Artist Index

Showing posts with label William Seeto. Show all posts
Showing posts with label William Seeto. Show all posts

20.2.22

Special show | Barbara Halnan 1941-2021

A survey exhibition facilitated by Dr William Seeto

Opening Reception Sat Mar 5th, 2-5pm

Facilitator Talk Sun Mar 13th, 2-4pm

Exhibition from Mar 2nd until Mar 13th
Open 11am - 5pm | Wed-Sun




"Variations on a Picket Fence" 2011. Photo by JC

Barbara Halnan described herself as an artist, painter and installation artist - her interests were art, music and reading. She was a dedicated artist and for many she was a friend and colleague. As an artist Barbara was knowledgeable, unpretentious, friendly, self-sufficient and hard working. She went about making art with determination and she needed no prompting to achieve it. Barbara made an impression on everyone who met her in Australia and other countries.


The survey exhibition celebrates her memory and place in Australian and international art. A tribute exhibition is also being held in Paris. ‘Barbara Halnan had strong ties with Paris and friendships with both French and European artists. She participated in the Salon Réalités Nouvelles from 2012 to 2019 and was part of the group of the "non-objective" art movement in Paris where she participated in exhibitions at the ParisCONCRET and ABSTRACT PROJECT galleries. She was an active member and driving force behind Franco-Australian exchange, particularly for The Drawing Collective; she also organised exhibitions of French and international artists in Australia’.



"View of exhibition preparation" 2022. Photos by William Seeto
 

The exhibition in Sydney is facilitated by William Seeto, a friend and colleague, who provides structure to 250+ artworks consisting of finished, lead-up and early works in the main gallery; with selected videos of past exhibitions, her last interview for Inner-West Council Library, and a link to the Paris exhibition in the Backroom. This is supplemented with sections defined by her Paris connection, a collection of Rose McGreevy and other artists' work, her curated artists projects with Rose, a display of her small artworks, booklets and studio set-up with easel, paints, and brushes in the Upstairs space. 

The survey of Barbara Halnan's life work offers a rare insight into her creative process in making artworks - it is the first time they are exhibited together and their significance cannot be overstated. Like most artists Barbara was a modest person who made art and did not promote her rightful place in Australian and international art. This exhibition makes a claim for her as an innovative artist. 


"View of exhibition preparation" 2022. Photo by William Seeto
Barbara Halnan. Photo credit A.P.

***

William Seeto BA, GDip (VA/GM), PhD is a practicing visual artist and exhibition facilitator with a practice of 40 years. His perceptual installations investigate the built environment by reconstructing architectural space.

Contact: bmseeto@gmail.com


"View of exhibition preparation" 2022. Photo by William Seeto



__________________________________________________________________________


Conditions of entry:

NSW Public Health Order requires all visitors over 16 years of age,
To sign in with the QR code provided at the entrance,
Wear a mask, social distancing rules will also apply.
Please don't come if you are feeling unwell.
Articulate is a registered Covid Safe business.

__________________________________________________________________________




29.10.21

Studio 1 | William Seeto - Retinal Displacement 3 Redux

Opening Event Saturday Oct 30th, 1-4pm
Exhibition from Oct 29th until Nov 14th

Open 11am - 5pm | Fri-Sun
Other times by private arrangement with the artist



photo: William Seeto, 'Schönfeld (Aus1)'_2016.


"Retinal Displacement 3 Redux" is large photographic work that is formal and abstract, uses colour and form, and incorporates abstraction on a large scale.


It re-examines work from 2016 by looking at how imagery is moderated by time and context in different locations. It reinvests the old by changing the place where it is shown - from a museum and gallery at Fairfield to a studio at Leichhardt. It offers intimacy that only comes with small spaces. The work still focuses on the ambiguity of minimal abstract images, however, it offers a different way of perceiving and interacting with it. In deconstructing imagery design parameters are broken, new ones formed, and reconfiguring alters purpose. In highlighting abstraction it draws upon past personal experience to create and enhance perception.
  
William Seeto is an established artist and project facilitator in photomedia, and site-specific constructed/ luminal installations that examine visual and sensory perception.

https://studio1at497.blogspot.com/



_______________________________________________________________

Conditions of entry:


NSW Public Health Order requires all visitors over 16 years of age,
To sign in with the QR code provided at the entrance,
To have double vaccination, and wear a mask.
Social distancing rules will also apply.
Please don't come if you are feeling unwell.
Articulate is a registered Covid Safe business.

 

14.10.21

Articulate re-opening Friday 15 October: artists' talks Sunday 24 October 2-5pm

Dell Walker's Holding Back the Tide  resumes Fri Oct 15th, till Sun Nov 14th 2021

psp:doc resumes Fri 15 Oct till Sun 24 Oct 2021


Open 11am - 5pm Fri-Sun 


Artists talks Sunday 24 October 2021 2-5pm:

Sue Callanan, Lesley Giovanelli, Terry Hayes, Aude Parichot,  Alan Schacher, Dell Walker & Toni Warburton:

• Join Zoom Meeting Sunday 24 Oct 2pm
https://us02web.zoom.us/j/4593687253 

• Or attend live (see Conditions of entry below)

Dell Walker's Holding Back the Tide celebrates Articulate's decade of support for spatial art practice by being the 27th project space project, a program that Articulate began in 2011 to encourage artists to use the project space to develop projects in the same space in which they are shown. It is supported by psp.doc in ArticulateUpstairs, which shows artist's documentation of ten of the earlier project space projects by artists Sue Callanan, Lesley Giovanelli, Terry Hayes, The Hypothetical World, Aude Parichot, Kathryn Ryan, Alan Schacher, William Seeto and Toni Warburton.


CATALOGUE


Dell Walker Holding Back the Tide 2021

Conditions of entry:


NSW Public Health Order requires all visitors over 16 years of age,
To sign in with the QR code provided at the entrance,
To have double vaccination, and wear a mask.
Social distancing rules will also apply.
Please don't come if you are feeling unwell.
Articulate is a registered Covid Safe business.



26.8.21

In Memory of Barbara Halnan [1941-2021]

 

"Opening of Confluence 3" 2016 at The Shop Gallery, Sydney. Photo: W.Seeto 

Barbara Halnan described herself as an artist, painter, and installation artist; and her interests as art, music and reading. She was all that and much more and for many she was also a friend and colleague.

She played an important role in Articulate's decade as an artist-run space and was there as participant, volunteer and exhibitor and a place she regularly visited for exhibitions and openings by friends and fellow artists. Barbara was an essential part of the Articulate community, along with her colleague and partner Rose McGreevy [1945-2014]. 


"Articulate Turns 7" 2017 at Articulate Project Space, Sydney. Photo: W.Seeto


As an artist Barbara was knowledgeable, unpretentious, friendly, self-sufficient, reliable and hard-working. She went about her business with determination and when she set her mind on something she needed no prompts to achieve it. 

Barbara made an impression on everyone who met her and she will be sadly missed by those associated with Articulate. 

In 2022, Articulate will hold a survey exhibition of Barbara's work to celebrate her memory and her part in Articulate's history, as well as her place in Australian art that is reflected by her work. It will be held concurrently with an exhibition in Paris by her colleagues there and it will be live-streamed to coincide with the exhibition in Sydney. 


"Ferret 4" 2018 at Articulate Project Space, Sydney. Photo: W.Seeto


The exhibition is being organised by William Seeto, a friend and colleague of Barbara's. He is interested in locating artworks by Barbara in the possession of others and would appreciate your assistance if you have any. If you can help, he can be reached here via email.




24.6.21

Event Cancellation of Saturday 26 June opening & talks

EXHIBITIONS: originally planned to be open 11am - 5pm Fri-Sun 18 June- 18 July 2021

EXHIBITIONS OPEN 11am - 5pm Sat-Sun 17-18 July 2021 (subject to lockdown lifting 16 July)

EVENTS CANCELLED DUE TO COVID: Opening event and artists' talks Saturday 26 June and 3 July 2-5pm 

Articulate is closed until end of lockdown, with plans to extend current shows by two weeks, with final talks and closing on weekend of 17/18 July if lockdown is lifted by then. 

Dell Walker's Holding Back the Tide celebrates Articulate's decade of support for spatial art practice by being the 27th project space project, a program that Articulate began in 2011 to encourage artists to use the project space to develop projects in the same space in which they are shown. 

It is supported by psp.doc in ArticulateUpstairs, that shows artist's documentation of earlier project space projects by artists Sue Callanan, Lesley Giovanelli, Terry Hayes, The Hypothetical World, Aude Parichot, Kathryn Ryan, Alan Schacher, William Seeto and Toni Warburton.

Dell Walker, Holding Back the Tide 2022






photos: the artist

 CATALOGUE


Conditions of entry:

 Please do not come if you are unwell or a contact of a COVID-19 case.

 Complete your contact tracing information on entry to Articulate.

 Keep 1.5 metres distance from others and wear a face mask

Use the hand sanitisers provided at the entrance to Articulate. 

14.6.21

Upstairs | psp.doc

Resumes Oct 15th, till Oct 24th
Open 11am - 5pm Fri-Sun

Artist talks Sunday Nov 24th 2-5pm

Sue Callanan, Lesley Giovanelli, Terry Hayes, Aude Parichot, 
Alan Schacher, Dell Walker & Toni Warburton.


CATALOGUE

psp.doc shows the work of artists Sue Callanan, Lesley Giovanelli, Terry Hayes, The Hypothetical World, Aude Parichot, Kathryn Ryan, Alan Schacher, William Seeto and Toni Warburton that documents the project space project they undertook at Articulate during the last decade.

Articulate beg: an the project space project in 2011 by inviting artists to work in Articulate's 27m long ground floor project space for pre-determined periods  of 1-3 weeks, in whatever way a project space serves their art practice at the time. The broad aim is to show what a project space is through the accumulation of the various ways that artists employ it in their art practice. 

All the project space projects (psp) are recorded on Articulate's public archive with images and text.  

The psp.doc exhibition provides physical artspace (but different from and smaller than the project space) and a catalogue space for writing, for artists to reduce their project space project to whatever material continuation, summary, analysis or other form of documentation that they think appropriate.

Psp.doc will be accompanied by a new project space project on the ground floor project space and back room: Holding Back the Tide by Dell Walker. 


Toni Warburton  idea for a conic frustum basin form, 2021, watercolour on rag paper.210mmx310mm


Toni Warburton Template Panorama 2012 (day 8 of project) photo: William Seeto


Toni Warburton, Conical frustum basin forms: cumulative retrieval series.2021.  Various media, including bookbinders’ muslin, paper, hessian, canvas, chicken wire, fabric, thread, paint, glue. H 140mm, W 540mm 

draw    notation   space   encryption   base        imprint    writing   map code    decipher    grain     pixel      texture Fold    roll     compress      shape      conic     section        trace      edge    circle  cone         oval   ellipse   rim     moment   clay     paper   canvas    object    sew     outline     contour     stitch   profile     template       elevation   shape  plan  top   pattern   MA*      base    copy      side    scissors     repeat   brush     duplicate     foot   pot   void   calligraphy     pleat      void    join    door              action       point   container    codicil    seam  decryption  plane illustrate     opening            replica   compose     variation   form    line    empty       translate       tear     expanse      evidence    grid     arrange       sunlight       study      calibrate             interval     inaction            dart     striation    marginal       window          join          repeat         sketch    duration   drape   italic            illumination      expanse    pause     mold      crenellate        shadow       prototype              assemble      edition               air   serpentine             reflection    artifice     morphology          cut   absence          cursive      bend     decipher      unwind          scratch     blend                                     

*Japanese aesthetic concept  of time and space  



William Seeto, 'Untitled (b-g3.r.g3.w.y3.gr.b)' 2021  

Untitled (b-g3.r.g3.w.y3.gr.b) is work that is part of Articulate’s project space project documentation series; as an addendum to previous use of Articulate’s exhibition space to consolidate practice and artwork relative to site. It documents process to reconceptualise and extend form with images and artwork. 


It is a continuation of Art & Situation in 2019, a process based project over 12 days that deconstructed and re-purposed 3 pairs of crutches, as well as created two site-specific projections consisting of one and three painted oblique squares using fixed-point perspective, work dependent upon location and viewable only from set positions.

 

Untitled (b-g3.r.g3.w.y3.gr.b) continues examining spatiality ‘in between’ sculpture and painting with re-purposed objects of interest in the form of deconstructed domestic furniture from the 1980s to extend the dialogue between everyday objects, sculpture, painting, and site. It balances form, colour and composition and is inspired by Arte Povera.


In a way it looks at space in a literal sense and as visual metaphor by working with objects, colour and the built environment. It offers a personal formalised dialogue where ‘site’ and ‘art’ is queried as to whether one or the other is more important, and poses questions of how spatiality and objects interact, inform, or interfere with the work and its location.  

***

William Seeto is an installation artist with a practice of 41 years. His site-specific constructed installations examine perceptual qualities by incorporating immersive light, sensory perception and luminal light fields (Ganzfelds); his ephemeral works re-purpose everyday materials in a blend of minimalism & kinaesthetic experience.

 

http://williamseeto.blogspot.com.au/


 


The Hypothetical World

Boxed Corner

2021

Cardboard 30x30x300cm approx., photocopy

Seminal to this work is the exhibition The Question Consortium, which was held at Articulate project space in 2015. Both works together query our worlds within worlds. In this appeal of what we may consider as cosmic dance, corners play a fundamental part. Corners organise the worlds' coexisting realms. Boxed Corner refers in that sense to our utmost experience of corners' status, which unites and divides worlds, both subjectively and normatively. In space time is life, and are we and I, with and through corners, which concomitantly allow and limit our individual and shared experiences. To corners' universality stick things and non-things alike, from materialist grapple to epic discontent about origin, causality, and fake criticism. Attached to them are also our utterly romantic encounters with chance and speculative embracement of the future. Corners' physical and metaphysical omniscience comes to light equally in the plethora of phantasms including our most hidden and wildest dreams. The corner is one of worlds' great commons, a world glory hole, from which, relentlessly, we attempt to become liberated or struggle to separate. The corner reminds us also of our remarkable impetus when it comes to our hideous desire and instinct to govern or even just to be in or with the world.


Sue Callanan FENCING: Repairs and maintenance (2017, 2021) 

The idea for Fencing: repairs and maintenance arose when the opportunity of doing a project space  project coincided with my having completed construction of a fence around my home. The leftover pile of palings and sticks became source material for translating the notion of fence to Articulate.


The sticks and palings became tools for defining, marking and also dividing the space. They also became a form of large scale notation. I moved them from one end of the space to the other in an evolving series of installations, where one idea flowed on from the one preceding it.


Whilst appearing functional, the arrangement of the sticks, over time, began to take on metaphoric meanings in relation to the marking dividing and barricading. For each progression, I found a new title: 1. Landing  2. River of Styx,  3. Opposite sides of the fence, and so on.

The overriding title, Fencing: repairs and maintenance held a clue to the functional aspect of addressing the everyday management of life and its material substance within the architectural or urban framework within which one finds oneself. However, the open-ended site of the project space (compared to that of home and actual fence) becomes a container for expanding the notion of the mundane through the lens of the poetic. It allows that moment where the real (mundane) and the poetic hyphenate, see sawing from one to the other.


Documentation


For the documentation, the presence of some of the fencing material, with its physicality, colour, texture and solidity seemed crucial, but for it to have any meaning, I needed to find a spot where the idea of ‘fence’ was relevant. I located a small pocket of space which allowed me to create an enclosure, contiguous with the stair rail, itself a fence.


It’s challenging, in retrospect, to identify the core elements of the work, as ideas evolved quite rapidly over the course of the week, morphing from one idea and form into another. Again I came back to the title, Fencing: repairs and maintenance, and decided to use it as the header for a log book with a list of entries of ‘works’ undertaken. My aim was to present this in a condensed form, and in doing so, to draw out not just the physical connotations of fence, but also the metaphorical ones.


It occurred to me that one could also record the different configurations in the form of diagramatic notation. Both of these last two representations, log book entries and diagramatic notations, in effect become part of a new work with reference to the original. They served to encompass an element implied rather than spelt out. It becomes clear to me that in any work, the act of documenting (reviewing and reflecting) becomes a new creative act triggered by, but independent of its original counterpart.


 

Open to contingencies- Invitation to possibilities 

20-day project, May 2021.


Documentation: Fluid memory, day 20, one channel video, 3h1min25s, and mixed media.


For 20 days, I committed to work every day on a site specific series of works, responding to the place, evolving with time and interactions. In a John Cage’s spirit, who stated  “Life without structure is unseen. Pure life expresses itself within and through a structure”, I aimed to let the project unfold in an open creative process within specific parameters of time, space and engagement.

Kathryn Ryan Drawings of Pieces of Practice 2011


When I got to Articulate in 2011 I didn’t have much with me. I had two carry bags of small things that were easily moved on public transport. It was always very hard for me to identify the materials of my practice but with time and absence I see now that they were objects of proximity and convenience, there were so many practical considerations that defined what I chose: Money, opportunity, portability, and a certain material flexibility to sympathise with the spaces I worked in - which for most of my practice happened to be non contemporary with natural elements.


All these restrictions were freeing in a way, whatever I chose had to be chosen and that’s what I had to work with. All these objects, discarded from old houses, living in op shops, and littered along streets, form a line along a network of busses and trains that encompass a space that was entirely personal and yet also shared.


I never tried to make these objects make sense or to find out what they meant, I just enjoyed the challenge they presented to surprise me, and hopefully others. It was very much like working with words and finding their poetry. Anyway, I remember that Articulate as a space had a lot of rough edges. There were cracks and bricks and wood and natural things left undone. And without these I don’t know that I could have made anything without becoming lost. I needed these areas as points of departure - and as an end point to the tether the journey of these objects.


At the end of my time I drew each miniature installation as a way of keeping it and making something I could own. 



Terry Hayes 'I believe you have something to tell me' (Polish version)  22 x A3 sheets of dissolved text


'I believe you have something to tell me' (Polish version) stems from a randomly selected text comprising of 192 words that I initially transcribed by hand onto an A3 sheet of paper with a non-permanent blue marker pen. I then decided to further transcribe this hand written copy onto another sheet shortening the text by omitting the letter 'A'. This shortened text was then further transcribed, omitting the letter 'B' and so on and so forth until all that was left on the final sheet were 'Y's (there were no 'Z's in the random text.)


On completion of this progressive deletion across the 24 pages, each separate sheet was then dipped into a bucket of water, upside down, partly dissolving the text and then allowed to drain. The sheets were then hung out to dry.


The Polish version of the dissolved texts were produced in a re-enactment that followed an identical procedure to that of the original English version. The re-enactment took place in Łódź, Poland in 2012.




Lesley Giovanelli Garden Wall 2021


A documentation of ‘Garden Wall’ developed during a project space project in 2019 at Articulate project space. Materials used: polystyrene, dyed wool hanks, polyester wadding (spray painted), painted paper


During my project space project in 2019 I was able to explore elements in space on the large scale afforded by Articulate which would be impossible in my studio. Each week I used a different element from my practice: soft hanging bags, fabric patchwork curtains or coloured objects. For this documentation show I will only reconsider the coloured objects. I used large blocks of styrofoam covered in paper or fabric juxtaposed with coloured planes on the wall, floor or hanging freely. Coloured wool was both a playful and textural element. The psp gave me the opportunity to play and discover without the expectation of showing the work and gave me a greater understanding of how to handle large 3 dimensional space. I am reflecting on the work after a period of time, in particular I am able to think more critically about the colour relationships and the possibility of greater textural variety. I will make an installation using the same elements but condensed and packaged. Smaller blocks and paper rolled up then bound with wool will be placed against a coloured wall and floor plane. The effect of reusing the same materials whilst changing the scale will mean a change in proportions. It should feel chunkier and bulkier than the original but also give an idea of the potential. I would like it to feel ambiguous, as if the materials could be unpacked and opened up to form a much larger work whilst still working as an installation in its own right.



_______________________________________________________________

Conditions of entry:


NSW Public Health Order requires all visitors over 16 years of age,
To sign in with the QR code provided at the entrance,
To have double vaccination, and wear a mask.
Social distancing rules will also apply.
Please don't come if you are feeling unwell.
Articulate is a registered Covid Safe business.



Previous dates and events, cancelled due to lockdown in Sydney

Open 11am - 5pm Fri-Sun 19 June- 11 July 2021

Opening Saturday 26 June 2-5pm (Cancelled and postponed till 10/11 July subject to lockdown) 

Artists talks:

Saturday 26 June 2pm: Dell Walker, Aude Parichot, Alan Schacher, Lesley Giovanelli, William Seeto, Terry Hayes.  (Cancelled and postponed till 10/11 July subject to lockdown) 

Closing and artists talks: Saturday 3 July 2-5pm: Dell Walker, Sue Callanan, Toni Warburton, Aude Parichot, Alan Schacher, Lesley Giovanelli, William Seeto, Terry Hayes.  (Cancelled and postponed till 10/11 July subject to lockdown)