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Archive for June, 2010

Panoramica opens at Colour Factory tomorrow

Wednesday, June 30th, 2010

Panoramica
David Mitchener
Colour Factory
Opening: Thursday July 1st 6-8pm
Exhibition runs til 31st July 2010

David_Mitchener

David Mitchener is showing Panoramica, a collection of his stunning mural photographs at the Colour Factory Gallery in July.

All the images in this exhibition are taken with the remarkable Hasselblad X-Pan. This small and very portable camera allows shooting with great spontaneity.  It’s very wide film format and superb optics are portrayed beautifully in the mural prints. The panoramic format allows for his unique concept of landscape photography to be viewed in incredible detail. David shoots using a grainy negative film stock, which in combination with some specialised processing techniques, yields a painterly, organic effect. His interpretation of these destinations is as much about the detail and texture as it is about the broader horizon. This often abstract and unexpected view takes the work into a more experiential, epic realm.

Educated at RMIT in Australia and Brooks Institute of Photography in California, his career has included stints in New York and Denmark, and has taken him on shoots in South America, South East Asia, Japan and New Zealand.

Sistagirls opening at Nellie Castan Gallery July 8

Wednesday, June 30th, 2010

Sistagirls
Bindi Cole
Nellie Castan Gallery
Gallery 1
Opening Thurday 8th July 6-8pm

BindiCole

Bindi Cole spent a month living there in the Tiwi Islands creating a series of portraits of a community of Aboriginal Transgender women (men that identify as women) called the Sistagirls.

TWO X TWO
Karl Scullin and Lauren Bamford
Gallery 3
c3 contemporary art space
June 23rd – July 11th

ScullinBamford

TWO X TWO is a collaborative portraiture project by Melbourne photographers Karl Scullin and Lauren Bamford. Each artist presents a unique portrayal of the coterie of Melbourne’s emergent artistic subculture – with the common theme of ‘two’.

Worm Mountain – perspectives on natural history
Curated by Nicola Page
Amber Wallis, Andy Hutson, Dane Lovett, Jordan Wood, Linda Tegg, Lucy Griggs and Nicola Page.
GALLERY 1

c3 contemporary art space
June 23rd – July 11th

WormMountain

Moving across a range of art forms featuring, video, photography, wall drawing, painting, sculpture and mixed media, artists have approached the topic of natural history with unique perspectives and inventive approaches to both subject and media.

All artists list interaction with nature and the sublime as concerns in their work, manifesting in various forms as, decorative, historical, scientific, sociological and spiritual. The exhibition aims to represent the full spectrum of these concerns as a reflection of contemporary art and natural History in 2010.

Gertrude St Projection Festival
Opening Night Friday 9th July
7:00pm-8:30pm
Workers Club
51 Gertrude St, Fitzroy
Exhibition runs at various locations on Gertrude St until 17th July

GertrudeProjectionFestival

Colour Factory Festival Picks:
Kotoe Ishii
Gertrudes Brown Couch
30 Gertrude St, Fitzroy

tomorrow
Kristen McIver, Ry David Bradley,Valentina Palonen
Michael Koro Galleries

Opening Friday 2nd July  6-8pm
Exhibition runs til August 1st

KristenMcIver

Somewhere In Between opens this Saturday

Tuesday, June 22nd, 2010

Somewhere In Between
Natasha Frisch
Dianna Tanzer Gallery
Opening Saturday June 26, 3-5pm 2010

natasha

Delusional Dimensions
Ashlee Laing
Blindside
Gallery One and Two
Exhibition Dates June 17 – July 3

ashlee-laing

Ashlee Laing’s new body of work Delusional Dimensions interprets the complex emotional spaces of the amorous subject. Referencing excerpts from Roland Barthes’ “A Lover’s Discourse,” Laing has employed video and projected onto objects to visualize responses to the gestures or figures of the lover at work.

Similar to Barthes’ fragments, the visual elements Laing has engaged as responses are not sentences, not a complete message. The active principle is not what is says but what it articulates. Love, here, is a state of mind filled with anxiety, melancholy and beauty.


The Other World
Leigh Backhouse
Kick Gallery

Exhibition dates: June 8 – June 26

Leigh-backhouse
Leigh Backhouse is a photographer who explores nocturnal natural landscapes and unpopulated public spaces in a dramatic, cinematic way. Through his selection of imagery, as well as the richness of colour and texture in his final printed works, we are taken to places that are hypnagogic and otherworldly.


Sight & Sound

The Arts Centre
Exhibition dates June 12 – September 19

sight-sound
Sight & Sound is an exhibition that explores the intersections between music and abstract art in Australia from the early 20th century to contemporary practice.

The painters represented are John Aslanidis, Yvonne Audette, Ludwig Hirschfeld Mack, Roger Kemp, Donald Laycock, Roy de Maistre and Robert Owen, while contemporary sound artist Michael Graeve has created a new site-specific installation for the exhibition.

Integrated into the exhibition is a unique soundtrack of music, spanning classical to contemporary, including newly commissioned scores by artist Niels Hutchison after Roy de Maistre’s work, and by Toyko-based musician and composer Benjamin Skepper in collaboration with John Aslanidis.

The Other World now showing at Kick Gallery

Thursday, June 17th, 2010

Leigh Backhouse
The Other World
Kick Gallery
Exhibition dates: June 8 – June 26

Leigh-backhouse
Leigh Backhouse is a photographer who explores nocturnal natural landscapes and unpopulated public spaces in a dramatic, cinematic way. Through his selection of imagery, as well as the richness of colour and texture in his final printed works, we are taken to places that are hypnagogic and otherworldly.


Sight & Sound

The Arts Centre
Exhibition dates June 12 – September 19

sight-sound

Sight & Sound is an exhibition that explores the intersections between music and abstract art in Australia from the early 20th century to contemporary practice.

The painters represented are John Aslanidis, Yvonne Audette, Ludwig Hirschfeld Mack, Roger Kemp, Donald Laycock, Roy de Maistre and Robert Owen, while contemporary sound artist Michael Graeve has created a new site-specific installation for the exhibition.

Integrated into the exhibition is a unique soundtrack of music, spanning classical to contemporary, including newly commissioned scores by artist Niels Hutchison after Roy de Maistre’s work, and by Toyko-based musician and composer Benjamin Skepper in collaboration with John Aslanidis.

Charmwood

Tuesday, June 15th, 2010

Charmwood, an exhibition by four Melbourne based photographers which opened at the Colour Factory on June 3.

Melbourne based curator and arts writer, Jessica O’Brien writes about the exhibition.

The latest exhibition to show at The Colour Factory exhibition space is Charmwood, a collaboration between Melbourne based photographers Todd Anderson- Kunert, Warwick Baker, Linsey Gosper and Michelle Tran.

The conceptual basis for the work is a small, fictional town called Charmwood, a place that could represent any and every suburban wasteland or depressed small town. The body of work comprises of a mixture of staged portraits, the minutiae of everyday life, objects and empty rooms.

There is a pervasive anxiety throughout the photographs, evident in the carefully arranged domestic interiors, empty landscapes and the awkwardness and vulnerability captured in the depictions of the towns inhabitants.  Not all is bleak however. Themes of isolation, stunted dreams and the claustrophobic nature of small town lives are interspersed with works that contemplate the often surprising beauty of the kitsch and mundane.

Gosper, Baker, Tran and Anderson–Kunert employ a combination of staged and documentary photography, and share a similar pared-down aesthetic. The result is a cohesive, cinematic body of work, with each photograph building on an overall narrative.

The Charmwood exhibition represents a small selection of the work which eventuated from the overall project.  The limited edition catalogue, free from the constraints of a limited gallery space, fleshes out the fictional Charmwood with a larger body of work from each artist.

-Jessica O’Brien

Michelle Tran

Michelle Tran

Linsey Gosper

Linsey Gosper

Warwick Baker

Warwick Baker

Todd Anderson-Kunert

Todd Anderson-Kunert

Gallery manager and artist Linsey Gosper writes about the concept and process behind the exhibition.

At the beginning of 2010, considering the ‘line up’ of shows to be held at the Colour Factory Gallery, I wanted to be involved in a contemporary photographic exhibition that would embody some of the principals that the Colour Factory staff share – technical proficiency, the tradition of film based photography using a variety of camera formats to produce beautiful photographic (C-type) prints. The images in this exhibition have been scanned and printed onto photographic paper using a wet process, the same process for making analogue optical prints.

I wanted to collaborate with photographers who share a similar passion for these principles, a similar aesthetic and process of making work. I immediately thought of Anderson-Kunert, Baker & Tran. I have seen the work of these artists for a couple of years, and our common love for photography has strengthened our friendships.

To arrive at the theme of Charmwood we held regular show & tell meetings to find a common thread from the work we were already making. Through this continual shared dialogue we could see a connection in the documentation of our personal relationships, and a strong theme of the Australian domestic emerging. Our similar approach to making artwork has increased the exhibitions consistency.

Coming from a traditional documentary background, influenced by contemporary filmic and narrative based photography, we take inspiration from our life experiences and recreate these personal moments through staged fictional narratives. The exhibition features selected images from the broader narrative that is explored in the Charmwood book, also on show in the exhibition.

-Linsey Gosper

Reconciliation Plan

Tuesday, June 15th, 2010

Colour Factory will be committing to a Reconciliation Action Plan (RAP). Through the acknowledgement of the Aboriginal people as the traditional owners of our country and their continuing connection to the land and community, as well as through the education of our staff, we hope to create a better understanding and relationship with indigenous people. We will be researching our particular area of inhabitance and familiarizing ourselves with the details of its original occupants. We will be working in collaboration with Reconciliation Australia and following the guidelines of the RAP.

What’s happening at the 17th Biennale of Sydney

Tuesday, June 15th, 2010

The Beauty of Distance: Songs of survival in a precarious age
Until August 1, 2010

Colour Factory went to the Sydney Biennale a couple of weeks ago. What an extraordinary event! We highly recommend that people visit this incredible free event wherever possible. Cockatoo Island is the major venue hosting the Biennale. Previously a former imperial prison, industrial school, reformatory and gaol, it is located in Sydney Harbor, just a short and beautiful ferry ride from Circular Quay. Large workshops, slipways, wharves, residences and other buildings retain the texture of the island’s industrial past. To see 120 works by 52 artists in a variety of unusual spaces is fascinating.

Site specific works were most impressive. Highlights in this regard are Peter Hennessey’s My Hubble (the universe turned in on itself) – a life-size ‘re-enactment’ of the Hubble telescope, approximately the size of a tram. Constructed inside the Turbine Hall where it resides, it is intricately made from ply wood and steel, impressively enacting the scale and detail of the original. See a video of this here.

Penalogical Pianology: the Timbers of Justice by Slave Pianos is a surrealist allegory of the convict transportation of a piano to the former penal colony for crimes against humanity. It is sentenced ‘to be hanged by the neck until dead’. For the duration of the exhibition the gallows is the resting place for the now mechanically operated piano, whose troublesome, violent, yet beautiful sounds can be heard throughout the entire Industrial precinct.

Kate McMillan’s site specific photographic installation, Islands of incarceration, sits hauntingly on top Cockatoo Island. Inside a weather exposed timber drying shed, the curtain like fabric photograph of the Ludlow Tuart forest (site of the 1841 Wonnerup Massacre of 300 Aboriginal people) eerily floats about as you pass it by, gently caressing you and seemingly following your footsteps. The high positioning of the building and widely spaced wooden beams beneath your feet further influence your sense of unease and danger, as does the barely audible soundtrack made in collaboration with sound artist Cat Hope. See a video for more here.

Rodney Glick
RodneyGlick
Other highlights are Building 6 in the Convict Precinct, with personal favourites being Rodney Glick and Isaac Julien. Rodney Glick’s ‘Everyone’ series combines imagery from popular eighteenth and nineteenth century Indian Hindu paintings with modern people and scenarios, these beautifully carved and painted wooden sculptures imbue the everyday person with god-like powers. The sense of drama, humour, detail and scale is delightful. Isaac Julien’s film ‘Ten Thousand Waves’ is incredible. Projected front and back over nine large screens with images travelling from one screen to the next, this major work is a very powerful installation. Superbly filmed, picturesque, emotive and quirky, this piece deserves allocating substantial time required to view it in its entirety, and also allows a well deserved resting opportunity.

There are so many more amazing works to be seen and enjoyed…all for free!

The Sydney Biennale is also on at The Museum for Contemporary Art, Pier 2/3 and many other locations. Please see the website for details: http://www.bos17.com

A small artist run space on Brunswick St has just opened up!

Wednesday, June 9th, 2010

window99
Dominic Kavanagh & Kristian Glynn

A Short History of Mystery

Kavanagh_Glynn
Exhibition dates 5 – 24 June

99 Brunswick St, Fitzroy

A small artist run space has opened at the top end of Brunswick St (near Gertrude) . With two exhibition spaces, the professionally built and beautifully lit window boxes allow for 24 hour viewing.

Catherine Asquith Gallery
Kari Henriksen

Being at Bundanon
KarlHenriksen
Private viewing Saturday June 12, 2 – 4pm

“The impetus for my work comes from sense of wonder and delight in observing the phenomena of constantly changing light and atmosphere, seasons and weather conditions. Making art from such evanescent subject matter provides a means of preserving moments in time, moments that have now passed.”

Charmwood opening tonight at 6pm

Wednesday, June 2nd, 2010

Colour Factory Gallery
Charmwood

Todd Anderson Kunert, Warwick Baker, Linsey Gosper & Michelle Tran
Opening tonight June 3, 6-8pm

Charmwood

Exhibition dates June 3 – 26, 2010

Jenny Port Gallery
Jill Orr

Vision

Opening night Wednesday June 2, 6 – 8pm

Jill_Orr_Vision

Exhibition dates: June 2 – July 3, 2010

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 1970’s, delighted, shocked and moved audiences through her performance installations.”