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the art life

"...it's just like saying 'the good life'".

No Hugging, No Learning

Tuesday, February 24, 2009
Pepe Le Pew writes...

Artexpress 2009 opened the Art Gallery of NSW. It was a gala affair despite an earlier midday starting time replete with new Ministers and special guests Ben Quilty and Del Kathryn Barton who offered pragmatic and heartfelt advice about 'keepin’ it real and keepin’ it going' in the art world.

If you are one of the few in NSW who aren’t familiar with this show it’s a curated exhibition of graduating High School Visual Arts students. Culled from over 9000 artworks the AGNSW choose about 60 from a lucky 500 or so preselected candidates. They get the first pick so the Art Gallery show always seems to carry a little more weight despite the high quality of the other exhibitions.

It’s almost obligatory at this point to mention the vast numbers of people who walk through the door of the gallery to visit the exhibition, an impressive statistic by any standard but one that has always made me a little bit uncomfortable. I guess it’s because I have never been completely sure who the information is aimed at persuading. It’s certainly not the twenty thousand plus people who flood through the doors of the exhibition. For some it’s their only annual visit to the AGNSW, who in turn claim it as one of their biggest shows of the year. And whilst I concede it is possible to argue that the vast numbers could merely be a case of collective proud parenting, I think there is something else going on here.

Strip away the direct friends and relatives and the artists themselves and there is still a fair whack of people wandering around. Their motives must vary but I suspect many of them end up there to learn.


Rose Ayers, I Want, 2008.


Much is made of the “amazing talent” and “raw energy” of the kids and Artexpress can sometimes be touted as almost a freak show of savant-like ability by the media. This is possibly as a way to make up for all the negative press they pile on about scary and dangerous teens throwing parties on your street the rest of the year. I am sure many people do come to the show to be impressed with our “Talented Aussie Champions”, and the formal fine art skills they present but as many of the works have become significantly more conceptual in the past few years the audience is often exposed to a much broader spectrum of art practice.

It’s a mediated experience of contemporary art practice without the pressure because it is student work and that means it's ok to put up your hand and ask. Indeed you don’t have to ask because the answers are provided by an extensive support system of artist’s statements, diaries and prep sketches and now even a podcast of interviews with its exhibitors guaranteeing even the most timid visitor walks out well informed about the work and the process of creating it. It’s a very satisfying experience for many.

The perceived role of the education people at the AGNSW may be to guide the kiddies round the gallery and give them worksheets to colour in, but Artexpress demonstrates the much more complex and considered role education plays in the institution. Additionally Artexpress has a resultant function in that it enhances the experience for the general public who can use Artexpress as a conduit to access or at least get exposure to art practices which they may find otherwise intimidating.

So who’s not buying?

Well certainly some people are, literally. A side effect of the growing presence of Artexpress in the exhibition calendar has been the market interest in selected exhibitors. In the same way that Primavera has become a speculative investors shopping list, some buyers are getting in at the ground floor and snapping up potential art stars at bargain prices. The legend of artists like Jasper Knight, and Ben Quilty who were both Artexpress stars, bait the hook for these long-line fishermen. To say nothing of the folly this concept, it’s tragic to think that these personally significant works are being seduced away from young people for mediocre returns and an unrealistic sense of material success. It also puts significant pressure on young artists to get in lest they experience the sort of disappointment that artists aren’t supposed to feel until they turn 35 and can’t get any of those travel grants anymore.

Ironically many of the students who make the cut at Artexpress have no intention of pursuing art as a primary career goal, choosing instead more pragmatic paths into regular paid employment like prime mortgage lending and insurance.

So who’s not with the program?

Well possibly it’s us. By us I mean the art literate practitioner's writers and consumers of contemporary art. Having perhaps adopted the Seinfeld credo of “no hugging and no learning” many avoid Artexpress with enthusiasm.

This I think is a bit of a pity since I think there is value in the experience for us too.

Like what you hear?

Student art is largely a direct response to the perceived state of current art practice. Its interesting to those of us who care at all what the audience might be thinking to be able to see physically manifested responses to the work they do. One artist I spoke to recently bemoaned an uncredited and blatant rip off of their work, perhaps failing to consider that this meant they had effectively made the grade and crossed over into a wider awareness of their practice. Remember all those Brett Whitley paintings you did in High School, the Salvador Dali’s and that crying Lichtenstein chick? Today’s students are just as likely to be ripping off Lionel Bawden and Todd McMillan.

As an exhibition how does Art Express fare?

A multi themed, multi discipline group show is going to be a tough hang at the best of times But Tristan Sharp the exhibitions curator avoids over-sentimentalising with a tightly curated and carefully considered layout. There is more space this year allowing for a greater distance between the pieces which allows a separation of ideas but also the opportunity for the interconnections to come together more subtly.

The use of boldly coloured walls at different points effectively serves to guide and as well as providing some functional support such as the black alcove portals for the video work. Sharp has deftly balanced works ranging from those that explore traditional skills and materials with more contemporary conceptual work in such as way as that they also inform each other. The colour scheme despite its striking hue serves as a gentle arm to the elbow rather than a twist and shove in any particular thematic direction.

The result is a complex show that avoids completely giving in to patronising head patting whilst also allowing and acknowledging the budding nature of the artists work at this early point in their development.

And of course there are always a few works that will surprise you with their conceptual strength. Take Luis Tapia’s moving tribute to his late father or Christine Kim’s miniature robots made from of broken computer parts that draw for their artist. Benjamin Wilson’s award winning Michel Gondry tribute scored him a scholarship to the Sydney international film school at the Robin Anderson awards last year.

These works would not look out of place at an arts degree graduation show or local film festival screening.

HSC Visual Arts students work in a structured, pressured and restrictive environment unlike anything outside High School. Despite this some of the work holds up pretty well in any context and deserves to be acknowledged, not just by proud mums, dads, Teachers and bestest buddies but by the agencies of the art world that some students aspire to. And in the process we have an opportunity to learn more about our own practice along the way.

Oops I said “learn” then didn’t I…

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Amusing Joan Sutherland related joke headline removed at request of lawyers...



A letter to the People:

So there is life after death!
Gay Bash proves the naysayers wrong with a huger than huge comeback for Mardi Gras.
On March 7th, they're taking over the entire Oxford Hotel to celebrate this gayest of all nights.
And as always, they've come up with a brilliant theme for the night - RICH/POOR.
Think Liberace, Orphan Annie, Scrooge McDuck, Les Miserable, the Great Gatsby... you get the picture.

We have 5 tickets to giveaway to the first 5 that can answer this question correctly:

WHO IS RICHER AND WHY? (EXPLAIN YOURSELF)

1. Oprah Winfrey.

2. Mary Kate and Ashely-Olsen combined.

3. Zsa Zsa Gabor.

4. William Gates III.

5. Donald Trump.

info@dukemag.com

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MEDIA RELEASE
23 February 2009

Penrith art project transforms waste into large-scale installations and wearable art sculptures

Sydney, Australia: Penrith is hosting a new contemporary art project which raises questions about society’s relationship to the production and consumption of waste. Taking its name from Penrith’s postcode, the Activate 2750 project presents eight days of sculptures, processions and performances created out of commercial and industrial waste.

Artist Ash Keating collaborated with waste management company SITA for the project to create a series of artworks which raise awareness about waste and recycling.

Keating will create a large-scale installation on the front lawn of Penrith’s Joan Sutherland Performing Arts Centre using three truckloads of SITA’s commercial and industrial waste. The waste pile will be manipulated by the artist and illuminated at night for the duration of the project from 26th February until Friday 6th March 2009.

Pieces of the recyclable material will also be fashioned into wearable costumes which will be worn by local performing artists to create moving ‘waste creatures’. These wearable sculptures will be paraded in three processions throughout Penrith City Centre and train station, Westfield Plaza and Mulgoa Road Superstore District in the week commencing Tuesday 3rd March 2009.

Activate 2750 will culminate in a final performance on Friday 6th March from 7pm until 8.30pm outside the Joan Sutherland Centre for Performing Arts. This fantastical mixed media finale involves sculptural installations, video, performances, lighting effects and music.

Keating describes the project as aiming to raise community awareness about waste and recycling, explaining: “My art practice is interested in natural environmental issues and particularly the effects that globalisation has on the natural world.”

During the final performance all the waste materials recycled in the event will be placed into large bulk bins, ready for delivery to the Elizabeth Drive Landfill. SITA trucks will then collect the bins which will be then returned to landfill, raising further questions about the ongoing cycle of the creation and disposal of human and industry waste.

Activate 2750 project is facilitated by the Penrith Performing and Visual Arts Ltd and Penrith City Council and has been organised as part of the C3 West cultural partnership, between the MCA, Penrith Regional Gallery & The Lewers Bequest, Casula Powerhouse and Campbelltown Arts Centre, which brings together community, culture and commerce to create art projects in Western Sydney.

KEY DATES:
Sculptural Installation:
The commercial and industrial waste which will form the basis of Ash Keating’s sculptural installation will be onsite at the Joan Sutherland Performing Arts Centre on Thursday 27th February. The artist will work with an assistant to manipulate this waste into a sculptural work, situated at the Joan for the entire project period. Public will be able to view the installation and also a team of artists working onsite at the Joan from 27th February until 7th March 2009.

Procession & performance dates:
Tuesday 3rd March, 4:00pm – 5:00pm
Procession 1 – Mulgoa Road Superstore District, Mulgoa Road

Wednesday 4th March, 4:00pm – 5:00pm
Procession 2 – Penrith City Centre, performers to travel up one side of High St, rest and return


Thursday 5th March, 4:00pm – 5:00pm
Procession 3 – Performances in and around Westfield Shopping Centre, and Penrith Train Station. Procession start at exterior of Westfield, walking through the Westfield to Riley Street and through to the train station before returning through Westfield.

Friday 6th March, 7:00pm – 8:30 pm
Final project Performance- Joan Sutherland Performing Arts Centre.
8:30 pm – 11:30 pm - Several smaller performances continuing into the early evening including by Russ Kitchin and Ash Keating.



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The Tiny Stadiums Festival
Blue ribbon artists cramming big experiences into intimate spaces
LAUNCH: Tuesday Feb 24th at 6pm
At the corner of Prospect st and Erskineville road: (The Pink Cake Shop..see it here)
Join us for the beginning of our unique festival.
www.tinystadiums.com.au

Feb 24th -March 8th,
Curated by Quarterbred, presented by PACT and supported by The City of Sydney..

Highlights include...SMELL-O-VISION DOUBLE BILL
Two shows for $15/$18!
Holiday by spat+loogie and Asisthesis by James Brown
25th Feb – 7th March. Wednesdays - Saturdays
Both shows twice a night 7pm and 8.30pm.
At Pact 107 Railway Pde Erskineville STRICTLY LIMITED AUDIENCE
BOOKINGS ESSENTIAL call PACT on 9550 2744

QUARTERBRED SYMPOSIUM FREE EVENT
SAT 28th 10am-4pm. At Erskineville Town Hall.

VIDEO HERO
A curated video ensemble hand picked by Di Smith. Will be played on loop at the The Rose of Erskineville! Video art at the pub!

ERSKINEVILLE VILLAGE LIVE ARTS WEEKEND FREE EVENT
SAT + SUN March 7th and 8th 2-5pm
Experience giant kaleidoscopic dynamite, karaoke massage, video heros, delicate displays and interactive word games as artists take over shop fronts, pub televisions parklands and the local Town Hall. Let the HI VIS DANDIES show you around!

DVD LIBRARY FREE EVENT
An archive of the most innovative national and international arts projects.
At Erskinveville Town Hall.

Check out our full program at www.tinystadiums.com.au

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The Art Life 2: Sittin' and Thinkin'

Monday, February 16, 2009


The Art Life 2 begins on March 17th, 2009 at 10pm on your ABC.

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New Work Friday #15

Friday, February 13, 2009






"I'm interested in art that reflects every day life and experiences. Although my works hide the interactive technologies required to drive them, I'm dependent on this same hidden technology to achieve a deeper connection with the audience and to make the artwork seem more ‘real’ and identifiable. For Drifting, I have drawn from both intimate and global experiences to connect with the viewer. This work allows the viewer to act as a voyeur as they watch the personal lives of others and are led to reflect on their own. The placement of three surrounding projections on screens and real objects creates an immersive experience and should help to enhance the ‘presence’ of the characters in the real space. Although the interaction of the viewer is minimal, it is enough for them to disrupt the flow of the fictional characters lives and thus play a part in the narrative. The immersive film sequence features a loose narrative, based on the experience of insomnia. As the central character moves across the room, he drifts from states of consciousness, wakefulness, reality, fantasy and nightmare. The work is ‘choreographed’ to a dramatic cello composition, using the genre of German Expressionism as a major influence - Julia Burns."

Got new work you'd like to share? Send images and a description or statement about your work to thearlife at hot mail dot com. Images should be no larger than 350k each.

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Exhibitionists

Wednesday, February 11, 2009


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Julia Burns
Exhibition at beta_space
The Powerhouse Museum, Sydney
DRIFTING
Curator: Deborah Turnbull
February 2 - 28, 2009




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SquatFest 2009: Sunday February 22

SquatFest happens every year at the same date and time as TropFest. While the hopeful entrants for TropFest are fretting about whether they’ll get the chance to move up a rung in the Hollywood Sweatshop, artists and activists from across Australia are living it up, projecting films and videos in an inspired squatted venue.

SquatFest began at the Broadway Squats in 2001, and has since made appearances at the Midnight Star Social Centre, the Sydney Park Brickworks, the Sydney Dental Hospital and under the grandstand in Erskineville. Our film programs have toured to Newcastle, Melbourne, Perth, Indonesia, Germany, New York and Italy. For more on the history of SquatFest see here: http://squatfest.com/history/

When? 7:30 pm, Sunday February 22, 2009 (Same night as TropFest, of course!)

How? SquatFest is off the grid! We will be utilising battery-powered video projection technology and sound will be simulcast on FM radio. Bring along a battery-powered radio and tune in!

Why? All together now “Because TropFest sux corporate cock!”

We are proudly sponsored by no one.


Entries are now invited for SquatFest 2009:
Send your films and videos by post to
SQUATSPACE
PO BOX 391 Newtown NSW 2042

or

Get in touch with us to arrange a rendezvous/pickup: info@squatspace.com



Fresh off the press!!! Don't miss this year celebrity guest! Mickie Quick from Guerrilla Gardeners!! or simply bring it along on the night!

Formats we can show: DVD, miniDV, VHS, 16mm, expanded cinema, any file extensions, sound and vision spectacle etc. If your format of choice is not on the list get in touch and we can negotiate. Please contact us in advance if you want to show 16mm or super 8

email: info@squatspace.com
Mob: Keg 0412 920044 NoBody 0411 293178
www.squatspace.com/squatfest


What's the deal with these ads on The Art Life? We support artist run and not-for-profit galleries and museums, artist publications and other projects by posting press releases and other pr material. Send your info to theartlife [at] hotmail dot com. Images should be no larger than 100k each.

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All Your ABC Are Belong To Us

Tuesday, February 03, 2009
Greetings. After months of meeting 'n' greeting artists, travelling here and there in a van and then spending countless hours in the edit room, The Art Life Series 2 is ready to go. Oh yes.

Episode 1 is called Starry Starry Night and it can be seen on Tuesday, March 17 at 10pm on ABC1. Episode 2 - Who Made Who will seen on the following Tuesday, March 24 - and the final epsiode Lust for Life - on March 31.



Why is the show on "so late"? Glad you asked. The 10pm Tuesday time slot is now traditional ABC territory for the arts. You think "Tuesday, late night" and you think "art". That half hour even has even got its own name - "Artscape". The later time slot also means that programing can be more, how shall we say - "adult oriented" and feature nudity, frequent coarse language, drug use and adult themes. We have worked very hard to ensure we live up to that promise and without wanting to give too much away, we can say that this new series has more salty language than Fleet Week.

Some of you are no doubt saying "Yeah, but I like the bleep machine... and I need my rest." We're happy to announce that the new series will be repeated the following Sunday on ABC2 at 7pm. Because the eps will be screening before the 9.30pm watershed, offending language will be "bleeped" [sadly losing nearly everything Renny Kodgers says], offensive images will be pixilated [there goes most of episode 2] and images of deceased relatives will be sensitively fogged. So if you can't stay up "late", forgot to program TIVo or just want to watch the shows without the dirty words and images, you can see the show on the 22nd and 29th of March and April the 5th.

Can't be arsed with broadcast television, want to watch the show on your phone or have a yen to bootleg the thing on peer-to-peer? We're delighted to advise that yes, finally, can't-believe-it's-happening but Art Life 2 will be available as a vodcast from iTunes and your ABC. Details to follow.

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Sans Pants

From Carrie Miller...

Pinning down the meaning of Stuart Bailey’s recent video performance is like trying to feed an oyster into a parking meter. That’s probably to be expected in a work like Desert Mouth which depicts the artist wandering around in circles in the Californian desert without his pants - or his mind by the looks of things.

The scene is one that conjures up the type of forgetfulness that drugs induce, reinforced by the references to marijuana in his accompanying sculptural pieces. But Bailey rejects the idea that the meaning of the work is literally associated with the altered states brought about by drug use. So what’s the motivation behind his Lynch-like, pants-off escapade?

The video and accompanying sculptures seem to be concerned with the alternative states of being brought about by drug use. Certainly, you don’t seem to be thinking about much out there in the desert except perhaps “Where are my pants?” What’s the conceptual point of ‘Desert Mouth’?

Stuart Bailey: I'm not actually interested in alternative states of being. I approve of the the idea that the role of drugs in creative pursuits is pretty bogus. What I'm really interested in doing is using the cliches surrounding the use of pot to explore other ideas. I try to use popular notions about pot use such as forgetting, paranoia, thirst and a disconnection from the realities of life, to discuss the broader implications of this kind of disconnection. I see this as willful and something that suits the individual who decides to use / be disconnected.



When you say you’re concerned with“the broader implications of this kind of disconnection” are you talking about a more general level of disconnect members of late-capitalist society have to the political reality they’re immersed in (but often conveniently ignore)? A type of collective cultural forgetfulness?

SB: But it's not solely this political disconnection I'm looking at. I'm also interested in the kind of empty bravado that seems so common. Things like the hollowness of the low-level nationalism that is so popular in Australia or the recently damaged belief in the promise of unchecked capitalism. They're all a kind of delusion bought on by a narrow focus.

Jasmin Stephens said of your work that ‘Stuart has evolved a stylish, protest vocabulary’. Can you explain how this operates in an obscure work like ‘Desert Mouth’?

SB: In the Desert Mouth installation there is a fair amount of flag waving and claim-staking, in the sculptural element particularly. Having said that I try to avoid having specific political or social issues referenced directly in my work these days. I think it can end up limiting possible readings of the work and also tends to date it. I’m more interested in getting to the anxiety associated with this quickly shifting ground we’re presented with and how people respond and attempt to control things. In one way Desert Mouth tries to talk about how exposed and vulnerable we can be.

So do you think art can take a political and ethical stance against the scourge of rampant capitalism – to rouse us from our “delusional” state - or is it always already just another commodity amidst a sea of mindless consumption?

SB: Art can try, and I guess you could say I’d like to think it does make a difference. On the flipside of this I feel that contemporary art’s small audience doesn’t make it the best medium to try and influence people on a vast scale. It would be better to make a movie, start a political group or even write a song.

‘CRYPTOPHILISTINISM’, curated by Amita Kirpalani and featuring Stuart Bailey, James Dodd, Sarah Goffman, Scott Morrison, Justin Trendall runs from 6 - 28 February at Gertrude Contemporary Art Spaces ‘Desert Mouth’ runs from 27 February - 15 March 2008 at the Institute of Contemporary Art, Newtown.

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Fear Me, Love Me

Monday, February 02, 2009
In 2009...

People will respect the majesty of my creativity 31% 32
I'll get organasized 15% 16
I will definitely go to the Festival du Sidney 3% 3
I'm going to visit that artist-run gallery for sure 13% 13
Mark down March 19 as an important date in my diary 10% 10
Join the Art Life Facebook group 6% 6
I'll get that cheesecake that I was promised in 2006 10% 10
I will respect the majesty of other people's creativity 13% 14

104 votes total

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Well Fancy That #17: It's A Conspiracy!

"Here is an exhibition of an important contemporary Australian artist and an aesthetic sensibility that is the antithesis of everything that exhibitions such as Optimism in Brisbane would have us believe is the essence of the art of our time.

"Cressida Campbell seems never to have looked over her shoulder to see what other people are doing, or tried to second-guess trends and institutional taste. She has simply concentrated on making her subtle and distinctive woodblock prints, and has gradually become one of those artists that collectors wait in line to acquire.

"She has never worried about the tribe of curators and catalogue-essay writers and the art establishment has consequently ignored her. The paucity of her bibliography is striking, especially considering the quantity of verbiage heaped on far less significant artists. Curators have no idea what to make of her: on the face of it, she should have been an outstanding candidate for an exhibition on the theme of optimism, and there was a touch of irony in the fact that she had a commercial show at Philip Bacon's gallery in Brisbane at the same time. But the functionaries of contemporary art are guided by brands and slogans, not by visual appreciation."

Christopher Allen, Happy Days, The Australian, Jan. 31, 2009.

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