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Showing posts with label Juliet Fowler Smith. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Juliet Fowler Smith. Show all posts

3.4.22

ArticulateUpstairs | Juliet Fowler Smith - Habitat 497

Opening Event Saturday Apr 9th, 2-5pm
Exhibition from Apr 8th until 24th
Open 11am - 5pm | Fri-Sun


Studio study, Habitat 497. Drawing on shutters, tracing paper. 2022

Suzanne Bartos and Juliet Fowler Smith have occupied studios at Articulate since its beginning. In Habitat 497 they incorporate drawing, found objects and other spatial interventions developed in the studio in relationship to the site and individual but overlapping interests. While two distinct works, they share a common interest in expressing the feeling that having a sense of place, safety brings.


There are particular locations at Articulate that I have been drawn to in past works. Heights, corners, airflow and light, on top of a building on top of a hill. Horizons and sky views.

Habitat 497 is a response to this space above Parramatta Road developed on site (in quiet moments) and those in Studio 4 nearby. Trying to imagine past hill views and horizons while watching the cars go by.
Interplaying ideas around inhabiting and Habitats and survival.

Studying ecology , Space- Time saturation is what the Northern Bobwhite* wants and I get that. A place to be where there is unconstrained space to thrive over a decent period of time.
VOTE 1 HABITAT!

* Fred S Guthery ,A Philosophy of Habitat Management for Northern Bobwhites. The jnl of Wildlife Management Vol.61,No.2,(Apr 1997)


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COVID-Safe Measures:

Following the NSW Government’s relaxing of COVID-safe rules, there will be no check-in requirements. Wearing face masks is a personal choice, but we highly encourage you to when social distancing might be difficult. Please do not visit if you’re unwell or, if you have been instructed by health authorities to isolate or are a close contact of an identified COVID case.

The health and wellbeing of our visitors, artists and volunteers is our priority. We look forward to seeing you at Articulate project space.

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9.1.22

mov.doc opens Saturday 15 January 2-5pm

Open Fri-Sun 11am-5pm 14 -30 January 2022

Opening event Saturday 15 July 2-5pm

Artists talks - TBA

CATALOGUE

Articulate's third Decade show emphasises artworks that are time-based in incorporating literal movement into their work via moving image or moving objects. (Time-based works that are better described as 'performance' are the subject of a later Decade show.)

Some of the artists who have shown time-based work at Articulate during the last decade will show documentation of that work upstairs and in the backroom. These artists are  Ciaran Begley, Linden Braye, Bet(tin)a Bruder, Sue Callanan, Juliet Fowler Smith, Laine Hogarty, Noelene Lucas, Anne Mosey, Jacek Przybyszewski, Margaret Roberts, Margaret Seymour, Helen M Sturgess, Gary Warner, Sarah Woodward and Belinda Yee. Find their time-based works, and the many other time-based works shown at Articulate during the last 10 years, scattered among the posts seen here. The exhibition will also show a range of ways in which artists decide to document their work. 


The exhibition will be supported by a catalogue of texts by the artists, as well as a 'new' time-based work by Terry Hayes on the ground floor project space.


Ciaran Begley Tabletop #2 2021
Jacek Przybyszewski Eye Level 2021

Adrian Hall, Espérance, 2022 (not now in mov.doc)


Bet(tin)a Bruder mov.doc - moving forward in rearview (2022)

2014 Diagrammatic Entanglements

2015 No words anymore

2017 Bet(tin)a Bruder featuring forever

2018 Contemplative event scores inspired by Fluxus

2018 Ferret out loopholes

2019 get rid of it all

2020 Draughts/droughts

2020 Breakfast with Beta

2021 Dance with Beta

2022 mov.doc – moving forward in rearview





Juliet Fowler Smith


Juliet Fowler Smith

Noelene Lucas

Linden Braye

Margaret Roberts

Margaret Seymour

Sarah Woodward

Sue Callanan




3.1.21

Lisa Pang: It all begins with soap

AT10: Articulate turns Ten – group exhibition

Articulate project space, 19 December 2020 – 3 January 2021



It all begins with soap 


Here we are, we open the door, go in and begin the rituals. We register ourselves, checking in and performing hand sanitisation. Maybe we also wear a facemask and we are definitely conscious of maintaining a 1.5 m distance from others. It is pandemic season and announcing one’s identity, hygiene and personal space are on show in the gallery for the annual exhibition AT10: Articulate Turns Ten at Articulate project space, celebrating ten years of spatial and experimental art practice in its location at Parramatta Rd. Leichhardt. 


Let us wash. A strong smell of soap with its associations of washing and cleanliness assail you once inside, and while an orderly installation of bars and bowls of creamy soap are familiar and ought to be comforting, the carved statements they spell out are not, sowing seeds of doubt about welcome in that place for anyone who has heard them (Alan Shacher, You Don’t Know Me From a Bar of Soap!). Reflecting on a wider narrative beyond that stark domestic contrast invoked by Shacher’s choice of materials: white soap and black shoe polish, is another loaded text work, a diptych quietly but emphatically hanging above, inviting dissection of word and meaning (Vilma Bader, Blackout). Works engaging with the socio-political and cultural and visual contexts of text and language continue within. A painting with a gridded composition functions through a colour-square system to translate an artist’s aphorism (Kate Mackay, Language Is A Virus – Laurie Anderson). Apparent seasonal greetings are conveyed by a string of crystal ball-baubles, but the adjacent noticeboard speaks of veering between horror and jollity (Sue Callanan, Ho! Ho! Ho! : Ha! Ha! Ha!).


Let us look. Perception is very often altered by one’s viewpoint, and there is a convention within painting, and the vernacular of abstraction to reference a window as a device. Through a window, framing and transparency are means of directing gaze and the visual dilemma of looking through / at. This is particularly pronounced in the many angles and coloured surfaces bluntly offered by Susan AndrewsOrange Lip, glimpsed at in the ambiguous angled spaces of Barbara Halnan’s Pages and suggested by the ephemeral layering, placement and tapes of Michelle Le Dain’s Square. Explorations of rectilinearity through paint and colour continue. Sarah Fitzgerald’s The Three Graces is a small and delicate tempera and wax painting alluding to a historical subject. Diane McCarthy’s Orphans in the Storm diptych is a muted colour study anchored by a grid. Coming off the canvas and onto a domestic textile, a complex layering and weaving of paint with found colour finds a softened, domestic expression (Nicole Ellis, Double-Check 4), while upstairs in a dramatically lit corner, monochromatic planes incline, suggesting ways of reconfiguring space (Beata Gayer, Tango). Referencing the regular while allowing for the insinuation of tactile materiality to emerge; paint flecks sit, somehow uncomfortably, on a felt surface (Tamsin Salehian, Untitled) while the seriality of a triptych frames an unlikely combination of human hair, folded plastic and hessian (Philippa Hagon, Continuum).


Let us look within, and close to home. Unexpected conflations of materials and methods offer alternate and temporal metaphors and meanings, lending poignancy to re-contextualised objects. My work conflates dumpling-folding techniques with priming a canvas for painting (Lisa Pang, Paintless Paintings (i) gyoza (ii) bao (iii) combination). Substitution and surrogacy of materials effectively creates a space of subversive domesticity; present in Jane Burton Taylor’s re-imagined wallpaper square (Wallpaper – After Agnes) and in the soft pillows scattered in piles, featuring transferred psychological-response imagery (Fiona Kemp, Now I Lay You Down). Elsewhere, tucked under the stairs, there is comfort in the manufactured domesticity of a comfortable chair, a lamp to read by and a bookshelf filled with proffered books (Ella Dreyfus, Help Yourself!). Drawing back and looking at the house and home at a remove, as a container of people, are Jan Handel’s analytical series of drawings on house-building materials (HOUSE (contain / er).


Residues, collaged and combined assemblages evocative of domestic life continue to pervade other works, indicative perhaps of the lengthy lockdown time we spent at home this year (Sue Pedley  & Phaptawan Suwannakudt, Line Work). Elizabeth Rankin’s Fabrications of Linda is a painted portrait pinned, primped, plaited fussed and worried over, much like the frustrating elusivity of the crime represented.  Che Ritz presents a series of detailed drawings evocative of absent sound (and freer times) in Distortion 2020 Homage to Effects Pedals creative process endless possibilities live music and free spirits. Elke Wohlfahrt in Beyond Stitching I-IV has made forms that are bound and gathered from upholstery offcuts and other things.


Let us look without. In a similar spirit of free wheeling play using domestic materials to hand, Gary Warner has fashioned the sonic event generator for gallery wall from consumer packaging waste materials. Waste is also upcycled as colourful, yet sinister plastic assemblages by Rox De Luca in Blue, green, yellow absurdity. Finds of plastic on Sydney beaches lead us to anxious contemplation of the fragility of our environment and the wall drawing by Parris Dewhurst, Ephemeral Landscape, to be gradually erased over the course of the exhibition, expresses that concern. Loss of landscape through fire devastation was a recent reality and Juliet Fowler Smith’s Koala up a tree uncannily resembles a giant match. Commentary upon and objects recalling last summer’s bushfires are filmic and visual reminders of that stark experience (Mahalya Middlemist, Reverse Bushfire #2 & Noelene Lucas, Black Earth) with recovery an enduring hope (Sonja Karl, Rebounding Buds). 


Let us move. Rather than facilitating one’s movement in the space, some works function to direct or hinder passage, calling attention to the significance and value we place in free movement and expectations of behaviour (Raymond Matthews, Boundaries & Murray and Burgess, Hazard). Wider movements of people and the function of borders, topical subjects these days, are explored through the pokerwork drawing by Kendal Heyes, Dover. Imagery and accessibility of travel also seemed to become more localised this year, and the call of wide open spaces as a road trip experience is evoked by photographic work (Molly Wagner, It’s all happened before… & Steven Fasan Somewhere). Bonita Ely’s The Tenth Coolest Suburb in the World is a celebration of the local as destination, and travel as a state of mind. Anke Stäcker’s Random Discoveries is just that, a presentation of street photography through street names, all female, randomly found.


Let us connect. The collaborative and performative impulse is realised through works made and manipulated online (Isobel Johnston & Jude Crawford) and through the virtual participation of one artist from Germany (Beta Bruder, Breakfast with Beta). A still from a previous collaboration in the space lingers on like a memory (Voices of Women, Lliane Clarke). Yearning for human contact and touch is gently and profoundly realised by the video work, Untitled [Distant Near] by Renay Pepita & Michael Ward. The screen placed low on the floor reveals a body turning and curling in the same site, recorded during lockdown. It is a solo by a usually participatory performer and its melancholic soundtrack seeps into the room and the mood.


Let us be. Sometimes, things are not as they seem. Several works in the show position themselves to play with concepts of reproducibility, duplication, and so, identity and context. Anya Pesce’s signature material-process of hand moulded acrylic sits beside an image of itself, linked by a bright gesture in neon (Cobalt Blue Form with Orange Paint 1). Another printed image reveals its constituent pigments as a spilt gesture (Curtis Ceapa, LLKMLCLKMKCMY). Sue Murray’s large scale painting Orange Tupperware magnifies and mirrors the multiple-use plastic domestic icon. All questioning the place and role of objects and representation.


It may be artistic shibboleth to say that art holds up a mirror to the world, but here it is, these works, this space and our movement within it reflecting and indeed articulating much that has happened and is happening in our age. Or we could say that these contemporary and contemporaneous works are interpreted as analyses and musings because, 2020. It has been a tumultuous year for humanity. We see this, because we have lived with and debated over these things. Cleanliness and colour politics. Framed and mediated points of view. Expansion of the domestic sphere. Movement of people. Things taken for granted. Things questioned. The space for kindness and community. Look up. Margaret Roberts’ work TEST2 hangs on the axis of Articulate project space, marking its internal linear division. A black fabric form, an interpretation of half a painting made by another artist in another tumultuous age, the other (white) portion of the painting left unarticulated, as Roberts says, to dissolve into its invisible space. 


To Every Age Its Art. To Every Art Its Freedom.


Lisa Pang (Lisa Sharp)

December 2020



With thanks to Articulate project space and its community of artists,

dedicated to spatial and experimental arts practices.

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16.11.19

GOING GONE opened last night

Saturday November 30: 3-5pm: International Remembrance Day for Lost Species

Open 11am - 5pm 16 Nov – 1 December



GOING GONE is is organised by Noelene Lucas and Juliet Fowler Smith as an exhibition that explores creative responses to human-induced species extinctions, ecological devastation and the climate emergency.  It will show the work of Suzanne Bartos, Barbara Campbell, Josie Cavallaro, Simon Champ, Juliet Fowler Smith, Joan Grounds, Virginia Hilyard, Noelene Lucas and Gary Warner.



Photo: Chris Tay
Photo Chris Tay

11.11.19

GOING GONE opens on Friday 15 November 6-8pm

Opening 15 November 6-8pm 2019


International Remembrance Day for Lost Species: Saturday November 30: 3-5pm: 

Open 11am - 5pm 16 Nov – 1 December

GOING GONE is is organised by Noelene Lucas and Juliet Fowler Smith as an exhibition that explores creative responses to human-induced species extinctions, ecological devastation and the climate emergency.  It will show the work of Suzanne Bartos, Barbara Campbell, Josie Cavallaro, Simon Champ, Juliet Fowler Smith, Joan Grounds, Virginia Hilyard, Noelene Lucas and Gary Warner.


Juliet Fowler Smith Sunflight, 2018-2019. Photograph










20.12.18

Final Weekend coming up of Articulate Turns Eight


Articulate Turns Eight celebrates eight years of support for spatial and experimental art practices with an exhibition of new work by artists who have shown at Articulate during that time.

Open Friday to Sunday, 11-5pm till 23 December 




Artists exhibiting in Articulate Turns Eight are Alison Clouston, Anya Pesce, Ambrose Reisch, Anke Stäcker, Asher Millgate, Barbara Halnan, Beata Geyer, Bettina Bruder, Bill Moseley, Brigitta Gallaher, Caitlin Hespe, Chantal Grech, Ebony Secombe, Elizabeth Ashburn, Elizabeth Hogan, Elizabeth Rankin, Elke Wohlfahrt, Ella Dreyfus, Fiona Kemp, Genevieve Carroll, Jane Burton Taylor, Jeff Wood, Jenee O’Brien, Jody Graham, Julian Day, Juliet Fowler Smith, Kate Mackay, Laine Hogarty, LInden Braye, Lisa Andrew and Rachel Buckeridge, Lisa Sharp, Liz O’Reilly, Mandy Burgess, Margaret Roberts, Michael Jalaru Torres, Mireille Eid, Molly Wagner, Nadia Odlum, Noelene Lucas, Nola Farman, Pam Kleemann, Parris Dewhurst, Paul Sutton, Renay Pepita, Ro Murray, Ros Cook, Rox De Luca, Sarah Woodward, Sardar Sinjawi, Sonja Karl, Steven Cavanagh, Steven Fasan, Sue Callanan, Sue Pedley, Suzanne Bartos, Vilma Bader and Virginia Hilyard.


Juliet Fowler Smith

L-R:  Genevieve Carroll , Margaret Roberts, Molly Wagner, Jane Burton Taylor

foreground L-R: Mandy Burgess, Sue Callanan, Linden Braye, Jeff Wood, Lisa Sharp, Beata Geyer

foreground L-R: Lisa Andrew and Rachel Buckeridge, Chantal Grech, Fiona Kemp, Kate MacKay,  Jody Graham


L-R: Ebony Secombe, Jody Graham, Noelene Lucas, Mireille Eid, Alison Clouston
foreground: Laine Hogarty, bckground: L Elzabeth Rankin, R: Sarah Woodward
Photos Peter Murphy

24.7.16

TWITCHERS - the works


Linden Braye above L: Wetlands Launch Pad: R: Birdwalk; Below: Ibis



















See Friday Essay: the rise of the 'bin chicken'


Below: Noelene Lucas Incidence of appearance 2016, 6-channel HD video and mixed media







































Anne Graham

Anne Graham Plucked (detail) 2016

Debra Porch My grandfather named all his parakeets Billy (detail) 2016

Juliet Fowler Smith Curleeee 2016

12.7.16

TWITCHERS opens Friday 15 July at 6-8pm

TWITCHERS is curated by Juliet Fowler Smith and Noelene Lucas.

Opening Friday 15 July 6-8pm
Open 11am - 5pm Fri - Sun, Saturday 16 - Sunday 31 July 2016 

INVITATION

TWITCHERS brings together artists who are delighted, amazed, curious and worried about our feathered friends. They are: Linden Braye, Juliet Fowler Smith, Anne Graham, Noelene Lucas and Debra Porch. Most bird watchers prefer to be called ‘birders’ these days, but we still like the word ‘twitchers’ as we definitely feel twitchy about the subject.

Juliet Fowler Smith Curlew pencil on wall 2015

 


























Birds...don't you just love them? Their grace, power, beauty, their songs and behaviour and, for some of us, their flavour!

Our feathered friends can be seen as ‘the canaries in the coal mine’ with their numbers and habitats dwindling as we hog or wreck life’s essentials: forests, clean air, water and wetlands (over 50% of wetlands in Australia have already been wrecked!).

While birds serve as metaphors for the soul, freedom, peace and war as well as symbols of national identity – raptors, for example, can stand for war, aggression and dominance – we also hunt birds for food, trophies and fashion. And we share their predicament as we irrevocably change the planet.

Anthropogenic climate change has caused populations of migratory birds to decline. It is tough for these birds, genetically programmed to think ‘I'm on my way to food and shelter’, to arrive exhausted and depleted at a wasteland, a garbage dump or dried up wetlands. Some birds get called vagrants when they change location and come to the city (the Ibis in Sydney), but they are often desperately responding to displacement, wild populations attempting to survive by adapting to conditions we humans have created. Scientists call this a ‘phenological mismatch’, when food availability no longer matches the birds’ timing for food and reproduction, a mismatch of our making, as we wreck bird habitats and sometimes even regard them as pests.

Some birds are just mind-bogglingly amazing: navigating vast distances, in tune with the climate, winds, currents, searching for tasty titbits and a place to rest and nest. Some demonstrate extraordinary behaviour, others make us laugh, touching our hearts and minds. Their songs lift our spirits and inspire us. Incredibly, more than half the world’s birds and all the songbirds have their origins in Australia. Don't we have some responsibility for their condition, their survival?


17.11.13

LEAVE IT IN THE GROUND opening and works


 Jamie Parker, our Greens MP, with chocolate frog reward for opening LEAVE IT IN THE GROUND 
and launching The Stuttering Frog #2, with Juliet Fowler Smith, founder of WRVAP.
Sharyn Munro speaking at opening of LEAVE IT IN THE GROUND
above photos: Noelene Lucas
David Watson 

Ralph Snowball New Lambton pit head, Adamstown  1897 
inkjet print (2013) from an original Ralph Snowball glass negative,
     courtesy Norm Barney Photographic Collection,University of Newcastle

David Watson Fuse  1:100,000 maps showing proposed 2014 walk
 following power grid from Rozelle to Hunter valley source

Information corner
Neil Berecry-Brown Social Licence  2013 inkjet print
Ian Milliss Viburnum with Coal  2013 inkjet print  

above  Toni Warburton coal clay water wood - some processes and relationships 2013. 
People are invited to submit words, images, patterns, marks from which the artist 
can select to draw onto clay beakers. Beakers will be glazed, fired and available 
for sale for $30.00 each on Sunday 1st December. Photo Chris Ward
Noelene Lucas Living with Coal  2013 single-channel HD video
photo Chris Ward
Christine McMillan Sludge  2013 
coal sludge in snow-domes on shelf

Noelene Lucas, Rivers of Coal  2013 3-channel HD video 

Sue Callanan Going, Going, Gone  2013 
hessian bags, stencil paint,coal, wood, lights

Margaret Roberts Titled  2013
ply, hinges, live space/visitor-interaction 
David Watson  Mining Rash [The Drip]  2013 
inkjet print on aluminium
David Watson Checkout  + Ransom Note (with Denise Corrigan)  
2013  powerpoint 
Juliet Fowler Smith The Area of Affectation  2013
 installation, table, dowel, seats & found objects 
Wendy Bowman at 'Rosedale' (centre)  in Camberwell, 
with David Watson (left, with The Stuttering Frog #2) and Sue Callanan (right) 
David Watson and Sue Callanan 
distributing The Stuttering Frog #2 in the Hunter region

Video Doc by Noelene Lucas