Category: Art Work

Taking the Protests to the Art World

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The Occupy Wall Street movement took on the art world, sort of, this week, with a splinter group, Occupy Museums. Convened on Thursday evening through a Facebook, Twitter and Tumblr posts, about 20 people made their way from the Museum of Modern Art to the New Museum to a downtown gallery, protesting what they say is the conflation of art and commerce, the snobbery of the art market and high ticket prices at museums, which they called the “temples of the cultural elite.”

Outside the New Museum they chanted: “Museums, open your minds and your hearts, and listen. Art is for everyone! The people are at your door.” Standing in a circle on the sidewalk, they used the call-and-repeat system known as the people’s mic, which has become a hallmark of the movement. The people’s mic is an “art form,” Noah Fischer, an artist and organizer of Occupy Museums, said later, promising that it was only the first new artistic tool to emerge from the protests. “I thing art is going a change from this movement,” he said, “because it’s going to unstick the current paradigm, which is based on money.”

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Collectively finding home a project for a thousand people

A thousand people ‘trying to find their way home’ on a saturday night were attempting to be a part of The okcollectives’ project. Unknown to the participants they were performing a ritualistic trample to the trains that forces the actors in this scene to cross over social boundaries not usually crossed. Their attempt to get home fraught with train timetables, squashed carriages, barriers bridges and team allegiances. Viva Saturday night.

 

For more details email us at okprojects@gmail.com

Where in the world is Muammar Gaddafi?

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Rebels searching Moamar Gaddafi’s Tripoli compound have discovered a scrapbook filled with pictures of the former US secretary of state, Condoleezza Rice.

The US State Department described Gaddafi as creepy for keeping pictures of the former secretary of state.

Gaddafi was vocal about his admiration for Dr Rice, once giving her a diamond ring and a locket with his own picture in it, and describing her as his “darling African woman”. Among the pictures in the album are a series of photos of Dr Rice and Colonel Gaddafi during their 2008 diplomatic talks in Tripoli. During their meeting he also told journalists that he loved her. US State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland says she has not seen the photos, but she is not surprised he had them at his home.

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In the Art World, No Lack of Ryans

The photographer Ryan McGinley.

ART lovers can be forgiven for mixing up some names. Consider the confusion between Steve McQueen, the British artist, and Steve McQueen, the 1960s Hollywood legend. Or between the American steel sculptors Tony Smith and David Smith. Or how about Judy Chicago, Gary Indiana and Marfa Texas? (Trick question: two are places, and two are people.) But these are child’s play compared to the perplexity of the moment, in which it seems that every other male artist is named Ryan.

A casual count reveals no fewer than eight: There is Ryan Trecartin, with a one-man show at MoMA PS1, and Ryan McNamara, the performance artist who entertained Hamptons galagoers at the Watermill Center benefit last month. There are up-and-comers like Ryan Johnson, Ryan Sullivan, Ryan Gander and Ryan Humphrey. And the best-known of the Ryans — the photographer Ryan McGinley, whose 2003 solo show at the Whitney Museum propelled him to art fame at the age of 25 — is often confused with his sound-alike peer, the painter Ryan McGinness.

It’s as bad as 17th-century Holland, when everyone was named Jan.

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The OK Collective – featuring Melanie Neal – @ Seventh Gallery from August 17th – September 3rd.

The OK Collective – featuring Melanie Neal – @ Seventh Gallery from August 17th – September 3rd.
What was borne out of our developing frustration with, and consequent despair of, Melbourne’s escalating real estate prices has developed into a tongue-in-cheek reflection upon the ironies of inner city housing. It seems somewhat comical that folk are so quick to pay the exorbitant prices demanded for stacked-shoe-box apartments within the vicinity of the very commission style housing that has been historically lampooned as inhumane and culturally offensive. What also becomes dryly amusing, whilst at the same time so fascinating, is that almost anything is becoming housing; warehouses, petrol stations, silos, telephone boxes….

The long believed Australian notion that all could find a space for living is flailing and so, we aim to rectify this issue for at least one person, and in doing we develop an installation that grows as the projection screen for our combined artistic and social interests and endeavours.

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Uniquely Yours – 155a Gertrude Street, Fitzroy 3065

SEVENTH GALLERY


155 Gertrude Street Fitzroy

 

Exhibition Opening
Wednesday 17th August 6-8pm

Exhibition Dates: August 17th – September 3rd 2011

Gallery Hours: Tuesday – Saturday 12pm-6pm

Gallery Two

THE OK COLLECTIVE (Oliver cloke and Kathy Heyward)

Uniquely Yours – 155a Gertrude Street, Fitzroy 3065

‘Uniquely Yours’ screams aloud the sign of the times as neighbouring art-spaces are sold off and threatened with gentrification, and it’s mimicry – initially coincidental
– becomes both artwork and art statement.

Through spatial re-appropriation the viewer is left de-centred; the inhabitant develops their relationship to the space through action and alteration and the viewer becomes not unlike a domestic visitor or, alternately, dependent upon their own resonance within the space, a voyeur. A social game is developed as a form of artwork and allowance is made for direct observation of how people function within private space – the irony of course, being obvious.

Consideration of Consciousness

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Consciousness is a slippery word, so slippery it babbles in your mouth as you divulge its contents, its directionless-ness. Viewed with cynicism because of its slippery foundations it becomes for most, an untenable subject matter. However, it has been the subject matter of philosophy dating back to the father of modern Philosophical thinking, Descartes; who noted that consciousness is the most indubitable thing there is… The question then arises; why seek to further understand the incomprehensible?

The answer is simple, because humans are curious animals; we wish to further our knowledge of the world that surrounds us. This investigation runs from our infantile selves that needed to touch and taste everything, then as sensations grow and expectation builds our maps that we create for the world start to form. We build a knowledge of ourselves in relation to objects, which then evolves into our relationship with others. Our developments of theories of mind educate us in our understanding of others, and ourselves and to understand that others have beliefs, desires and intentions that are different from one’s own. The communities that we grow up in corral us, delivering us into the ever-increasing world/map that we are expected to cope with easily. We do this through communication and the comprehension of rules and formulae for interaction and action.

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light projects show

the mind of itself and the world
A collaborative project facilitated by Brooke Shanti Fenner, Oliver Cloke and Tahlia Jolly, with artists Laura Carthew, Nickk Hertzog, David Mutch and Mattie Young

Breaking down some (white) walls

Opened this past weekend is yet another art gallery for inner-Melbourne-urbanites to add to the growing list of which to frequent in tight black jeans and an oh-too-cool look. But, alas, there is something wrong. There is something a little bit different. This does not seem to be the norm. This gallery, Fehily Contemporary on Glasshouse Road in Collingwood, is a little bit different. There appears, here, to be some sort of ‘feeling’.

Now, all easy puns aside; a quick moment to describe. The ‘feeling’, is not in any way related to any derivative of any kind of ‘vibe’ that might be already associated with any number of the burgeoning ARIs or contemporary private galleries around the place. The ‘feeling’, has nothing to do with rustic milk-crates-as-chairs style decor or associated trendy art-scene style. The ‘feeling’ has little to do with these notions and everything to do with the manner in which art, artists and how an approach to the art world is considered.

The Fehily artists are not referred to as ‘stock’ or a ‘stable’ and they, all, are considered equals as well as associates of the gallery; encouraged to contribute to the development of an artists’ agreement, not expected to simply fling their signature at an art ‘worker’s’ contract. The work that these artists produce is not forced so harshly into little pigeon-boxes that small pieces of it break off, leaving said artist trembling and sobbing in a bleak, stained, studio corner, broken and integrally disemboweled. It is, instead, welcomed with such relish, in all manners and with an holistic appreciation for its implicit evolution that the artists are almost openly encouraged to explore their practice and not merely ‘churn’ for the next decade. These artists are not owned. Represented within the Fehily family are an enlightening mix, which also adds to the feeling that perhaps there is another way for the art world to function. Young and mature artists, in both age and practice, are brought together as well as national and international representatives. Old faves Richard Lewer, Sally Smart and Ricky Maynard hang alongside contemporary buzz-names Ash Keating, Nick Devlin and Patrick Pound as well as long-time-working-short-time-trending artists like Scott Miles, Graham Brindley and Angela Ellsworth.

And the ‘feeling’? It seems good, the feeling is good. The Fehily’s ethos comes through in the space, the works, the set-up and their methods. That they consider a cyclical approach to the working of the art industry is evidence of their own passion and understanding for supporting artists’ careers. There appear to be no secrets and the Fehily’s seem keen to lay their cards on the table and encourage others to play with them.

Perhaps this is what the Melbourne (if not broader) art world needs the most. That perhaps when the gallerists, collectors and even curators level out and stop perpetuating an ‘us’ and ‘them’ scenario then that buzz, that energy, that feeling that seemed to be fading, will come back to our contemporary scene and the artists and all stakeholders within might actually be able to just get on with it, for all the reasons that set us down that path in the first place.

Fehily Contemporary ArtistsTHURS 12 MAY – SAT 4 JUNE – Glasshouse Road, Collingwood.

‘Tent’

‘Tent’  at Artecycle in the Incinerator arts complex, made from reclaimed business shirts, cotton rope, dowel and tent pegs.

From a distance the shining beacon of bright white fabric that is ‘Tent’ situates the viewer in a complex conundrum, why would a tent be considered an artistic accomplishment? And if it were not art, what use would a tent have if it has holes in? On closer inspection it becomes obvious that the tent is made from mens’ shirts, which could be considered a symbol of power and the conforming individual that creates a homogeneous society.

And what use would a viewing portal have from a tent, if it were not to stare in wonder at the delicious outdoors, at the wonders of our environment in an expanded understanding. The tent is a modality of freedom, and expansion of our typical day, or holiday facilitator.

The OK Collective is an ongoing project that aims to produce site-specific works that are an amalgamation of the skills and interests of these two artists.  Recycled materials, concentration on the hand-made and an underlying notion of playfulness are a focus of most works.

 

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