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rex-livingston art dealer cordially invites you
to the opening of Peter Cameron
Paintings from Hill End (studio residency)
and Millamolong Station
Peter Cameron, Hill End 13, 2009, oil on linen, 152 x 148cm
Opening Night drinks with the artist:
Thursday 10 September 6 to 8pm
Exhibition on View:
9 to 27 September
“Peter’s paintings capture the interface between physical form and the energetic dimension of reality.
His landscapes appear to pulse in and out of existence from the underlying quantum world of energy”.
Richard Barrett
Founder and Chairman
Barrett Values Centre
Wines by Mount Eyre Vineyards, Hunter Valley NSW
David Rex-Livingston, Director
rex-livingston art dealer
ph + 61 2 9357 5988
mobile 0414 240 664
email: art@rex-livingston.com
Specialising in dealing quality investment art
and the exhibition of professional emerging
to mid career artists.
Gallery: 59 Flinders Street, Surry Hills, NSW 2010.
Hours: Tues to Sat 11am to 6pm & Sun Noon to 4pm
MAKING IT is proud to announce the new poly-venue gallery initiative which has just exploded in Sydney.
Young entrepreneurial curator duo Tony Curran and Luke Tipene have set up an artist run space where artists get exhibition space for free! An experimental artworld model, this project has been liaising with small business in Sydney for simple sponsorship arrangements and is currently hosting their debut appearence at World Bar's club room in King's Cross and future events are rumoured to be held in the elegant design studios of NMI in Chippendale. Emerging artists are strongly represented in the vision for the gallery, Mitchel Spider boasting the first so far.
However, more established practitioners in a huge range of visual and sonic media are to be involved as well. While it doesn't behave like a normal gallery with the white cube aesthetic WATCH THIS SPACE hopes to make the artworks more accessible to those who normally wouldn't have the luxury to visit galleries and project spaces.
While there are no fees to be paid for space rental WATCH THIS SPACE take a 20% commission on works sold which goes toward running costs of the organisation.
For more information about how to get involved or join the mailing list email realperspectives@gmail.com.
Posted with LifeCast
The old surrealist game of exquisite corpse was once again rinsed off and hung out to dry at Roslyn Oxley9 last Thursday night. If unfamiliar with the game, its what Breton and the rest of the surrealists used to make - something from bits of nothing in the early days of the movement a century ago. This was of course, the sculptural beginnings of found object turned modern mythical edifice that filtered on through the rest of the 20th century.
And now here again almost one hundred years out of date, Hany Armanious has given us something that can only be distinguished from a retrospective by the fact that he worked fastidiously with foam to reproduce found objects instead of simply using them: a manikin head on a sphinx on a box; cardboard tubes, under a log, under a gray thing...it was beautiful. At least that's what I overheard. The 20-something up-and-comers in attendance went out of the way to exercise their extended adjectives that night, though all their theater only fell on deaf ears while the older patrons of Oxley9 simply wandered around seeming a little more puzzled than usual.
Everyone agreed with admiring relief on one wall piece-slash-torn notice bound. Seems it was the only work that was almost similar enough to something that could safely be comment on...sounds confusing...go see the show and find out for yourself.
But seriously, Roslyn Oxley9's press writer Amanda Rowell leads us to believe that through these works we find an 'otherness' in the slippage of the real and unreal of every day objects. Hmmmm...despite the ambiguity of these works delaying our judgment, in no way do they transgress the object/observer relationship to mitigate the encompassing experience of the 'Uncanny Valley'. Juan Munoz or even Felix Gonzalez Torres have been extending further into anthropomorphic sculpture and found object than Armanious' work dreams of, and with no need for expensive fabrication techniques for validation. Really, these sculptures don't boil down to answer the 'intriguing' question “What is it”, as Rowell claims, they only incited the assumption that 'they don't mean anything'.
Art should insight us shouldn't it? It should move us deeper into our understanding of the human condition. And isn't there a much greater discussion of 'otherness' in that than in a reductive, labored critique of the uncanny?
A bitter taste came to my mouth whilst watching the next generation of art school students work their way through the free beers and giggle about finding their next sculpture in a wheelie bin. Seems the only insight from this show was a cheap hangover and a couple of contacts.