Blog – 2011
A complete, resolved and conceptually clear show in Fitzroy
artists, spaces
7 December 2011
Mum's the Word is the latest exhibition by Melbourne-based artist Catherine Bell at Sutton Project Space in Fitzroy.
As soon as I walked into Sutton Project Space, I felt that I was back in New York City.
You could feel the streets of NYC, the air, the energy, and the hustle and bustle.

At first, the large pinned black and white photographs by Catherine Bell look to be mums with their children crossing the busy streets. On closer inspection you realise that these women do not belong to these babies and children. They are the hired help; they are the African American nannies that often go unmentioned and unrecognised.
"Bell builds on her longstanding interest in motherhood, surrogacy and deviant maternity, and also presents new ideas relating to the per formative nature of public space."
It's the first time in a long time that I've walked into a show at Sutton Project Space and felt the exhibition was complete, resolved and conceptually clear. The photographs are not technically outstanding; they don't need to be as Bell has produced a very tight and balanced show.
Sutton Project Space
230 Young Street, Fitzroy (view location on Google Maps)
Friday and Saturdays only, 1pm to 5pm
Until 17 December
Wow factor art in Naarm / Melbourne
artists, spaces
10 November 2011
The problem, if it is a problem, with travelling overseas – especially to see a Biennale – is that you are spoilt with an abundance of art.
I have come back to Melbourne in search of the wow factor and so far this is my list:
Murray White Room
Sargood Lane (off Exhibition Street, between Flinders Lane and Flinders Street), Melbourne
Transfer Stations by Mira Gojak

Exhibition runs until 19 November
Tuesday to Friday, 11am to 6pm, and Saturday, 12pm to 4pm
- Great to walk into Murray White Room and see 2 fabulous installations.
- The 2 works occupy the space perfectly and I love the use of various materials, lines, dimensions and colours.
- The works are technical, beautiful and should be in a fabulous foyer somewhere!
Lamington Drive
15–25 Keele Street, Collingwood (view location on Google Maps)
Page Girls by Kat Macleod

Exhibition runs until 19 November
Wednesday to Friday, 11am to 6pm, and Saturday, 12pm to 5pm
- The cardboard gallery continues with great works by artists/illustrators.
- The unique states by Kat Macleod are worth buying if there are any left.
- Otherwise you can buy a digital print or the book!
Mailbox 141
Entrance, 141–143 Flinders Lane, Melbourne (view location on Google Maps)
The Wonderful House by Owen Hammond

Exhibition runs until 2 December
Monday to Friday, 8am to 6pm, and Saturday, 10am to 5pm
- Incredible houses occupy 14 mailboxes at Mailbox 141.
- Owen Hammond's works are crafted to perfection and are fascinating.
- The exhibition asks us about where do we live, what type of house do we occupy, what goes into our house.
walk-to-art Venice: 6 days of opulent space and art, 2 outstanding artists
artists, spaces, Venice tours
25 October 2011
walk-to-art has just taken a group to La Biennale di Venezia – 54th International Art Exhibition – the first walk-to-art Venice.
Before I left for Italy I had a few people informing me that this year's Biennale was not very good, others saying that it was fabulous.
Well, I must say it was amazing. It was great on so many levels and not just for the art.
For 5 months every second year, Venice is transformed. For the art lover it is an abundance of opulent space and art in museums, disused buildings and of course the main arena's the Giardini and Arsenale.
During our time there every afternoon was dedicated to art and prosecco at 5pm... perfect. The mornings were for the early walks before the crowds and cruise ships started rolling in.
I've been back under a week and, after seeing a lot of art, I am still thinking about a few of the outstanding pieces:
- The most outstanding artist was Anish Kapoor, who is based in London.
- The most outstanding pavilion was the French one hosting Christian Boltanski.

Ascension by Anish Kapoor is located in the magnificent Basilica di San Giorgio Maggiore.
"Ascension is a site-specific installation that materializes the paradox of the column of smoke: a vortex of white smoke rises from a circular base."
The feeling was one of enlighten, spirituality and peace. At first it appears to be lifeless, but with further attention a "tornado" swirl of smoke slowly rises to the top and disappears into the suction of the exhaust fan.
The space, the religious aspect, the technical difficulties, the concept is all outstanding. This is an installation that captured the audience emotionally, conceptually and technically.
Unfortunately for me the Australian pavilion was disappointing. However, next-door was a perfectly sharpened exhibition by Christian Boltanski representing France.
Christian Boltanski, a leading figure in the international art scene, featured a spectacular installation entitled "Chance."

"Chance" marks an important stage in the evolution of Christian Boltanski's work. Unlike the rest of his art, which is dominated by disappearance and death, here he opens himself up to a broader examination of fate. The unfolding of life and the rhythm of births and deaths raise the question of the universal and the individual in a new form, of what distinguishes one being from another.
Far from being grim, the ambience here is welcoming. Even though the brutality of an industrial and mechanical system serves thwarts the building's neoclassical harmony, here filtered light illumines the faces of newborns.
The sheer mechanical sound, install and the interaction aspect was outstanding and engaging. It was great to watch children get involved and excited.
Art is to speak to all and especially at the Biennale, where there are so many people from all walks of life. Both Kapoor's and Boltanski's works were successful because they achieved and produced work that was of an outstanding level.
Getting ready for Venice
artists, spaces, Venice tours
9 September 2011
I have many friends on the way or on their return from La Biennale di Venezia – 54th International Art Exhibition, the oldest biennale in the world.
As for me, I have spent the last few days writing the info pack that will be sent to all the participants heading to walk-to-art Venice, between 10 and 16 October.
There's so much to see, not only in the main areas, such as the Giardini and Arsenale, but also in the buildings scattered throughout Venice and the islands.
It is important to travel and view art on an international level. It's exciting to view new spaces, art in different spaces and art that is contributing to our environment politically, socially and culturally.
Established in 1895, the Venice Biennale (La Biennale di Venezia) remains as the most important and prestigious event on the international contemporary visual arts calendar.

The Australian Pavilion is positioned within the Biennale Gardens (Giardini di Castello). The pavilion was designed by renowned Australian architect Philip Cox and opened in 1988. It was gifted to the Commonwealth Government and is currently managed by the Australia Council for the Arts.
Australia's official representation for the Venice Biennale 2011 will feature artist Hany Armanious. This exhibition will be curated by Anne Ellegood, who is based in Los Angeles at the Hammer Museum.
walk-to-art's artist in residence 2011: Daniel Anderson">walk-to-art's artist in residence 2011: Daniel Anderson
artists
12 August 2011
Once a year walk-to-art invites an artist from New York City to participate in the walk-to-art residency program. The program consists of 2 months in Naarm / Melbourne, with accommodation, studio and exhibition space provided.
In 2011 walk-to-art's artist in residence is Daniel Anderson.

Anderson's art is influenced by surrealism, cubism and futurism. Motion, energy, push and pull are constant repeated elements in his work.
After creating a new body of work whilst residing in Naarm / Melbourne, he will be exhibiting at Work Space Gallery between 20 and 26 August (the opening will be on Saturday 20 August from 2pm to 4pm).
Murray Arts and South West Arts Inc. have also supported Anderson in a recent regional tour.
The idea of the residency program is to offer a life changing experience. It is not necessarily about the work or the exhibition; it is about growing, learning and being in a new environment.
The experience will offer new ideas and possibly allow the artists to move through any blockages that may be occurring. The breakthrough may not happen until after they return home. walk-to-art provides, facilitates and "joins the dots".
Work Space Gallery
13 Glasshouse Road
Collingwood VIC
Wednesday to Friday, 11am to 4pm (or by appointment)
20 to 26 August 2011
Melbourne's art scene has a new space: Daine Singer
spaces
5 July 2011
It's always exciting when a new space is opened in Naarm / Melbourne.
Daine Singer has recently opened in the basement of 325 Flinders Lane in Naarm / Melbourne (view location on Google Maps). It is always a risk to have a hidden space in Naarm / Melbourne, as it takes a while for the wider community to find these amazing places. It is not easy for people to find some art spaces and galleries in Naarm / Melbourne, but this is what makes this city so unique.
Daine Singer is known for acting as an independent curator, as well as working in commercial galleries. Her recent curatorial projects include:
- Experimenta Utopia Now: International Biennial of Media Art (curatorium, touring Australia 2010–2012)
- Dream Weavers (CAST Gallery, Hobart, Tasmania, 2010)
- Draw the Line: the Architecture of Lab (National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne, 2009)
- The Nauru Elegies (DJ Spooky and Annie K Kwon, Experimenta at Blindside, Melbourne, and Shed 4, Melbourne, 2010)
- Big Screen Shorts (Federation Square, Melbourne, 2010).
Daine has held positions including:
- Gallery Manager at Anna Schwartz Gallery (Melbourne)
- Associate Curator at Experimenta Media Arts
- Curator at the Museum of Chinese Australian History (Melbourne).
She has a BA (art history and history), Grad Dip in Arts Management and Master of Art Curatorship from the University of Melbourne, and is a member of the advisory committee at Blindside ARI.
The first exhibition to be shown at Daine Singer gallery features the works of Kate James, The Other Side to Despair, until 30 July 2011.

Cipher (2011), by Kate James
"Melbourne-based artist Kate James employs repetitive and painstaking techniques, often adapted from uncommon, sometimes obsolete, craft practices. In this new body of work the measuring of time is counted out in tiny horsehair stitches."

The Work of Worry is Never Done (2006), by Kate James
The work is delicate, erotic and incredibly beautiful. It is lovely to see such crafted work.
Welcome Daine Singer!
Daine Singer
Kate James, The Other Side to Despair
Basement, 325 Flinders Lane
Melbourne VIC 3000
Wednesday to Saturday, 12pm to 5pm (or by appointment)
Until 30 July 2011
365 days weeping, crying and shedding tears
artists, New York tours
15 June 2011
Travelling takes you to places and gives you experiences that you may never have at home. Maybe it is because you go searching for that something to excite you.
As I spend my last few days in New York, I write about the artist who has ignited yet again my love for beautiful photography: 35-year-old New York City based photographer and video artist Laurel Nakadate.
I was introduced to Nakadate at MoMA PS1 whilst researching for walk-to-art New York. Excitement filled the air as I very happily sat and watched video work and engaged in the stills that covered the walls.
Nakadate's work is soft, with 1970′s coloring and beautifully shot. The exhibition at MoMA PS1, Laurel Nakadate: Only the Lonely, brings together bodies of work over a 10-year period.
These works touch:
- voyeurism
- loneliness
- the manipulative power of the camera
- the urge to connect with others.
I feel very lucky as not only is Nakadate showing at MoMA PS1 (until 8 August 2011), but also at Leslie Tonkonow Artworks + Projects. 365 Days: A catalogue of Tears and Lost Party Guest is on until 25 June 2011.

This body of work is a visual diary of Nakadate photographing herself over 365 days weeping, crying and shedding tears.
"Nakadate's year of suffering, her calendar, her breviary, is a recognition of a shared language of regret that yokes us together, therefore, and a recognition that this regret and loss are somehow beautiful, no matter how they look."
It has been wonderful to discover Nakadate's work. The beauty, discipline and passion are evident.
I am very happy that Nakadate cried for 365 days of 2010.
MoMA PS1
22–25 Jackson Avenue at the intersection of 46th Avenue (view location on Google Maps)
Long Island City, NY
Thursday through Monday, 12pm to 6pm
Until 8 August 2011
Leslie Tonkonow Artworks + Projects
535 West 22nd Street (view location on Google Maps)
New York, NY
Tuesday through Saturday, 10am to 6pm
Until 25 June 2011
Into the Dark: memory, moments, relationships
artists, spaces
17 May 2011
It has been such a pleasure to follow Bonnie Lane's journey as an artist in the last 4 years. I discovered Lane's work in 2007 at Platform artist run initiative.
I suppose what I was attracted to was not only the concept of her video installation, but her drive, focus and ability to engage in conversation.
To me, Lane is an old soul and her work is about:
- memory
- moments
- childhood
- adulthood
- personal relationships.
Her work has grown from strength to strength. Lane is a clear example of an achiever, someone who has an idea or goal and makes it happens. Whether it's travelling to Berlin, completing her masters or fine-tuning her video installation work.
Lane has also been very successful in receiving grants, and this current body of work, Into the Dark, is supported by the City of Melbourne through the Arts Grants Program. Into the Dark is showing at BUS Projects Gallery, basement level, Donkey Wheel House, 673 Bourke Street, Melbourne (view location on Google Maps).
BUS Projects Gallery is located in an incredible basement, and I have seen shows there that have completely used the space to their advantage and others that have not been so successful.
Into the Dark works so well at BUS Projects Gallery. Lane has made the work for the space, and the darkness, coldness and narrow pathways add to the viewer's experience.

Lane's work clearly is about the light, repetition and reframed memories. The most haunting piece would have to be the "girl skipping" – tucked away in a small alcove, the continuous loop of a girl facing away from the viewer and continual skipping allows us to reflect and remember our own childhood memories, lost or forgotten.
BUS Projects Gallery
Donkey Wheel House
673 Bourke Street
Melbourne VIC 3000
Wednesday to Saturday, 12pm to 6pm
Until 28 May 2011
Don't miss: James Cochran's London Street Portraits
artists, Melbourne tours
22 March 2011
You have this week only to see James Cochran's London Street Portraits at Lindberg Galleries in Naarm / Melbourne. I have popped in numerous times with my walking tour groups to see this excellent show.
Cochran has excellent technical skill and his paintings are automatically striking. Cochran fuses techniques together using aerosol pointillism, using multiple dots of spray-paint to render the entire image. In his late teens and early twenties Cochran began his career as an artist out on the street. Cochran began exhibiting oil paintings in the late 1990s while continuing his graffiti and mural work. He is best known for his gritty street urban subjects, but in this show there are only portraits of the homeless people in London.

The work is extremely personal and intimate – there is an emotional and humane connection. You can feel that Cochran is close to the subject and has spent time being involved in their lives. This understanding has come from a period of homelessness himself when he was a teenager and forced out onto the streets.
In Hosier Lane (view location on Google Maps) there is a portrait in the laneway that Cochran has painted; it is an extension of the show at Lindberg.
Lindberg Galleries (view location on Google Maps)
2/289 Flinders Lane
Melbourne VIC 3000
Tuesday to Friday, 11am tp 5pm
Saturday, 12pm to 5pm
Until 26 March 2011
Street artists: from public open areas to indoor commercial galleries
artists, spaces
1 March 2011
Andy Mac (Until Never and Citylights Project, in Naarm / Melbourne) has educated and worked with communities and building owners in Naarm / Melbourne for several years.
He is the reason why Hosier Lane (view location on Google Maps) is the most photographed lane in Naarm / Melbourne.
In 2004 Andy Mac assisted the National Gallery of Australia, in Canberra, in the acquisition of a large selection of stencil work for its works of paper collection.
His gallery, Until Never, is an independent gallery in Naarm / Melbourne, presenting contemporary art by Australian and international artists. Founded in 2005, it was the first commercial gallery supporting street artists into the gallery system. The works sold at Until Never remain very reasonably-priced and the exhibitions, strong.
"Hosier may feel impossibly offbeat, but its twists and turns are the essence of the city. This is embodied by Until Never, a small gallery that punches above its weight with some of the most influential emerging street founded art in the world." Financial Times (March 2011).
Larger commercial galleries, such as Metro Gallery on High Street, Armadale, have followed in Andy Mac's vision but with a highly commercial edge. They have invested a substantial amount in support of this style of art. In return, the works are highly priced and are being purchased by a larger middle market.
In 2010 Metro Gallery hosted Blek Le Rat and in 2011 it is Swoon.

"Swoon has been working on the streets of New York City for over 10 years, creating large scale paste-ups of the every day inhabitants of the Big Apple. She uses traditional print making techniques to reproduce these beautiful images at life size before hitting the streets to create her own unique, narrative driven cityscape. Swoon also ensures that each piece she creates is inherently unique by physically cutting details into her works, this process of subtraction allows the pieces to take on a life of their own on the street because the textures and tones of the surface they are pasted on then become integral to the construction of the work themselves. While the method of her work is indebted to both traditional craftsmanship and classic painterly technique, her execution is entirely modern. It is this method of incorporating both age old techniques and contemporary graffiti practice that makes her work so compelling, not to mention highly sought after. She has contributed work to MOMA, Art Basel Miami, and the Brooklyn museum."

Swoon is on until 5 March 2011. Swoon has totally reconstructed the space and the installations look great. All her hours and hard work are definitely noted.
Metro Gallery
1214 High Street Armadale VIC (view location on Google Maps)
Monday to Friday, 10am to 5.30pm; Saturday and Sunday, 11am to 5pm
A new year in the art world: Debut
artists, spaces
1 February 2011
The art industry has reopened for 2011 with Debut VII at Blindside.
For the last 7 years, Blindside Artist Run Initiative has opened the new year with an exhibition titled Debut.
"Debut is in its seventh incarnation. Every year since 2005, a curator nominated by the Blindside committee visits the graduate exhibitions of Naarm / Melbourne's major art schools and invites artists to exhibit early the following year. This year's curators, Shae Nagorka and Julian White, have selected group that, if we are being overly simplistic, could be described as formalists. However, the methodical and prescribed practices displayed reveal a deep emotional understanding of the often-overlooked subtleties of our everyday experiences that, taken en masse, make up our lives."
In the 2010 exhibition I particularly enjoyed Ted Mckinlay's work and in 2011 standouts would have to be Alice Wormald and Jessica Honey.

Alice's beautiful oil painting of an intimidation pot plant is technically very sound and textural. The different tones of green emphasise the real being the hanging pot basket and the unreal being the pot plant itself.

Jessica's smaller images of "yacht-owning" children are also successful in representing a purely aesthetic level. The children's gaze and light colour scheme of white, baby blue and pink all successfully work in an exercise of formalism.
There are 8 artists in total:
- Mari Adams
- Sam Barbour
- Fiona Boyd
- Zoe Croggon
- Jessica Honey
- Adele Macer
- Esther Stewart
- Alice Wormald
Blindside Artist Run Initiative (view location on Google Maps)
Gallery One and Two
Level 7, Room 14, Nicholas Building
37 Swanston Street Melbourne 3000
Wednesday to Saturday, 12pm to 6pm
Until 5 February 2011
Platform Artists Group Inc. turns 20 years!
spaces
7 January 2011
For all the many people who conduct tours in Naarm / Melbourne, Platform is a regular on the itinerary.
Platform is the hidden underground path of window boxes that over the past 20 years has displayed:
- group shows
- solo exhibitions
- installation
- even performance shows.
Melbourne would not be the same without these hidden public art spaces that are occupied by talented artists.
Platform has a continuos flow of traffic every day from Flinders Street Station and is a perfect art space for an emerging artist to showcase their body of work to a larger audience.
Platform Artists Group Inc. was established by artists Andrew Seward and Richard Holt in 1990 as a non-profit public art organisation.
Twenty years on and, as Melbourne's longest running artists-run initiative and public art project in the CBD, Platform continues to provide an engaging contemporary art program to public audiences at its 2 main locations:
- Campbell Arcade, the pedestrian underpass linking Flinders Street Station to Degraves Street (view location on Google Maps)
- the nearby Majorca Building in Centre Way Arcade off Flinders Lane (view location on Google Maps)
Funding partners – Platform is supported by the City of Melbourne, Arts Victoria and the Australian Government through the Australia Council, its arts funding and advisory body.

The current birthday show runs from 10 December 2010 to 29 January 2011.
Artists include: AND, Kate Cotching, Adam Cruickshank, DAMP, Michael Graeve, Brad Haylock, Richard Holt, Ash Keating, Simone LeAmon, Bridie Lunney and Meredith Turnbull, Simon Pericich, Tape Projects and Andrew Seward.
The event will also launch the publication "What Art, Which Public: Platform Artists Group 1990–2010", which captures just some of the history, events and exhibitions from this period. Edited by Angela Brophy, featuring an introductory essay by Zara Stanhope, interview with former directors and short story by Richard Holt.
Details on how to purchase the book will be coming soon on Platform's website.
Happy birthday, Platform!



