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Archive for May, 2010

FREEDMAN FOUNDATION TRAVELLING SCHOLARSHIP FOR EMERGING ARTISTS

May 31st, 2010 by Paul | No Comments | Filed in news

THE FREEDMAN Foundation Travelling Scholarship for Emerging Artists provides assistance towards travel for educational purposes for young people building a career in the visual arts in the areas of painting, photography or sculpture. Overseas travel, preferably for the first time, to undertake formal study, a residency or a planned program with a professional artist or mentor will be considered, as will informal study for a planned research project. Up to 5 recipients will be awarded $5,000 each. Successful applicants will exhibit their work in the first week of September 2010 and upon their return in 2012 at COFAspace, College of Fine Arts – UNSW.

Closing date for applications is approaching fast – 5 June 2010 – so for more information and to download application forms head here.

STEVE LOPES @ DWYER FINE ART, MELBOURNE

May 31st, 2010 by Paul | 1 Comment | Filed in exhibition

“40 Days/40 Nights” 2009 Oil on Canvas - 116 x 145 cm

ONE OF OUR On This Island exhibiting artists and feature writer for Artist Profile, Steve Lopes, has an exhibition of new work at Dwyer Fine Art, Melbourne, from 2-26 June 2010. Not to be missed.

Dwyer Fine Art
Level 1 422 Bourke Street, Melbourne
T +61 3 9670 1702

AUSTRALIAN ARTISTS COOKING UP A STORM @ ART HK10

May 28th, 2010 by Owen Craven | 7 Comments | Filed in Uncategorized

Damien Hurst with White Cube

Today Artist Profile continued their tour of the 2010 Hong Kong International Art Fair. In its third year and with an increased participation from international galleries, the fair hosts a large and varying array of artists on exhibition. On the floor, works by Damien Hirst sit alongside pieces by collaborative artist duo Gilbert & George. A collage of eastern and western art hangs amongst one another. A mixture of genre, mediums, styles and outputs comes together in what can only be described as an overwhelming visual – and at times audible – sensation.

For the Australian artists and their gallery representation, the fair is an opportunity to extend their international profile as the international art world is, quite obviously, focusing its attention on who is here and what they’re doing – be they from Hong Kong, New York, Paris, Berlin, London, Melbourne or Sydney (to name but a few cities branded for their lively art scenes).

Sam Leach, Penny Byrne, Alexander Seton, Darren Sylvester + Marc De Jong with SSFA

On exhibition at ART HK10 are some of Artist Profile’s favourite artists. Showing with Sullivan + Strumpf Fine Art is 2010 Archibald prize winner Sam Leach, marble fiend Alexander Seton and ceramic conservator come political activist Penny Byrne. Each artist has produced a new body of work to show here in Hong Kong. From Melbourne, ISSUE 11 cover artist Brook Andrew has completed a new series of belgian linen, gold reflective canvases inscribed with text extracts taken from library archives as he attempts to reveal the truths of unspoken stories from our past. These works hang alongside the paintings of Tim Maguire in the Tolarno Galleries stand.

Brook Andrew, Tim Maguire, Patricia Piccinini + Rosemary Laing with Tolarno Galleries

Hitesh Natalwala has proven a favourite in GBK’s stand, with his vibrantly colourful gouache on paper works, who is exhibiting with 2009 Venice Biennale representatives for Australia Sean Cordeiro and Claire Healy who have created images of nuclear explosions with corkboards and pins. Dani Marti has woven a golden delight for the BREENSPACE stand with three large woven portraits created by a gilt of golden materials. These simply glow next to the light boxes of Gary Carsley who has recreated images of the Hong Kong Botanic Gardens.

Bill Henson, Dale Frank, Fiona Foley + Imants Tillers with Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery

On a darker palette, Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery has brought over both landscape and portrait works by Bill Henson from his current exhibition in Sydney.  GRANTPIERRIE allows Lionel Bawden to bursts off the walls with his coloured pencil sculpture creations while Raafat Ishak, represented by Sutton Galleries, shows 2D geometric works on board that give the illusion of 3D. Mori Gallery, arguably the most minimal stand in the entire fair, has installed Susan Norrie’s latest video piece SHOT which adorns the dimly lit white walls. And, by contrast, Conny Dietzschold has filled her space with sculptures of Robert Schad and Julia Davis’s beautiful metallic stones.

As David Elliott said in his opening address for this year’s Sydney Biennale, “Something’s cookin’ down here” referring to Australia and its art scene. If the artists who are exhibiting here in Hong Kong, holding their own amongst some of the – arguably – best of the contemporary art world, are to go by then David Elliott is spot on. Something is cooking and it smells good.

ARTIST PROFILE @ ART HK10

May 27th, 2010 by Owen Craven | No Comments | Filed in Uncategorized

The 2010 Honk Kong International Art Fair kicked off last night to much fanfare and a throng of crowds – artists, curators, collectors and galleriest amongst everyday art lovers – from around the world. The fair, in its third year, has grabbed the attention of the international art world as it plays host to some of the most respected galleries and their represented artists from all corners of the globe.

Participating galleries include London’s White Cube, New York’s James Cohan Gallery and Galerie Urs Meile of both Beijing and Lucerne.  Sitting along side these galleries are some of Australia’s heavy weights who clearly see this fair as the foray into a market perfect for their artists as they increase their profiles to an international scale. Returning for their second or third times, BREENSPACE, Conny Dietzschold Gallery, GBK, GRANTPIERRIE and Mori Galleries have all been joined by first timers Roslyn Oxley9, Sullivan + Strumpf Fine Art, Sutton Galleries and Tolarno Galleries.

Many eyes are watching over this emerging fair and, by all accounts, it’s impressed both exhibitors and visitors alike. Stay tuned for more in depth stories of our time here at the 2010 Hong Kong International Art Fair.

PHAPTAWAN SUWANNAKUDT OPENING TONIGHT @ 4A CENTRE FOR CONTEMPORARY ASIAN ART

May 27th, 2010 by Paul | No Comments | Filed in Uncategorized
Phaptawan Suwannakudt.

Catching the Moment ; Each Step is the Past. Courtesy 4A Centre for Contemporary Asian Art

4A PRESENTS Catching the Moment; Each Step is the Past, an exhibition of major new work by Thai-Australian artist Phaptawan Suwannakudt.

Catching the Moment; Each Step is the Past is an ephemeral and poignant installation using silk and hand-woven fabric, layered
with delicate drawings and Thai texts. This exhibition includes a major new interactive work, Conversation Room. Two people are invited to sit at a table and work with lengths of shredded silk. The participants are connected through their actions with the silk but obscured by a veiled curtain. Working with the material in silence, participants are able to observe the implications of the other on their attempts to create their own space.

Exhibition Dates 21 May – 3 July 2010
Opening: 6-8pm Thursday 27 May 2010
To be opened by Tony Bond OAM Assistant Director, Curatorial and Head Curator International Art, Art Gallery of NSW
4A Centre for Contemporary Asian Art
181-187 Hay St Sydney

MAGMONDAY

May 19th, 2010 by Paul | 1 Comment | Filed in news


Issue 11 CoverSo this is cool—blogging about a mag blog blogging about our mag. Thanks to the zine aficionados at magmonday who had some nice things to say about our cover art direction:

Keep an eye out for some nice stuff being done on the cover of Next Media’s Artist Profile using hand shaped typography. The last two issues (10+11) feature a portrait of the cover star with strong, rather unpredictable black type on white. The issue on stands at the moment features Magmonday favourite Brook Andrew and a font called Boar from youworkforthem. The type represents the mag’s goal to focus on the process of the artist, rather than the finished product. It’s a nice direction, and we look forward to seeing how it develops.

So do we.

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SOME FILM MUSEUMS I HAVE KNOWN, 19-22 MAY @ ACMI, MELBOURNE.

May 19th, 2010 by Paul | No Comments | Filed in exhibition
Some Film Museums I Have Known

Cecily Hardy and John Leary. Photo by Will Mansfield, 2009

Who wouldn’t love a festival that runs under the motto “No Risk Too Great”? The 2010 Next Wave Festival is a collection of events involving some 300 artists across a range of endeavours and Melbourne venues. “Not only in galleries and theatres,” says Festival Director Jeff Khan, “but also on our streets, in sporting clubs, high on rooftops and across a host of Melbourne’s most intriguing public and private spaces.”

As part of the Festival, opening 8pm tonight at the Australian Centre for the Moving Image is the “darkly comic journey into the heart of one woman’s cinematic obsession”: Some Film Museums I Have Known

The performance/film is a “tongue-in-cheek exploration into the cultural dominance of Hollywood. Acclaimed theatre company Rhubarb Rhubarb, the team behind the wildly popular cinema remixes Wonka! and The Mad Max Remix, have created a world of dioramas, tiny cameras, VHS and internal monologues within an ever-evolving DIY set.”

Some Film Museums I Have Known is running same time each evening until this Saturday 22nd (+ a 2pm Sat matinee)

AUSTRALIAN CENTRE FOR THE MOVING IMAGE,
FEDERATION SQUARE, MELBOURNE

ENTRY
$15/ $13 concession
Tickets 1300 727 432

www.nextwave.org.au

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ARTHK10 – HONG KONG INTERNATIONAL ART FAIR, 27-30 MAY.

May 19th, 2010 by Paul | No Comments | Filed in news


FOR AUSTRALIAN galleries and collectors, the growing popularity of the Hong Kong Art Fair can only be good news—a sign that the art world’s eyes and purchasing power are increasingly focused on our region. This year a slew of top Australian galleries are making the trip—including BREENSPACE, Conny Dietzschold Gallery, gbk, Sullivan+Strumpf, Tolarno, Roslyn Oxley9, Mori Gallery, Sutton Gallery and GrantPirrie.

Our deputy editor Owen will also be there and promises to keep us updated on Facebook and Twitter with the all the news and views from the fair.

HONG KONG INTERNATIONAL ART FAIR
HONG KONG CONVENTION AND EXHIBITION CENTRE
27-30 MAY 2010

INDIGENOUS ART GOES TO CHINA

May 19th, 2010 by Paul | No Comments | Filed in news

DOT paintings from the indigenous Papunya community are heading to the heart of Beijing. In an exercise in cultural diplomacy, packers at the National Museum of Australia spent yesterday sliding paintings from its successful 2007-08 exhibition into crates marked for the National Art Museum of China …

Read more from Yuko Narushima in today’s SMH

DAVID SERISIER @ LIVERPOOL STREET GALLERY, SYDNEY

May 7th, 2010 by Owen Craven | 1 Comment | Filed in exhibition
From top left to bottom right: David Serisier, untitled yellow square painting, untitled grey painting, untitled red square painting, untitled blue painting, 2010, all oil on linen, 45.7 cm  x 45.7 cm each

From top left to bottom right: David Serisier, untitled yellow square painting, untitled grey painting, untitled red square painting, untitled blue painting, 2010, all oil on linen, 45.7 x 45.7 cm each

David Serisier’s latest body of abstract paintings further explores his interest into the perception of colour and light; issues of materiality and immateriality; and his passion for the geometry of the square. The exhibition is made up of five large paintings of varying monochromatic colours, four smaller monochromatic paints, and a series of prints made through a collaboration with Diana Davidson.

David has recently travelled to Japan and the USA, where he encountered different light and space. Attempts to describe the experience of Serisier’s paintings have drawn analogies with the natural world around him. These experiences of new spaces, new lights, and new natural worlds heightened his senses and curiosity to explore the project that is his current exhibition.

Born in Australia in 1958, David Serisier has been committed to an abstract aesthetic for over twenty years. He has received numerous awards and scholarships, including the Australia Council Greene Street residency in New York. His work is represented in many significant public, corporate and private collections, including the National Gallery of Australia, New England Regional Art Museum, Charles Sturt University, Artbank and JP Morgan Chase Bank.

Until 3 June
DAVID SERISIER
TOWARDS THE WHITE BUFFALO

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