4a Curators’ Intensive

Curator-Intensive-template

Last week I was fortunate to take part in the 4a Centre for Contemporary Asian Art‘s Curators’ Intensive, “an initiative developed by 4A to encourage professional advancement amongst early career Australian cultural practitioners with an interest in curatorial practice”.

Cosmin Costinas discussing the work of Ai Weiwei during the 4a Curators' Intensive in Sydney, July 2014

Cosmin Costinas discussing the work of Ai Weiwei during the 4a Curators’ Intensive in Sydney, July 2014

We participated in keynote lectures and workshops led by three noted curators from the Asia-Pacific region, Cosmin Costinas (Hong Kong), Dr Sophie McIntyre (ACT), & Robin Peckham (Hong Kong/Beijing). These ranged in subject from the recent shaping of Hong Kong’s identity, to the phenomenon of post-internet art, to the politics of representation. We also undertook field trips to artist studios and exhibitions around Sydney, which provided a context for questions around various curatorial approaches.

4a Curators' Intensive participants listening to curator Andrea James discussing Karla Dickens' work 'Demanding a voice is tiresome' (2014) in the exhibition Hereby Make Protest at Carriageworks, Sydney. Photograph: Chloé Wolifson

4a Curators’ Intensive participants listening to curator Andrea James discussing Karla Dickens’ work ‘Demanding a voice is tiresome’ (2014) in the exhibition Hereby Make Protest at Carriageworks, Sydney. Photograph: Chloé Wolifson

My fellow participants were Miriam Arbus (VIC), Mira Asriningtyas (Indonesia), Andrew Ewing (NT), Sebastian Goldspink (NSW), Sophie Kitson (NSW), Alana Kushnir (VIC), Tess Maunder (QLD), Tulleah Pearce (NSW), Kyle Weise (VIC), Gintani Nur Apresia Swastika (Indonesia), & Luisa Tresca (NSW). These emerging curators from around the region have backgrounds ranging from visual arts to literature to performance, in commercial galleries, artist-run spaces and institutions. This variety of perspectives contributed to lively dialogue, and the conversations continued in taxis and around lunch tables over the course of the four days.

4a Curators' Intensive participants listening to gallerist Amanda Rowell discuss Archie Moore's exhibition Les Eaux d'Amoore at The Commercial, Sydney. Photograph: Chloé Wolifson

4a Curators’ Intensive participants listening to gallerist Amanda Rowell discuss Archie Moore’s exhibition Les Eaux d’Amoore at The Commercial, Sydney. Photograph: Chloé Wolifson

I feel privileged to have been chosen for such a great opportunity, and look forward to continuing the discussions with my curatorial cohort.

4a Centre for Contemporary Asian Art is an enduring institution with fantastic public programming. The Intensive’s keynote lectures were open to the public and recorded – I will link back to them here once they are available online.

4a Curators' Intensive participants experiencing Archie Moore's exhibition Les Eaux d'Amoore at The Commercial, Sydney. Photograph: Chloé Wolifson

4a Curators’ Intensive participants experiencing Archie Moore’s exhibition Les Eaux d’Amoore at The Commercial, Sydney. Photograph: Chloé Wolifson

What I Learnt When…

Welcome to What I Learnt When… a new segment in which I share some of the weird and wonderful things I learn about in the course of my work.

When interviewing artist Sarah Contos, she mentioned Cargo cults. Did you know there’s a particularly royal one?

Contos uses images from the Australasian Post, which at the time of its closure in 2002 was the longest-running continuously printed publication in Australian history.

When reviewing Christian Thompson’s latest exhibition, I discovered the underground dialect of Polari, shared by actors, prostitutes, merchant navy sailors, circus folk and the gay subculture.

I attended the Head On Photography awards where the audience were told that the smartphone is “the darkroom in your pants”.

When preparing to review Tehching Hsieh‘s show at Carriageworks I came across an interview which begins with a handy guide to how to pronounce his name.

Studio visits are always full of surprises. Seeing the transformation of micro to macro in the work of Melissa Coote was a pleasure. A fossilised mammoth’s tooth (seen below on the shelf) is writ large in charcoal and graphite (on the rear wall, in the image on the right).

Views of the studio of Sydney-based artist Melissa Coote. Photographed by the author.

Views of the studio of Sydney-based artist Melissa Coote. Photographed by the author.

Arts Around the Web / World / Corner #4

Here are a few local and global arts stories that caught my eye over recent weeks:

From a record 546 entries, the 24 finalists in the 2014 John Fries Award for emerging artists were announced. This year’s award is curated by Sebastian Goldspink and will be announced on 12 August.

Marah Braye, CEO of the Biennale of Sydney for the past eight years has moved on to take up the position of CEO of the Harbourfront Centre, Toronto.

An artists membership organisation in the UK has found that in the past three years, 70% of artists who exhibited in publicly-funded shows received no fee for doing so.

And finally, this daguerreotype depicts the earliest-born person ever to be photographed!

Conrad Heyer, Waldoboro, ca. 1852 Daguerreotype, leather case 9 x 7 cm Image: Collections of Maine Historical Society

Conrad Heyer, Waldoboro, ca. 1852
Daguerreotype, leather case
9 x 7 cm
Image: Collections of Maine Historical Society

Will to Keep

Archive Space is an artist-run gallery in Sydney’s Newtown. Archive’s focus is to provide not only a space for the exhibition of work, but also platforms for critical engagement with, and discussion of, contemporary art. Their website contains an archive where documentation and texts relating to each exhibition are gradually being recorded, rather than disappear into the ether of ARI history as is so often the case.

'Will to Keep' Reader, published by Archive Space, Sydney, May 2014

‘Will to Keep’ Reader, published by Archive Space, Sydney, May 2014

I was recently invited by Archive to contribute to a reader which was produced as part of a satellite project called Will to Keep. The exhibition, curated by artist Lisa Sammut and held at 107 Projects in Redfern, Sydney, is a standalone extension of the Archive concept, featuring over a dozen artists and writers musing on the desire to remember, record and accumulate. Writers were invited to investigate “the role history, historical memory or its mechanisms play in the formation of contemporary works of art, curatorial practices or artist-run initiatives and the dialogue surrounding this”, as well as contribute “a unique hand-drawn diagram illustrating the writer’s own critical thinking on the exhibitions themes in relation to their text.” I enjoyed producing a text which used an artwork (Laurence Aberhart’s Files, Wanganui 1986, below) as a departure point to meander through some memories. The hand-drawn diagram was more of a challenge but a fun one nonetheless.

Laurence Aberhart, Files Wanganui, 1 July 1986, silver gelatin, selenium-toned print, 19.4 x 24.5 cm. Image courtesy the artist and Darren Knight Gallery, Sydney

Laurence Aberhart, Files Wanganui, 1 July 1986, silver gelatin, selenium-toned print, 19.4 x 24.5 cm. Image courtesy the artist and Darren Knight Gallery, Sydney

You can purchase the reader for AUD$5 from Archive Space (it’s beautifully printed at The Rizzeria and in a limited edition of 56). The content will also be available online, check back for a link.

I’m also part of the Archive Writers Program for 2014. The exhibition program is still under wraps but check back mid-year when I will be writing on the work of an interesting exhibiting artist.

Gallery Highlights of Hong Kong

In late February I spent ten days in Hong Kong with a group of friends. With the happy excuse of a friend’s wedding to attend, I of course couldn’t let the trip pass without a visit to some of the city’s contemporary galleries.

Having briefly experienced the more established Hollywood Road precinct on a previous trip, I decided this time to focus on the flashier side of things. With six friends accompanying me around the busy streets, it seemed wise to keep things geographically focussed. Armed with some tips from Texan-Australian artist Eric Niebhur, who has made his temporary home in the city, I decided on two complexes in Central – the Pedder Building and 50 Connaught Road.

The jewel in the Pedder Building crown is the Hong Kong branch of Gagosian Gallery, which, as luck would have it, was in between shows the day we visited. Not ones to be put off so early in our endeavours, we descended a level (in one of the city’s more agreeable lifts) to Pearl Lam Galleries, where the renowned restaurateur Mr Chow, aka Zhou Yinghua, was holding his first solo exhibition in five decades, Recipe for a painter.

Michael Chow aka Zhou Yinghua, Rite of Spring 1, 2013, Mixed media: household paint with precious metals & trash, 243.8 x 183 cm, Courtesy the artist and Pearl Lam Galleries, Photography: Fredrik Nilsen

Michael Chow aka Zhou Yinghua, Rite of Spring 1, 2013, Mixed media: household paint with precious metals & trash, 243.8 x 183 cm, Courtesy the artist and Pearl Lam Galleries, Photography: Fredrik Nilsen

Zhou’s large-scale canvases are laden with detritus. Delicately resting eggshells, and rubber gloves emerging zombie-like from the works’ surfaces, refer obliquely to a painter’s studio practice. However these chaotic details belie the overall seductive effect of Zhou’s work. While the rough scramblings of paint and objects breaking through the paintings’ grey, white and silver skins owe a debt to American abstract expressionism, these are thoughtfully interspersed with negative space in a manner bringing to mind traditional Chinese ink compositions. Abstracted landscape elements emerge and are submerged again, taking the viewer with them as we are drawn into examining what objects lies within these clusters.

Next stop on the gallery express was Hanart TZ Gallery. Like their neighbours Pearl Lam, Hanart was established over 20 years ago and is one of the few galleries in the building with a focus on Chinese art. However Yuan Jai’s Year of Abundance could not have been more different from Zhou’s work. These delicately painted polychromatic ink on silk works feature dreamscapes which make reference to diverse art historical traditions, from Indian miniatures to Surrealists. Simultaneously joyful and chaotic, there is a lot to see in Yuan’s works. In some paintings, religious totems and other cultural iconography commune with wildlife in sublime colour fields, while elsewhere, still life compositions have a psychoanalytic flavour. On another scale or with a more saturated palette, Yuan’s compositions might have seemed flamboyant; however the artist’s delicate treatment of her subject matter results in intriguing arrangements that invite contemplation.

Down the end of the hall from Hanart are the Hong Kong headquarters of art world heavy hitters Lehmann Maupin. Small but perfectly formed, the space (like the gallery’s other branches) was renovated by Pritzker Architecture Prize winner Rem Koolhaas. At the time of our visit it was inhabited by the immersive video installations of Jennifer Steinkamp. The LA-based artist’s exhibition Diaspore comprised two works, both projected at full wall-size in darkened rooms. In the exhibition’s namesake work, animated tendrils and leaves swirl around and bounce off the sides of the wall like particles in a jar of liquid. In Bouquet, a clump of organic matter gradually disperses through space. The effect of both works is immersive and hypnotic, taking the viewer on a journey through animation’s virtual space.

Jennifer Steinkamp,  Diaspore I, 2014 (installation view), video installation, dimensions variable,  Edition of 3 , Courtesy the artist and Lehmann Maupin. Photography: Kitmin.com

Jennifer Steinkamp, Diaspore I, 2014 (installation view), video installation, dimensions variable, edition of 3. Courtesy the artist and Lehmann Maupin. Photography: Kitmin.com

We were in for a change of pace on the third floor at the Europe-focussed gallery Ben Brown Fine Arts, with the self-titled exhibition by legendary French collaborators Claude & François-Xavier Lalanne (whose fans included Serge Gainsbourg who named an album after a Lalanne work). Animal, vegetable and mineral meet in these whimsical objects which are part functional sculpture, part decorative arts. Flora and fauna adorn and sometimes form furniture rendered in gold. Hybrids are the norm for Les Lalannes, such as an oxidised copper cabbage standing on chicken’s legs. One smaller room was occupied by the unlikely scene of a flock of oblong sheep-benches grazing on AstroTurf. Eccentricity at its best, and “equally suitable for traditional and contemporary environments” (according to the gallery website).

Claude & François-Xavier Lalanne, 2014, installation view, courtesy the artists & Ben Brown Fine Arts

Claude & François-Xavier Lalanne, 2014, installation view, courtesy the artists & Ben Brown Fine Arts

Back to reality, we wandered down the hall to the more typically austere gallery setting of Simon Lee. Here the group exhibition Walk the line was showcasing the work of eight artists from the gallery’s predominantly European and American stable (this being an offshoot of the gallery’s main London branch). I was particularly excited to see the inclusion of Heimo Zobernig (whose exhibition in Madrid’s Palacio Velazquez blew away my husband and I when on our honeymoon last year) as well as Christopher Wool (who was recently given a survey show at New York’s Guggenheim). These artists’ abstract paintings, along with the others in Walk the line, are formed via a process more conceptual than intuitive, often involving the translation of an image numerous times resulting in changes or mutations. While aesthetically divergent, the works in the show share an investigation into the possibilities of the medium.

This completed our visit to the Pedder Building, so we resisted the urge to visit the chandelier-laden Abercrombie & Fitch trance palace next door, instead heading to Connaught Road as planned. The main event here is White Cube, a two-decade old establishment which currently spans two London spaces as well as one in São Paolo. In a city where life is lived at very close quarters, the Hong Kong spaces of White Cube are luxuriously expansive, with two floors both graced with high ceilings. Our group all immediately noticed the soft beige carpet underfoot, perhaps in place to absorb the noise from the busy road outside. If this is the intention it works, cocooning the visitor within a serene, well, white cube.

Sergej Jensen, Evian, 2014, installation view. Courtesy the artist and White Cube

Sergej Jensen, Evian, 2014, installation view. Courtesy the artist and White Cube

Danish artist Sergej Jensen’s Evian  is a collection of minimalist and slightly grungy paintings, in which the artist has used the existing condition of his materials as readymade marks. The subdued palette and subtle gestures of Jensen’s acrylic on linen works are quietly angst-ridden. One untitled piece made of wool was spread in the centre of the floor as if it had lain down in emotional exhaustion. Perhaps we could relate after cramming so many galleries into one afternoon; however there was one more stop on our itinerary. So up we went in another lift (this one was clad in white marble and gold and left the one in the Pedder Building for dead) to Galerie Perrotin.

Chen Fei, Jupiter 2013, acrylic on canvas, 170 x 130 cm. Courtesy the artist and Galerie Perrotin

Chen Fei, Jupiter 2013, acrylic on canvas, 170 x 130 cm. Courtesy the artist and Galerie Perrotin

Perrotin has been around for 25 years and currently has sites in New York and Paris, so as expected its rooms in 50 Connaught Road were impressive to say the least. The main gallery space was playing host to a solo show by Japanese artist Izumi Kato, whose figurative paintings and sculptures display innovative application of paint and psychoanalytic undercurrents. In two smaller gallery spaces we found Chen Fei’s Flesh and Me. These paintings draw in the viewer with their incredible flatness and detail, only to confront with their subjects, mostly figures in nocturnal settings who display marks of intentional violence with quiet passivity.

The accidental star of the show at Galerie Perrotin, however, is the view of the harbour afforded from its place on the 17th floor. The gallery knows it, and has benches in place in front of the floor-to-ceiling windows allowing visitors to drink it in. On the one hand one feels for the artists whose work has to compete with the vista, but on the other it clears the mind and invites the audience to dwell longer in the space. This we did, enjoying some welcome respite from the frenetic pace of the city,  before heading back out into it again for more Hong Kong adventures.

View from Galerie Perrotin on a typically smoggy Hong Kong day. Photograph by the author.

View from Galerie Perrotin on a typically smoggy Hong Kong day. Photograph by the author.

Back to the Future

Lei Lei & Thomas Sauvin, RECYCLED 2013-2014 (detail), five-channel video animation installation with 2,200 photographs. Photograph: Chloé Wolifson

Lei Lei & Thomas Sauvin, RECYCLED 2013-2014 (detail), five-channel video animation installation with 2,200 photographs. Photograph: Chloé Wolifson

In a film made with the Australian Centre for Contemporary Art in Melbourne recently, influential British artist Tacita Dean thoughtfully discussed the future of the film-based arts in the face of the rise of digital photography. Just as analogue photography supposedly heralded the ‘death of painting’ in the mid-19th Century, this phenomenon appears to be increasingly preoccupying the art world, as evidenced by a number of current Sydney exhibitions.

I spent a day checking out Suburban Noir at the Museum of Sydney, and Beijing Silvermine at 4A Centre for Contemporary Asian Art. Suburban Noir asked contemporary Australian artists to respond to forensic police photographs of Sydney from the early- to mid-20th Century, the results being sometimes sinister, sometimes melancholy. In a very different take on the found photograph, Beijing Silvermine is collector-curator Thomas Sauvin’s re-appropriation and re-activation of many thousands of discarded domestic photographs from more recent decades. (You can read my review of this extraordinary project over at RAVEN Contemporary.)

And then of course there is Christian Boltanski’s mammoth work Chance, currently on view at Carriageworks. Boltanski has often incorporated found photographs as a medium alongside others when describing collective and individual memory. Here his use of anonymous photographic subjects, as well Chance’s physical allusion to the increasingly redundant printing press, become threads to draw the audience into greater existential questions. Ultimately, that’s how every medium should serve its author and its audience.

Arts around the web/world/corner #3

Art reaches into all corners of life, often in surprising ways. Here’s some of the more unusual stories that caught my attention this week:

London’s Victoria & Albert Museum is to publish the full list of 16,558 ‘degenerate’ artworks compiled by the Nazis at the height of the Second World War. The list includes notes on what was destroyed as well as information crucial to establishing the provenance of surviving works.

Crowds lined up to visit and exhibition of Entartete Kunst ("degenerate art") at the Schulausstellungsgebaude, Hamburg, in 1938

I was heartened to see this ABC profile of a suite of photographs by Melissa Powell. Powell has documented a community of Karen people from the Thai-Burmese border who now live in Nhill in regional Victoria, contributing socially and economically to the town.

I recently discovered the Sydney Theatre Company magazine’s archive feature which focuses on the oeuvres of noted Australian actors, including one of my favourites the terrific Paul Capsis.

Paul Capsis playing Edina in Kai Tai Chan's Two Wongs. (Photo: Branco Gaica, courtesy Sydney Theatre Company)

Public Art Now published The New Rules of Public Art – a manifesto for a universally contentious art form.

Brooklyn gallerist Stephanie Theodore confronted a couple at the Tate Modern, London whose child was climbing on a Donald Judd work.

British ceramic artist and noted transvestite Grayson Perry received his OBE from Prince Charles. Perry described his ensemble as ‘Italian mother of the bride’.

Artist Grayson Perry (centre) holds his CBE presented to him by the Prince of Wales during an investiture ceremony at Buckingham Palace, London.

One Night Stands in Art Land

Crowds viewing Connie Anthes' 'Low Relief' at Damien Minton Gallery on 17 December 2013. Photography: Chloé Wolifson

Damien Minton Gallery decided to cap off 2013 with a series of One Night Stands – 14 exhibitions over 14 consecutive nights. As a former gallerina I can vouch for how exhausting just one opening night can be, and how the relative quiet of the subsequent days provides a chance to catch up on work that has been left behind in the rush of the launch. Well, no chance of such welcome respite at DMG. Gallerist Damien Minton is constantly trying different approaches to getting people through the door and looking at the art (dwindling visitor numbers being the scourge of the commercial gallery in the online age). So I guess I shouldn’t be surprised that he held 14 openings at the most hectic time of the year, finishing just three days before Christmas. It’s exhausting just thinking about it.

Sydney artist Connie Anthes‘ project took the stage on 17 December. Anthes elected to keep the walls blank and instead drew the crowds towards the work of 20 artists contained within a set of plan drawers in the middle of the gallery. I have just published a review of her intriguing exhibition Low Relief that I invite you to read over on Das Platforms.

Detail of Connie Anthes' 'Low Relief' at Damien Minton Gallery on 17 December 2013. Photography: Chloé Wolifson

 

Arts around the web/world/corner #2

Happy new year! Here is the latest selection of arts news that caught my eye recently:

The Herzog & de Meuron-designed Pérez Art Museum Miami is now open, and isn’t shy to show off its setting.

Installation view of Oscar Muñoz, Cortinas de baño (1994). Image courtesy of Pérez Art Museum Miami

The directors of two of Sydney’s iconic arts institutions discussed the necessary evils of private and corporate philanthropy.

Sydney commercial gallery Breenspace closes its doors after seven years.

Tacita Dean advocates the continuing importance of film as a medium in parallel to digital photographic technologies on the occasion of her recent exhibition at ACCA, Melbourne.

Curator Glenn Barkley demystifies the museum visit for those hesitant about what to do once you’re inside the white cube!

New York Times art critic Roberta Smith was unimpressed by the Metropolitan Museum of Art’s ‘Jewels by JAR’ exhibition featuring the baubles of the rich and famous.