Tag: art exhibition

  • Art and About

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    While my gorgeous girl was at Sovereign Hill learning all about being a school student in the 1850s, I headed into the centre of Ballarat to visit the Ballarat Art Gallery. They were showing a special double header exhibition entitled Morris and Beyond. The exhibition showcased the work of artists from the era as well as contemporary artists inspired by the work of Morris. This exhibition was so popular that they sold out of the exhibition catalogue within a couple of weeks as people from all around Australia ordered their copies!

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    It’s the first time I have seen the past and present exhibited in art in this way and it was great to see the art works in this context. Fashion designers like Alexander McQueen drew on the past in their clothing and I really enjoyed seeing sculptures, installations and fabric being displayed alongside paintings. How could you not, given that Morris was heavily into the Arts and Crafts movements (you could even say he was a huge driver of the revival) dabbling in furniture design and wallpaper among other things.

    But the best thing about this visit was all the wonderful people I met who were working there. From the man who opened the door, to the ticket seller and the gift shop attendant, they were all super happy to chat and spend some time with a visitor.

     

  • Know My Name

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    How many female artists can you name? How many of those are Australian?

     

    Less than a quarter of the artists represented in the National Gallery of Australia’s collection in Canberra are female. Approximately a third of the artists in the NGA’s Indigenous collection are female. This is in spite of women significantly outnumbering men in art at the tertiary level. Worse, only two percent of the global art market is represented by women.

     

    This thought provoking article says ‘…artists who are not white men come with qualifiers, whether it's "woman artist", "black artist", or "disabled artist".

     

    Art historian Griselda Pollock says ‘In that qualifying, I have disqualified them from automatically being part of this neutral category: artist.’

     

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    The NGA’s initiative, Know My Name seeks to address this shortcoming with exhibitions featuring artists who are female. 

     

    Ironically the first two exhibitions in the series to expand the category of artist in the Australian imagination were held during the pandemic so hardly anyone got to see the works and learn a more complete picture of the story of art in this country. Unfortunately I don’t think there are any plans to tour these exhibitions which is a travesty. It should be required viewing for all high school students.

     

    Cressida Campbell has been an artist for forty years and this year marks the 40th anniversary of the NGA. Campbell attended the opening of the gallery forty years ago and she is still painting. It’s the first time the gallery had featured a living, female Australian artist in its summer blockbuster exhibition. 

     

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    Campbell sketches drawings on plywood which she then paints with watercolours. When the paint is dry, she uses an electrical tool to carve the wood. This woodblock is then misted with water from a spray bottle and a piece of paper is laid on top. A roller then presses the paint into the paper. This process is repeated until Campbell is happy with the result. Once the paper is removed she touches up both the block and it’s print. Only a single print is made from the block and both the print and the block are sold for around $500,000 each. 

     

    Even though she is a commercially successful artist championed by Margaret Olley who bought her paintings and donated them to galleries, most of the works in the exhibition came from private collections.

     

    Seeing her woodblocks side by side with their reverse prints was wonderful. There was also a display case filled with paint brushes, rollers, empty paint tubes and the brace she wears to support her wrist. 

     

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    Campbell’s work focuses on details of intimate interiors as well as landscapes and botanical illustrations. My favourites were the tondo painting – the round prints with thin white frames. 

     

    The exhibition featured a video of Campbell talking about her work as well as images of her meticulous process. She talks on the phone or listens to music when she’s painting but when it’s time to make the print she closes all the windows and turns off the phone and radio so she can have complete silence and focus on the process. 

     

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    I didn’t think I was going to have a chance to see this exhibition but I managed to squeeze it in before my flight home. I’m so glad I managed to see it. 

     

  • Mind Bending Art

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    'If you only knew how entrancing, how strikingly beautiful the images in my head are, the ones I am unable to express.'

    Enter the mind bending world of M.C. Escher, astronomer, mathematician and woodworker.

    Mr Escher, as he liked to be called, was a Dutch artist best known for his black and white prints of optical illusions. He travelled each year, spending time in nature to refresh and inspire his work. Like most artist there is much more to his work than the handful of famous pieces which have entered our collective psyche. 

    Before I went to this exhibition with my daughters and our friends at the NGV in Melbourne I knew of the famous works. What I didn't know was Escher also created beautifully detailed self portraits and landscape pieces. Fascinated with maths – infinity, the impossible cube and platonic solids – he expressed complex concepts in intricate images.

    After I downloaded these photos I noticed the reflections on the glass in some of them. They seem to be somehow echoing the art in the frames.

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    Most of Escher's works were created by carving wood blocks and then printing a series of pictures. The process itself is mind bending with meticulous attention to detail and incredible craftsmanship. He also experimented with lithographs and lino cuts.

    My favourite pieces were the sketches and studies Escher created before carving his blocks for printing. I love seeing someone else's creative process. It's a potent reminder that everyone drafts, edits and rewrites. Or in Escher's case, sketches, erases and redraws.

     

  • Texture of the Face

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    While I was in Bali I stumbled across a wonderful exhibition in the hotel next to the one where I was staying. Giant canvases painted with oil and pencil or acrylic and pencil brought to life Balinese faces in the most extraordinary way.

    Seeing these faces was incredible. Living in Australia, I am so used to seeing European faces portrayed. It was a delight to see these gorgeous brown faces in all their wrinkles and beauty adorning the gallery walls.

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    The detail was amazing – it was like looking at a photograph or a living face, close up. The artist, I Dewa Gede Rata Yoga is a phenomenal talent.

  • Texture of the Face

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    While I was in Bali I stumbled across a wonderful exhibition in the hotel next to the one where I was staying. Giant canvases painted with oil and pencil or acrylic and pencil brought to life Balinese faces in the most extraordinary way.

    Seeing these faces was incredible. Living in Australia, I am so used to seeing European faces portrayed. It was a delight to see these gorgeous brown faces in all their wrinkles and beauty adorning the gallery walls.

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    The detail was amazing – it was like looking at a photograph or a living face, close up. The artist, I Dewa Gede Rata Yoga is a phenomenal talent.