Saturday, September 21, 2024

Photography, Popular Culture and A very Dutch ghost

On Friday night I attended an exhibition of classic photographs, by deceased photographers Terry O'Neill and Norman Parkinson, curated with the works of living artists, Alea Pinar Du Pre, Patrick Rubinstein and Louis Pratt, with Louis in attendance at the event. The theme was icons of popular culture under the banner of Curated Wealth (with) Art Society International (ASI) who had a team of five or six representatives present. The show took place at a new event space using the whole expanse of a renovated 6th floor loft on Kent Street, Sydney.

Installation picture of the sculpture A very Dutch ghost, Sydney, Australia 2024 - Photographed by Kent Johnson
A very Dutch ghost, sculpture by Louis Pratt - Sydney 2024

The photographs by Parkinson and O'Neill are images you know. They are of major 20th century celebrities, Audrey Hepburn by N.P. and Faye Dunaway Faye Dunaway at the Pool, 1977 and Brigitte Bardot Smoking by T.O. The show went from photography of popular culture (past) to artworks that referenced popular culture, and curiously all of those artworks had sculptural qualities which provided a counterpoint all it's own to the flat physicality of the supersized giclée prints.

Photographs by Terry O'Neill and Norman Parkinson, artworks by Patrick Rubinstein and Alea Pinar Du Pre - Sydney exhibition by Art Society International
Photographs by Terry O'Neill and Norman Parkinson, Mona Lisa artwork by Patrick Rubinstein

There was a brief speech about the works being exhibited and I had quite long conversations with most ASI team members about the large-scale photographic works on display - and I loved that they did not say photography. They simply said art, all the time.

Art opening with Mona Lisa artwork by Patrick Rubinstein, Woman in a striped sunhat by Alea Pinar Du Pre
Mona Lisa artwork by Patrick Rubinstein, Woman in a striped sunhat by Alea Pinar Du Pre

The Patrick Rubinstein works are kinetic pictures that change as you walk past them revealing clever takes on POP art, Warhol et. al. And you kind-of get three-pictures-in-one which is perhaps a little too clever for my taste, or maybe I just need to spend more time with them. The theme of celebrity and fashion(able) icons continued in the Op art paintings of Alea Pinar Du Pre. There was a youthful Op art Elvis (also Warhol-ed back in the day) and beautiful pictures of a woman 'CELESTINE' in a striped sunhat, that you just know you know – somehow, as Alea Pinar has so effectively nailed the visual identity of female fashion archetypes.

A woman looking at the sculpture A very Dutch ghost, Sydney, Australia 2024 - Photographed by Kent Johnson

In the early days of the explosion of Instagram Social Media. I coined a phrase that I found myself using repeatedly when talking with colleagues about the endless appropriation of well established styles, forms and tropes online as, 'last to steal it owns it' (and that was well before all this hype about A.I. which looks like the appropriation heist to end all art heists...).

Can you tell I'm a old Punk from the 80s, a time when anything from the recent past was considered some sort of toxic evil? 'Death to hippies' and all that. It was an interesting time and we are clearly in interesting times again.

Back of a man looking at the sculpture A very Dutch ghost, Sydney, Australia 2024 - Photographed by Kent Johnson

There is one artwork left to consider. The sculpture by Louis Pratt titled 'A very Dutch ghost' which to my mind is both the masterpiece and linchpin of the whole exhibition. The sculpture is kinetic. It is bronze and stainless steel, and yet it is ephemeral – a floating image made from hard forms. It is modern. In part computational, and Old-Mastery in its oblique references to Hans Holbein's The Ambassadors. Poppish and blatant in it's creative appropriation of Vincent Van Gogh, doyen of art lovers everywhere, (btw, I nearly threw up in the Musée d'Orsay when faced with the heaving mosh pit of art-lovers trying to get a selfie with the self portrait - of an artist that no one wanted to know about while he was alive) an early painting - Head of a Skeleton with a Burning Cigarette.

Portrait of artist Louis Pratt with his sculpture A very Dutch ghost, Sydney, Australia 2024 - Photographed by Kent Johnson
Artist Louis Pratt with his sculpture A very Dutch ghost

A very Dutch ghost seems to do the impossible. It brings the history of art to a contemporary audience. In a time of celebrity and Insta-celebrity-status and nostalgia for a golden age, it presents us with a mirror that reminds us nothing and no one lasts forever. From a technical standpoint the piece could not have been created without the collaboration of Dr Nico Pietroni who developed the software needed to design the concave mirror, to model the skull and reflect, or to my mind, project the Memento mori, the skull's ephemeral image. I enjoyed talking with both Nico and Louis about the sculpture which as you can tell if you have read this far, completely blew me away.

Portrait of artist Louis Pratt & Dr Nico Pietroni with the sculpture A very Dutch ghost, Sydney, Australia 2024 - Photographed by Kent Johnson
Artist Louis Pratt & Dr Nico Pietroni with the sculpture A very Dutch ghost

If you would like to see this show yourself, Art Society International are doing it all again in Sydney, Australia on Friday the 27th of September, by Invitation only – if you would like to attend I would recommend heading over to their website and sending them an email https://artsocietyinternational.com/


Telling Stories in Pictures all over..

Kent Johnson, Sydney, Australia.
0433 796 863


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