Curated program of contemporary video art
Transcription
Curated program of contemporary video art
Curated program of contemporary video art 1 Introducing the Kick Off contemporary video art program. 2 4 3 Kick Off is a curated program of contemporary video art created specifically for the new Metricon Stadium, home of the Gold Coast SUNS. This project has provided a rare opportunity to create a public art program that 5 seeks to explore the boundaries between art and sport. The stadium’s enormous high 6 7 definition LED scoreboard sparked the idea of creating a program of video art that would inspire, challenge and excite both sports fans and lovers of contemporary art alike. By operating at the intersection of art and sport, the Kick Off program aims to bring 8 9 contemporary art to a broad new audience at a scale seldom seen in Australia. Kick Off has been made possible with the invaluable support from Stadiums 10 Queensland, The Gold Coast SUNS, The Gold Coast City Council, Watpac, Populous, Creative Sight and the Queensland Government. Angeline Smith, Public Art Project Manager, Project Services, Department of Public Works, Queensland Government. Resonating with our human experiences and principles, sport drives our perceptions in ways that also apply to contemporary art practice. 1 2 3 4 5 Ten video art pieces were selected and commissioned from Mata Dupont, Alex Chomicz and Paul Mumme have all made various an array of emerging and established Australian artists for the observations of the cult of the Australian sporting hero. The subtle inaugural Kick Off program. This unique collection of curated works humour derived from Christopher Howlett and Laith McGregor’s includes artists that are recognised at a national and international works are different perspectives to art and sport in a high impact level for their contribution to culture including Vernon Ah Kee, arena, whilst Grant Stevens has created a poetic, emotionally charged Julie Rrap, Grant Stevens, Christopher Howlett, Tarryn Gill and commentary of ‘the game’. Pilar Mata Dupont, Alex Chomicz, Laresa Kosloff, Paul Mumme, 6 7 8 9 10 The works vary in disposition; from those that are light, Gabriella and Silvana Mangano and Laith McGregor. These humorous (and sometimes kitsch) contrasted with other more talented artists work across disciplines within their practice in abstract interpretations of strategy, the game, movement, winners and film, performance, choreography, photography, drawing, sound, losers and nationhood. A number of the video art pieces specifically animation, new media and installation. Artists Gabriella and reference the Gold Coast as well the Gold Coast SUNS, whilst others Silvana Mangano and Tarryn Gill and Pilar Mata Dupont were tend to explore the broader themes and ideas of play, the individual specifically selected for their collaborative practice. and the audience. The inaugural Kick Off program offers viewers a The video artworks selected are diverse in tempo from Vernon Ah Kee’s powerful reclaiming of Surfers Paradise Beach; an upbeat hand-drawn dance animation by Laresa Kosloff to subtle real time interpretations of the movement of the game and the spectacle by Julie Rrap and Gabriella and Silvana Mangano. Tarryn Gill and Pilar broad range of unique and highly engaging works to be experienced and enjoyed on the stadium’s big screen. Renai Grace, Curator, Creative Director of Creative Sight. CantChant (sequence one) Ah Kee was born in 1967 in Innisfail, North Queensland. The Beach encompasses a specific mindset in the Australian His people are the Kuku Yalandji, Koko Berrin, Waanji, Yidindji and psyche. It is the ideal and the idealism in what the Beach means to Guugu Yimithirr peoples of North Queensland. He lives and works in the rhythms of everyday life for the people of this land that must be Brisbane. His work explores the Aboriginal and the non-Indigenous considered in every encounter with Beach, or indeed the Coast. It position and context in contemporary Australian society. Using seems everyone, be it near as the foreshore or as far off as the central text, video and drawing, Ah Kee references past and present racial deserts, is informed and shaped by their proximity to the Coast. atrocities and the resonance they have in the present. “The art we What is clear in Australia is that the Beach not only possesses make is Aboriginal art ... because the way we live our lives is an white sands, but it possesses White people. And it is White people, Aboriginal experience.” Ah Kee’s work is motivated by his profound who in turn, would seek to possess it. While it is Aboriginal people who sense of exclusion and invisibility as an Aboriginal Australian. While truly embody the Beach, along with the whole of the ‘Australian’ land his work is cast as a clear statement of Aboriginal sovereignty, on mass, it is White people in Australia who have established the Beach, closer inspection it is its ambiguities that take the discussion to particularly the East Coast, as a bastion of power and privilege; a the next level. Ah Kee is represented by Milani Gallery, Brisbane, territorial preserve for the White Australian ideal. Australia. www.milanigallery.com.au The Surfboard and Surfing lifestyle have become synonymous with the Beach and Beach Culture in Australia. In CantChant, the shield boards and their association with Aboriginal men, encompassed in the surfboards and in the video, are an exercise in reiteration; of identity, and of social and political positioning. Equally clear, is the all too real sense that the Black men, despite their colourful beach-branded apparel and flashy boards, do not fit. Vernon Ah Kee (detail) still from CantChant (sequence one). Image courtesy the artist. Rising Suns Chomicz has been awarded the ‘Tomorrow’s Cinema’ Prize at the The image of a golden sun rising relentlessly out of the water, day Festival International du Film Indépendant in Brussels for his 12 min after day, became an irresistible symbol for the idea of an unstoppable film Half Mongrel. Previous work attracted awards from the Australian team of players rising up mystically into the sky. Writer’s Guild; ACS; ATOM; as well as a recent Critic’s Choice Prize at The Brisbane International Film Festival. The Laundry was invited to the student showcase at the Cannes Film Festival. Following an internship in Warsaw with Academy Award winning director Andrzej Wajda, he was commissioned to make recruitment films for the Singapore Army. Recently he has been exhibiting Video Art as well as a Photographic Series which was shown as part of The Weekend Australian’s emerging art project Off The Wall @ Art Sydney & Art Brisbane. www.alexchomicz.com Alex Chomicz (detail) still from Rising Suns. Image courtesy the artist. Shooting at 1200 frames per second revealed a kind of magic in something that is very normal and everyday. The endless inevitable sunrise. Red & Yellow Composition Howlett graduated with a MFA from the Californian Institute of Red & Yellow Composition is a whimsical, child-like fairytale the Arts in 2000 and previously graduated with First Class narrative between two AFL match balls who develop a friendship Honours in a Bachelor of Fine Arts at the Queensland University of as they hop, bounce and roll their way through the Gold Coast Technology in 1996. His works have been exhibited internationally fantasy theme parks, simulated nature exhibits and idyllic beach in festivals including the Inter-Society of Electronic Arts in Helsinki, surroundings. Flying though the air, they eventually discover their Finland and Stockholm; Videoholica International Video Art Festival new home which just so happens to be the new Metricon Stadium, in Bulgaria; Los Angeles Freewaves Festival of Film, Video and homeground of the Gold Coast SUNS. Happiness and joy abounds as New Media and exhibited work at the Art Center College of Design they hop, jump and skip around the architecture of their new adopted in Pasadena, California. His solo and collaborative works have playground – like two butterflies fluttering from leaf to leaf, searching also been exhibited locally at the Gallery of Modern Art, Institute of for flowers. Through the use of open ended sign systems my art Modern Art, the QUT Art Museum, the Arc Biennial for Art & Design practice manipulates virtual and real environments to shift cultural and and interstate at the Contemporary Art Centre of South Australia, political understandings of our physical and psychological selves. Hobart Art Gallery, Cairns Contemporary Art Space and Blindside My conceptual art projects often result in long term performances, Artist Run Space in Melbourne. In 2010 he founded the Queensland video art computer game design, hardware modifications, 3D Centre for Contemporary Art and is currently lecturing in Sculpture animations, sound and sculptural works, site-specific installations, at the Queensland College of Art. He is currently based in Brisbane, painting, and machinima films. These diverse, artistic universes Queensland. www.chrishowlett.com.au expand preconceived notions of narrative and documentary by using humour, autobiography, pop music, fiction and fantasy to explore how technology redefines and influences our subjectivity through its pervasive use. Chris Howlett (detail) still from Red & Yellow Composition. Image courtesy the artist. Feeling for You Kosloff lives and works in Melbourne, Australia. Her work This hand-drawn animation is an imaginary self-portrait, in which incorporates a range of approaches to making including Super 8 Kosloff executes a complex dance routine involving break-dance film, choreographed video works, hand drawn animation, installation, moves. Feeling for You explores the imaginative possibilities drawing and performance. Recent artworks explore the figure in of drawing in relation to the temporal and spatial limitations of relation to form; slapstick meets high-end abstraction. Kosloff is two-dimensionality. interested in how movement, gesture and abstraction translate into The theme of fantasy in relation to the human body is prevalent in significance. Central interests include the body in relation to systems Kosloff’s animations. Feeling for You (a self portrait) uses stop-frame aspiring to purity, including abstraction, geometry, architecture, animation and pop culture sound to create short narratives about the sport and the trained body. Kosloff uses humour and the absurd fantasy of dancing the way you want to. Influenced by music video to manipulate and expose mythologies of autonomy, for example, clips, Kosloff has constructed a false reality in which animations central to her choreographed video works is an interest in the subtle are able to physically achieve the unachievable, in humorous, jerky and ongoing influence of aspects of modernism, imbedded in our compressed time movements. Her animations have influenced the relationship to formal, cultural and historical narratives. choreography of the movements by carrying the formal concerns of www.laresakosloff.com drawing through to dance practice; Kosloff links the improvisations and gestures that underpin both drawing and dance by emphasising the way both disciplines rely on movement of the body through space with the principal difference being that in drawing, unlike dance, marks remain behind as an after-trace. Laresa Kosloff (detail) still from Feeling for You. Image courtesy the artist. Untitled 2011 Born Stanthorpe, Queensland, the performance and video art This performance video explores the performative element of of Gabriella Mangano and Silvana Mangano challenges conceptual sport not only from the players and audience perspective, but also drawing practice using body gesture to draw in space. During 2010, the medias take on these events. The TV coverage that surrounds Gabriella Mangano and Silvana Mangano works were included in the sporting events, in particular their use of repeated replay of great 2010 Adelaide Biennial of Australian Art at the Art Gallery of South sporting moments, is an area that has been explored in this work. Australia and Love, Loss and Intimacy, an NGV group exhibition. We are interested in the movements that are slowed down, frozen, Gabriella Mangano completed a BFA (Drawing) at the Victorian replayed and repeated for several seconds for audience enjoyment. College of the Arts in 2001 and Silvana Mangano a BFA (Drawing) This work conveys the universal idea of the emotive states that one at the Victorian College of the Arts in 2003. Gabriella Mangano and experiences when viewing sport. Silvana Mangano were awarded an Ian Potter Cultural Trust Grant and We used the editing process as an essential element of the work. the Can Serrat International Arts Residency in 2007. They were also Untitled is made with the use of two separate frames. Both frames recipients of a New Work Emerging Grant from the Australia Council have one body moving differently within the frame. The two frames for the Arts in 2006. Their work was exhibited at the Art Gallery of NSW are then cropped individually in half. The cropped frames are then as part of the prestigious 2009 Anne Landa Award. Gabriella Mangano joined together to create one whole frame again. Thus the end result and Silvana Mangano are represented by Anna Schwartz Gallery in is an image of one body moving, yet there is awareness that there is Victoria. www.annaschwartzgallery.com something slightly awkward in the movements. It is split, disjointed; connected, disconnected. The body represents part player, part audience member. It also represents teams playing with and against each other. Filming in black and white was a deliberate decision to emphasize movement. The black and white montage of abstract shapes echo the actions of the body to accentuate the occupied Gabriella Mangano & Silvana Mangano (detail) still from Untitled 2011. Image courtesy the artists. space that is created with each movement. Nelson R. Mandela Ball Game McGregor’s practice draws on illusionary material to convey a In Ball Game a link is made between sport, art and the body. sense of the uncanny in his work. The figures that he represents McGregor has created a moving ‘living sculpture’. When the spectator are derived from both factual and fictitious realms including hero views the work they are left with a feeling of uneasiness as they watch worship and personal family stories. The qualities that result from with the anticipation that the sculpture may fail at any moment. In the McGregor’s practice highlight the grey areas that exist between work the protagonist is asked to carry out the simple task of bringing fiction and non-fiction. the basketball from the ground to their head without using their hands. McGregor has exhibited widely throughout Australia most Before our eyes we watch a comical dance unfold. Like other sports, recently in New Psychedelia, The University of Queensland Art there are rules and regulations the punter has to abide by while also Museum (2011) and Freehand: Recent Australian Drawing, Heide maintaining a high level of concentration and determination that is Museum of Art, Melbourne (2010). He won the 2009 Qantas Art Prize evident in all sporting codes. This ‘living sculpture’ takes on its own life and has been a finalist for numerous other prizes including: Rick as it begins to form absurd renditions of human dexterity. Amor Drawing Prize (2010), Wilson HTM National Art Prize (2009) and Royal Bank of Scotland Emerging Artist Award (2009). In 2009 he received a New Work Grant and carried out a residency at the Centre Intermondes in La Rochelle, France. McGregor is represented by Sullivan + Strumpf Fine Art, Sydney. www.ssfa.com.au Laith McGregor (detail) still from Ball Game. Image courtesy the artist. Play Hard Brisbane born multidisciplinary artist Paul Mumme began This new media artwork takes the form of a single channel painting at age 10. After leaving school he travelled Europe for slapstick video montage showing the protagonist training, warming some time, before enrolling in Fine Art at Queensland College of Art up and preparing for a game of football. Referencing recent comedies which he graduated from with First Class Honours. In 2006 Mumme and also the classic sports training montage, the protagonist’s acts was the recipient of the Churchie Emerging Art Award and his work highlight not only the risks and absurdities involved in AFL game play, was included in the IMA’s annual Freshcut exhibition, as well as a but also the endurance and skill required to participate. There exists Queensland video art survey in the IMA screening room. Since then, in sport an inherent absurd futility; it is a purposeless exercise for the Mumme has exhibited in a variety of group shows and solo exhibitions sake of leisure. But while it serves no tangible function it does, almost both in Queensland and interstate and has being included in a major instinctually, mimic a more original hunter-gatherer preoccupation. It is video art survey at QUT Kelvin Grove – Figuratively Speaking, the ARC dangerous, and runs against our instinctual reflex for self-preservation Biennial Exhibition To be confirmed and in 2010 Mumme’s work was – evidenced by the myriad of protective clothes and precautionary included in the Australian Centre for Photography group exhibition strapping – further adding to the ridiculousness of the exercise. Dream Home. Mumme’s work deals with paradox, futility, irony and the absurd Why suffer for the sake of enjoyment? It’s an undeniable human tendency. We have come full circle, pitting logic against function in in human behaviour, operating within various manifestations of object- the name of play. Play (through sport) has come to represent its exact based tragi-comic slapstick. Usually performative, it stresses the opposite – passion. Passion by definition is pain; so are we here presence of a protagonist – sometimes present as a suit-clad figure. turning play, recreation and fun into suffering? What could be more www.paulmumme.com intrinsically human? The slapstick nature of the work is not only a continuation of a preoccupation of mine but also complements the contradictory nature of the paradoxes surrounding sport, risk and play. Paul Mumme (detail) still from Play Hard. Image courtesy the artist. Spin Stevens is an Australian artist currently based in Brisbane. Stevens often animates texts, images and sounds to explore He has held numerous solo shows in Australia, as well as in Italy, various cultural ‘languages’. At the foundation of his practice is a New Zealand, the United Kingdom and the United States. His work drive to reconsider how we understand, construct and communicate has been exhibited in many group-shows including at the Art Gallery our experiences. By moving between and across the personal, of New South Wales, the Queensland Art Gallery, the National shared, virtual, actual and symbolic, his works question how various Gallery of Victoria and the Singapore Art Museum. Grant received verbal and non-verbal languages shape our daily lives, subjectivities his PhD in Fine Art from the Queensland University of Technology, and communications. Brisbane, in 2007. He is represented by Gallery Barry Keldoulis in Sydney. www.gbk.com.au Spin borrows idioms and metaphors from sports commentary and squeezes them into a single emotional rollercoaster. Accompanied by a driving soundtrack, text appears and disappears one word at a time. As the work progresses, multiple words fade in and out at the same time, filling the screen and testing our ability to read and assimilate these well-worn phrases. On the one hand, the work mimes some of what we enjoy about sport – its ability to take us to another place, to incite passion and emotion, and to enable us to share in common experiences, goals and desires. On the other hand, it plays up the hyperbolic language often associated with sports broadcasting. The very language that helps take us to another place, incite passion and make us feel part of something bigger than ourselves, is pushed to its extreme and starts to burst at the seams. Grant Stevens (detail) still from Spin. Image courtesy the artist. OuterSpace Rrap has been one of Australia’s leading contemporary artists for OuterSpace represents photographic images in which the the last three decades. Her work has sought to disclose and unravel body (the artist’s body) appears in a state of suspension. There is the ways in which the human body has been defined throughout a narrative of otherness in which the body occupies space but not western history and culture. She does so with a seductive wit, an place; the body in outer space is alien and unanchored from earth’s outward display of pleasure, and a determination to match the gaze gravitational pull suggesting a body that is ‘out of place’. Equally ‘out- of her audiences. Deeply based in the story of the body, Rrap’s of-space’ suggests an opposite; a claustrophobic tightening of space. art is always a surprise, resulting from an individual ingenuity. In In the processes of making this work Rrap wanted to create a the work OuterSpace, the body appears in a state of suspension, territory in which the performing body could displace the shape of the castaway and adrift. Rrap is represented by Arc One Gallery in constructed space. Rrap decided to work with a variety of black elastic Victoria www.arcone.com.au and Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery in New strips because this material was malleable. The 3D construction in the South Wales www.roslynoxley9.com.au studio environment translated into 2D images which suggested black line drawings within abstract tonal surfaces that created an ambiguous space for the body to inhabit. These images were further fractured within the animated space of the video where space shatters yet constantly re-forms. Here the female figure becomes a trickster troubling the neutrality of abstraction by suggesting that no space of art can escape the essential uncertainty of existence. Crawling, falling, climbing, flying; the body makes mutable those spaces of art history fixed in time. Julie Rrap (detail) still from OuterSpace. Image courtesy the artist. Gymnasium In Gymnasium we have portrayed 20 fresh-faced athletes ‘performing’ various indoor gymnastic-like routines. Their movements Tarryn Gill and Pilar Mata Dupont were both born in Perth in are rhythmical and repetitive, like clockwork, made with the poise and 1981. They are multidisciplinary artists, producers and performers with perfection of an ancient statue of Diana. As they move in the space they backgrounds in dance and music theatre. Since 2001 they have worked seem connected as a team, smiling with pride, working together. The together on a practice that encompasses photography, performance, joyous expressions the performers exude are akin to Ziegfeld’s girls in choreography, film, installation and design. Gill and Mata Dupont’s staged his 1920’s follies. investigations into nationhood interweave references to Hollywood glamour, burlesque, Australiana kitsch and social realism. Recent exhibitions include: remix: wa contemporary art Art Gallery of The work does adopt the theatrical style of a Hollywood musical review, but at the same time closely references the aesthetics of the film work of Leni Riefenstahl. We looked to the Nazi soldiers in her Western Australia (2011); The Beauty of Distance: Songs of Survival in a propaganda film, Triumph of the Will (1935), and her perfectly honed Precarious Age, Biennale of Sydney (2010); The Basil Sellers Art Prize, Ian athletes in Olympia (1938). The style and the camera techniques used in Potter Museum of Art (2010), Contemporary Australia: Optimism, Gallery these films, ground breaking at the time they were made, are dramatic of Modern Art, Brisbane (2008); Primavera, Museum of Contemporary Art, and theatrical. “Fascism is theatre,” said Jean Genet. Sydney (2008); and Linden1968, Linden Centre for Contemporary Arts, We find it to be a useful tool that the complex and alluring visual Melbourne (2008). They are currently working on a major solo exhibition effects used in this kind of propaganda film strongly suggest a sinister of their work, due to open at the Perth Institute of Contemporary Arts in subtext. With Gymnasium, we investigate how the same qualities that September 2011. Tarryn Gill and Pilar Mata Dupont are represented by are valued in sport – camaraderie, mental focus and bodily control, Goddard de Fiddes, Perth. www.tarrynandpilar.com submissive behaviour and endurance of pain – are all also valued in militarised societies. We link the sportsfield to the battlefield as a location for the demonstration of legitimate patriotic aggression, and success in both as a source of national pride. Tarryn Gill & Pilar Mata Dupont (detail) still from Gymnasium. Image courtesy the artists. Ideas of the fascist aesthetic, it’s use in propaganda and the cult of By presenting these replica Australian sports heroes using a the heroic sportsperson in Australia permeate our single channel video tongue-in-cheek, fascist-styled aesthetic, this nationalistic aggression is work, Gymnasium. implied and transposed onto Australian culture. This project has received financial assistance from the Queensland Government through art+place Queensland Public Art Fund. Curated program of contemporary video art