Regenerate - The Hold Artspace
Transcription
Regenerate - The Hold Artspace
Regenerate June 12 - June 21 This exhibition catalogue documents Regenerate, a group exhibition curated by Luke Kidd held at The Hold Artspace. Regenerate featured work by Benjamin Crowley, Katelyn-Jane Dunn, Kristian Fracchia, Dominic Reidy, Emma Rochester and Angela Rossitto. The exhibition opened on 12 June 2014 and continued until 21 June 2014. Front cover Dominic Reidy Reach 4, 2014 Over page Katelyn-Jane Dunn Sugar, 2013 Next page Emma Rochester Re-imagining Feminine Landscapes, 2014 Luke Kidd & Kylie Spear 0414 441 922 www.theholdartspace.com info@theholdartspace.com Level 2, 274 Montague Road West End Q 4101 The Resurrection of Narrative by Marisa Georgiou “… There has been a disenchantment with theories … that portray the self as a mere “point” acted upon by external forces. Narrative, by contrast, emphasizes the active, self-shaping quality of human thought, the power of stories to create and refashion personal identity.¹” Regenerate offers six wide-ranging perspectives on corporeality and consciousness. The human body is the intersection of many different ideas: mortality, sexuality, identity. This intricate melange of concepts is explored through the dissection and utilisation of narrative philosophies, both personal and cultural. On a base level, our bodies are biological vessels. Influenced by the Frankenstein text, a novel designed to help us understand our humanity through the advanced potentials of science, Angela Rossito’s work looks to dissect the concept of the “spark of life”. Frankenstein’s beast is a monster of human design: the scientist is portrayed as an artist; as the Creator. As the scientist manipulates raw materials into imitating life, Rossito attempts to understand how raw materials, through the hand of the artist, come to imitate art. These works reference organic cellular structure and neurons, but are plainly combined with technological components. More than just biology and science however, the Frankenstein text explores themes of phenomenology and consciousness. In the text, this constructed creature is unexpectedly found to be a sentient, sapient being. Likewise, Rossito’s creatures are conscious; reacting to the audiences’ presence. Angela Rossitto Beings and the mother ship, 2014 Personal narratives are instrumental in understanding our humanity in a world governed by unwavering mathematics and science: “Narrative seems to offer a way out of the reification that “mechanistic” models of human behaviour may unwittingly impose²”. It is part of the human condition that we are uniquely aware of ourselves as temporal creatures: creatures each imbued with a sense of history and narrative. By allowing the work to look recycled and handmade, Rossito has instilled a narrative into them: they were “created”. Though these forms are not humanoid in design, the audience still must wonder whether these creatures are sentient too. Taking a different approach, Kristian Fracchia explores the corporeal experience of adolescence through technology. Based on selfobservation, these self-portraits reflect on the construction of sexual identity in the age of information. These images document fleeting moments in the narrative of a young man during times of intimacy and anxiety. Drawing itself is regenerative and transformative; the artist often finds that it enhances perception and insights into the subject. Not only does the drawing medium enhance the aura of affection intrinsic to this particular work; it stands as the physical outcome of direct investigation into the ever-changing self. “Our narrative identities are neither God-given nor innate, but are painstakingly acquired as we grow, develop, and interact with the people around us.³” Sometimes, however, interactions are one-sided: one individual responding to an image of another. This skewed interaction is wholly apparent here. The starkly illustrated isolation and vulnerability of a young body is juxtaposed against the mental image of bodies we imagine that he is viewing: pornographic, entirely demystified, hegemonic masculine and feminine constructions. Kristian Fracchia Untitled (self-portrait #2), 2014 Dominic Reidy further utilises contemporary examples of heroism and masculinity to bring attention to pressures in masculine identity, and its relationship to the physical body. In this case, he appropriates athletic media imagery; specifically that of Australian football players. Reidy seeks to disrupt and decontextualize a common cultural narrative by removing these iconic images from their usual surroundings. Instead, these small male figures are detached from their uniforms and situated against delicate pastel colours and floral forms in attempt to undermine the machismo that is so central to Australian sporting culture. These figures are portrayed as clumsy, vulnerable and fragile; surrounded by feminised imagery. Cultural context and narrative are undeniably important to our personal bodily experience, but also in the portrayal of a body, and formation of a perceived identity: “Masculinity is not a solid, immovable construction. An individual does not guard one definitive gender position: from moment to moment, forces redictate, replace, and reimagine its reconstructing.⁴” Where these figures were originally portrayed powerfully jumping over each other to catch the ball, they now look as if they are all falling through space. In decontextualisation to such a degree, Reidy can subvert the idea that gender constructions are eternally unchanging and innate; recognising how important environment can become in the portrayal of gender, and how cultural hegemonies have the power to regressively influence identity. Dominic Reidy Anemone 1 and Reach 2, 2014 Benjamin Crowley, too, explores common expressions of masculinity in Australian visual culture. Juxtaposing iconic images of the Australian bushman from Baz Luhrmann’s Australia with billboard ads for male virility, he seeks to alert the viewer to the (often conflicting) ways culture perceives hegemonic masculinity. These billboards are an advertisement specifically designed to play on men’s fundamental insecurities: that without certain physical qualities, it negatively impacts your personal worth. The societal construct of a “real man” is all too often associated with notions of idealised physical strength and phallic performance. In the construction of identity, gender is certainly important. But how important is physical fitness, strength or virility when forming philosophies of “self”? Benjamin Crowley Untitled (car seat) and Billboards, 2014 Katelyn-Jane Dunn also looks at the coming of age transition in her series Sugar. These photographic works look at some of the contextual narratives that define an identity. Themes of femininity, family histories and sexuality are all explored in these works. It is plain that many themes wind their way throughout. As one views the series, the mind automatically tries to decipher the relationships between the photographs and place a story onto it; a natural attempt to decipher these images which we know must be connected. It seems almost surreal with such strong use of symbolism, but narrative clarity only just out of reach. Though the work is highly auto-biographical, the lack of any identifying features and purposeful ambiguity allows the audience to place themselves within it. These images are intrinsically personal, a trait that has emerged in feminist art and literature over recent decades: “… the conviction that “the personal is political” has sensitized feminists to narrative. Telling, listening to, and analysing women’s life stories has become important to both feminist political practise and feminist scholarship.⁵” This is not to argue that Katelyn has an agenda. It is apparent, though, that these narratives allow viewers to contextualise and therefore empathise with her; some would argue a more effective approach than those which are governed by rules and in-depth formal analysis. Katelyn-Jane Dunn Sugar, 2013 Emma Rochester highlights the link between the body, place and history through her own printed corsets. She re-imagines diverse landscapes through performance walks, redrafting charts and narratives as she wanders. These works challenge traditional mapping practises: how straight lines and mathematical principles are used to depict a living, endlessly changing landscape where precision is wholly rejected by nature. Rochester disregards these rules, shamelessly and organically scrawling and mark-making on top of the charts. The feminine body has historically been used as allegory for the natural environment; the corsets seen here bringing a female bodily interpretation to the contemporary maps that are printed on the material. The temporality of the human condition is inescapably linked with narrative consciousness: “The conscious present is that of a body impacted in a world and moving, in process, in that world⁶”. Rochester views her body as more than a vessel, it also serves as a conduit; channelling natural energies from her surroundings as she walks. She walks in touch with her consciousness: that is to say, she knows that consciousness dictates we must always be some place at some time. Identity cannot emerge from abstraction. This is why geographical and cultural identities are important; we need situatedness to form a coherent notion of self. These are certainly vast issues that the young artists in this exhibition are wrestling with, but the use of narrative allows them to effectively explore, subvert and challenge existing notions of identity, contributing to growth on both personal and socio/cultural spectrums. Emma Rochester Re-imagining Feminine Landscapes, 2008 - 14 Crites, S 1997 ‘The Narrative Quality of Experience’ in L Hinchman & S Hinchman (eds) ‘Memory, Identity, Community- The Idea of Narrative in the Human Sciences’, State University of New York Press, New York, pp. 26-50 Hinchman, L & Hinchman, S 1997 ‘Memory, Identity, Community- The Idea of Narrative in the Human Sciences’, State University of New York Press, New York Novitz, D 1997 ‘Art, Narrative and Human Nature’ in L Hinchman & S Hinchman (eds) ‘Memory, Identity, Community- The Idea of Narrative in the Human Sciences’ , State University of New York Press, New York, pp. 143-160 Watson, M & Shaw, E 2011 ‘Performing American Masculinities: The 21st-century Man in Popular Culture’ Indiana University Press, Indiana ¹ Hinchman &Hinchman 1997 p xiv ² Hinchman &Hinchman 1997 p xiv ³ Novitz, D 1997 p150 ⁴ Watson, M & Shaw, E 2011 p1 ⁵ Hinchman &Hinchman 1997 p122 ⁶ Crites, S 1997 p39 Angela Rossitto Beings and the mother ship, 2014