Showing posts with label Art Review. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Art Review. Show all posts

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


Monday, July 30, 2018

July Winter - Fashionable Art & Street Fashion Roundup

So much art, so much fashion and so little time to select, edit and present the pictures in a way that does justice to all those involved.. Oh what a torrid story. Actually I have become obsessed with a new camera technique and it's taken over most of my brains editing space! But not completely. Winter has had some great shows and these pictures are from my most recent art excursions. Absolutely loved Caroline Gibbes  first exhibition, Turning Heads at ArtHouse Gallery. Fashion wit and lovable ceramics all done with impeccable style (just like Caroline herself). How wonderful it would be to see, fashion vision of creativity more closely embraced in Australia - where I think it's often considered a dirty world! There are more shows and text following, so do scroll down - and horizontal pictures are now clickable to view larger - so enjoy, what a great art winter its been.
Ceramic heads with waving hands by Caroline Gibbes - Photography by Kent Johnson. Photography by Kent Johnson.
Hello - Can you See me! 

Ceramic Dogs heads by Caroline Gibbes - Photography by Kent Johnson.

Yes it's been cold - So apparently an off the shoulder jacket is the new thing - quite sensible in Sydney too, where there is never anywhere to hang your coat anyway! Seen at King on William and China Heights.
Greay parka worn off the shoulders with black crew neck jumper, fawn chinos and work  boots. Photography by Kent Johnson for Street Fashion Sydney.
Mustard parkka worn off shoulder with black leggings with white stripe. Photography by Kent Johnson for Street Fashion Sydney.
Anne Lynam at her show LOOK.  Photography by Kent Johnson for Street Fashion Sydney.
Anne Lynam, whom I consider a personal friend is having one of her amazing photography shows - LOOK at ARO Gallery. The works so good you can't even be jealous and the pictures are as mysterious as Anne! Go take a look for yourself.
Harrie Fasher - Studies in bronze and steel - at King on William Gallery - Photo by Kent Johnson.
While you are still on William Street head up to see the amazing Iron and Bronze 'Horses' by Harrie Fasher - Studies in bronze and steel - at King on William Gallery.

Portrait of Tanja Bruckner photographer with artist Steve Tierney - Reflected at China Height Gallery. Photo by Kent Johnson.
Tanja Bruckner with artist Steve Tierney - Reflected at China Heights Gallery.
If it's Friday it must be China Heights - I'm surprised my first blog post from China Heights was not until May 2010 (SFS launched late 2008); simply because hanging out at shows at CH and taking photos there was certainly part of the impetus for creating Street Fashion Sydney. And as I have said to many people many times - Street Fashion Sydney was started to show people that creative things DO Happen in Sydney, you just need to show up and join in. Last Friday night at CH was certainly no exception, great art on show from Brooklyn Whelan and Steve Tierney, and plenty of style on show too. My hat goes off to the Directors of China Heights Gallery and the amazing way they have steered the space and continue to show innovative art that's not the mainstream commercial gallery scene.
Black jumper jeans ankle boots and soft leather bag. Photography by Kent Johnson for Street Fashion Sydney.
Neon cloudscapes of Brooklyn Whelan at China Heights Gallery - Photography by Kent Johnson for Street Fashion Sydney.
Coats and hats on show along with the Neon cloudscapes of Brooklyn Whelan at China Heights Gallery - Photography by Kent Johnson for Street Fashion Sydney.
Scarf and Hair in sliver and magenta colours, silver backpack. Photography by Kent Johnson for Street Fashion Sydney.
Fringes, hair styles seen at China Heights Gallery. Photography by Kent Johnson for Street Fashion Sydney.
Digital native biding their time - Photography by Kent Johnson for Street Fashion Sydney.
Leopard print coat, womwn prepare to enter the white cube of the China Heights Gallery space. Photography by Kent Johnson for Street Fashion Sydney.
A young girl views art from a mans shoulders in a colourful tulle skirt. Photography by Kent Johnson for Street Fashion Sydney.
A variety of boots - Photography by Kent Johnson for Street Fashion Sydney.
Unique layering of lace shirt under a belted vest, jeans and a leather stockmans hat. Photography by Kent Johnson for Street Fashion Sydney.
Fabric artworks at M Contemporary gallery - Photography by Kent Johnson for Street Fashion Sydney.
Fabric artworks by Cameron Stead at M Contemporary Gallery
Red sweatshirt with slogans - Seize the day - Photography by Kent Johnson for Street Fashion Sydney.
orange felt hat, tights, olive winter jacket, same orange beer can in hand. Photography by Kent Johnson for Street Fashion Sydney.

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http://www.arthousegallery.com.au/
http://www.arogallery.com/
http://kingstreetgallery.com.au/
https://mcontemp.com/events/discovery-emerging-artists/
https://chinaheights.com/

Telling Stories in Pictures all over..
Kent Johnson, Sydney, Australia.
0433 796 863

Saturday, March 24, 2018

From Suburbia to China Heights and a New Standard..

I keep hearing about how galleries are closing; but new galleries are opening too and some rippers like China Heights just keep doing what they do and keep doing it well. So lets kick off with my first visit to Cement Fondu (CF) (website coming soon)  CF opened on the 10th of  this month with a beautifully curated group show SUBURBIA. This is a colourful show of installations, photography, ceramics, drawings and mixed media work on, you guessed it suburbia. Only the selection of artists and their own visions of suburbia while remaining somewhat familiar, will certainly shift your perception of what is suburbia, and how it is for some who are for whatever reason on the periphery. Pictured directly below is my portrait of Caroline Garcia - post Live Performance & floor talk at CF with House #7 by Garry Trinh as a background.
Portrait of Caroline Garcia - post Live Performance & floor talk at Cement Fondu Gallery Paddington, Sydney. Background image House #7 by Garry Trinh. Photography by Kent Johnson.
The post performance floor talk was actually really illuminating as to immigration and integration into Australian suburban society. It was during this talk that I realised that Garry Trinh's "Houses" represented a shuttering of suburban society to those new people moving in around them. I mean maybe it should have been obvious (but then I'm a white anglo Aussie) and the context of the show made this very clear! That said, the installation has a lot of whimsy bright colour and is an overwhelmingly enjoyable experience and I can't wait to see more shows from Cement Fondu!
Caroline Garcia - Live Performance & floor talk at Cement Fondu Gallery Paddington, Sydney. Photography by Kent Johnson.
Caroline Garcia - Live Performance & floor talk at Cement Fondu Gallery Paddington, Sydney. Photography by Kent Johnson.
SUBURBIA installation at Cement Fondu. Photography by Kent Johnson.
I've know of Disorder Gallery for a while now but have only just made it to two my first shows there. On NOW, the beautiful new show from Catherine Hourihan - dance inspired images with a contrast of youth and age, beautiful images and really lovely matte prints - you need to seem them on the walls, not on some glossy glowing screen!
Portrait of Catherine Hourihan at Disorder Gallery - dance inspired images with a contrast of youth and age, beautiful images and really lovely prints. Photography by Kent Johnson.
Attendees at Catherine Hourihan at Disorder Gallery - dance inspired images with a contrast of youth and age, beautiful images and really lovely prints. Photography by Kent Johnson.
Catherine Hourihan and friend at Disorder Gallery - dance inspired images with a contrast of youth and age, beautiful images and really lovely prints. Photography by Kent Johnson.
China Heights - Even after all these years attending an opening at CH still feels like like being part of some underground yet very cool art society. I'm not sure if that's because it seems way off peoples radar or they just can't handle the coolness factor! That said I think (not unlike the recently closed Black Eye) many of their artists seem to come from commercial design and advertising backgrounds - like Andy Warhol & Willem de Kooning did - but in Sydney that still seems to be a bit of a no-no to the art establishment. I enjoyed seeing "they used to call me" Rad Dan by Daniel R. Watkins on Friday night, the work reminding me a little of 1960's British Pop artist Richard Hamilton. CH have the slightly unusual practice of Friday openings followed by Sat/Sun only viewings so check the website first if you want to see the work.
"they used to call me" Rad Dan - Portrait of Daniel R. Watkins - China Heights Gallery. Photography by Kent Johnson.
Opening night, "they used to call me" Rad Dan - Daniel R. Watkins - China Heights Gallery.  Photography by Kent Johnson.
Phillippa Griffin and Sam Ramsden's The New Standard Gallery has been up and running for a little over a year now (I think). The Current show Brad Teodoruk, PROOF IS AN IDOL is a show that feels very much, one from a stable of artists coming from Sydney's strong art school traditions and I perhaps felt more my age at this opening than I do at CH! Lovely skilled painting, don't be fooled by the painting out and naive approach to form - it's anything but that..
Portrait of Brad Teodoruk, PROOF IS AN IDOL at The New Standard Gallery, Surry Hills Sydney. Photography by Kent Johnson.
And if you like the pictures on this blog; you can view them larger on my Street Fashion Sydney Facebook page here - and don't forget to Follow too - all of these shots without the review appeared there first.

https://www.facebook.com/StreetFashionSydney/
http://cementfondu.org/
https://www.disordergallery.com/
https://chinaheights.com/
http://www.thenewstandardgallery.com/

Telling Stories in Pictures all over..
Kent Johnson, Sydney, Australia.
0433 796 863

Tuesday, December 6, 2016

UNIFORM By Joe Wilson & Chanelle Collier at Lilac City Studio.

Posters riffing on the ideographs of an IKEA instruction sheet. White plinths topped with packaged canvas boiler suits in clear plastic bags - complete with suffocation warnings - in a variety of languages. A logo, no it must be another art work, the word Uniform over a line drawing of a Unicorns head.. it all feels astonishingly familiar. Of course there are people milling around as one would expect at an art opening.

Some small square canvases on the wall, just canvas.. It has the feeling of a minimally decorated On-Trend Fashion showroom launch. As one moves deeper into the space - looking for the opening night bar - there is a white clothing rack, white table, a white curtained change room; and someone to help you to UNIFORM. It's artist Chanelle Collier, quite naturally wearing fashion's favourite colour.. black. The clothes rack is mostly empty, there are Logo'd canvas suit-bags folded on the table; waiting.. for the clothing of anyone who changes from their clothes into the Uniform for the next 24 hours, becoming part of the art.

The show is titled UNIFORM and uniform is the artwork, the logo, the leitmotif. The word Uniform above a simple line drawing of a Unicorn's head says it all; well maybe not quite all. It does however do exactly what a Logo is supposed to do, create an immediate visual connection with the Brands Identity art as you move into this multi layered installation and performative art work.

Decoration over substance, conformity over vision, the gallery as temple, the artist as seer, machine made, hand made, is it possible to be Uniform and Unicorn at the same time?

This is one of the first exhibitions I have seen in quite a while where I didn't find myself wondering if the work might not possibly be a triumph of technique and style (top shelf decoration) over creative vision and substance. So while I suppose everyone who did choose to wear a boiler suit for 24 hours is most likely on their way to Masters degree in Art; making the process a bit of an inside job. That certainly does nothing to undermine that this show asks real questions of what art is and what it means to be an artist; and covers a lot more VERY unpopular creative ground. Really, when was the last time you saw art that challenged you to think about what is going with the world, with life, and how that fits with art? Uniform addressed a lot of ideas (mostly with a sense of fun and wit) that I have only very sketchily scratched the surface of here. The photographs below are a chronological documentation of the opening night of a three day show that I hope describe more than I have put into words above.

UNIFORM By Joe Wilson & Chanelle Collier. Lilac City Studio 17th November 2016. Darlinghurst, Sydney.
Art documentation of - UNIFORM By Joe Wilson & Chanelle Collier at Lilac City Studio - Photography by Kent Johnson.
Art documentation of - UNIFORM By Joe Wilson & Chanelle Collier at Lilac City Studio - Photography by Kent Johnson.
Art documentation of - UNIFORM By Joe Wilson & Chanelle Collier at Lilac City Studio - Photography by Kent Johnson.
Art documentation of - UNIFORM By Joe Wilson & Chanelle Collier at Lilac City Studio - Photography by Kent Johnson.
Art documentation of - UNIFORM By Joe Wilson & Chanelle Collier at Lilac City Studio - Photography by Kent Johnson.
Art documentation of - UNIFORM By Joe Wilson & Chanelle Collier at Lilac City Studio - Photography by Kent Johnson.
Art documentation of - UNIFORM By Joe Wilson & Chanelle Collier at Lilac City Studio - Photography by Kent Johnson.
Art documentation of - UNIFORM By Joe Wilson & Chanelle Collier at Lilac City Studio - Photography by Kent Johnson.
Art documentation of - UNIFORM By Joe Wilson & Chanelle Collier at Lilac City Studio - Photography by Kent Johnson.
Art documentation of - UNIFORM By Joe Wilson & Chanelle Collier at Lilac City Studio - Photography by Kent Johnson.
Art documentation of - UNIFORM By Joe Wilson & Chanelle Collier at Lilac City Studio - Photography by Kent Johnson.
Art documentation of - UNIFORM By Joe Wilson & Chanelle Collier at Lilac City Studio - Photography by Kent Johnson.
Art documentation of - UNIFORM By Joe Wilson & Chanelle Collier at Lilac City Studio - Photography by Kent Johnson.
Art documentation of - UNIFORM By Joe Wilson & Chanelle Collier at Lilac City Studio - Photography by Kent Johnson.
Art documentation of - UNIFORM By Joe Wilson & Chanelle Collier at Lilac City Studio - Photography by Kent Johnson.
Art documentation of - UNIFORM By Joe Wilson & Chanelle Collier at Lilac City Studio - Photography by Kent Johnson.
Art documentation of - UNIFORM By Joe Wilson & Chanelle Collier at Lilac City Studio - Photography by Kent Johnson.
Art documentation of - UNIFORM By Joe Wilson & Chanelle Collier at Lilac City Studio - Photography by Kent Johnson.
Art documentation of - UNIFORM By Joe Wilson & Chanelle Collier at Lilac City Studio - Photography by Kent Johnson.
Art documentation of - UNIFORM By Joe Wilson & Chanelle Collier at Lilac City Studio - Photography by Kent Johnson.
Art documentation of - UNIFORM By Joe Wilson & Chanelle Collier at Lilac City Studio - Photography by Kent Johnson.
Art documentation of - UNIFORM By Joe Wilson & Chanelle Collier at Lilac City Studio - Photography by Kent Johnson.
Art documentation of - UNIFORM By Joe Wilson & Chanelle Collier at Lilac City Studio - Photography by Kent Johnson.
Art documentation of - UNIFORM By Joe Wilson & Chanelle Collier at Lilac City Studio - Photography by Kent Johnson.
Art documentation of - UNIFORM By Joe Wilson & Chanelle Collier at Lilac City Studio - Photography by Kent Johnson.
Art documentation of - UNIFORM By Joe Wilson & Chanelle Collier at Lilac City Studio - Photography by Kent Johnson.
Art documentation of - UNIFORM By Joe Wilson & Chanelle Collier at Lilac City Studio - Photography by Kent Johnson.
Art documentation of - UNIFORM By Joe Wilson & Chanelle Collier at Lilac City Studio - Photography by Kent Johnson.
Art documentation of - UNIFORM By Joe Wilson & Chanelle Collier at Lilac City Studio - Photography by Kent Johnson.
Previous Joe Wilson & Chanelle Collier on Street Fashion Sydney http://streetfashionsydney.com.au/on-rivet-art-fashion-well-we-like-that.html

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Telling Stories in Pictures all over Sydney..
Kent Johnson, Sydney, Australia.
0433 796 863