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Exhibitions
Past Exhibition Program
Kawing: artists linking Darwin to Baguio, Cebu, Davao
& Puerto Princesa

Brisbane Festival |
Techy Masero
Techy Masero was born in Chile in 1954 and
came to live in Darwin in 1985. She works primarily in cane
and other natural materials on a monumental scale and her
works are instantly recognisable in NT as an integral part
of outdoor festivals and community events. She is concerned
with mythologies of place and has interwoven her own conceptual
concerns into the many large public commissions she has undertaken.
Masero has developed a longstanding relationship with Filipino
community groups in Darwin and during her time in the Philippines
she is working in Simpocan, 45 kilometers southwest of Puerto
Princesa on the resort Island of Palawan. Together with a
team of local artisans she will work for two months to create
a large, ephemeral outdoor sculpture on the beach. Her visit
is being auspiced by Galeri Kanarikutan, a space which, like
Masero's work, is entirely made of indigenous materials.
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| Winsome Jobling Winsome
Jobling was born in Sydney in 1957 and moved to Darwin in
1982. Jobling creates huge paper installations and sculptural
forms which extend traditional notions of papermaking. She
has been exhibiting since 1981 and her practice is linked
to the environment for both political and physical reasons.
She recycles used paper and looks for alternatives, such as
local banana fibre, to the finite resource of wood pulp. Jobling's
recent work has consisted of oversized dresses, patterned
with watermarks and stencils dwarfed viewers yet remained
fragile and translucent. She exhibited on arrival at the University
of the Philippines in Diliman and undertook the Luis Stuart
Paper Workshop Tiaong Quezon in early December. Later she
will work in Baguio City and will exhibit from 17-21 December
at the Botanical Gardens Gallery there. |

Dress Ups |
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Untitled Cane
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Dennis Bezzant
Dennis Bezzant is an emerging artist with
extensive connections with Sarawak, Malaysia. He completed
his undergraduate studies in 1998 and received the 24HR Art
Graduate Prize. Dennis' sculptural installations are based
around notions of weaving both physically and metaphorically,
as in inter-cultural meshing. His interest in combining traditions
of Celtic weaving with those of Malaysian indigenous traditions
conceptually underpins his work. In the Philippines Dennis
is working with the internationally established artist, Bert
Monterona in Davao, taking workshops with underprivileged
children and will exhibit his work at Dugukan Gallery from
16 December.
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Jacki Fleet
Jacki Fleet is a well-established Darwin painter
who has engaged in detailed investigations into the dichotomies
of landscape/country in the Top End. In forming significant
relationships with Aboriginal artists in the Kimberley much
or her recent work has centred around the motif of the flying
ant. Jackie will travel to Cebu in January 2002 to work at
Gallery Luna, an exciting artist run space there, as well
as with the local Mardi Gras.
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Fire Dance
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Arts Exhibition Program 1991 - 2002 go
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