Showing posts with label exhibitions. Show all posts
Showing posts with label exhibitions. Show all posts

29 April 2007

New Screening in Russia

In -Transition
curated by Helene Black
National Centre of Contemporary Art,
Yekaterinberg: 27.10.08 - 16.11.08
National Centre of Contemporary Art, Moscow: 24.11.08 - 21.12.08

I will be screening a selection of the Uber memoria works in the forthcoming curated exhibition In Transition at two locations of the National Centre for Contemporary Art in Russia during late 2008. This also accompanies a 3-day international conference (exploring themes raised by the exhibition) to be staged at
the Ural State Gorky University in Yekaterinberg.

Updates on the exhibition and conference will be made available soon.

17 April 2007

New Screening in Melbourne



Voyeur One

69 Smith Street, Melbourne: 16.04.07 - 06.05.07
Zurich, Switzerland 25.07.07
Helsinki, Finland: 01.08.07
Amsterdam, Holland: 07.07
Weblink: http://www.voyeurcollective.com/index.html

I am participating in the group exhibition/project by the Voyeur International Video Collective opening Tuesday 6:00pm-8:00pm April 17th at 69 Smith Street Gallery in Melbourne. A total of 28 artists are screening their works who are based in Australia and elsewhere. My work features the first public screening of the Uber Memoria (short version) to be later displayed as a larger and more substantial edition.

The exhibition will tour to various venues in Zurich, Helsinki and Amsterdam later this year.

Image: copyright Voyeur Video Art Collective, 2007.

24 December 2006

Filmic Memorials (PICA)


Shaun Wilson, Wonderlandic (2005), DV as single channel DVD, colour, sound, 60 mins

01.09.2005 - 09.10.2005
Perth Institute of Contemporary Art
Perth , Australia
website

Small Worlds


Shaun Wilson, The Memory Palace (2003), DV as single channel DVD, colour, sound, 5 mins.

Curated by Sean Kelly
March 2003
Contemporary Art Services Tasmania (CAST)
Hobart, Tasmania

23 December 2006

White Line Fever/Footballism


Shaun Wilson, Barry's Gig Game (2004), DV as single channel DVD, colour, sound, 3 mins.


White Line Fever
Curated by Malcom Bywaters
05.07.2004 - 06.08.2004
Academy Gallery
University of Tasmania
Launceston, Tasmania

Various artists




Footballism
14.09.2005 - 23.09.2005
PITSpace Gallery
RMIT University
Bundoora, Victoria

Hidden Worlds


Hobart - Shaun Wilson, The Hidden Worlds detail of diorama attached to gallery ceiling (2002), digital print, 70mm x 95mm

Entrepot Gallery
01.09.2002 - 14.09.2002
Centre for the Arts
University of Tasmania
Hobart, Tasmania

Artwork exploring the relationship between the miniature and spatial narratives.

Little Things Count


Shaun Wilson, September (2002), photograph, 1200mm x 870mm. (ed.2 of 4)

December 2002
Centre on Contemporary Art (COCA)
Seattle, USA

Various artists

19 December 2006

Nextworlds (Part 3)

Switchback Gallery
30.04.2003 - 22.05.2006
Monash University Churchill
Victoria, Australia


Shaun Wilson, Nextworlds 3 detail (2006), mixed media, dimensions variable.


Shaun Wilson, Nextworlds 3 detail (2006), mixed media, dimensions variable.


Shaun Wilson, Nextworlds 3 detail (2006), mixed media, dimensions variable.

Installation price: $25,000 AUD (includes monitor and video camera)

Nextworlds (Part 2)


Shaun Wilson, The Wanderers, detail (2002) mixed media, dimensions variable.

16.11.2002 - 14.12.2002
Canberra Contemporary Art Space Cube
Gorman House, Canberra
ACT, Australia

Nextworlds (Part 1)


Shaun Wilson, The Displaced (2002), digital photograph from video still, 1200mm x 870mm

08.10.2002 - 18.10.2002
The George Paton Gallery
University of Melbourne
Victoria, Australia

Compendium


Shaun Wilson, Mr Wigglie survey's his lawn, acrylic paint, plastic, paper, glue, metal, found object, copper.
Collection: Deakin University Art Collection.


Curated by Martina Copley
Platform II: 10.2003
Icon Museum of Art: 18.02.2004 - 27.03.2004
Melbourne, Australia

In this artwork, curator Martina Copley sent me an old medallion box with the intent of converting it into an art object. I chose to address its sculptural form as a type diorama where the flipped outwards case held a direct visual relationship with the main hinged container.

The image itself was based on my next-door neighbour's (
who was a leading Tasmanian politician at the time) garden gazing abilities when I lived in Sandy Bay, Hobart (Tasmania) . He would often spend time looking over his front yard with a sense of commandment, as if a Navy admiral which at times appeared quite comical. In response Mr Wigglie came to be in 1/76th scale.

The exhibition was staged in 2003 at Platform, Melbourne and then in 2004 at the Icon Museum of Art, Deakin University. Mr Wigglie now lives in the his new home at the Deakin University Art Collection.

Modern Topographies




















24hrArt: NT Centre for Contemporary Art
09.07.04 - 07.08.04
Darwin, Australia
website


There has been much dialogue in recent times concerning the issue of boarder protection. Whether it is terms such as ‘queue jumper’, 'illegal immigrant’ or ‘boat people’, the plight of the refugee is by its very nature a sensitive and complex topic. Moreover, the philosophical issues that arrise from the detainment of refugees in Australia raise important questions about nationalism, place, identity and memory.

On the one hand, the refugee is fleeing their native environment – their native place – due to a number of reasons that may include war, religious or political persecution. In doing so, a new place is sought to inhabit. However, the unsolicited entry into Australia is often met with hostiliy and suspicion resulting in the forceful detainment of these individuals into a foreign and unfamiliar place.

On the other hand, memories of these native places are often mapped onto the localities that are experienced within the places of detainment. For example, if someone inhabited a village for most of their life, the memories of such a place would become part of their identity. Moveover, the design of architecture, family traditions and cultural practice, in particular, would be unique to their specific surroundings. However, when the same person leaves their native environment for the aforementioned reasons the manner in which that person interacts with their new surroundings is characterised by the comparisons made between what they perceive in the present with the memories of experiences located in the past. If the mapping of such perspectives involves the places of both the past and the present, what is to become of a person identity? Can the places of internment define a new identity or is it a corruption of an old one? Perhaps these memories of the past are traumatic and triggered by objects in the places of internment – razor wire might prompt a memory of war just as uniformed staff might prompt memories of military or terrorist action.

One might argue that memory and place have such impact on the identity of the refugee that internment places open up another kind of space – a modern topography. These are the philosophical spaces developed by those who experience and move through internment places that are characterised by the memories of another.

Responding to this idea I have developed a series of miniature landscapes that depict internment places from both interior and exterior views – those who look in and those who look out. By videographing these artworks a secondary artwork emerges that reflect other places, namely the extracts from topographical views documented through standard 8mm home movies. By doing so, the viewer witnesses a morphing of scenes that combine the idyllic with the traumatic. Here, we see the modern topography come to life through a kaleidoscope of memory and narrative that seeks to question and discover.

Video price: $5,000

Dorkbot: People Doing Strange Things with Elecricity Too


Shaun Wilson, Statica (2004), video still, DV, from the cover of 'Statica', Comfortstand Records (USA).

Centre on Contemporary Art Seattle, USA
CD launch: People Doing Strange Things with Electricity II
project website
Comfortstand Records profile of Shaun Wilson

The philosopher P.F. Strawson who described, in The Individuals, a universe called 'no space world', influences this artwork. He created the hypothetical world based on the idea it had no form except sound, whereby living creatures were audio signatures, coexisting through a series of bips, noises and distortions. I created the artwork using a series of manipulated recordings of static electricity from t-shirts in my clothes dryer and blended it with other noises to produce a universe not unlike Strawson's description. The main part of my sound universe comes from slowed down static noises that created a sense of spatiality, defining up and down, here and there, too and fro. The title of the artwork, Statica, is derived from the words 'static' and 'galactica' (as in galaxy).

The artwork was represented in the CD launch at COCA Seattle and has been released by Comfortstand Records (US) in Volume Two of People Doing Strange Things with Electricity.

Memory, Place and Identity

Curated by Alexandra Brouch
12.03.2005 - 16.04.2005
HERA Gallery
Rhode Island, USA
website

Luke Buffenmyer
Susan E. Evans
Adam Eckstrom
Penelope Manzella
Olivia McCullogh
Shaun Wilson

The works by the seven artists in this exhibition explore the complex relationships between memory, identity and place. Place holds memory and defines who we are. Memory is malleable, part invention, part interpretation. We each have memories that relate to or are invoked by a certain place. These stories are our own and help make us who we are. We also share memories of a common social history that connects us to community. The connection we feel to place, changes to that place, or its loss, affect us in profound ways.

Both photography and painting have been used to depict idealized, utopian, or exotic places -- fictionalized images that reflect or influence the collective imagination of the times. The artists in this exhibition examine these cultural notions of place by deconstructing and re-contextualizing traditional photographic and painterly modes of portraying the landscape, family, and community.
This program is sponsored in part by The Rhode Island State Council On The Arts, The Friends of Hera, and The Hera Educational Foundation. (from the exhibition website).

Video $5,000 AUD

Boogy, Jive and Bop

Curated by Malcom Bywaters


Academy Gallery, Launceston: 18.09.2003 - 03.10.2003
Deveonport Regional Gallery, Devonport: 28.11.2003 - 04.11.2003
Plimsol Gallery, Hobart: 05.03.2004 - 28.03.2004

A CAST Touring project

Robert Bridgewater, Jane Burton, Kate Cotchings, Penelope Davis, Michael Doolan, Stephen Haley, Troy Innocent, Stone Lee, Danielle Thompson, Shaun Wilson

Reviews:

SEDUCTIVE TALENTS

Diane Klaosen
Realtime, No. 61, June/July 2004, p.41

The other exhibition recently curated by Malcom Bywaters at the School of Art’s Plimsoll Gallery features some very exciting work by artists with Tasmanian connections as well as interstate practitioners. I’m not sure why it was entitled Boogy, Jive & Bop, as the exhibition did not seem to address any of these, though the work was undeniably ‘hip.’ Moreover, the catalogue, via artists’ interviews, made extensive reference to September 11, an event not mirrored in the works. Perhaps the catalogue was intended as an ‘add-on’, or even a kind of discrete exhibit in itself, reminding us that art-making persists even in the face of the worst disasters.

Among some very stimulating pieces, Jane Burton’s Type C photographs, The Other Side, depict glowing, deserted telephone boxes at night with an eerie surreality. Stone Lee was born in Taiwan and now lives in Launceston. His 3 strange assemblages are fascinating in their simultaneous identifiability and recontextualisation of materials. All entitled Everydayness, they utilise acrylic media, newspaper and found objects. Danielle Thompson created some highly seductive and beautiful lightjet photographic prints full of abstract movement and lush colour. Shaun Wilson is an engaging artist and his hypnotic video My Sweet Mnemonic Wonderland also uses vibrant colour and slow, contemplative movement. This talented artist’s work provides a good foil, both in medium and style, to the other pieces in Boogy, Jive and Bop.

Given that these are some of Tasmania’s newest artists, it was heartening to see the intelligence, talent and originality on display in all 3 shows. On a related note, the work of Megan Keating, melding pop culture and an obsession with military symbolism, features in Body Bag and constitutes the first show at Hobart’s newest commercial exhibition space, Criterion Gallery in the CBD. With its sound artistic ideals this will be a venue to watch.

Body Bag: Somewhere Over the Rainbow, curator Malcolm Bywaters, Carnegie Gallery, March 18-April 18; Boogy, Jive & Bop, curator Malcolm Bywaters, Plimsoll Gallery, March 5-28; Group Material, curator Michael Edwards, Tasmanian Museum and Art Gallery, March 18-May 2



BOOPGY, JIVE AND BOP

Briony Lee Downes
Artlink, Vol 24, No.2, 2004


In response to the questionnaire sent out by curator Malcom Bywaters to the artists of Boogie, Jive and Bop, Stephen Haley replied, 'Artists don't answer questions, they pose them.' Rightly so. Art should get the viewer thinking in a way that pesters the sluggish brain into heated inquiry. The works included in Boogie, Jive and Bop were a stimulating mix, however, the curatorial concepts (and the title) pestered me with more nagging questions than the artwork did.  Described as 'a survey exhibition' featuring the work of twelve contemporary artists (the Hobart show featured only eleven), Boogie, Jive and Bop was set out to be a selective response to the creative energy generated by events taking place after September 11th. The war on Iraq, the SARS outbreak and the Australian government's refugee policy were all topics of questions answered by the artists and printed in the catalogue text. For me, the wandering focus of the questions was confusing. I found it difficult to find a connection between Bywaters' heavy-handed political inquiries and his probing of 'coffee shop rituals' and 'favourite restaurants.'

Standing strong on the strength of the work alone, Boogie, Jive and Bop was one of the best collections of contemporary art seen in Tasmania this year. Given the title, I was expecting a frothy selection of laboriously academic pop art. On walking in to the exhibition, this thought was immediately (and thankfully) dashed. The dull, strangulated hum emanating from Shaun Wilson's My Sweet Mnemonic Wonderland, made the air of the gallery thick with a deep sense of foreboding. Sudden inflections of a shrill telephone ring punctuated the air at random intervals and kept me on edge. Wilson's video soundtrack was the perfect backdrop for the sinister undertones of several other works on show.Michael Doolan's unmistakable Friend of the Family stood out in its bright canary yellow and unashamed nostalgia for the playthings of childhood. A master at combining warm fuzzy feelings with a bitter tinge of malevolence, Doolan's Friend of the Family made for a zesty centrepiece. Looming in front of a tight gaggle of roly-poly dolls of varying sizes was a waist high, blindfolded toy bunny. Wielding a thumbtack-like weapon in its right paw, Doolan's bloated Miffy exuded a threatening malice lurking beneath its podgy, seamed exterior. Whether potential victims, a reluctant army or stalkers themselves, (how far can a bunny go with a blindfold on?) the dolls stood motionless, ready to roll into action at the drop of a thumbtack. 

Jane Burton's The Other Side retained the still, cinematic suspense of earlier works while using the metallic structures of phone booths instead of anxious female bodies. The empty booths appeared as gleaming beacons within a seemingly desolate landscape of dimly lit hotels and sidewalks. Burton captured that gut-turning feeling of waiting for something to happen. Will the phone ring? Who will emerge from the darkness to answer it and what will they say? Themes exploring the natural and the artificial were evident in most of the works in Boogie, Jive and Bop. Robert Bridgewater's sublime wooden vessels echoed the sacred flora of a distant civilisation. Hundreds of paper cuts reminiscent of the pressed flowers one might find in between the pages of an antique book made up Kate Cotching's A Place for a Village. Cotching's work hovered above the floor, spread out over wire netting like topographical layering; a delicate contrast to Stone Lee's quirky plastic trucks and carts sprouting newspaper covered kitchen Tupperware. At the other end of the gallery, recent work by Danielle Thompson and Troy Innocent referenced the superficial surface of film and popular culture through the medium of the lightjet print. In a striking twist of voyeurism, Penelope Davis placed the camera under interrogation in her x-ray like images of Polaroid cameras, while the painterly portrait of Philip, by the masterful John Derrick, cast a distracted eye into the unknowable space suspended between the viewer and the intimacy of the studio. 

Survey shows are notoriously difficult to curate and given their broad range, a simple theme often works best. Publicised as an upbeat collection of work, in reality, Boogie, Jive and Bop was a distinctly unnerving experience. Without the curatorial meanderings, Bywaters' apt selection of work was enough to make me want to see more art of this calibre grace Tasmania's southern shores. 


NEW06


Shaun Wilson, video still from 1975 (2006), DV as single channel DVD, sound, colour, 120 mins.

Curated by Juliana Enberg
Australian Centre of Contemporary Art, 14.03.2006 - 14.05.2006
Melbourne, Australia
Shaun Wilson's New06 podcast interview

Helen Johnson
Makeshift
Laresa Kosloff
Natasha Johns-Messenger
Darren Sylvester
Giles Ryder
Shaun Wilson

ACCA's annual showcase of new commissions by younger Australian artists, this year's NEW06 will be a sensory experience, one of palaces, pop, mazes and mirrors, childhood memories and merchandise. It will feature installations, sculptures, sound works, photography, video and painting, showcasing the diversity and verve of Australia's visual arts talent (ACCA website).