Artist Index

Showing posts with label FERAL 4. Show all posts
Showing posts with label FERAL 4. Show all posts

2.2.15

LISA SHARP WRITES ON FERAL4




The FERAL project’s ethos has been likened to a communal studio and its relentless progress as a series of overlapping, altered and interactive spatial occupations of the communal studio and project space was certainly evident at the opening of Feral 4 last Friday night.[i] There was a distinct performative aspect, as a number of artists (and one particular work) acted within and upon the confined space, performing in close proximity to each other and to viewers. Apart from the vitality that these performances brought to the experience, an unexpected aspect of returning to a progressive exhibition such as this one was the experience as the returning viewer. The return to last week’s show as it transitioned into this week’s show is activated by the familiar and the unknown. As a returning viewer you are able to interact activated not only through memory and a certain nostalgia, but also with curiosity and this awareness mediates your perception of the show. You have arrived with baggage.

Some works linger as relics and mementoes of FERAL 3 and consolidate the notion of transgressive domesticity that characterised the earlier FERAL. Other works have been removed, their sites replaced by new works that may or may not be haunted by what has gone before, depending on the baggage of the viewer. As with any group show, sometimes the proximity between the works allows other dialogues to emerge, expected or not.

Entering within the narrow rectangular space of Articulate Project Space, one is confronted once again with the now familiar forms of Veronica Habib’s suspended underwear work. As promised, the hair is even thicker and curlier than before, assuming a defiant territorial occupation of each little patch of lingerie, and therefore of its section of the show. It is as if the work has matured and staked its own little land claim over the past week. A little beyond, writhing slowly on the floor is the shiny green ducting recognisable as of Sue Callanan’s In the space of a breath, perhaps a little more battered. Her neighbours this week are not static however as there is a cluster of performance activity centred on this part of the ground floor as incoming artists move in on the space. Also under the staircase, Jeff Wood tinkers and adjusts his work Painting Machine, an assemblage of found objects, including skateboard parts and a bicycle wheel as ode to Duchamp. These are all coaxed into function and pressed into service as surrogate-artist objects, mechanically creating works of paint on canvas. Against the wall near Jeff, Melissa Maree quietly and methodically sorts and sticks brown lionoleum cut-outs onto the floor and wall, based on “basic forms of artworks, objects and feelings” she has encountered during FERAL.[ii] At some point, Aude Fondard’s performance work, Dolly’s mad enters the fray as a self possessed young woman lies down in the possession of / possessed by a plastic bride doll. All this activity occurs in a close and narrow space, around and between groups of spectators.

Possibly a poster piece this week for the curatorial concept of feral / fair isle as transgressive / domesticated is Kate Mackay’s soft edged and hand crafted piece of geometric abstraction. Crochet Cubes is a three-dimensional work and it hangs across the space, forming a room divider or screen. In contrast to the usually cool delineations of gridded colour associated with geometric abstraction in which gesture is minimised however, every stitch references the gesture of making, and yarn edges and changes protrude unevenly, clearly delineating the crafting process. The work’s cubed seriality is appropriately within sight of Richard Dunn’s series of small, perfectly square paintings, in which precise bands of precisely mixed colour are placed, hard edged yet emergent in subtle relief against other bands. A part of the material dialogue between Richard and Kate’s proximate works is surely colour as pigment as against colour as dyed yarn. Upstairs, Yoshi Takahashi’s installation of timber cubes presents another variant of geometric abstraction as units of colour are placed in gridded symmetry in a meticulous visual analysis of colour as part of a larger whole, creating a field-like effect.

Appearing as a motion stopped by a brick, Sarah Fitzgerald’s sculptural piece Arch curves gracefully away from the back wall of the space’s ground floor, providing a contrast, as Sarah describes, with “the post and beam structure of the gallery space”.[iii] Continuing this mode of invasive interactions into the gallery space, but taking it to invasion is Dominic Byrne’s aggressive little work, Trigger Warning 2015. Perched in apparent domestic serenity on the far back wall this air dispenser squirts pepper spray into the room once every 15 minutes, in an eye-watering, sneeze-inducing inversion of the domestic room fragrance product.

A synchronous melding of works from FERAL 3 and 4 occurs upstairs, where the upper portion of Helen L Sturgess’ work, consisting of bunched pale pink tulle on exposed rafters is adjacent to a softly flickering watercolour animation of couples dancing, their bodies compressed within the space of the projected band across the uneven white brickwork: Thin Ice by Elizabeth Rankin. This narrative of containment is continued with Kathryn Ryan’s boxes, arrayed in a museological display of  small and delicate items that appear to have been collected from the site. Particularly poignant and tenderly observed is the box of “small white spaces” visible below.

The final iteration of this 6-week long communal project, FERAL 5 opens on Friday 6 February 2015. Some visitors will then have 5 pieces of baggage to carry around with them.






[i] Articulate blog post, 02.02.2015 http://articulate497.blogspot.com.au (accessed 05.02.2015)
[ii] Melissa Maree, Facebook post, 01.02.2015 https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=1570312622&fref=ts (accessed 05.02.2015)
[iii] Sarah Fitzgerald, Artist Statement, Feral 4 Roomsheet https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B78OP44gB4wbS1I0bVo4NS1rZGs/view accessed 05.02.2015)

1.2.15

FERAL 4 OPEN TODAY TILL 5PM

and FERAL 5 begins installing tomorrow for final FERAL opening on Friday 6 February.

see Rochford Street Review commentary



Helen L Sturgess, Phaptawan Suwannakudt 
Veronica Habib
FERAL 4

Ambrose Reisch (photo by Glenn Locklee)

Sue Callanan, Jeff Wood
Jeff Wood

Melissa Maree
Jeff Wood, Richard Dunn, Melissa Maree  

Richard Dunn, Kate Mackay

Judith Torzillo, Jannah Quill, Melissa Jane Palmer,
Sarah Fitzgerald, Kate Mackay
Melissa Jane Palmer, Sarah Fitzgerald, Katya Petetskaya
Dominic Byrne, Helen M Sturgess, Melissa Jane Palmer
Andrew Christie, Yoshi Takahashi
Foreground-back: Kathryn Ryan, Helen L Sturgess, Elizabeth Rankin, 

Kathryn Ryan
see photos by Glenn Locklee on facebook

FERAL 4 ROOMSHEET

26.1.15

FERAL4 OPENS FRIDAY 30 JANUARY 6-8pm

FERAL4 ROOMSHEET

Artists in FERAL4 are Dominic Byrne, Sue Callanan, Andrew Christie, Richard Dunn, Sarah Fitzgerald, Aude Fondard, Veronica HabibRichard Kean, Kate Mackay, Melissa Maree,  Christine Myerscough, Melissa Jane Palmer, Katya Petetskaya, Jannah Quill, Elizabeth Rankin, Ambrose  Reisch, Kathryn Ryan, Helen L Sturgess, Helen M Sturgess, Yoshi Takahashi, Phaptawan Suwannakudt, Judith Torzillo and Jeff Wood.

FERAL is a progressive, overlapping exhibition program of over 60 artists that will be open Friday - Sunday 11-5pm between 9 January - 8 February 2015. Its five opening events are Fridays 9, 16, 23 + 30 January and 6 February at 6-8pm, each of which will show the work of a different combination of about twenty artists. 
FERAL is designed for artists to experiment with installation or location of artwork in an architectural space that is already altered by the earlier installation of other artists' work, and which will be altered again when another group replaces that earlier installation. The FERAL project is part of the broader Articulate interest in the relationships artworks form with their locations. It does this by focusing in particular on the contribution that the changing installations of artwork make to the constitution of a site.


Phaptawan Suwannakudt  There, There 2014  
When Phaptawan’s mother lost her memory,

she started talking in the Lanna dialect

of her childhood. Phaptawan sculpted the head

of her mother from the memory of the time
when her mother was a nun. The scattered
fabric masks are placed together and filled
with produce from local market.
(Funded by Asialink Art Residency Program
2014 at Ne’-Na Contemporary Art Space,
Chiengmai funded by Arts NSW)
Dominic Byrne
http://www.dominicbyrne.net/
Elizabeth Rankin
Yoshi Takahashi
yoshitakahashi.com
Jeff Wood
Kate Mackay 2014
http://kate-mackay.blogspot.com.au/
Melissa Jane Palmer
Sarah Fitzgerald Arch 2015
Richard Dunn Untitled #1-6 2014 (detail)
Kathryn Ryan |Three collections for Articulate (2015)
http://piecesofpractice.blogspot.com.au/ 
Aude Fondard