Showing posts with label Brett Hilder. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Brett Hilder. Show all posts

Saturday, November 5, 2016

Click! 2016 Photography Show at Badger & Fox Gallery.

I'm in a SHOW - but it's not all about me. The Click! 2016 Photography Exhibition kicked off in great style on Thursday night at Badger & Fox gallery with a strong attendance from the Sydney photographic community and an opening speech by Gael Newton. This year the exhibition is drawn from the Badger & Fox photography collection of Australian and International photographers, along with works by a selection of  local photographers that have caught owner/curator Peter Maddison's eye; Brett Hilder, Vivianna Barrero, MikiNobu Komatsu, Peter Maddison and myself, Kent Johnson.

The show is divide across three rooms and the stairway and loosely from vintage and 'historical' photography - original prints - through to major contemporary photography; well they are all orginal prints! If you are new to photography and wonder what classic photography looks like, this is a great show to see a good chunk of the history of photography in one place in one afternoon. Gael spoke about the transition of photography from being seen as an applied art or trade to it becoming an accepted art form in major institutional galleries, and also praised Peter for the quality of the work on show and his unswerving eye for exceptional photography. Weekends only 11 to 5 201 Albion St Surry Hills untill Nov 27.
Opening night, Click! 2016 Photography Exhibition at Badger & Fox Gallery.
Gael Newton delivers her speech, Opening night, Click! 2016 Photography Exhibition at Badger & Fox Gallery.
Looking on as Gael Newton delivers her speech, Opening night, Click! 2016 Photography Exhibition at Badger & Fox Gallery.
Let to right, Robina Christopher, Sam, Vivienne, Kent and Brett at Badger and Fox.
Classic vintage black and white photography at Click! Badger & Fox Gallery 2016.
Viviennne Shui & Marcus Tush at Badger & Fox Gallery for the opening of Click!
Geoffrey Jaeger & Christopher Haggerty at Badger & Fox Gallery for the opening of Click!
Jackie Hung, Vivienne Shui & Sandy Edwards at Badger & Fox Gallery for the opening of Click!
Jackie Hung, Vivienne Shui at Badger & Fox Gallery for the opening of Click!
Photography on display at Badger & Fox Gallery for the opening of Click!
With Brett Hilder & Marcus Tush at Badger & Fox Gallery for the opening of Click!
Guests mingle at Badger & Fox Gallery for the opening of Click!
Robina Sam and Vivienne at Badger & Fox Gallery for the opening of Click!
Flyer for the 2016 Click exhibition at Badger & Fox Gallery, Surry Hills, Sydney.

Art photograph  'Fast Food From the Freeway' by Kent Johnson.
Fast Food from the Freeway (Brisbane) my photograph in Click! at Badger & Fox Gallery - Edition of 10.
Or to view my image larger Click HERE.
https://badgerandfoxgallery.com/

Kent Johnson,
Sydney, Australia.

0433 796 863


Friday, July 29, 2016

Art, The Art of Pokemon, & Fairies at the Bottom of the Garden..

Unless you have been living under a rock without crystal-set-WiFi; you will have certainly noticed that there is a new kid in town. Or maybe 151 strange cartoony kids, or maybe just smart phone wielding kids running through your garden. If you are wondering what it is? It's called Pokemon Go; and it has apparently uprooted couch potatoes, reunited parents with their formerly sullen, phone-communication-only children - all the better to travel to new places safely to hunt Pokemon with - and burnt goodness knows how many thousands, hundreds of thousands of kilos of human fat, off the face of the earth already!!

Apart from Pokemon Go being much more friendly than playing chess online (but that's another story) seeing these Pokemon pop up all over the place including art shows... Reminds me of the  Cottingley Fairies that famously duped Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, famed author of Sherlock Homes into believing there really were Fairies at the bottom of the garden - maybe he just needed a Galaxy 7 or iPhone 6 to prove to the world they were real. Not fake or imagined at all.. I for one am more than happy for a return to simpler times with the aid of 'smart' technology.. If it helps unchain me from behind the computer. Now if you can scroll past the next 4 'proofs' that Pokemon's really exist and are amongst us, there is a round up of some superb art shows - painting and photography - and then a little more banter about the positive side of Pokemon Go. Go on, keep scrolling, you might be surprised! Art & Gallery links below!
A Pokemon Doduo crashes and art opening at Folonomo Gallery in Surry Hills, Sydney.
A Pokemon Doduo crashes an Art Opening at Folonomo Gallery.
A Pokemon Pidgey crashes and art opening at KUDOS Gallery.
A Pokemon Pidgey crashes and art opening at KUDOS Gallery.
A Squirtle prepares for Pokemon battle outside the 'Pokestop' at Gallery 9  in Darlinghurst.
A Squirtle prepares for Pokemon battle near the 'Pokestop' at Gallery 9 Darlinghurst.
The ubiquitous Pokemon Zubat hangs out at Canvas Bar for a casual art opening and a few Drinks in the Sydney CBD.
The ubiquitous Pokemon Zubat hangs out at Canvas Bar for a casual art opening in the Sydney CBD.
Getting back to the art - Two weeks ago I attended a Friday night opening of Scott Gardiner's 'Disappear Here' at Palmer Art Projects. It is still on and is a curious blend of seascape abstraction and geometric rendering. Scott explores the nature and power of the ocean combining his art with his love of being in the ocean (the floor was already painted..). Nature was also vividly on show in Sarah Ducker's mandala like photographic observations of alpine flora in the New Zealand Alps. Both artists drawing their own visual meta of landscape.

Scott Gardiner 'Disappear Here' at Palmer Art Projects
Scott Gardiner 'Disappear Here' at Palmer Art Projects.
Funky winter knits, green red, flared denim overalls. Street Fashion Sydney by Kent Johnson.Mens style, winter coat, fedora ans cravat. Street Style Sydney by Kent Johnson.
Blue playsuit, pastel cardigan and 'emotional baggage' tote. Perfect for Pokemon hunting. Street Fashion Sydney.
Artist portrait at Off the Wall, Al Poulet at KUDOS Gallery. Photographed by Kent Johnson.
Off the Wall  by Al Poulet at KUDOS Gallery
Room view, Off the Wall  by Al Poulet at KUDOS Gallery.
Portrait of Sarah Ducker at Barometer Gallery. Photographed by Kent Johnson.
Sarah Ducker at Barometer Gallery.
'Fragile' by Sarah Ducker at Barometer Gallery.
Brett Hilder and female friends at the Habana Story book launch and pop-up photography show. Badger and Fox Gallery Surry Hills.
Brett Hilder and friends at the Habana Story book launch, Badger and Fox Gallery Surry Hills.
If you are fortunate enough to have seen or better yet, own a copy of Brett Hilder's Another Time, Past Created you will be aware of the beauty of both his photography and his prose. Always a man of the times Brett has side-stepped traditional publishing and is offering his new book only as a PDF at $10.00. Email him directly at  bretthilder@gmail.com The Cuba photographs are for sale too though not at quite that price point..
Vivienne Shui AKA vivialaViv and Ben Robertson at the 'Habana Story' book launch.
Brett Hilder and Ashley 'the' King. Badger and Fox gallery.
Gina at the Brett Hilder book launch, Badger and Fox Gallery.
Portrait of Kate Farquharson at KUDOS gallery for her exhibition Disintegration.
Portrait of Kate Farquharson at KUDOS gallery for her exhibition Disintegration.
Sensitivity for the subject, especially in portraiture should be a given and Kate has it in spades in this exhibition which examines a life lived and the effects and affects of ageing - by only photographing the space lived in and the objects therein. I was very moved by this series of photographs created over a four year period. On now at KUDOS Gallery.
Winter fashion, long cream coat, washed out jeans and fawn scarf - Street Fashion Sydney by Kent Johnson.
Men's hair - shaved sides for hard 'bangs' seen at KUDOS gallery. Street Fashion Sydney.
Anne Lynam speaking at her show 'Arcana' Barometer Gallery, Sydney.
Anne Lynam speaking at her show 'Arcana' Barometer Gallery, Sydney.
What to say about Anne Lynam's show 'Arcana' at Barometer Gallery.? I first meet Anne when she was showing at the Chrissie Cotter Gallery, Camperdown Sydney, 2004 and later at Point Light gallery. Forget the rapidity of modern photography. There's fashion, street photography, nudes somehow fitting together. Anne's works are unrushed, meticulously constructed images, the result of a disciplined eye and a creative and often witty mind. The work delivers a feeling of familiarity and is yet quite unique. And I usually feel like throwing in the towel after seeing one of Anne's shows.. Nothing has changed, the work just keeps on getting better. On until the 7th of August.
Portrait of Anne Lynam at her show 'Arcana' Barometer Gallery, Sydney.

So some wonderful painting, some stunning photography by four vastly different photographers. And that bloody game you already love or hate. I have picked it up in the interest of seeing what it's all about; if the CIA are reading Street Fashion Sydney they should already know what I am up to anyway. Other than doubling my daily walk and discharge of my phones battery. Pokemon Go (PG) is a boon for anyone that has painted a mural, made a public sculpture, or for buildings of, historic significance. Now not all artworks I have seen popping up as Poke Stops are credited but this one by Anthony Lister in Newtown that I came across today is. I presume the image was put up on google maps as a credited image at that GPS location. Something for (legal) Street Artists to think about. PG may not be the hot game forever, in fact its quite unlikely; I do think its the start of a form of everyday virtual reality, and something for all artists to have a look at, even if only with their kids or some friends; after all, Pandora never went back in the box, those Pokemon's are out for good too.

Pokemon Go Poke Stop credited art by Anthony Lister in Newtown.


https://palmerartprojects.com/
https://www.facebook.com/KUDOS/Off the Wall Al Poulet
http://www.barometer.net.au/ & http://sarahducker.com/
https://www.facebook.com/KUDOS/Kate Farquharson/
http://www.barometer.net.au/ & http://annelynam.com/

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