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Exhibitions
Photographica Australis
An exhibition of current
photographic practice in Australia, Photographica Australis
explores a variety of attitudes to the medium and its capacity to
invoke aspects of a complex and diverse society. This fresh, lively
and provocative exhibition includes the works of thirteen individual
artists, Phillip George, Scott Redford, Joachim
Froese, Max Doyle, Deborah Paauwe, Martin Walch,
Anne Zahalka, Glenn Sloggett, Pat Brassington,
Darren Sylvester, Brenda L Croft, Polixeni Papapetrou,
and Michael Riley, and two collaborations Farrell &
Parkin and Brown & Green. Organised and curated by
Alasdair Foster, Director of the Australian Centre for Photography
in Sydney, Photographica Australis has toured South and Southeast
Asia from mid 2003 as part of Asialink's Visual Arts Program.
Photographica Australis
was shown at the National Gallery of Thailand in Bangkok from 3-27
July 2003, the Singapore Art Museum from 13 August to 9 November
2003, represented Australia at the 11th Asian Art Biennale Bangladesh
from 15 January to 2 February 2004, and at the Taipei Fine Arts
Museum from 21 February to 18 April 2004.
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Polixeni
Papapetrou Olympia as Chinese Lady 2001
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Glenn
Sloggett Cheaper & Deeper 1996 |
Curatorial Premise
When the first Europeans
came to Australia they were struck by the unusual variety of its
flora and fauna. The title alludes to this fact and suggests a potent
'biodiversity' in photographic practice in Australia today, stemming
from a rich multiculturalism unfettered by the weight of history.
The first part of the
exhibition includes the work of six photographic artists. Collectively
they reflect something of the diversity of ideas, styles and methodologies
current in Australia today. Phillip George uses digital manipulation
to create a large panoramic image of a fictional coastline strewn
with the remnants of ancient civilisations whose descendants came
only recently to Australia. Meanwhile Martin Walch challenges
the easy romanticism of popular ecology with a series of seductive
stereo images of open cut mining in Tasmania. By contrast, Scott
Redford finds a sumptuous aesthetic in the surface of public
urinals, whilst hinting at a sexual significance they may hold for
a gay man.
Deborah Paauwe
presents an image of herself hovering in the ambiguous space between
childhood innocence and sexual maturity. Joachim Froese creates
idiosyncratic still lifes in which dead insects enact allegorical
parodies of the human condition.
Finally, Max Doyle,
one of a new generation of photographers who are bringing the visual
language of postmodern art photography to the worlds of fashion
and lifestyle publishing, presents an installation of a teenage
boy's bedroom in which all the pictures on the wall and the fanzines
by the bed have been replaced by the artist's work. In this way
he seeks to break away from the classic modernist practice of setting
art in a 'neutral' space.
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Joachim
Froese Rhopography 7 1999
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In the second part two
artists present work which looks at Australian suburbia. Anne
Zahalka's large colour photographs explore the leisure industry
while Glenn Sloggett records images of dereliction, failed
aspiration and abject domesticity. Both Zahalka and Sloggett
locate the heart of the suburban experience in the surface of things
and in the triumph of fey optimism over irony. For Zahalka
it is in the fibreglass volcanoes of the theme park or the regimentation
of beach culture. For Sloggett it is in the dilapidated wastelands
of suburbia and a battered pink hearse bearing the cheerful slogan:
Budget Burials - Cheaper & Deeper.
Artists who bring a fresh
and original approach to traditional forms and ideas are showing
in the third part. Pat Brassington explores and exploits
the legacies of surrealism, whilst subtly subverting those (primarily
masculine) traditions with a clearly feminine and feminist inflection.
There is a wistful humour in these deceptively simple juxtapositions
which set up strangely perverse associations that grip the imagination.
For many years Rose Farrell & George Parkin have
been exploring historical medical machinery. They create large complex
tableaux juxtaposing papier-mâché figures with real
human beings.
The fourth part brings
together work by three artists and one artistic partnership that
describes two intersecting trajectories in contemporary Australian
photo-media: the consumer/cultural and the personal/political. Darren
Sylvester's celebration of consumer technologies contrasts with
Lyndell Brown & Charles Green's trompe l'oeil
works that mix painting and photographic media to address the representation
of art historical imagery and its reproduction. Meanwhile Brenda
L. Croft and Polixeni Papapetrou address issues of personal
identity. Croft uses digital imaging to expose the injustices and
hypocrisies surrounding the relationship between early colonists
and Australia's first peoples, while Papapetrou works with
her four year old daughter to explore childhood role-play through
the game of dressing up.
Michael Riley's
Cloud (2000) occupies the last part. This sequence of ten
large inkjet prints reflects upon his enforced Christian upbringing
and the wider impact of assimilation programs on Aboriginal communities
throughout Australia. Recognising both negative and positive outcomes
of his upbringing, Cloud seeks to make sense of a history
that defies simple resolution. Showing with this work is Empire,
Riley's acclaimed and evocative short film made in 1997 for
The Festival of the Dreaming. The film was commissioned by
the Australian Broadcasting Company and has a soundtrack performed
by the Tasmanian Symphony Orchestra.
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Australia
Japan Art Exhibitions Initiative
Past
Exhibitions
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