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the art life

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

Beyond The Edge

Tuesday, February 16, 2010
Some months back we posted an image by Ross Racine. After the artist got in touch to ask us to let readers know that he has new work available on his web site, we asked if he'd agree to a short email interview. Conducted over the last month, Ross offered some insights into his work:

The Art Life: You've spoken before on the method you use to make your images, but could you briefly explain your combination of techniques?

Ross Racine: The note on my technical process, available on my site, gives an overview of how I proceed. In a nutshell, the process involves creating the artwork in two steps: the first and main one is drawing freehand directly with the computer, and the second one is printing the image on paper with an inkjet printer. The drawing phase involves working with Photoshop with a pen and a tablet, aside from some preparatory work in Illustrator. In Photoshop, I start from a blank ground and build up the image with a small set of basic tools, such as selection, painting and cloning tools, copying and pasting, layers, luminosity and contrast controls, grain and smoothness modifications, and automation. In short, the process is a combination of digitally drawn material and various transformations done to this material.




Ross Racine, New Foxtown and Westhaven Villas, 2008.
Digital drawing, 60x80cms.


RR: One of the main properties of digital drawing is a virtual, non-material working environment. The fact that the image is not bound to a physical base has several advantages. It allows various combinations of techniques and treatments, an ease in modifying the whole image at once, an ease in copying and cutting, moving and pasting parts of the work (within an image as well as between images), the blending of layers of variable translucency, and the creation of copies of the image in progress (to save steps in the generation of the work and to create different versions of a work). Working in the virtual world also means the image can be altered at any time, even after a final version is established, thus creating a new, different image from a "final" one. Another property of the medium is its very fast speed compared to most physical media. This allows a very short delay between intention and result, as little time is needed to try out various ideas.

TAL: The result of your approach creates pictures that land somewhere between photography and drawing, and they have an almost hyper-real quality to them - is your intention that the viewer respond in a particular way?

RR: With the medium of digital drawing and my rather realistic treatment of the subject, my aim is to work in the gaps between photography and traditional, physical drawing. I am aware that many people who happen upon my prints think that they are photos, at least initially. Digital drawing is a relatively new medium among more established visual art mediums. There are few precedents to act as visual references to help viewers approach this type of drawing. But hopefully, a tradition will gradually emerge to make viewers, including myself, more familiar with this new domain of imagery. A precedent can be found in the last two decades in photography (in art, design, and other fields), as viewers have come to expect a measure of manipulation in any photograph, whether this manipulation is apparent or not, ranging from obvious color and shape distortion to very subtle and invisible detail correction. Viewers in front of the actual prints of my work (24 x 32") are less likely to consider them photographs, as the drawing-like detail on the surface is more visible.

TAL: The aerial view perspectives of your images suggest a disconnected point of view, one that isn't necessarily experienced by many people, but are familiar from satellite imagery, weather maps, surveillance images - and seems to suggest a very eerie feeling of being watched, or targeted - is there an intention an explicit criticism of suburbia, of expansion in your work?

RR: I value the distant, aerial point of view as promoting an attitude of reflection about the world. The public in general has, in the last decade or so, experienced an increased familiarity with the aerial viewpoint, with the instant availability of satellite imagery on the Web. This type of image is quickly becoming as ubiquitous in daily experience as the map. The feeling of "being watched" you mention is not my intention, but nevertheless interesting. It depends on how much you identify with the residents of my suburbs. On the other hand, I acknowledge a feeling of "watching", as the viewer of my prints is in the position of the all-seeing observer. The watcher knows some things that the inhabitants of these subdivisions do not. My viewpoint is also that of the planner: the all-over, top-down approach of the decision maker. There is an obvious criticism of suburbia in my images, mainly through the exaggeration of certain of its characteristics. The suburbs are the fastest growing part of the urban environment in the majority of nations. But beyond the suburban example, these digital drawings are a way of thinking about design, the city and society as a whole. I would like my prints to remain as open as possible, to be triggers for reflection through analogy with various aspects of the world.

TAL: The way you use the imagery of suburbia seems to imply visual conundrums - it feels as if you're being pulled into the detail of the work trying to sort out individual houses, drive ways... What's happening there?

RR: I think the conundrum is due to the small size of the jpgs available on the Web. When in front of an actual 24 x 32" print, the viewer has the liberty to look at it from a certain distance to take in the overall composition and then to come nearer to examine the details within each "property", making the experience a more intimate one, almost like eavesdropping.




Ross Racine, Subdivision, Cedar Valley, 2006.
Digital drawing, 15 x 20 inches.


TAL: By conundrum, the suggestion was that certain of your images, say for example the views of the housing estates as circles, some like question marks, many of them isolated like desert communities or clustered together in what appears to be empty space, have a very interesting visual play, like an Escher drawing or a jigsaw - were these the kinds of references you were looking at when began to create these drawings? Or was there some other inspiration?

RR: I am inspired by diagrams, by the means by which information can be represented in visual form. The vocabulary of diagrams can be very straightforward and powerful. I use it for composition and also to imply that the suburbs' contents (material and human), seen from a high aerial viewpoint, may be also considered information. The word I use for my application of the idea of the diagram is structure. A related concern is the conflation of the macroscopic and microscopic scales suggested by the concept of structure. The observable world has many examples of organizations that are similar at both scales, for example the concentric structure. I am also interested in the implications of living within a specific structure, for example the experience of living in an endless accumulation of haphazardly connected streets.

TAL: The images imply a science fictional formulation of suburbia. Do you imagine that there is a particular scenario going on in these places?

RR: I am definitely open to a science fictional reading of my images and I leave the viewer to imagine possible narratives for an image, if a person is so inclined, but I wouldn't encourage the formation of definite scenarios. This would limit the evocative potential of the image. After all, my prints remain first and foremost images, not descriptions of established stories.

Rossracine.com

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New Work Friday #40

Friday, February 05, 2010

Sarah Nolan, PRETTY GOOD, 2009.
Various fabrics, beads, sequins and polyester thread. 25x51cm



Sarah Nolan, NAME, 2009.
Various fabrics, beads, sequins and silk thread. 28x51cm.


"Rewarded: This series of thirteen hand sewn pennants metaphorically represent the artist’s aspiration for a material recognition of their work. The conventional reading of these flag shapes, reminiscent of the felt pennant purchased as a souvenir or awarded for a sporting achievement, are subverted by the text, which have been sourced from art reviews, statements quoted from panel discussions, or from observations and experiences of the art world. Located somewhere between the decisive congratulatory tone to the explicit reinforcing of a fact, the reduction of this text to a single word allows the artwork to take on a more ambiguous and provocative tone. The abundance of beads, sequins and trimmings stitched on to plain and patterned fabrics imply a kitsch preciousness" - Sarah Nolan.

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This just in

Just as we posted our roundup of comments from our call for suggestions for influential shows [see below], we received an email from a reader we shall do the favour of calling Sgt. Schultz. Although not exactly what you'd call a "positive" suggestion, the good Sargeant remembers a stoush in the Sydney:

Well, perhaps not influential, but I'd say Tony Bond's Body exhibition at AGNSW rates a mention for the following...

A clear realization that if you really want to see particular master works, go overseas, they're never coming here. Bond's inclusion of prints of artworks he wanted for the show was a pretty stark reminder that even if they could be loaned, they won't come to the outposts. (Perhaps this has changed a little, and perhaps this embarrassing curatorial 'decision' spurred the good museum folks onto lobbying a bit harder and demanding standards that can not really be argued with. Maybe.)

Secondly, Bond's inclusion of a substantial amount of his acknowledged friend Mike Parr's work. The ensuing battle in the SMH instigated by the esteemed critic, between himself, Bond and Parr reached fever pitch. McDonald eventually publishing a fictional fantasy dialogue. Not since (I couldn't really say if before) has arts coverage in Sydney and likely in Australia (with the exception of the Henson Fiasco) been afforded such column inches, a trait more common in the British press. For once, a seriously curated exhibition of contemporary art was given a good going round in the papers. Who cares what was said - it was there. The sensation was not tabloid, it was merely a mutual distaste between the combatants - who in turn fired off by turns intelligent and amusing missives and an editor willing to let it run. If only that would continue.

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And the winner is...

Thursday, February 04, 2010
Our call for suggestions for influential and important exhibitions brought in some interesting suggestions. The call was in two parts - you could either vote in the poll at the right of the Art Life home page, or, if you disagreed with our selection, you could suggest another or leave a comment under the post below. This seemed to confuse many people, as the poll results show:

Which of the following exhibitions would you rate as the more influential or imporant in Australian art?

The Field, NGV 1968 16% 27
Christo's Wrapped Coast, 1969 30% 52
European Dialogue: The 1979 Biennale of Sydney 7% 12
Popism, NGV, 1982 3% 5
Origins, Originality + Beyond: 1984 Biennale of Sydney 7% 12
The Readymade Boomerang: Certain Relations in 20th Century Art 11% 19
Rad Scunge, Karyn Lovegrove Gallery, 1992 5% 9
Another show [nominate in comments] 20% 35

Christo's Wrapped Coast in Sydney in 1969 was by far the winner of the poll. Another Show meanwhile scored 35 votes but we had a mere 10 comments. Ah, never mind, since we also offered a prize for the most insightful and well reasoned suggestion - a gift of a $17.99 album from iTunes. So who is in the running?

Guest was first in and wrote: "I reckon Signs of Life, Melbourne International Biennale 1999. It was ambitious...to the point where it is the only Melb Biennale to date. It used a derelict Telstra building instead of a white box. It exposed people to a lot of conceptional installation art that was coming out of Europe and the US at the time. It established Julianna Engberg as one of the more adenturous curators of contemporary art. As an art school grad at the time, it felt like a whole new world of art possibiliities had blossomed before me."

Tony Lloyd also suggested Signs of Life, but had a slightly longer memory, pointing out that it was in fact the second Melbourne Biennale - "the first From the Southern Cross being 11 years before and directed by the late Nick Waterlow. [Signs of Life] was a genuinely thrilling show with stunning works from Ricky Swallow, Maurizio Cattelan, Patricia Piccinini, David Noonan, Mariele Neudecker, Stephen Bush, Cornelia Parker, Callum Morton, Robert Gober, and too many others to recall. The raw concrete and steel of the gutted eight story building that housed the biennale lent it an apocalyptic feel, perfectly apposite to the end of a century; the new art seemingly born from the rubble of the previous hundred years. It showed that art can have power and weight outside the artificial gravity field of the institution, and most importantly it showed that art can be exciting, wonderous, witty and wise. I remember thinking at the time that this show would be the launching point and benchmark for the art of the new century."

Although The Field attracted a predictably high vote in the poll, a reader suggested an exhibition from the year before, Two Decades of American Art 1967. "Swept away the last of insipid Anglo colonial pseudo-modernism, made New York the place to go," argues Savant.

Christo's work in '69, like Nam June Paik's visit in the 70s, drew a lot of attention to what was then a marginal artistic practice in Australia. "Conceptual and installation work has dominated Australian art for nearly 40 years," says Rsrch09. "It was first widely publicised by Christo's Wrapped Coast but Australian artists working in the style only began to receive wide publicity through a series of exhibitions in the early 1970s with the 1970 Transfield Prize - curated Brian Finemore) - in Sydney, the Szeeman/Kaldor exhibition 1971 in Sydney and Melbourne, Object and Idea - again curated by Brian Finemore) - in Melbourne in 1973 and the Mildura Sculpture Triennials in 1973 and 1975 (curator Tom McCullough). Eveything since has followed in the footsteps of these artists and these exhibitions."


Daniel Mudie Cunningham had a list of three influential shows: Don't Leave Me This Way: Art in the Age of AIDS, curated by Ted Gott, National Gallery of Australia, 1994-5, Anita & Beyond, curated by Lisa Havilah, Penrith Regional Gallery & The Lewers Bequest, 2003, and Gallery A Sydney 1964-1983, curated by John Murphy, Campbelltown Arts Centre/Newcastle Region Art Gallery, 2009.

The Asia Pacific Triennial is now in its sixth incarnation, but RK thought that it's very first outing was notable: "APT 1. Ahead of the curve in so many ways. For all its flaws, it was the first major exhibition to seriously propose a framework for conceiving cultural production in Australia outside the Euro-American canon. In its subsequent iterations it became the country's most important international exhibition bar none, with a tangible effect on the way in which art in Asia, and to an unfortunately lesser degree, the Pacific, is produced and received. Both a symbol and a model of Brisbane's transformation from a cultural backwater to a half decent city."

After much deliberation we've decided to award our modest prize to Rscrch09. Sir or madam, please write to us at the art life at hot mail dot com and we'll sort out the gift giving. Thanks for your help. In the meantime the poll will live a little longer, and we're still looking for interesting suggestions.

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Art Month's Shout Out to Emerging Artists

Art Month kicks off in Sydney in March and features exhibitions in more than 50 galleries including public museums, commerical spaces, ARIs and auction houses. Art Month will also be staging a series of lectures, tours, workshops and symposiums. The Art Life will be taking part in a program for emerging arts writers [more details to come]. But right now, there are great opportunities for emerging artists to show their work - and schmooze and booze with art world gliterrati. Time to get on to it:


Call for Submissions from Emerging Artists


Art Month Sydney is a new event for the Australian visual arts calendar scheduled for March 2010... During a month long program we will collectively promote our industry, artists and venues. As part of the Program’s commitment to promote and provide opportunities for all groups within the arts we plan to help emerging artists to secure valuable contacts with galleries, and potential exhibition space.


Applications are open to young and emerging artists - who have not yet held a solo exhibition of their work in a commercial gallery.


A team of curators will select 40 applicants to participate in workshops run by Australian Business Arts Foundation and held at Artbank’s Rosebery premises.

Participants will then be invited to participate in a Speed Dating Program where they will have the opportunity to present themselves and their work in a short pitch to 30 of Sydney’s leading gallerists and curators.

This Event is scheduled to take place on 31st March, 2010.

Those artists participating will then be invited to stay for the Art Month Closing party for further networking opportunities with gallery owners, curators and writers.

The winner of the Speed Dating program will be awarded a one week solo exhibition at Gallery II, Danks Street Galleries in Waterloo, (kindly donated by Leo Christie to the value of over $1700) and a grant for Art materials from Eckersleys Art Supplies for $2,000 of materials.

Applications should include 5 images of an artist’s work, total not exceeding 5 mgb, together with a one page CV, and a 500 word Artist Statement. Applications Close Monday 15th February. Email Applications to: Mandy O'Bryan: speeddating [at] artmonthsydney.com

Please note that only successful artists will be notified, by telephone and in writing, by Friday 26th February, 2010.

Forms for the Speed Dating program will be available via the Sydney Art Month Facebook Page from 27th January 2010.

For further information regarding Sydney Art Month check the following links:

www.artmonthsydney.com (including registration for e-news)
Film clip/cinema ad- www.youtube.com/artmonthsydney
Social networks- www.twitter.com/ArtMonthSydney and www.facebook.com (search for Art Month Sydney)

Art Month Sydney acknowledges the support of Leo Christie, Carriageworks, Eckersley's art and craft, Artbank, and the Australian Business Arts Foundation in staging this event.

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