At the National Art School end of year exhibition I had two pieces in the main show, and seven in the sculpture studio exhibition.
Exhibited Works:
- This?
- That.
- There.
- There?
- kØi
- C45C4D3
- BØN541
- 4:7:3:6
- Left Hand
Pinned and chronological feed of posts. Check The State of The Art for the big picture.
An attempt to create a smaller version of “There”, and tackle the problems of relative scale in the various components. When changing the scale of a sculpture, one has to take into account some fundamental issues to do with viewing angle, viewing distance, perceived weights etc.
A tumbling progression from order to chaos, in brilliant gold recycled computer motherboards.
A fusion of impressionist colour placement and Japanese Koi imagery.
This is an essay for the Modernist Sculpture elective in Art History & Theory at the National Art School. It received a High Distinction result. There’s a few issues with it that were largely symptoms of the constricted word length – such as the description of European isolation not placing enough emphasis on it being artistic isolation, while Europe was in fact very connected to the rest of the world through trade and imperial power. I also had to cut a discussion of Modernist architecture from Frank Lloyd Wright onwards being a result of FLW’s encounter with Japanese architecture at the Chicago World’s Fair. So, with those flaws in mind…
Just want to note down some impressions of the SCA graduate show, while it’s still fresh in my mind. Of course, it should be noted that I’m a sculptor who works in fairly “solid” materials, and have been trained is a relatively formalist manner, or at least have been trained to work from the premise that a piece must succeed on composition alone, before anything else is taken into account.
Building on the process of Left Hand, this work scales up, while stripping away. Four years, seven months, three weeks and six days worth of prescription medication vials capture time in the form of mass repetition.
Created for the We Love Art fundraiser exhibition for St Vincent’s Hospital’s Xavier Art Space. All works were sold unattributed for a flat rate of $250, raising over $10,000 for the refurbishment of the art display facilities.
The “We Love Art” fundraiser was held to raise funds for the St Vincent’s Campus Art Committee at St Vincent’s Hospital.
The exhibition was made up of small scale works, all sold unattributed, for a standard price of $250, eventually raising over $10,000 towards the refurbishment of the display space.
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