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Archive for the ‘Art - What's On’ Category

One Night Only Melbourne Art Exhibition!!

Wednesday, March 24th, 2010

Holes in the Wall
Curated by Theresa Harrison

Opening night: Thursday 25th March 2010
276 Station St, North Carlton

Artists: Linsey Gosper, Shay Minster, Valentina Palonen, Damien Rudd & Urban Village Melbourne, Sonya Parton, Anga’aefonu Bain-Vete, Peta Glenn, Shu Liu, Richard Bruch, Andrew Reynolds, Ammon Beyerle, Caitlyn Parry

HolesIn TheWall_ TheresaHarrison

Curator Theresa Harrison has invited 12 artists to transform a Carlton North home into a series of arts installations. The result is Holes in the Wall, a site-specific exhibition that allows its audience to indulge their innate voyeuristic desires, offering a glimpse into a series of uncanny domestic spaces. It will be held for one night only, on Thursday 25 March from 7-10pm.

While the house will be emptied of its inhabitants, artists will work within the confines of the existing domestic space, creating installations amidst the quotidian lives of the people that normally reside there. Audiences will be invited to peer into these strange yet familiar worlds via the windows of the adjoining laneway. By not allowing the spectator to enter these rooms, however, their voyeuristic urges can never be entirely satisfied. Holes in the Wall challenges the boundaries between art and the everyday, public and private, and internal and external. The exhibition also questions the social meanings attached to suburban architecture, encouraging audiences to look beyond the windows, doors, fences and walls traditionally designed to keep intruders out and protect the privacy of the occupants inside.

WHAT’S ON IN MARCH

Tuesday, March 16th, 2010

Melbourne Food + Wine Festival
12-23 March 2010

Image: Natasha Frisch It’s ... nothing really (2006). Single channel video.

Image: Natasha Frisch It’s ... nothing really (2006). Single channel video.

The High Life is a series of rooftop art projects curated by West Space that will be a feature of this year’s Melbourne Food + Wine Festival. The Festival invited West Space to work with contemporary artists to present artworks that reflect upon themes initiated in this year’s festival keynote project ‘The Metlink Edible Garden’. West Space has commissioned eight artists to make new work that responds to ideas around plants and gardens, food sustainability, urban landscapes and environmental concerns more broadly.

Working across some of Melbourne’s best-loved rooftops for the duration of the festival, the artists have also responded to the unique flavour of each establishment. How will artists interpret the hunter/gatherer ethos at Sarti Bar and Restaurant, or the flamboyant cheekiness of Madam Brussels? How will they respond to the understated but oh-so-Melbourne elegance of the Order of Melbourne, or the cool as a cucumber and high as a kite atmosphere of Rooftop Bar?

Artists:
Sarti Restaurant & Bar: Hotham Street Ladies + Natasha Frisch
Rooftop Bar and Cinema: Dell Stewart + Adam Cruickshank
The Order of Melbourne: Andy Hutson + Kirsten Bradley
Madame Brussels: Tai Snaith + Carl Scrase

Closing Night Event: Tuesday 23rd March

The Melbourne Queer Film Festival

12 – 28th March 2010

Opening night Wednesday 17 March at the Astor Theatre

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MQFF is the biggest and oldest queer film festival in Australia, and screens the best in queer film from Australia and around the world.

Centre for Contemporary Photography

Gallery Two

David Van Royen

Not Moving

19 March – 16 May 2010

Opening night Thursday March 18, 6-8pm

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Not Moving is an exploration of self-portraiture within photography to display no movement and to create a still frame. This photographic series examines the process of becoming older by exploring that one’s ‘persona’ or ‘inner picture’ somehow remains the same within one’s mind throughout the course of one’s life.

We have a specific self-portrait inside our minds that does not shift like a photograph. It is this image that we attempt to maintain in spite of its possible discordance with the reality of our physical appearance. Like many artist self-portraits that examine mortality, this series concentrates on the environment around the subject, as well as my own state within the particular place displayed.

These photographic images display ideas that permeate my life without relying on the traditional ‘returned stare’ that dominates the genre of self-portraiture. Through this the window to my soul/persona becomes the photographic frame rather than my eyes. Within these images the release cable from the camera represents the physical action of taking the photograph, symbolising my attempt to ‘refresh’ the internal photograph of myself.

It’s L’Oreal Melbourne Fashion Festival Week!!

Wednesday, March 10th, 2010

The Colour Factory is a proud sponsor of ‘The Spirit of the Black Dress’ photography exhibition that showcases talented emerging fashion designers.

The Fashion Photography exhibition runs from 12-6pm, 12-21st March at Georges on Collins, 195 Little Collins Street, Melbourne, FREE entry.

The_Spirit_of_the_Black_Dress

“We are a group of independent recent graduates from different backgrounds committed to raising the profile of emerging fashion and increasing international appreciation for Australian design. We run an annual Fashion Photography Exhibition that showcases ten of Australia’s most innovative emerging designers.

In our second year we are amazed and humbled at the talent and innovation shown by emerging fashion designers. The ten for 2010 were chosen on the aesthetics of their garments as well as their response to environmental issues, by a panel of industry judges including Janice Breen Burns, Karen Webster, Joe Saba, Roger Leong and Emer Diviney. The garments showcase a varied landscape of sustainably driven creativity.”

‘Embodiment: Fashion, Image and Art’
Guildford Lane Gallery

5 Artists:
Claudia Phares, Cody Daley, Jillian Allan, Julee Latimer, Milla Zhugalo
Opening night Thursday March 11 at 6pm

Image: Claudia Phares

Image: Claudia Phares

This exhibition runs from March 8 to 21, 2010

A curated exhibition that explores personal identity through fashion, design, illustration and art.

Also on at Guildford Lane
‘New Masculinities’
Clinton Hayden
Opening night Thursday March 11 at 6pm

Clinton_Hayden

Clinton Hayden explores and interrogates ideas of identity and sense of self through photography, drawing and painting. Using fashion (modes of masculine dress both traditional and contemporary) as a foundation, the exhibition culminates in a series of portraits, exploring masculinity, masculine representation and masculine construct through fashion.

Vivien Racault
Melbourne French Alliance

‘Between Plant and Ghost’
Opening night March 11, 2010

Vivien_RacaultExhibition runs from March 11 to April 9.

A poetic and critical fantasy about the notion of evolution and the radical transformation of our consciousness.

New exhibition at the Colour Factory Gallery opening this Thursday

Tuesday, March 2nd, 2010

Allan Kleiman
Colour Factory Gallery

Urban Archaeology- reconstructing the present

Opening Thursday March 4, 6-8pm

Allan_Kleiman_Colour_Factory_Gallery

Exhibition runs from March 4-20, 2010

Allan, a successful commercial photographer for many years, has recently turned his passion for photography into the pursuit of fine art. This body of work presents the graphic beauty of the everyday, illustrating and recording degrees of urban decoration and decay. Mostly shot in the familiar streets of Melbourne, Allan invites the viewer to imagine and interpret these ‘discoveries’ in the same way that an archaeologist discovers the remains of ancient civilizations and reconstructs what life was like.

This week is hot for great photographic exhibitions!!

Tuesday, March 2nd, 2010

Sarah Berners
Bus Projects – Main Space
The Garment-Body
Opening Tuesday March 2, 6-8pm

Sarah_BernersExhibition runs from March 2-19, 2010

“The Garment-Body is a photographic and sculpture based exhibition which explores an intimate synthesis between flesh and fabric. The Garment-Body is an exploration of the erotic appeal of inanimate materials in conjunction with the human body. The exhibition considers the fusing of flesh and fabric as a symptom of the human urge to bond with and transform the body in relation to its environments, objects and garb”.

Paul Philipson
c3 Contemporary Art Space
A hierarchy of loss
Opening March 3, 6-8pm

Paul_Philipson

Exhibition runs from March 3-21, 2010

“Philipson’s work explores the poetics of photography and its ability to present description without place. His seemingly unrelated images, when placed together, expose a shared language. The result is an unsettling exploration through territories as diverse as the elegiac texture of his landscapes to the texture of skin itself. The currency of the sublime runs through every aspect of Philipson’s work. His upcoming exhibition shows a series of ethereal photographs which transport you from a frozen lake, to a misty tree-lined road, to a night owl caught in the flash of a light. The effect is one of an almost David Lynch-ian strangeness, deftly offset by a sweeping gesture towards German romanticism.”

Lez Horvat
Red Gallery
The Minefield and the Lotus
Opening Wednesday March 3, 2010

Exhibition runs from March 3-20, 2010

Lez_Horvat

“This series of photographic works was captured in Ba Ria-Vung Tau (formally Phuc Tuy) province in Vietnam over the course of the past two years. Horvat’s images feature Vietnamese and Australian service personnel who were involved in the Vietnam/American war. As he reveals, ‘these portraits seek to explore the effects of conflict upon service personnel of both sides. The lotus flower, which for centuries has been known not only for its great beauty but also for its ability to rise from the mud, is used as a metaphor for renewal and growth and as a signifier of place.’’”

Allan Kleiman
Colour Factory Gallery

Urban Archaeology- reconstructing the present

Opening Thursday March 4, 6-8pm

Allan_Kleiman_Colour_Factory_GalleryExhibition runs from March 4-20, 2010

Allan, a successful commercial photographer for many years, has recently turned his passion for photography into the pursuit of fine art. This body of work presents the graphic beauty of the everyday, illustrating and recording degrees of urban decoration and decay. Mostly shot in the familiar streets of Melbourne, Allan invites the viewer to imagine and interpret these ‘discoveries’ in the same way that an archaeologist discovers the remains of ancient civilizations and reconstructs what life was like.

Melbourne Art Exhibition – View From Here V

Wednesday, February 24th, 2010

View From Here V – New Landscapes
Flinders Lane Gallery

Artists: William Breen, Marika Borlase, Lilly Chorny, Lizzie Buckmaster Dove, Ian Greig, Juli Haas, Greer Honeywill, Jean Lyons, Marise Maas, Mark Ogge, Garry Pumfrey, Christophe Stibio, Ken Smith, Christine Willcocks, Simeon Walker, Mami Yamanaka

Exquisite Enticement #3 by Greer Honeywill

Exquisite Enticement #3 by Greer Honeywill

This Melbourne art exhibition runs from February 23 – March 13, 2010

“This popular annual exhibition features new landscapes by gallery artists”.

Connor O’Brien book launch
The Thousands Shop
Saturday February 27, 6-8pm

Connor_O’Brien_box_set
The Thousands Shop and Serps Press invite you to the launch of the Conor O’Brien Box Set and a showing of photographs borrowed from private collections in Melbourne.

The Conor O’Brien Box Set “includes publications There Stands The Glass (2006/07), Hold On To Each Other (2005/06), Westside (2004) and Oh No, I Think I’m Falling (2003). It also includes a B&W zine including photos from exhibitions at Utopian Slumps, Black & Blue, CCP and ACP accompanied by an essay by Robert Cook entitled ’ Up Trees and Not Up Trees’.”

Slow Dance by Shay Minster opening tonight at West Space

Thursday, February 18th, 2010

Slow Dance
West Space

Shay Minster
Opening: Thursday February 18, 6-8pm

Image: Shay Minster

Image: Shay Minster

Exhibition runs from February 19 to March 13, 2010

Free Artist Talk: Thursday March 11, 12.30-1.30pm Gallery 3

“The Slow Dance exhibition examines the tragic comedy of the human condition. Appearing familiar and amusing at first, the project explores the suppression experienced when a personality is radically altered through the manipulation of their environment. A clown motif – drained of its usual high colour and its joyous free dance restricted – flails about in a futile attempt to fulfill its intended purpose. Stuck in endless repetition, Slow Dance confronts, in an absurd manner, the existential vacuum”.

Addition and Erasure
VCA- Margaret Lawrence Gallery

Opening Thursday 18 February 6–8pm

Exhibition runs from February 19 to March 20, 2010

Artists/participants: Luke Beesley, Michael Farrell, Doug Heslop, Helen Johnson, Margaret Mahem, Peter O’Mara, Simon Pericich. Curators: Luke Beesley and Doug Heslop

Image: Luke Beesley

Image: Luke Beesley

“This project will represent a collaboration between a number of artists and poets and will engage a between space – ‘addition and erasure’ – as a conceptual beginning for an artwork. Addition and Erasure includes participants and works that locate language and/or text somewhere between contemporary art and poetry, as a strategy for illuminating the question or place of the author, reader, spectator or critic; and as a way of challenging easy categorisation. Some of the questions the exhibition aims to raise include: Is text a limited medium? How can poetry exist alongside contemporary art practice?  Where might the gallery and the page meet? Can they be made identical? More specifically, perhaps: Can ‘poets’ and ‘artists’ be critiqued in a single breath?”

Last week of ‘Debut VI’ art school graduates exhibition!

Wednesday, February 10th, 2010

‘Debut VI’
Blindside
Curated by Natalya Maller, Drew Pettifer and Andrew Tetzlaff

Artists: Maggie Brown, Christo Croker, Dylan Hammond, Ted McKinlay, Sophie Mitchell, Sam Page, Van Thanh Rudd, Jacob Weiss and Marcin Wojcik

28 January to 13 February 2010

Maggie Brown

Maggie Brown

Van Thanh Rudd

Van Thanh Rudd

“Blindside’s Debut series of art exhibitions is an annual survey of Melbourne’s freshly emancipated art school graduates.

Its curatorial premise is simple: NO fancy French philosophy or long German words to connect points A and B; NO unifying theories; and NO attempt to fill in the gaps. Debut, without bias or favor supports the sweat and success of 2009’s brightest – the shining stars and the diamonds in the rough.

Work is selected from the tender bits of a marathon hunt through a month-and-a-half of near-daily exhibitions. We’d like to congratulate these artists, emerging talent we proudly highlight, and wish them well as they transition from art schools to art galleries and beyond.”

‘Accumulating’
Gorker Gallery
Michael Steele

4 February – 21 February 2010

Michael Steele

Michael Steele

“Gorker Gallery is proud to present a solo show by Melbourne based artist Michael Steele. Michael’s mixed media pop surrealist cluster paintings convey personal and culturally based themes. These themes are explored by sourcing and combining visual icons from the artist’s generation, referencing the development of computer game culture, the internet phenomenon, the evolution of a multicultural consumer society, advertising and the emergence of graffiti art.

By fusing recognizable visual elements together in random composition, the artist’s works engage the viewer to respond simultaneously to these clusters, evoking their own unique response to each combination. The works are rich in communication, obvious and hidden messages lie within each explosion of visual stimulus to interpret.”

Wordless – Photographic art exhibition opening this Wednesday

Monday, February 1st, 2010

Wordless
Vivian Cooper Smith
C3 Contemporary Art Space - Space B

Opening Wednesday February 3, 2010

Image: Vivian Cooper Smith

Image: Vivian Cooper Smith

“Wordless is a collection of photographic images that examine a life without anchors, without precedents and without hope in eternity. It examines life in the dark, without the illumination of understanding and description. It is a meditation on losing a faith and unbelieving in God.

Vivian Cooper Smith grew up the son of missionaries in Bangladesh. After finishing school and a Fine Arts degree in Perth he moved to Melbourne 10 years ago. He works as a photographer and graphic designer and has exhibited widely both locally and nationally”.

Secret History of the Working Men’s College
RMIT Project Space
Group exhibition

Opening Thursday February 5, 2010

Artist’s inlcude:
[Anon], Rhett D’Costa, Richard Harding, Kate Just, Nick Pantazopoulos, Spiros Panigirakis, Drew Pettifer,  Jon Riethmuller, Jonas Ropponen, David Sequeira , Glenn Walls

Image: Drew Pettifer

Image: Drew Pettifer

“Secret Files from the Working Men’s College highlights some of the talent that over time has been fostered and released from the School at Art of RMIT University. Gallagher brings together artists who reflect on gay lifestyle through the subtle inclusion of queer content into their art practice. This exhibition is part of the Midsumma Festival’s Queer City”.

Canadian Pharmacy
Neon Parc
Group exhibition
Opening Wednesday February 3, 2010

Image: Stephen Bush

Image: Stephen Bush

Canadian Pharmacy is a group art exhibition that brings together 18 artists and collaborations from Australia, New Zealand and the United Kingdom. The show includes artists works from the following: Dan Arps, Hugo Atkins, Stuart Bailey, Stephen Bush, Gabrielle De Veitri, Danielle Freakley, Ian Haig, Greatest Hits.

Re/Gendered art exhibition presented by Midsumma 2010 opening tonight!

Monday, January 25th, 2010

Re / Gendered
Platform Artists Group Inc.
Artists: Monika Tichacek (Sydney), Tejal Shah (India), Jake Wotherspoon (Melbourne), Drew Pettifer (Melbourne), Fran Barrett, Kate Blackmore & Anastasia Zaravinos (Sydney), Liam Benson (Sydney), 4evamore (Melbourne), Michelle Tran (Melbourne), Gerard O’Connor & Marc Wasiak (Melbourne).

Opening Monday 25th January 2010, 6 – 8pm

Gerard_O’Connor_Marc_Wasiak_art_exhibition

Image: Gerard O’Connor & Marc Wasiak

Presented by Midsumma 2010 & Platform
Curator: Laura Castagnini

Re/Gendered brings together a number of high profile international and Australian artists in a group exhibition that celebrates the notion of fluid or ‘unstable’ gender. These artists all aim to transgress and blur the boundaries of gender performance. Often using drag as a technique to destabilise identity, these diverse artists disrupt and subvert the traditional binary system of gender. In turns joyful, disturbing, and deliberately ambiguous, these artworks expose the theatricality involved in our everyday performance of gender roles.

This art exhibition runs until February 6, 2010.

Trish Morrissey
Centre for Contemporary Photography – Gallery 3

Trish_Morrissey_photographic_exhibition

In the four works that comprise this exhibition Trish Morrissey employs self-portraiture, performance and wit as tools to investigate the boundaries of photographic meaning through still and moving images. The humour often evaporates, leaving a slow-burning psychologically tense afterglow. Weaving fact and fiction, she plunges into the heart of such issues as family experiences and national identities, Irish middle-class values, feminine and masculine roles, and relationships between strangers.

This photographic exhibition runs until March 14, 2010.