuality, Visual Culture, and Education. [Online] Cited 10/08/2006. www.forkbeds.com/visual-pedagogy.htm (link no longer active)

    3/ Foucault, Michel. The Order of Things: An Archeology of the Human Sciences. New York: Vintage, 1973 quoted in Thumlert, Kurt. Intervisuality, Visual Culture, and Education. [Online] Cited 10/08/2006. www.forkbeds.com/visual-pedagogy.htm (link no longer active)

    4/ White, Minor. Mirrors, Messages and Manifestations. Aperture, 1969

    5/ Leo, Vince. Review of Mirrors, Messages and Manifestations on the Amazon website [Online] Cited 26/06/2010

    6/ Helguera, Pablo. “How to Understand the Light on a Landscape,” in Patt, Lise (ed.,). Searching for Sebald: Photography after W.G. Sebald. Los Angeles: The Institute of Cultural Inquiry, 2007, pp. 110-119

       

       

      Jill Orr (Australian, b. 1952) 'Jacinta' 2009 from the exhibition Review: 'Jill Orr: Vision' at Jenny Port Gallery, Richmond, Melbourne, June - July, 2010

      Jill Orr (Australian, b. 1952) 'Jacinta' 2009 from the exhibition Review: 'Jill Orr: Vision' at Jenny Port Gallery, Richmond, Melbourne, June - July, 2010

       

      Jill Orr (Australian, b. 1952)
      Jacinta
      2009

       

      Jill Orr (Australian, b. 1952) 'Avoca Primary School' 2009

       

      Jill Orr (Australian, b. 1952)
      Avoca Primary School
      2009

       

       

      Jill Orr’s work centres on issues of the psycho-social and environmental where she draws on land and identities. Grappling with the balance and discord that exists between the human spirit, art and nature, Orr has, since the 1970s, delighted, shocked and moved audiences through her performance installations.

      This current body of work involved children from the Avoca Primary School as active participants in Orr’s performance for the camera. The result is a series of high contrast black and white photographic portraits, which are shown as diptychs portraying the different states of seeing both outwardly and inwardly. One of each pair frames the child looking directly at the camera. The gaze meets the viewer. Who is looking at whom? The second captures the child whose eyes are closed. An inner world is intimated, but not accessible to the viewer.

      In terms of the ‘gaze’, these works turn to the child as conveyer of the imaginary engaging both within and without. “I have found that creative acts require the visionary sensibilities of both the inner and outer world to operate simultaneously, consciously and unconsciously as dual aspects of the one action. In this instance the action is that of active imagination as a means to visualise sustainable futures.” (Jill Orr, 2010). The portraits also reflect the present relationship to place that is etched into the faces of youth as already kissed by the harsh Australian sun.

      Avoca is one of many townships that has been socially, economically and environmentally affected by drought and climate change. The portraits are created against this background.

      Text from the Jenny Port Gallery website [Online] Cited 26/06/2010 no longer available online

       

      Jill Orr (Australian, b. 1952) 'Vision' installation photograph at Jenny Port Gallery

      Jill Orr (Australian, b. 1952) 'Vision' installation photograph at Jenny Port Gallery

       

      Jill Orr (Australian, b. 1952)
      Vision installation photographs at Jenny Port Gallery
      June 2010
      Photos: Marcus Bunyan

       

       

      Jenny Port Gallery

      This gallery has now closed.

      Jill Orr website

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      Exhibition: ‘Detroit Experiences: Robert Frank Photographs, 1955’ at Detroit Institute of Arts, Detroit

      Exhibition dates: 3rd March – 4th July, 2010

       

      Robert Frank (Swiss-American, 1924-2019) 'Assembly Plant, Detroit' 1955 from the exhibition 'Detroit Experiences: Robert Frank Photographs, 1955' at Detroit Institute of Arts, Detroit, March - July, 2010

       

      Robert Frank (Swiss-American, 1924-2019)
      Assembly Plant, Detroit
      1955
      Gelatin silver print
      8 7/8 × 13 1/8 inches (22.5 × 33.3cm)
      Founders Society Purchase, Coville Photographic Fund
      © Robert Frank, from The Americans. Detroit Institute of Arts

       

      Many thankx to Pamela Marcil and the Detroit Institute of Arts for allowing me to reproduce the photographs in the posting. Please click on the photographs for a larger version of the image.

      Marcus

       

       

      “I am always looking outside, trying to look inside, trying to say something that is true. But maybe nothing is really true. Except what’s out there. And what’s out there is constantly changing.”


      Robert Frank, 1985

       

       

      Robert Frank (Swiss-American, 1924-2019) 'Belle Isle' 1955 from the exhibition 'Detroit Experiences: Robert Frank Photographs, 1955' at Detroit Institute of Arts, Detroit, March - July, 2010

       

      Robert Frank (Swiss-American, 1924-2019)
      Belle Isle – Detroit
      1955, printed between 1966-1968
      Gelatin silver print
      12 5/8 × 18 7/8 inches (32.1 × 47.9cm)
      Museum Purchase, Ernest and Rosemarie Kanzler Foundation Fund, Forum for Prints, Drawings, and Photographs Purchase Fund, and General Art Purchase Fund
      © Robert Frank, from The Americans. Detroit Institute of Arts

       

      Robert Frank (Swiss-American, 1924-2019) 'Detroit River Rouge Plant' 1955 from the exhibition 'Detroit Experiences: Robert Frank Photographs, 1955' at Detroit Institute of Arts, Detroit, March - July, 2010

       

      Robert Frank (Swiss-American, 1924-2019)
      Detroit River Rouge Plant
      1955, printed 1970s
      Gelatin silver print
      9 1/8 × 13 7/8 inches (23.2 × 35.2cm)
      Founders Society Purchase, Coville Photographic Fund
      © Robert Frank. Detroit Institute of Arts

       

      Robert Frank (Swiss-American, 1924-2019) 'Drive-In Movie, Detroit' 1955

       

      Robert Frank (Swiss-American, 1924-2019)
      Drive-In Movie, Detroit
      1955, printed 1977
      Gelatin silver print
      8 1/4 × 12 1/2 inches (21 × 31.8cm)
      Founders Society Purchase, Tina and Lee Hills Graphic Arts Fund
      © Robert Frank, from The Americans. Detroit Institute of Arts.

       

       

      Detroit Experiences: Robert Frank Photographs, 1955 showcases more than 50 rare and many never-before-seen black-and-white photographs taken in Detroit by legendary artist Robert Frank. The exhibition will be on view at the Detroit Institute of Arts (DIA) March 3 – July 4, 2010. The exhibition is free with museum admission.

      In 1955 and 1956 Robert Frank traveled the U.S. taking photographs for his groundbreaking book The Americans, published in 1958. With funding from a prestigious Guggenheim grant, he set out to create a large visual record of America, and Detroit was one of his early stops. Inspired by autoworkers, the cars they made, along with local lunch counters, drive-in movies and public parks such as Belle Isle, Frank transformed everyday experiences of Detroiters into an extraordinary visual statement about American life.

      According to Frank, The Americans included “things that are there, anywhere, and everywhere … a town at night, a parking lot, the man who owns three cars and the man who owns none … the dream of grandeur, advertising, neon lights … gas tanks, post offices and backyards …” The exhibition includes nine Detroit images that were published in The Americans, as well as, for the first time, an in-depth body of work representative of Frank’s Detroit, its working-class culture and automotive industry.

      Frank was drawn to Detroit partly by a personal fascination with the automobile, but also saw its presence and effect on American culture as essential to his series. Frank was one of the few photographers allowed to take photographs at the famous Ford Motor Company River Rouge factory, where he was amazed to witness the transformation of raw materials into fully assembled cars. In a letter to his wife he wrote, “Ford is an absolutely fantastic place … this one is God’s factory and if there is such a thing – I am sure that the devil gave him a helping hand to build what is called Ford’s River Rouge Plant.” Frank spent two days taking pictures at the Ford factory, photographing workers on the assembly lines and manning machines by day, and following them as they ventured into the city at night.

      Whether in the disorienting surroundings of a massive factory or during the solitary and alienating moments of individuals in parks and on city streets, the Swiss-born photographer looked beneath the surface of life in the U.S. and found a culture that challenged his perceptions and popular notions of the American Dream. Further accentuating his view of America, Frank developed an unconventional photographic style innovative and controversial in its time. Photographing quickly, Frank sometimes tilted and blurred compositions, presenting people and their surroundings in fleeting and fragmentary moments with an unsentimental eye.

      Beat poet Jack Kerouac expressed the complex nature of the artist and his work in a passage from his introduction to The Americans stating, “Robert Frank, Swiss, unobtrusive, nice, with that little camera that he raises and snaps with one hand he sucked a sad poem right out of America onto film, taking rank among the tragic poets of the world.”

      Born in 1924 in Zurich, Switzerland, Frank emigrated to the U.S. in 1947. He worked on assignments for magazines from 1948–53, but his photographic books garnered the highest acclaim. After publishing The Americans, he began filmmaking and directed the early experimental masterpiece Pull My Daisy, in collaboration with Jack Kerouac in 1959. Frank continues to work in both film and photography and has been the subject of many traveling exhibitions in recent years. The National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C. established Frank’s photographic archive in 1990 and organised his first traveling retrospective, “Moving Out, in 1995” as well as a 2009 exhibition “Looking In: Robert Frank’s “The Americans”.” Frank lived in Mabou, Nova Scotia, and New York City with his wife, artist June Leaf.

      Press release from the Detroit Institute of Arts website [Online] Cited 24/06/2019 no longer available online

       

      Robert Frank (Swiss-American, 1924-2019) 'Untitled' 1955

       

      Robert Frank (Swiss-American, 1924-2019)
      Untitled
      1955, printed c. 1970s
      Gelatin silver print
      10 3/4 × 15 7/8 inches (27.3 × 40.3cm)
      Founders Society Purchase with funds from Founders Junior Council
      © Robert Frank, from The Americans. Detroit Institute of Arts

       

      Robert Frank (Swiss-American, 1924-2019) 'Ford River Rouge Plant' 1955, printed c. 1970s

       

      Robert Frank (Swiss-American, 1924-2019)
      Ford River Rouge Plant
      1955, printed c. 1970s
      Gelatin silver print
      13 13/16 × 9 1/8 inches (35.1 × 23.2cm)
      Founders Society Purchase, Coville Photographic Fund
      © Robert Frank. Detroit Institute of Arts

       

      Robert Frank (Swiss-American, b. 1924) 'Assembly Plant, Ford, Detroit' 1955

       

      Robert Frank  (Swiss-American, 1924-2019)
      Assembly Plant, Ford, Detroit
      1955, printed c. 1960s
      Gelatin silver print
      12 7/8 × 8 1/2 inches (32.7 × 21.6cm)
      Founders Society Purchase, Coville Photographic Fund
      © Robert Frank. Detroit Institute of Arts

       

      Robert Frank (Swiss-American, 1924-2019) 'Drugstore, Detroit' 1955

       

      Robert Frank (Swiss-American, 1924-2019)
      Drugstore, Detroit
      1955, printed c. 1960s
      Gelatin silver print
      23 1/4 × 15 3/4 inches (59.1 × 40cm)
      Founders Society Purchase, with funds from the Founders Junior Council
      © Robert Frank, from The Americans. Detroit Institute of Arts

       

      Robert Frank (Swiss-American, 1924-2019) 'Detroit' 1955

       

      Robert Frank (Swiss-American, 1924-2019)
      Detroit
      1955, printed c. 1960s
      Gelatin silver print
      9 1/16 × 13 1/2 inches (23 × 34.3cm)
      Founders Society Purchase, Coville Photographic Fund
      © Robert Frank, from The Americans. Detroit Institute of Arts

       

      Robert Frank (Swiss-American, 1924-2019) 'Detroit - Belle Isle' 1955

       

      Robert Frank (Swiss-American, 1924-2019)
      Belle Isle – Detroit
      1955, printed between 1960 and 1979
      Gelatin silver print
      12 1/2 × 18 3/4 inches (31.8 × 47.6cm)
      Museum Purchase, Ernest and Rosemarie Kanzler Foundation Fund, Forum for Prints, Drawings, and Photographs Purchase Fund, and General Art Purchase Fund
      © Robert Frank, from The Americans. Detroit Institute of Arts

       

      Robert Frank (Swiss-American, 1924-2019) 'Rodeo - Detroit' 1955

       

      Robert Frank (Swiss-American, 1924-2019)
      Rodeo – Detroit
      1955, printed 1960s
      Gelatin silver print
      6 1/2 × 9 7/8 inches (16.5 × 25.1cm)
      Museum Purchase, Ernest and Rosemarie Kanzler Foundation Fund, Forum for Prints, Drawings, and Photographs Purchase Fund, and General Art Purchase Fund
      © Robert Frank, from The Americans. Detroit Institute of Arts

       

      In 1955, Swiss-born photographer Robert Frank traveled across the United States photographing how Americans live, work, and spend their leisure time. Detroit was a critical stop on his itinerary, as the Motor City was world renowned for its automobiles along with its factories and labor force. Frank spent several days in Detroit at its legendary Ford Motor Company Rouge Plant and visited dime-store lunch counters, drive-ins, and public parks as well. He may have found Stetson-wearing spectators at a local rodeo an unlikely and uncharacteristic subject for Detroit – a large, industrial, midwestern city. Nonetheless he included Rodeo – Detroit, in addition to eight other photographs taken in the city, as part of the 83 images found in his ground-breaking photo book The Americans from 1958. The book brought Frank great acclaim for his critical commentary on America during the boom years following World War II.

      From Bulletin of the Detroit Institute of Arts 89 (2015)

       

      Robert Frank (Swiss-American, 1924-2019) 'Detroit' 1956

       

      Robert Frank (Swiss-American, 1924-2019)
      Detroit
      1956
      Gelatin silver print
      © Robert Frank, from The Americans. Detroit Institute of Arts

       

       

      Detroit Institute of Arts
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      Detroit, Michigan 48202
      Main Line: 313.833.7900

      Opening hours:
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      Exhibition: ‘Harry Callahan: American Photographer’ at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

      Exhibition dates: 21st November 2009 – 3rd July, 2010

       

      Harry Callahan (American, 1912-1999) 'Eleanor, Chicago' 1949 from the exhibition 'Harry Callahan: American Photographer' at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, Nov 2009 - July 2010

       

      Harry Callahan (American, 1912-1999)
      Eleanor, Chicago
      1949
      Gelatin silver print
      Courtesy Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

       

       

      I admire the use of strong horizontals and verticals in the work of Harry Callahan and the exquisite sense of space, stillness and sensuality he creates within the image plane. A true American master. Please click on the photographs for a larger version of the image.

      Dr Marcus Bunyan


      Many thankx to the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston for allowing me to publish the photographs in the posting. Please click on the photographs for a larger version of the image.

       

       

      Harry Callahan (American, 1912-1999) 'Eleanor and Barbara' 1953 from the exhibition 'Harry Callahan: American Photographer' at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, Nov 2009 - July 2010

       

      Harry Callahan (American, 1912-1999)
      Eleanor and Barbara
      1953
      Gelatin silver print
      Courtesy Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

       

      Harry Callahan (American, 1912-1999) 'Eleanor and Barbara, Lake Michigan' 1953 from the exhibition 'Harry Callahan: American Photographer' at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, Nov 2009 - July 2010

       

      Harry Callahan (American, 1912-1999)
      Eleanor and Barbara, Lake Michigan
      1953
      Gelatin silver print
      Courtesy Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

       

      Harry Callahan (American, 1912-1999) 'Eleanor and Barbara' c. 1954

       

      Harry Callahan (American, 1912-1999)
      Eleanor and Barbara
      c. 1954
      Gelatin silver print
      Courtesy Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

       

      Harry Callahan (American, 1912-1999) 'Eleanor, Chicago' 1953

       

      Harry Callahan (American, 1912-1999)
      Eleanor, Chicago
      1953
      Gelatin silver print
      Courtesy Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

       

      Harry Callahan (American, 1912-1999) 'Detroit' 1943

       

      Harry Callahan (American, 1912-1999)
      Detroit
      1943
      Gelatin silver print
      Courtesy Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

       

       

      The brilliant graphic sensibility of Harry Callahan (1912-1999), a major figure in American photography, is the focus of Harry Callahan: American Photographer at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston (MFA). Debuting November 21, the exhibition features approximately 40 photographs that survey the major visual themes of the artist’s career. It celebrates the Museum’s important recent acquisitions – by both purchase and gift – of Callahan’s photographs and showcases significant examples of his artistry from the collections of friends of the MFA. The many sensitive pictures that Callahan made of his wife Eleanor, his depictions of passers-by on the street, his carefully composed landscapes and close-ups from nature, and experimental darkroom abstractions reveal a wide-ranging talent that was enormously influential.

      “Harry Callahan was one of the most innovative photographers working in America in the mid 20th-century,” said Malcolm Rogers, Ann and Graham Gund Director of the MFA. “His elegantly spare, introspective photographs demonstrate his lyricism and the originality of his sense of design.”

      The Detroit-born photographer, whose career spanned six decades, became interested in the camera in the late 1930s while working as a Chrysler Corporation shipping clerk. He was largely self-taught, and attracted admiration early on for his originality. By 1946, Callahan was hired as a photography instructor by the Hungarian-born artist László Moholy-Nagy for the Institute of Design, a Bauhaus-inspired school of art and design in Chicago. In 1961, Callahan was invited to head the photography program at the Rhode Island School of Design (RISD), where he was based until retiring to Atlanta two decades later.

      “Harry Callahan’s approach helped shape American photography in the second half of the 20th-century,” said Anne Havinga, Estrellita and Yousuf Karsh Senior Curator of Photographs, who organised the exhibition. “His way of seeing inspired countless followers and continues to feel fresh today.”

      Callahan concentrated on a handful of personal subjects in his work, exploring each theme repeatedly throughout his career. These include portraits of his wife Eleanor, depictions of anonymous pedestrians, expressive details of the urban and natural landscape, and experimental darkroom abstractions. The MFA exhibition is organised into five themes: Eleanor, Pedestrians, Architecture, Landscapes, and Darkroom Abstractions …

      Press release from the MFA website [Online] Cited 20/06/2010. No long available online

       

      Harry Callahan (American, 1912-1999) 'Eleanor' 1948

       

      Harry Callahan (American, 1912-1999)
      Eleanor
      1948
      Gelatin silver print
      Courtesy Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

       

      Harry Callahan (American, 1912-1999) 'Chicago' 1950

       

      Harry Callahan (American, 1912-1999)
      Chicago
      1950
      Gelatin silver print
      Courtesy Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

       

      Harry Callahan (American, 1912-1999) 'Eleanor, Chicago' 1949

       

      Harry Callahan (American, 1912-1999)
      Eleanor, Chicago
      1949
      Gelatin silver print
      Courtesy Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

       

      Harry Callahan (American, 1912-1999) 'Eleanor and Barbara (baby carriage)' 1952

       

      Harry Callahan (American, 1912-1999)
      Eleanor and Barbara (baby carriage)
      1952
      Gelatin silver print
      Courtesy Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

       

       

      In 1936, around the time that Callahan began to explore photography, he married Eleanor Knapp, who served as one of his first and most frequent subjects. Callahan’s portraits of his wife, characterised by their intimate yet detached poetry, have become a landmark in the history of photography. In the photograph Eleanor (about 1948, see second photograph above), Callahan portrays his wife in a private interior setting, facing away from the camera. After the birth of their daughter Barbara in 1950, she too entered these family pictures, which capture the intimate moments of daily life as seen in the photograph, Eleanor and Barbara (1953, see photograph second from top).

      Callahan photographed the natural landscape throughout his career, focusing on its evocative forms and textures. In images such as Aix-en-Provence, France (1957), he explored the visual effects that he could create either through high contrast or closely related tonalities. Callahan also utilised a range of different experimental darkroom techniques – from photographing the beam of a flashlight in a darkened room, to developing one print from multiple negatives. Many of his multi-exposure pictures were made by superimposing images from popular culture onto studies of urban life. Callahan’s openness to experimentation was stimulating for the many students who worked with him.

      Callahan made many of his best known images during his 15 years in Chicago, where he also began his role as an influential teacher. During the 1950s, the photographer embarked on a series of close-ups of anonymous pedestrians in the streets of Chicago, most of them women. Using a 35mm camera with a pre-focused telephoto lens, he captured passersby unaware of his presence, resulting in snapshot-like images that record unsuspecting subjects absorbed in private thought or action, such as Chicago (1950, see photograph above), a close-up of a preoccupied woman’s face. Callahan returned to this theme frequently, working in both black and white and colour.

      Callahan was repeatedly drawn to architectural and urban subjects. Prior to moving to Chicago, he explored the spaces of Detroit, photographing the formal patterns he discovered there. In Detroit (1943, see photograph above), Callahan depicts a street scene, with the people in transit appearing as a pattern. He experimented with colour in these pictures as early as the 1940s, but he worked more extensively in colour later in his career, from the 1970s onward.

      Text from the Art Tatler website [Online] Cited 20/06/2010. No long available online

       

      Harry Callahan (American, 1912-1999) 'Chicago' 1961

       

      Harry Callahan (American, 1912-1999)
      Chicago
      1961
      Gelatin silver print
      Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. Gift of Barbara and Gene Polk
      © The Estate of Harry Callahan, courtesy Pace/MacGill, NY
      Courtesy Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

       

      Harry Callahan (American, 1912-1999) 'Eleanor' about 1947

       

      Harry Callahan (American, 1912-1999)
      Eleanor
      about 1947
      Gelatin silver print
      Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. Gift of Barbara and Gene Polk
      © The Estate of Harry Callahan, courtesy Pace/MacGill, NY
      Courtesy Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

       

      Harry Callahan (American, 1912-1999) 'Cape Cod' 1972

       

      Harry Callahan (American, 1912-1999)
      Cape Cod
      1972
      Gelatin silver print
      Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. Gift of Barbara and Gene Polk
      © The Estate of Harry Callahan, courtesy Pace/MacGill, NY
      Courtesy Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

       

      Harry Callahan (American, 1912-1999) 'Cape Cod' 1972

       

      Harry Callahan (American, 1912-1999)
      Cape Cod
      1972
      Gelatin silver print
      Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, Polaroid Foundation Purchase Fund
      © The Estate of Harry Callahan, courtesy Pace/MacGill, NY
      Courtesy Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

       

       

      Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
      Avenue of the Arts
      465 Huntington Avenue
      Avenue of the Arts
      Boston, Massachusetts 02115-5523
      617-267-9300

      Opening hours:
      Thursday – Monday 10am – 5pm
      Closed Tuesday and Wednesday

      Museum of Fine Arts, Boston website

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      Exhibition: ‘Lincoln, Life-Size’ at The Bruce Museum, Greenwich, Connecticut

      Exhibition dates: 13th February – 6th June, 2010

       Curators: Peter W. Kunhardt, Jr., Director of the Meserve-Kunhardt Foundation, and Robin Garr, Director of Education, Bruce Museum

       

      Many thankx to Mike Horyczun, Director of Public Relations and the Bruce Museum for allowing me to publish the images in the posting. Please click on the photographs for even larger version of the image.

      Marcus

       

      Alexander Hesler (American, 1823-1895) 'Abraham Lincoln' June 3,1860 Springfield, Illinois from the exhibition 'Lincoln, Life-Size' at The Bruce Museum, Greenwich, Connecticut, February - June, 2010

       

      Alexander Hesler (American, 1823-1895)
      Abraham Lincoln
      June 3, 1860 Springfield, Illinois

       

      Alexander Hesler or Hessler (1823-1895) was an American photographer active in the U.S. state of Illinois. He is best known for photographing, in 1858 and 1860, definitive iconic images of the beardless Abraham Lincoln. …

      Hesler’s known portraits include photographs of the two chief Illinois political figures of his day, Lincoln and federal senator Stephen A. Douglas. In the 1860 presidential election, Lincoln’s friends took steps to have Hesler’s images copied and recirculated, cementing their stature as works of Lincoln image-making.

      Hesler was an award-winning photographer whose goal was to create photographs of lasting artistic value. He was recognised for the quality of both his portrait work and his outdoor photography. Upon Hesler’s retirement in 1865, he transferred his Chicago studio and negatives to a fellow photographer, George Bucher Ayres. Several of Hesler’s best-known images of Lincoln are platinum prints produced by Ayres from Hesler negatives.

      Text from the Wikipedia website

       

      Preston Butler. 'Abraham Lincoln' August 13, 1860 Springfield, Illinois from the exhibition 'Lincoln, Life-Size' at The Bruce Museum, Greenwich, Connecticut, February - June, 2010

      Preston Butler. 'Abraham Lincoln' August 13, 1860 Springfield, Illinois

       

      Preston Butler
      Abraham Lincoln
      August 13, 1860 Springfield, Illinois
      Ambrotype
      Plate 5 3/4 x 4 1/2 in
      Library of Congress

       

      Abraham Lincoln as candidate for United States president. Half-length portrait, seated, facing front.

      Thought to be the last beardless portrait of Lincoln, this photo was “made for the portrait painter, John Henry Brown, noted for his miniatures in ivory. … ‘There are so many hard lines in his face,’ wrote Brown in his diary, ‘that it becomes a mask to the inner man. His true character only shines out when in an animated conversation, or when telling an amusing tale. … He is said to be a homely man; I do not think so.'” (Source: Ostendorf, p. 62)

      Published in: Lincoln’s photographs: a complete album / by Lloyd Ostendorf. Dayton, OH: Rockywood Press, 1998, pp. 62-63.

      Between 1856, the year of Preston Butler’s arrival in Springfield, and Feb. 11, 1861, when President-elect Abraham Lincoln departed from Springfield, Butler took at least 8 photographs of Lincoln and at least 1 photograph of Mary, Willie and Tad Lincoln. Also, in 1857 or 1858, Butler photographed each of the 4 sides of Springfield’s public square. These photographs are the primary source of information about the appearance of the public square in Lincoln’s Springfield.

       

      Abraham B. Byers (American, 1836-1920) 'Abraham Lincoln' May 7, 1858 from the exhibition 'Lincoln, Life-Size' at The Bruce Museum, Greenwich, Connecticut, February - June, 2010

       

      Abraham B. Byers (American, 1836-1920)
      Abraham Lincoln
      May 7, 1858 Beardstown, Illinois
      Ambrotype

       

       

      The Bruce Museum in Greenwich, Connecticut, presents its newest exhibition Lincoln, Life-Size, from February 13, 2010, through June 6, 2010. The exhibition features photographs of Abraham Lincoln reproduced full size, hanging alongside original 19th-century images and artefacts that tell the story of Lincoln’s tumultuous presidency. The exhibition is drawn from the Meserve-Kunhardt Collection which it has on loan from the Meserve-Kunhardt Foundation. Lincoln, Life-Size is supported by Fieldpoint Private Bank & Trust, New England Land Company, Ltd., a Committee of Honor co-chaired by Tom Clephane and Nat Day, and the Charles M. and Deborah G. Royce Exhibition Fund.

      Lincoln, Life-Size is organised by guest curator Peter W. Kunhardt, Jr., Director of the Meserve-Kunhardt Foundation, and Robin Garr, Director of Education, Bruce Museum. Peter W. Kunhardt, Jr., is the great-great-grandson of Frederick Hill Meserve one of this country’s premiere Lincoln collectors. Frederick Hill Meserve’s passion for Lincoln was ignited in the 1880s when his father, William Neal Meserve, who had served in the Civil War, asked him to hunt for photographs to illustrate his handwritten war diary. Five generations of the family have preserved this massive historical record over the past century.

      The exhibition chronicles the toll of war etched into the face of our 16th president. Life-size enlargements of Lincoln’s portraits circle the entire central gallery. Visitors will experience what it was like to stand before him and look into his eyes. Beneath this facial timeline of his presidency is a selection of photographs of people who touched his life and events that nearly wore him out.

      The show explores the time from Abraham Lincoln’s arrival in Washington in 1857 through his assassination in 1865. Photographs chronicle events as the war unfolds, his son dies, and he struggles with generals and mounting death tolls. In the photographs, Lincoln is revealed in a variety of poses, each bearing a significance that attests to the historic nature of his life, be it as he is grappling with emancipation or drafting words that would become sacred; serving as husband and father or being pulled in all directions by his constituents; and ultimately as he holds the country together throughout the turbulent times of the Civil War.

      Highlights of the exhibition include Leonard Volk’s bronze life mask of Lincoln’s head and hands, glass negatives by Mathew Brady, original albumen war prints by Alexander Gardner and Timothy O’Sullivan, and carte-de-visites of Lincoln, his family, his cabinet, and his generals. Viewers can study official government war maps, view a Thomas Nast drawing depicting the slavery issue, and walk around an early “triptych” photograph that portrays Lincoln, Grant, or Sherman, depending on where the viewer stands. An oversize “imperial” print shows Lincoln just days before delivering his Gettysburg address. In another imperial print a lab technician’s thumb print obliterates Lincoln at his second inaugural, but what is visible is a spectator in the crowd who appears to be John Wilkes Booth. Another photograph of Booth has these words written on the back side: “Recognize him and kill him.” Lincoln, Life-Size also include artefact related to Lincoln and his era.

      “We have presented these works so that viewers can see how the toll the war and personal tragedies aged him during his years in office,” said Peter W. Kunhardt, Jr. “In fact, he was just 56 years old when he was assassinated.” This is the first museum exhibition dedicated to the collection of the Meserve-Kunhardt Foundation, which is now housed on the campus of SUNY Purchase. The recent book, Lincoln, Life-Size, co-authored by Phillip B. Kunhardt III, Peter W. Kunhardt and Peter W. Kunhardt, Jr. is available in the Bruce Museum Store. A full array of exhibition programming related to the exhibition is scheduled.

      Text from the Bruce Museum website [Online] Cited 01/06/2010. No longer available online

       

      Mathew B. Brady (American, c. 1822-1896) 'Abraham Lincoln' January 8, 1864 Washington, DC

       

      Mathew B. Brady (American, c. 1822-1896)
      Abraham Lincoln
      January 8, 1864 Washington, DC
      National Archives and Records Administration

       

      Anthony Berger (American born Germany, 1832 - after 1897) 'Abraham Lincoln' February 9, 1864 Washington, DC

       

      Anthony Berger (American born Germany, 1832 – after 1897)
      Abraham Lincoln
      February 9, 1864 Washington, DC
      Collodion negative
      Quarter-plate glass transparency
      10.9 x 8.7cm (case)
      Brady’s National Photographic Portrait Galleries
      Library of Congress

       

      This is one of a series of photographs that Anthony Berger took of President Abraham Lincoln at the Brady Gallery in Washington in the winter of 1864, as the Civil War dragged on. Modern albumen print from 1864 wet-plated collodion negative. National Portrait Gallery.

      “The Famous Profile” by Anthony Berger, manager of Brady’s Gallery, Washington D.C., made direct from an original collodion negative in the Meserve collection (M-82). One of seven poses taken by Berger on Tuesday February 9, 1864, it is perhaps the most familiar of Lincoln profiles, a more handsome pose than its companion view (0-89) because Lincoln’s profile is less severe and his left eyebrow is more visible.

       

      Alexander Gardner (Scottish 1821-1882; emigrated America 1856) 'Abraham Lincoln' November 8, 1863 Washington, DC

       

      Alexander Gardner (Scottish 1821-1882; emigrated America 1856)
      Abraham Lincoln
      November 8, 1863 Washington, DC
      Library of Congress

       

      Alexander Gardner (Scottish 1821-1882; emigrated America 1856) 'Abraham Lincoln' February 5, 1865 Washington, DC

       

      Alexander Gardner (Scottish 1821-1882; emigrated America 1856)
      Abraham Lincoln
      February 5, 1865 Washington, DC
      Library of Congress

       

      Alexander Gardner was a Scottish photographer who immigrated to the United States in 1856, where he began to work full-time in that profession. He is best known for his photographs of the American Civil War, U.S. President Abraham Lincoln, and the execution of the conspirators to Lincoln’s assassination.

      This is one of the last photos taken of Lincoln, who was assassinated ten weeks later, on April 14, 1865.

       

      Alexander Gardner (Scottish 1821-1882; emigrated America 1856) 'Abraham Lincoln' February 5, 1865 Washington, DC (detail)

       

      Alexander Gardner (Scottish 1821-1882; emigrated America 1856)
      Abraham Lincoln (detail)
      February 5, 1865 Washington, DC
      Library of Congress

       

       

      The Bruce Museum
      1 Museum Drive in Greenwich, Connecticut, USA.

      Opening hours:
      Tuesday – Sunday 10am – 5pm
      Closed Mondays and major holidays

      The Bruce Museum website

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      Exhibition: ‘Romy Schneider. Wien – Berlin – Paris’ at Deutsche Kinemathek – Museum for Film and Television, Berlin

      Exhibition dates: 5th December 2009 – 29th August, 2010

       

      Heinz Köster (German, 1917-1967) 'Romy Schneider, Berlin 1962' from the exhibition 'Romy Schneider. Wien – Berlin – Paris' at Deutsche Kinemathek – Museum for Film and Television, Berlin, December 2009 - August 2010

       

      Heinz Köster (German, 1917-1967)
      Romy Schneider, Berlin 1962
      1962
      Gelatin silver print
      © Foto: Heinz Köster
      Quelle: Deutsche Kinemathek

       

       

      I seen to have become a little smitten by Romy Schneider. What charisma!

      Marcus


      Many thankx to the Deutsche Kinemathek – Museum for Film and Television for allowing me publish the images in the posting. Please click on the images for a larger version.

       

       

      Heinz Köster (German, 1917-1967) 'Romy Schneider, Berlin 1962' from the exhibition 'Romy Schneider. Wien – Berlin – Paris' at Deutsche Kinemathek – Museum for Film and Television, Berlin, December 2009 - August 2010

       

      Heinz Köster (German, 1917-1967)
      Romy Schneider, Berlin 1962
      1962
      Gelatin silver print
      © Foto: Heinz Köster
      Quelle: Deutsche Kinemathek

       

      Max Scheler (German, 1928-2003) 'Romy Schneider, Venice 1957' from the exhibition 'Romy Schneider. Wien – Berlin – Paris' at Deutsche Kinemathek – Museum for Film and Television, Berlin, December 2009 - August 2010

       

      Max Scheler (German, 1928-2003)
      Romy Schneider, Venice 1957
      1957
      Während Dreharbeiten zu SISSI – SCHICKSALSJAHRE EINER KAISERIN
      R: Ernst Marischka, A 1957
      Gelatin silver print
      © Foto: Max Scheler
      Quelle: Max Scheler Estate, Hamburg

       

       

      The exhibition documents the eventful career of Romy Schneider, who by the late 1950s no longer wanted to be Sissi, and by the 1970s was a celebrated star of French cinema. A large number of unknown photographs of Romy Schneider, her film partners, and family from the 1950s and 1960s will be on display from the collections of the Deutsche Kinemathek. The exhibition will also present loans from private individuals and institutions from France and Austria …

      The exhibition Romy Schneider. Wien – Berlin – Paris, which the Museum für Film und Fernsehen will present beginning on December 5th, documents the varied and wide-ranging career of Romy Schneider, who no longer wanted to be “Sissi” at the end of the 1950s and was celebrated as a star of French cinema in the 1970s.

      Romy Schneider publicly bemoaned her roles in Germany and went to Paris to play women who did justice to her acting abilities and her expectations. She settled in France at the beginning of the 1970s, where she advanced to one of the biggest stars of French cinema. She won several awards and made films with nearly all the great directors and actors of that period. The paparazzi followed the actress at every turn, documenting her strokes of fate for the international popular press, and throughout her life Romy Schneider considered herself to be their victim. Romy Schneider died in Paris in May 1982. To this day, she is admired by millions of fans around the world as one of cinema’s international stars.

      This homage, which can be seen in 450 sq. m. of exhibition space at the Filmhaus, treats both the diverse roles and changing image of the actress, as well as her representation in the media.

      Pictures from films, the press and her private life are grouped according to recurring motifs and combined with film clips. Media installations show the interplay between projection and active self-promotion. Posters, costumes, correspondence and fan souvenirs will augment the presentation.

      Numerous photographs from the 1950s and 1960s of Romy Schneider, her film partners and her family, largely unknown until now, originate from the collections of Deutsche Kinemathek. Loans from other institutions and private individuals will also be on view, for instance from the photographers F. C. Gundlach and Robert Lebeck, as well as from the personal archives of the film director Claude Sautet.

      Press release from the Museum für Film und Fernsehen website [Online] Cited 25/05/2010 no longer available online

       

      Installation view of the exhibition 'Romy Schneider. Wien – Berlin – Paris' at Deutsche Kinemathek – Museum for Film and Television, Berlin
      Installation view of the exhibition 'Romy Schneider. Wien – Berlin – Paris' at Deutsche Kinemathek – Museum for Film and Television, Berlin
      Installation view of the exhibition 'Romy Schneider. Wien – Berlin – Paris' at Deutsche Kinemathek – Museum for Film and Television, Berlin
      Installation view of the exhibition 'Romy Schneider. Wien – Berlin – Paris' at Deutsche Kinemathek – Museum for Film and Television, Berlin

       

      Installation views of the exhibition Romy Schneider. Wien – Berlin – Paris at Deutsche Kinemathek – Museum for Film and Television, Berlin
      Photos © Marian Stefanowski

       

      F. C. Gundlach (German, b. 1926) 'Romy Schneider, Hamburg 1961'

       

      F. C. Gundlach (German, 1926-2021)
      Romy Schneider, Hamburg 1961
      1961
      Gelatin silver print
      © Foto: F. C. Gundlach

       

      F. C. Gundlach (Franz Christian Gundlach) was a German photographer, gallery owner, collector, curator und founder. In 2000 he created the F.C. Gundlach Foundation, since 2003 he has been founding director of the House of Photography – Deichtorhallen Hamburg.

       

      Alain Delon and Romy Schneider in 'La Piscine'/'Der Swimmingpool' 1969

       

      Alain Delon and Romy Schneider in La Piscine/Der Swimmingpool
      R- Jacques Deray, F/I 1969
      Gelatin silver print
      Foto/Quelle: Filmarchiv Austria, Wien

       

      Romy Schneider and Alain Delon in 'La Piscine'/'Der Swimmingpool' 1969

       

      Romy Schneider and Alain Delon in La Piscine/Der Swimmingpool
      R- Jacques Deray, F/I 1969
      Gelatin silver print
      Foto/Quelle: Deutsche Kinemathek

       

      Georges Pierre (French, 1927-2003) 'Romy Schneider, 1972'

       

      Georges Pierre (French, 1927-2003)
      Romy Schneider, 1972
      1972
      © Foto: Georges Pierre
      Quelle: Cinemémathèque française

       

      Robert Lebeck (German, 1929-2014) 'Romy Schneider, Berlin 1976'

       

      Robert Lebeck (German, 1929-2014)
      Romy Schneider, Berlin 1976
      1976
      Während der Dreharbeiten zu PORTRAIT DE GROUPE AVEC DAME/GRUPPENBILD MIT DAME
      R: Aleksandar Petrovic, F/BRD 1976
      Gelatin silver print
      © Foto: Robert Lebeck

       

      Romy Schneider and Claude Sautet during the shooting of 'UNE HISTOIRE SIMPLE' / 'A SIMPLE STORY' 1978

       

      Romy Schneider and Claude Sautet during the shooting of UNE HISTOIRE SIMPLE / A SIMPLE STORY
      1978
      Gelatin silver print
      Foto/Quelle: Yves Sautet, Paris

       

      Claude Sautet

      Claude Sautet (23 February 1924 – 22 July 2000) was a French author and film director. Born in Montrouge, Hauts-de-Seine, France, Sautet first studied painting and sculpture before attending a film university in Paris where he began his career and later became a television producer. He filmed his first movie, Bonjour Sourire, in 1955.

      He earned international attention with Les choses de la vie, which he wrote and directed, like the rest of his later films. It was shown in competition at the 1970 Cannes Festival, where it was well received. The film also revived the career of Romy Schneider; she acted in several of Sautet’s later films. In his next film Max et les Ferrailleurs (1971) she played a prostitute, while in César et Rosalie (1972) she portrayed a married woman who copes with the reappearance of an old flame.

      Vincent, Paul, François, et les Autres (1974) is one of Sautet’s most acclaimed films. Four middle-class men meet in the country every weekend mainly to discuss their lives. The film featured a cast of major stars of French cinema: Michel Piccoli, Yves Montand, Gérard Depardieu, and Stéphane Audran. He achieved even further critical success with Mado (1976).

      His 1978 film A Simple Story (Une Histoire simple) was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film. The film featured Schneider again, this time as a dissatisfied working woman in her 40s. She won the César Award for Best Actress for her performance.

      Text from the Wikipedia website

       

       

      Deutsche Kinemathek – Museum für Film und Fernsehen
      Potsdamer Straße 2
      10785 Berlin

      Opening hours:
      Monday: 10.00 – 18.00
      Tuesday: Closed
      Wednesday: 10.00 – 18.00
      Thursday: 10.00 – 20.00
      Friday – Sunday: 10.00 – 18.00

      Deutsche Kinemathek – Museum for Film and Television website

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      Exhibition: ‘The Navigators’ at Karen Woodbury Gallery, Melbourne

      Exhibition dates: 5th May – 29th May 2010

      Artists: Lionel Bawden, Penny Byrne, Nicholas Folland, Locust Jones, Rhys Lee, Rob McHaffie, Derek O’Connor, Alex Spremberg, Madonna Staunton

       

      Lionel Bawden (Sydney, b. 1974) 'formless worlds move through me' 2010 from the exhibition 'The Navigators' at Karen Woodbury Gallery, Melbourne, May 2010

       

      Lionel Bawden (Australian, b. 1974)
      formless worlds move through me
      2010
      Coloured Staedtler pencils, epoxy, incralac
      51.0 x 51.0 x 9.5cm

       

       

      Some good work in this exhibition – especially the Staedtler hexagonal coloured pencil constructions by Lionel Bawden. Beautifully crafted by hand they remind me of ghosts, the ‘millefiori’ (thousand flowers) of Italian glass and the inside of caverns with their stalactites.

      Dr Marcus Bunyan


      Many thankx to the 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.

       

       

      Alex Spremberg (Australian, born Germany 1950) 'Inside skins' 2002 from the exhibition 'The Navigators' at Karen Woodbury Gallery, Melbourne, May 2010

       

      Alex Spremberg (Australian born Germany, b. 1950)
      Inside skins
      2002

       

       

      These artists have been selected for their interest in ideas of assemblage and re-use of pre-existing materials. Working across a range of media, each artist in the exhibition employs a process of manipulation to create completely different concepts and forms with their finished works. These works comprise of found objects and assembled from disparate elements, scavenged or foraged by the artists and juxtaposed in inventive ways. All works included in The Navigators take on their own form and imbue a new meaning to the original source materials.

      Not originally intended as art materials, yet these artists have seen potential for a new idea in the materials; creating a new thought for the object. The original useful element of the preformed material thus comes under more aesthetic and creative significance. The impetus for such artistic practice is located in a desire by these artists to re-use, re-model, reshape and recycle within their practices. Despite an obvious interest and emphasis in the materiality of the works, the conceptual underpinning are the key motivation within these varying works and pose questions regarding the value of the objects within society. The artists included in The Navigators are continuously surveying and navigating their practice, allowing for deeper exploration in their work.

      The exhibition will include various two and three-dimensional objects that interact with each other in unique ways. In the example of Lionel Bawden’s sculptures, his work exploits hexagonal coloured pencils as a sculptural material, reconfiguring and carving into amorphous shapes. Here the rich qualities of colour are explored as pencils are carved, shaped and fused together. Bawden explores themes of flux, transformation, rhythm and repetition as preconditions to our experience of the physical world. Bawden’s wall mounted works ‘the caverns of temporal suspension’ explore shapes within and outside the work as they hover ominously, melting, conjoined, growing, in transformation. These works are at the forefront of his current practice.

      Penny Byrne’s work makes use of vintage porcelain sculptures that are adorned with a range of materials. Through this process, Byrne makes the base sculptures appear starkly different to that of the original, taking on new connotations that are often humorous and quirky but also convey political and social issues. In her work Mercury Rising. Hunted, Slaughtered, Eaten vintage porcelain dolphins and new plastic Manga figurines are employed to relate to the annual Japanese slaughter of tens of thousands dolphins as highlighted in the documentary ‘The Cove’. The Japanese eat the dolphins and then suffer mercury poisoning due to the high mercury levels in the dolphins flesh, leading to symptoms of madness.

      Nicholas Folland’s Navigator sculptures are indicative Folland’s continued interest in utilising, modifying and experimenting with various sourced materials. These sculptures comprise of various upturned intricately detailed crystal objects that sit above a wood panelled shelf. These glass object are lit and act as beacons or floating satellite cities. Folland personifies the intrepid creative explorer via his navigation of various found materials.

      Locust Jones’ three-dimensional globes are made from papier mache and pictorially and graphically convey global issues. These works sit on the floor and allow the viewer to orient themselves around the works allowing for a detached, objective perspective on contemporary societal issues. The quickly worked surfaces reflect a stream of consciousness in process. Imagery and themes are taken from various media such as the Internet, photojournalism, film culture and nightly news broadcasts.

      The two sculptures in the exhibition by Rhys Lee imbue associations of debris and deal with found objects such as a money box, a dead bird and a clowns face. These trophy-like pieces are decorated by old, worn and found vintage materials that engage with the everyday. The intimate scale of these works do not account for the potency of symbolism and accumulation of collected ideas. The blistered silver patina and bronze sculptures allude to a dark gothic sentiment that extends beyond the morphing forms. The shapes have been smashed, manipulated and stuck back together again resulting in frozen miniature icons that represent a contemporary zest for defiance.

      Rob McHaffie’s works comprise a pastiche of painted anonymous unrelated objects and shapes that somehow come together to create unlikely compositions and formations. The highly skilled execution of McHaffie’s paintings attracts the viewer, who is then faced with a banality in subject matter, often of depictions of clothing, crumpled paper, plants and disfigured creatures and figures. These perfectly rendered images of everyday objects are unsettling in their clarity and realism, which are then skewed, moulded and displaced in unlikely relationships. There is a sense of a deliberate haphazard nature to McHaffie’s work that draws upon a range of elements brought together to mimic something else. Humour surfaces through this stylistic creative process.

      Derek O’Connor’s re-worked painting collages resemble distorted and fragmented realities and stories via the manipulation and playful technique of alteration and re-use of book covers and record album and EP covers. O’Connor’s characteristic gestural sweeping luscious brushstrokes are employed with precision yet allow for organic spontaneity. The old material takes on new meaning and are given new life via O’Connor’s creations.

      Alex Spremberg’s work Inside Skins highlights the artist’s accidental processes at work. This sculptural piece was made as an ancillary to his broader practice – working with acrylic, enamel and varnish on board and canvas. These objects where literally created via chance – an after thought that was noticed to be a finished piece in its own right. Left to dry within their containers these ‘skins’ were extracted and proved to provide aesthetic attraction and conceptual ideas of the ready-made.

      The mainstay of Madonna Staunton’s practice surrounds the physicality of assemblage. Essentially she is a collage artist. The components of her two- and three-dimensional assemblages are usually drawn from old, faded and battered discards such as frames and chairs that are carefully put together in new ways and given another life. A play between precision and randomness animates her work. Her sensitivity to tonal and formal arrangement always remains acute during this process and the results are austerely and chaotically beautiful.

      Press release from the Karen Woodbury Gallery website [Online] Cited 20/05/2010 no longer available online

       

      Nicholas Folland (Australian, b. 1967) 'Navigators 1' 2008 from the exhibition 'The Navigators' at Karen Woodbury Gallery, Melbourne, May 2010

       

      Nicholas Folland (Australian, b. 1967)
      Navigators 1
      2008
      Glassware, table and lightbox
      25.0 x 110.0 x 87.0cm

       

      Nicholas Folland (Australian, b. 1967) 'Navigators 2' 2008

       

      Nicholas Folland (Australian, b. 1967)
      Navigators 2
      2008
      Glassware, table and lightbox
      25.0 x 110.0 x 87.0cm

       

       

      Karen Woodbury Gallery

      This gallery has now closed.

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