Aleks Danko - Museum of Contemporary Art
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Aleks Danko - Museum of Contemporary Art
ALEKS DANKO: MY FELLOW AUS-TRA-ALIENS – Exhibition in Focus PRESENTATION mca.com.au/learn MCA Introduction 2 ALEKS DANKO – Meet the artist The son of Ukrainian migrants, Aleks Danko was born in Adelaide in 1950 and lives and works in Daylesford, Victoria. Photo of artists His career spans over four decades and encompasses diverse media – from sculpture, performance, installation, to text and languagebased works. Drawing actively upon Australia’s political and cultural history, his practice is infused with humour and a subtle (and at times not so subtle!) critique of contemporary social values. Aleks Danko, Loopix at Marimekko … or is this Bridget Boiling Brook?, 2015, photograph: Katri Lehtola. Image courtesy and © Aleks Danko and Katri Lehtola MCA Excerpts from Artist’s Voice: Aleks Danko, 2009 click on image to play video. View full video online Introduction 3 MCA It’s Such A Thin Line Between Clever & Stupid (2008/2009) 4 Make a list of 5 different places you see mirrors in your everyday life and what they are used for. Act out your interaction with each of them! WARM UP MCA It’s Such A Thin Line Between Clever & Stupid (2008/2009) Aleks Danko, It’s Such a Thin Line Between Clever and Stupid 2008-2009 sand blasted mirror, plastic mirror clips 59 x 42 x 0.6cm Museum of Contemporary Art Collection purchased with funds provided by the Coe and Mordant families, 2009 5 MCA “ It’s Such A Thin Line Between Clever & Stupid (2008/2009) If the viewer is the right height and standing at the right distance, a thin sandblasted line will separate their reflected head from their body, integrating them physically and conceptually into the work ” MCA Collection online, ABOUT THE ARTWORK 6 MCA It’s Such A Thin Line Between Clever & Stupid (2008/2009) Aleks Danko, It’s Such a Thin Line Between Clever and Stupid 2008-2009 (Selfie) sand blasted mirror, plastic mirror clips 59 x 42 x 0.6cm Museum of Contemporary Art Collection purchased with funds provided by the Coe and Mordant families, 2009 7 MCA It’s Such A Thin Line Between Clever & Stupid (2008/2009) 8 Imagine you are standing in front of It’s Such A Thin Line Between Clever & Stupid (2008/2009). How does it feel to see yourself in the artwork? • How would you act or perform in front of this artwork? • How would your experience of the artwork be different to others? DISCUSSION IDEAS MCA It’s Such A Thin Line Between Clever & Stupid (2008/2009) 9 Could It’s Such a Thin Line Between Clever and Stupid be considered a portrait? Why or why not? DIG DEEPER MCA “ Joycean Laugh (2008/2009) What I’ve done [is] put words into people’s heads, so to speak, as well as mouths. And it’s making them think about how thoughts are made.” ” Aleks Danko, Artist’s Voice video 2009 10 MCA Joycean Laugh (2008/2009) Aleks Danko, Joycean Laugh, 2008/2009 engraved plastic. 59.2 x 42cm Museum of Contemporary Art Collection Purchased with funds provided by the Coe and Mordant families, 2009 11 MCA Joycean Laugh (2008/2009) 12 ‘Joycean’ refers to James Joyce, a famous Irish writer who treated words as changeable playthings and delighted in their spoken form. Recite the words in Jocycean Laugh aloud ten times. Change the way it is spoken each time - fast, slow, loud, soft. • How did the mood of the work change when reading the words aloud compared to reading them in your head? • How does this artwork lend itself to ideas of performance? QUICK ACTIVITY MCA Joycean Laugh (2008/2009) 13 Aleks Danko thinks that language can be read, understood, performed and looked at. How does Joycean Laugh explore each of these different interactions with text? DIG DEEPER MCA Incident-Ambivalence (1991/1992) Aleks Danko, Incident-Ambivalence, 1991/1992 wood, galvanised steel and synthetic polymer paint and varnish 28 x 27.5 x 2.5cm Museum of Contemporary Art Collection Purchased with the assistance of stART, MCA Young Patrons, 1993 14 MCA Incident-Ambivalence (1991/1992) 15 The face in Incident-Ambivalence is based on a drawing found in an artwork by William Hogarth called The Analysis of Beauty: a sculptor’s yard, (1753). Hogarth was a painter, engraver, critic and satirist born in 1697. Look at the next slide. Can you find the face in Hogarth’s artwork? QUICK ACTIVITY MCA Incident-Ambivalence (1991/1992) William Hogarth, The Analysis of Beauty: a sculptor’s yard, 1753 Metropolitan Museum of Art, online collection: entry 365314. Wikipedia Commons 16 MCA Incident-Ambivalence (1991/1992) 17 Why do you think Aleks Danko has chosen this image? How has he changed the face from the original drawing by Hogarth? DISCUSSION IDEAS MCA Incident-Ambivalence (1991/1992) 18 Quickly draw yourself or someone near you using your NON-DOMINANT HAND (e.g. use your left hand if you’re right-handed). Then draw the same portrait with your dominant hand. Which drawing do you think is better and why? QUICK ACTIVITY! MCA Incident-Ambivalence (1991/1992) 19 Hogarth used the face image as a demonstration of a drawing that lacked elegance and beauty something ‘unartistic’ that could be made by a young child. He believed that an image needed to contain an ‘S’ shaped curve to make it a beautiful composition. How do we define what is good, or bad, artistic or unartistic? DIG DEEPER MCA 20 Extend your learning - try our online activities! mca.com.au/learning_danko THANK YOU
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