Review: ‘The Art of Existence’ exhibition by Les Kossatz at Heide Museum of Modern Art, Melbourne

Exhibition dates: 22nd November, 2008 – 8th March, 2009

 

Les Kossatz (Australian, 1943-2011) 'Digger's glory box' 1965 from the exhibition 'The Art of Existence' exhibition by Les Kossatz at Heide Museum of Modern Art, Melbourne, Nov 2008 - March 2009

 

Les Kossatz (Australian, 1943-2011)
Digger’s glory box
1965
Silk, felt, canvas, cardboard, wood, brass, ink, fibre-tipped pen and synthetic polymer paint
106.0 x 76.0 x 7.0cm
Courtesy the artist
Photographer: Viki Petherbridge
© Les Kossatz

 

 

Heide Museum of Modern Art has brought together nearly 100 pieces of work by the Australian artist Les Kossatz in an eclectic survey show, appropriately titled The Art of Existence. Featuring sculpture, painting and mixed media from the 1960s to the present the exhibition is appropriately titled because Kossatz’s work addresses certain archetypal themes that affect human existence:

“His life-long fascination with the natural world and desire to understand both its human and animal inhabitants; exploration of the systems of knowledge and codes of behaviour that structure individual and communal life; and his critical and playful reflections on contemporary behaviour and the mysteries of existence.”1

Strong symbolic paintings are the focus of the work in the 1960s, paintings that address the shocking brutality of war and its aftermath, when soldiers return home. To the observation that these are of the ‘pop-style’ school of painting suggested by the Heide website I feel these works are also influenced by the collage of Cubism, the boxes of Joseph Cornell and the dismembered bodies of Francis Bacon. They engage with the symbolism of war and remembrance: memory, myth, and the banality of heroism and sacrifice.

The key work in this series is the painting Diggers throne (1966). This is a powerful disturbing image, effervescent and unnerving at the same time. It features a disembodied arm on the hand of a throne, surrounded by a wonderful kaleidoscopic assemblage of pictorial planes, artefacts and memories – an English flag, the flag of St George, a crown, medals and the words RSL. The arm reminds me of the Francis Bacon painting Study after Velázquez’s Portrait of Pope Innocent X (1953) as it rests, roughly drawn in pencil on the arm of the throne, drawing the eye back up into nothingness.

The Diggers throne painting also features these prophetic words:

“throne slow to rot
and twisted the memory
becomes sacred.
Bloody was the truth
And this a chair.”


All other work in this period seems to flow through this painting – the other large paintings, the small canvases featuring individual medals and the less successful hanging banners. But it is to this work we return again and again as a viewer, trying to decipher and reconcile our inner conflicts about the painting.

As we move into the 1970s the work changes focus and direction. There emerges a concern with the desecration of the Australian landscape investigated in a series of large paintings and sculptures. In Packaged landscape 1 (1976) a steel suitcase with leather straps, slightly ajar, fulminates with artificial gum leaves trying to escape the strictures of the trap. In Caged landscape (1972) nature is again trapped behind steel wire, weighed in the balance on a set of miniature scales. The paintings feature trees that are surrounded by concrete and the rabbit becomes a powerful symbol for Kossatz – a suffering beast, strung up on fences, a plague in a pitted landscape of chopped down trees, erosion and empty holes.

Into this vernacular emerges the key symbol of the artist’s oeuvre – the sheep. In 1972 Kossatz began a series of sculptures of sheep, “initially inspired by the experience of nursing an injured ram.” For Kossatz the sheep represent the hardship of pioneer existence, the grazing industries prosperity, environmental concerns and the sheep act as narrative devices, potent metaphors for human behaviour.”2

The first sheep presented ‘in show’ is Ram in Sling (1973, below). In this sculpture a metal bar is suspended in mid-air and from this bar heavy wire mesh drops to support the fleecy stomach and neck of the ram almost seeming to strangle it in the process, it’s metal feet just touching the ground. Again the scales of justice seem to weigh nature in the balance.

The themes life and death, order and chaos are further developed in the work Hard slide (1980, below) where a sheep emerges mid-air from a trapdoor, two more tumble down a wooden slide end over end and another disappears into the ground through a wooden trapdoor opening. Sacrifice seems to be a consistent theme with both the earlier paintings and the metallised sheep:

“The completed life cycle, down the trapdoor, down the chute, after sacrifice by shearing.” ~ Daniel Thomas 1994

Further sculptures of sheep, both small maquettes and large sculptures follow in the next room of the exhibition. This is the artist is full flow, featuring the inventive taking of 2D things into the round, investigating the key themes of his work: the contrast between nature and artifice, or humanity.

The small maquettes of sheep feature races, gantries, sluices, pens, trapdoors and paddocks. Sheep tumble in a cataclysmic maelstrom, falling with flailing legs into the darkness of the holding pen below. These are my favourite works – small, intimate, detailed, dark bronzes of serious intensity – the sheep becoming a theatre of the absurd, suspended, weighed and balancing in the performance of ritualised acts, a cacophony of flesh at once both intricate and unsettling. Their skins lay flayed and lifeless disappearing into the ‘unearth’ of the slated wooden floor of the shearing shed. The sheep “can be viewed metaphorically as a commentary of the existential situation of the individual and collective behaviour.”3 As Kossatz himself has noted, “It is hard to bring a piece of landscape inside and give it a living animated form. The sheep somehow gives me this quality of landscape.”

But we must also remember that this strictly a white man’s view of the Australian landscape. Nowhere does this work comment on the disenfranchisement of the native people’s of this land – the destruction of native habitats that the sheep brought about, the starvation that they caused to Aboriginal people just as they bought riches to the pastoralists and the country that mined the land with this amorphous mass of flesh.

Recent work in the exhibition returns to the earlier social themes of memory, war, remembrance, religion, shrines, atomic clouds and temples but it is the work of the late 1970s-1980s that is the most cogent. As Kossatz ponders the nature of existence on this planet he does not see a definitive answer but emphasises the journey we take, not the arrival. Here is something that we should all ponder, giving time to the nature of our personal journey in this life, on this earth.

Here also is an exhibition worthy our time and attention as part of that journey. Go visit!

Dr Marcus Bunyan

Word count: 1,074

 

1/ From the Heide website
2/ From wall notes to the exhibition
3/ From wall notes to the exhibition


Many thankx to 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.

     

    Postscript 2018

    The late Les Kossatz (1943-2011) was a well known Melbourne-based artist and academic whose work is represented in many regional and state galleries and the National Gallery of Australia. He studied art at the Melbourne Teachers’ College and the RMIT, and went on to teach at the RMIT and Monash University. Kossatz’s first significant commission was for the stained glass windows at the Monash University Chapel in Melbourne. Later commissions included works for the Australian War Memorial, the High Court, the Ian Potter Foundation at the National Gallery of Victoria and the Darling Harbour Authority, Sydney. His sculpture, Ainslie’s Sheep, commissioned by Arts ACT in 2000, is a popular national capital landmark in the centre of Civic. A major retrospective of Kossatz’s work was held in 2009 at the Heide Park and Art Gallery, Melbourne.

    Text from the High Court of Australia website

     

    Francis Bacon (British born Ireland, 1909-1992) 'Study after Velázquez’s Portrait of Pope Innocent X' 1953

     

    Francis Bacon (British born Ireland, 1909-1992)
    Study after Velázquez’s Portrait of Pope Innocent X
    1953
    Oil on canvas

     

    Les Kossatz (Australian, 1943-2011) "Ram in sling" 1973 from the exhibition 'The Art of Existence' exhibition by Les Kossatz at Heide Museum of Modern Art, Melbourne, Nov 2008 - March 2009

     

    Les Kossatz (Australian, 1943-2011)
    Ram in sling
    1973
    Cast and fabricated stainless steel and sheepskin
    129.3 x 126.5 x 66.0cm
    Heide Museum of Modern Art Collection
    Purchased from John and Sunday Reed 1980
    © Les Kossatz

     

    Les Kossatz (Australian, 1943-2011) 'Trophy room' 1975

     

    Les Kossatz (Australian, 1943-2011)
    Trophy room
    1975
    Colour lithograph
    74.0 x 76.0cm (sheet)
    Courtesy the artist
    Photographer: Viki Petherbridge
    © Les Kossatz

     

     

    The art of existence is the first exhibition to review Les Kossatz’s contribution to Australian art in a career that spans the 1960s to today. Kossatz’s consistently experimental approach to media and techniques is revealed in works that display a lifelong fascination with humanity and the interaction of man and nature. His paintings, sculptures and works on paper stimulate a questioning and exploration of such concerns, which form the basis of this artist’s practice.

    Les Kossatz’s early works of the 1960s draw on his training and ability to work across a diversity of media, including painting, drawing, printmaking and glass. Early paintings and etchings on the theme of the emptiness of memorials to the Australian ‘digger’ or soldiers were succeeded by images and objects offering impressions of the world around the artist – the rural domain and interior life of St Andrews in Victoria where Kossatz lived and worked. Such works demonstrated his determination to pursue a figurative practice at a time when abstract art had been imported to Australia and was considered the avant garde.

    Remaining a staunchly independent artist, at the start of the 1970s Kossatz painted images of rabbits and sheep from St Andrews. In addition, the practice of working in three dimensions was to become more significant. Kossatz continued to develop familiar themes in the creation of installations and cast objects. Although he has produced drawings and prints across his career, working with sculpture has, since the early 1970s, been his primary mode of art-making. Large scale cast and assembled objects show Kossatz pursuing related themes of caged and packaged landscapes, shrines to the harvest and the still life.

    The art of existence surveys Kossatz’s monumental life-sized sheep sculptures, which he began making in 1972 from casts of animal parts, and for which he is best known. These include Hard slide (1980), his prize-winning commission in the collection of the National Gallery of Victoria. Kossatz has won numerous commissions for outdoor sculptures that employ the sheep as literal and metaphorical beings. Kossatz’s work across three decades reveals a number of ongoing engagements, such as his observations of human behaviour and at times its similar manifestation in animals; the beliefs that sustain individuals and communities (such as religion, music and politics); and the forms of the landscape and our understanding of these relationships.

    Introduction to the exhibition written by Zara Stanhope, Guest Curator, Heide Museum of Modern Art, 2008

     

    Les Kossatz (Australian, 1943-2011) "Hard slide" 1980

     

    Les Kossatz (Australian, 1943-2011)
    Hard slide
    1980
    Sheepskins, aluminium, Douglas-fir (Pseudotsuga sp.), leather, steel
    372.0 x 100.0 x 304.0cm (installation)

     

    Les Kossatz (Australian, 1943-2011) "Guggenheim spiral" 1983

     

    Les Kossatz (Australian, 1943-2011)
    Guggenheim spiral
    1983

     

     

    Heide Museum of Modern Art
    7 Templestowe Road
    Bulleen Victoria 3105 Australia
    Phone: +61 3 9850 1500

    Opening hours:
    (Heide II and Heide III)
    Tuesday to Sunday and public holidays, 10am – 5pm

    Heide Museum of Modern Art website

    LKE ART BLART ON FACEBOOK

    Back to top

    Review: ‘Disintegration’ by Robbie Rowlands at Place Gallery, Melbourne

    Exhibition dates: 22nd October – 15th November, 2008

     

    Robbie Rowlands (Australian, b. 1968) 'Scored' 2008 from the exhibition Review: 'Disintegration' by Robbie Rowlands at Place Gallery, Melbourne, Oct - Nov, 2008

     

    Robbie Rowlands (Australian, b. 1968)
    Scored
    2008
    Goal post, steel
    160cm x 130cm x 50cm
    Photograph: Christian Capurro

     

     

    “The philosopher Martin Heidegger argued that objects are often invisible to us gathered up as they are within a context of functionality and use. It is only when things break down that we become aware of them, seeing them with fresh eyes. In many ways Heidegger’s observation could form the basis of an approach to Robbie Rowlands’ work. Rowlands takes objects that are often forgotten, invisible or transparent to us, objects that exist on the verge of disappearance, and stages a kind of ‘breakdown’, inviting us to rediscover the object, poised somewhere between what it was and what it might become.”


    Simon Cooper. Catalogue essay

     

     

    Sitting in pools of light in the elegant modern space of Place Gallery in Richmond, six theatrically lit sculptures are presented by artist Robbie Rowlands. Made of everyday objects (a boom gate, desk, chair, single bed, electricity pole, desk and footy goalpost) they have been de/constructed by the artist and reformed into curved objects. With ironic titles such as Down for the felled electricity pole and Collapse for the dismembered chair Rowland’s work hovers between one fixed state and an’other’ transformative state of being.

    While the catalogue essay by Simon Cooper suggests that all of these objects are abandoned or nearly forgotten sharing a context of quasi-obsolescence, this is not the case. These were objects of purpose and form, the acts of ritualised production of a consumer society that contained signs that symbolised their status. In his creativity Rowland has used these technologies of production, which permit us to produce, transform or manipulate things to create new sensual forms of life. Some of the sculptures such as Boom (the boom gate; 2008, below) and Scored (the goal post; 2008, above) remind me of creatures emerging from the recesses of the unconscious, curling and rearing up like monsters from the deep. One of the most beautiful forms is the constructed white chair where the function of the object has collapsed into the essence of the form, like the surreal spatiality of a poetic Miro. As Gaston Bachelard reminds use in The Poetics of Space:

    “The grace of a curve is an invitation to remain. We cannot break away from it without hoping to return. For the beloved curve has nest-like powers; it incites us to possession, it is a curved corner, inhabited geometry.”1


    Cooper suggests that the curved forms that Rowland creates were “already there in the original object, even as it was sat on, written on, or passed by on the way to work.” He rightly notes that the process used contains a certain violence, but that we remember and reconstruct the old form even as we respond to the new construction. For these sculptures are a construction not, I believe, inherent in the original form. This can be seen in the sculpture Boom (2008, below) for example, where Rowland has used additional pieces of metal to hold the curve of the boom gate in place. Without this skilfully added, hidden sub-structure the transformative shape would collapse onto the floor. Rowland inhabits and possesses his new geometry with as much technology as the original but not in such an obvious form.

    At their best these sculptures are both poetic palimpsest and heterotopic objects of otherness that are neither here nor there. The work would have been stronger if only four pieces were presented in the gallery space – the sculptures needed more room to breathe (understanding the dictum that less is more). The sculptures themselves also needed greater thematic cohesiveness perhaps using the colour white as the unifying theme. But they are sensual and beautiful gestures and deserve the attention of your visit.

    Dr Marcus Bunyan

     

    1/ Bachelard, Gaston. The Poetics of Space. Boston: Beacon, 1969 [originally 1958] p. 146

     

    Robbie Rowlands (Australian, b. 1968) 'Boom' 2008

     

    Robbie Rowlands (Australian, b. 1968)
    Boom
    2008
    Rail boom gate, wooden
    160cm x 160cm x 130cm
    Photograph: Wren

     

     

    Place Gallery
    120 Collins Street
    Melbourne VIC 3000
    Phone: (03) 9527 6378

    Opening hours:
    Daily: 9.30am – 6.00pm
    Sunday & Holidays: Closed

    Robbie Rowlands website

    LIKE ART BLART ON FACEBOOK

    Back to top

    Exhibition: Louise Rippert ‘Trace’ at Deakin University Art Gallery, Melbourne

    Exhibition dates: 29th October – 6th December, 2008

     

     

    Louise Rippert (Australian) 'Recording' 2008 (detail) from the exhibition Louise Rippert 'Trace' at Deakin University Art Gallery, Melbourne, Oct - Dec, 2008

     

    Louise Rippert (Australian)
    Recording (detail)
    2008
    Collage; thread, aluminium and silver gilt and pencil on khadi paper
    38 x 37cm
    Collection of Deakin University

     

     

    Deakin University Art Gallery present an exhibition by this Melbourne artist of new work.

    “Favouring the use of archival, translucent, brittle and fine materials in her labour intensive and near devotional ‘manuscripts’ of stitching, pattern and perforation, Rippert creates mixed media works of the utmost delicacy … This is the first solo exhibition of Rippert’s work in a public institution and will present her past and recent work.”

    Rippert’s work is extraordinary. Taking paper of every sort Rippert inscribes the surface: stitches, weaves, colours and indents the paper, making annotations that develop personal narrative. Delicate and insightful her work celebrates what it is to be human – to be lovers, to be a daughter, to dance, to record. Rippert uses repetition of form in grids and circles to achieve her archetypal works, touching the deepest patterns of our lives.

    Dr Marcus Bunyan

     

     

    Louise Rippert (Australian) 'Cochin Mandala' 2005

     

    Louise Rippert (Australian)
    Cochin Mandala
    2005
    Collage; glassine, pencil, thread and gouache on paper
    Private collection

     

     

    For many artists the process of art making has a mysterious fascination that continues to draw them back to experimenting, searching and the experience of creating. At the very least, it is reasonable to suggest that art making in this respect is supramundane; an experience particular to itself, simultaneously autonomous but contingent on an “other”, challenging but ostensibly satisfying, baffling and revelatory as – in this sense – creating art involves the artist’s responses, reflections and what is sometimes referred to as an inner dialogue with the work.

    The medium (in that very specific conjuring sense of the word) and the interaction with it then becomes a vehicle in which this dialogue has an opportunity to “arise”, or be “heard”. It may be in these cases that the exercising of inner consciousness marks an escape or a period of sanctuary from the regular rigours of life, or that it denotes the labour of a different kind, of higher purpose, intellectual inquiry or even some manner of transcendence.

    The term meditative is often ascribed to this transformation of consciousness and the introspective process of art creation. So is it meditation? Certainly many artistic traditions have involved high levels of training and discipline. Certainly many forms of meditation have involved an “other” to provide musing, focus or distraction for the mind. Both have shared common traits of concentration, labour, devotion, repetition, patience and practice. In the artwork of Louise Rippert, certainly the preconditions for such a meditation are identifiable.

    The inherent irony with formal artwork is that short of sitting over the artist’s shoulder the audience experiences the result of process, rather than the process itself. However, the beauty (in more sense than one) of Louise Rippert’s work is that in many cases she leaves paths that can be followed or re-imagined, whether it is in the delicacy of her stitching and folding or the sequential approach to numbering that characterises many of her works. We can sense the endeavour. We can see the labour. We can begin in the middle of a spiral or circle and follow the numbers to their logical conclusion. Our mind in many respects can literally “join the dots” and so make the abstractive leap back and forth in time to appreciate this process of becoming.

    The extra dimension to the work exhibited in LOUISE RIPPERT: TRACE is that the result also speaks not just of the process, but the intent. There is equilibrium, harmony and quiet in and across these works, which compels revisiting that very painstaking process. While having exhibited artwork annually since 1994, Rippert’s modus operandi has meant limited opportunities to show substantive bodies of work. She has been represented periodically in the National Works on Paper Prize at the Mornington Peninsula Regional Gallery and in 2005 she was the co-winner of the Blake Prize for Religious Art.

    Deakin University Art Gallery is therefore very proud to present LOUISE RIPPERT: TRACE, the first solo exhibition of Louise Rippert’s creations in a public gallery and would like to thank the artist for collaborating in this project. Thanks are also extended to the following people for their contributions to this project; Euan Heng, artist, for his opening remarks to launch this landmark event, Diane Soumilas, Gallery Co-ordinator, Glen Eira City Council Gallery for her insightful catalogue essay, to the private collectors who have loaned works and Jasmin Tulk for designing the catalogue to mark and accompany this important exhibition.

    Victor Griss
    Exhibition Curator

    Originally published in Louise Rippert:Trace, Deakin University 2008

      

    Louise Rippert (Australian) 'Trace' 2008

     

    Louise Rippert (Australian)
    Trace
    2008
    Collage; pigment baking paper, tracing paper, pencil, thread and adhesive contact on drafting film
    94 x 94cm
    Collection on the artist

     

     

    Deakin University Art Gallery
    221, Burwood Highway
    Burwood 3125

    Opening Hours:
    Tues – Friday 10 – 5pm
    Saturday 1pm – 5pm

    Deakin University Art Gallery website

    LIKE ART BLART ON FACEBOOK

    Back to top

    Artist: Tim Fleming

    November 2008

     

     

    Tim Fleming (via Australian Design Unit)

     

     

    Artist Tim Fleming on the ABC’s Sunday Arts program talks about his art practice, his Flatland work in plywood and laminex and how the work has taken on a life of its own. The work takes on a self-reflexive element with his use of mirrored surfaces forcing the viewer/maker to assess where they are going in life. Fleming notes that it is important to take time as an artist to gather the skills and lay the foundation for future work. Working slowly, laying the foundations, gathering the skills.

    Personally I like the use of objects that are taken out of context to convey different metaphors for everyday life. As an artist Flemings semiotic language upsets accepted boundaries of how we look and interact with the world, forcing us to question what it is that makes us who we are.

     

     

    Flatland website

    LIKE ART BLART ON FACEBOOK

    Back to top

    Exhibition: ‘Klippel/Klippel: Opus 2008’ at Ian Potter Centre: NGV Australia

    Exhibition dates: 7th August – 2nd November, 2008

     

    'Klippel/Klippel: Opus 2008' exhibition sculpture and installation from the first space

    Robert Klippel 'Opus 2008' exhibition installation from the first space

     

    Klippel/Klippel: Opus 2008 exhibition sculpture and installation from the first space

     

     

    A magical exhibition of the work of the Australian sculptor Robert Klippel (1920-2001) is presented together with a soundscape to accompany the works by his son Andrew Klippel. The exhibition presents two distinct rooms of light and shade and finishes with a singular monumental bronze work No. 709, but it is the two rooms that astound. They contain small assemblages and bronze sculpture made in the 1980s-1990s.

    In the first space lit glass cases hover in darkness, containing delicate constructions of found objects, beautifully crafted. Made of plastic and metal, some parts taken from modelling kits, the sculptures morph and weave a delicate narrative, a powerful artistic vision. Mostly totemic in nature they transport the viewer with wonder and delight, the artists vision fully realised: no unnecessary flourishes, no wasted energy on forms that are redundant.

    Wandering from the first darkened space we face a curved wall of black with a bright white opening, almost like the mouth of a Nautilus shell. Upon entering we are enveloped in white – walls, floor, stretched acrylic ceiling and stands upon which glass cases sit all being pure white. It is like stepping into the spacecraft from Stanley Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyssey – quite disorientating but transformational. In the cases sit small very dark bronze sculptures contrasting with the white. Again mostly totemic in nature the sculptures have great power and presence. Some portray small cities on top of hills. Others intricate machine and figure like constructions. All of the cases are mounted at different eye levels, unlike the first room.

    When looking across the gallery space, the boxes and sculpture within create a diorama, almost a tableaux vivant, where you can move the focus of your gaze from foreground to mid to background, all suspended in white. If you can be in this space alone with the work and wander around soaking in the vision of this artist so much the better. The contrast and parallels between the two rooms is striking – here is an artist at the height of his powers commanding his materials and his vision in two distinct bodies of work: one delicate, found, plastic the other solid, dark and essential, both dealing with the essence of human creativity and being, leaving the viewer with a sensory experience long remembered.

    Dr Marcus Bunyan


    All installation photographs © Marcus Bunyan

     

    'Klippel/Klippel: Opus 2008' exhibition entrance to the second space

     

    Klippel/Klippel: Opus 2008 exhibition entrance to the second space

     

     

    Robert Klippel is regarded as Australia’s most important sculptor of the post-war 20th century period. Known for his abstract assemblages created from found objects he is a distinguished figure in the history of Australian art. Andrew Klippel, Robert’s son, is a composer and musician who has achieved international recognition as a solo musician, songwriter and influential music producer.

    Klippel/Klippel: Opus 2008 is a unique and compelling sensory experience which presents a group of Robert Klippel’s small-scale sculptures that were produced during the 1980s and 1990s – some of these have never been publicly displayed. It also includes the monumental bronze work No. 709. Andrew has arranged for this work, which Robert was preparing to cast at the time of his death, to be executed for the National Gallery of Victoria and included in the exhibition. And, in an important artistic response, Andrew Klippel has created a soundscape – a meditation on his father’s work.

    Klippel/Klippel: Opus 2008 is an extraordinary and immersive exhibition that celebrates the creative process.

    Text from the National Gallery of Victoria website

     

    Robert Klippel 'Opus 2008' exhibition bronze sculptures from the second space

    Robert Klippel 'Opus 2008' exhibition bronze sculptures from the second space

    Robert Klippel 'Opus 2008' exhibition bronze sculptures from the second space

    Robert Klippel 'Opus 2008' exhibition bronze sculptures from the second space

    Robert Klippel 'Opus 2008' exhibition bronze sculptures from the second space

    Robert Klippel 'Opus 2008' exhibition bronze sculptures from the second space

    Robert Klippel 'Opus 2008' exhibition bronze sculptures from the second space

    Robert Klippel 'Opus 2008' exhibition bronze sculptures from the second space

    Robert Klippel 'Opus 2008' exhibition bronze sculptures from the second space

    Robert Klippel 'Opus 2008' exhibition bronze sculptures from the second space

     

    Klippel/Klippel: Opus 2008 exhibition bronze sculptures from the second space

     

    Robert Klippel (Australian, 1920-2001) 'No. 879 (No. 1126)' 1995

     

    Robert Klippel (Australian, 1920-2001)
    No. 879 (No. 1126)
    1995
    Metal, enamel paint
    9.5 x 13.3. x 4.2cm
    Private collection, Sydney
    © Andrew Klippel

     

    Robert Klippel (Australian, 1920-2001) 'No. 881' c.1990 'No title (No. 1326)' c.1990 and works from the series 'No title (No. 1232)' 1980

     

    Robert Klippel (Australian, 1920-2001)
    No. 881
    c.1990
    No title (No. 1326)
    c.1990
    and works from the series
    No title (No. 1232)
    1980
    Private collection, Sydney
    © Andrew Klippel

     

    Robert Klippel (Australian, 1920-2001) 'No. 709' 1988

     

    Robert Klippel (Australian, 1920-2001)
    No. 709
    1988; 2008 {cast}
    Bronze
    318.9 x 94.8 x 100.2cm
    Artist’s proof
    National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne
    Purchased with the assistance of Andrew Klippel and the Estate of Patrick Byrne, 2008
    © Andrew Klippel

     

     

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

    Opening hours:
    Daily 10am – 5pm

    National Gallery of Victoria website

    LIKE ART BLART ON FACEBOOK

    Back to top