Artist Index

Showing posts with label project space project. Show all posts
Showing posts with label project space project. Show all posts

14.6.21

Project space | Dell Walker - Holding Back the Tide

Extended until Nov 14th
Open 11am - 5pm Fri-Sun

Artist talks Sunday Nov 7th, 2pm - 3.30pm


CATALOGUE

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.

Dell Walker, Frolic/Freeze 3, Articulate, 2020 (detail), balancing found styrofoam packaging


Holding Back the Tide

Both the process and the final appearance of this immersive installation are important, so visitors are welcome to see the work as it develops over the weeks, June 15 – July 4. You are invited to gently touch the work and/or participate by adding your own styrofoam. I will be working during opening hours (Fri - Sun, 11 - 5) and for other times to meet call 0424 444 631.


Rubbish art that thinks about acquiring and discarding

In Holding Back the Tide I link two inundations. Firstly, in purchasing we are still awash in single-use plastics (though that tide is beginning to turn). Secondly, careless disposal of these plastics creates a flood of rubbish and litter worldwide, impacting the planet, especially the oceans.

For this Project Space Project, I attempt to integrate two methods of ‘playing’ with plastic rubbish: hanging tiny pieces of litter in a variation of a child’s mobile, and, sculptural assemblage by balancing (house-of-cards style) with discarded, single-use, preformed polystyrene foam packaging shapes. An immersive, gradually modulating installation of vulnerable materials. 

With Articulate’s front door facing south, the strong wind gusts will require some ingenuity with the styrofoam, but no glues, tapes, cutting or pinning will be employed, to avoid making more litter. The foam is so light that it can easily escape into the environment during transportation or when left out for hard rubbish collection. In the weather it breaks up, blown or washed into drains and waterways, onwards towards the oceans. There, along with all the other plastics, it mimics fish food and disrupts hormones of all creatures. Plastics do not break down for at least 500 years, they just break up into minute particles, even more problematic than the unsightly debris.

Worrying about the state of the planet led me to first pull styrofoam out of the weather and into the studio but once there, this foam became just material and it is sheer fun to be able to make temporary installations with the endless variety of these crisp machine-cut forms. However, I am not interested in foam from recycling. My works critically depend on discardedness, the needless waste from thoughtless accruing in the dominant philosophy of our culture: consumerism.

Rubbish is not rubbish

Rubbish is a generic name that enables easier discarding; our unwanted, which we wish to conveniently disappear. If polystyrene foam is regarded as material, as for soft plastics going to REDcycle outside supermarkets, we would deliver it to densification machines, to remove its 98% air. Melted into a white solid, it can be melted again to form other products (now mostly for building products, in the past single-use cutlery was polystyrene). Currently made from fossil oil, foam packaging could be made from vegetable products, as with the loose-fill packing ‘noodles’, which dissolve out of doors. Alternatively, appliances are sometimes packaged with preformed recycled cardboard fitting the negative spaces (as for eggs). Styrofoam inserts can be returned to the retailer to dispose of, but shopping online results in more packaging and less responsibility for it. Packaging skips behind retailers were for recyclers but these have largely disappeared with other countries no longer willing to buy our unsorted plastics. 

The value of rubbish is starting to be recognised with more bottles made with 100% recycled plastic.

The turtle’s view

As well as utilising discarded styrofoam, the second aspect of this Project Space Project will take a diver’s or a turtle’s view of our plastic litter. Delicate hangings in this section will be affected by viewers’ movements among them, giving agency. To sway with an underwater motion, the tiny pieces of litter needed to be glued to an unobtrusive, lightweight support. Human hairs sufficed, with the bonus of hanging the responsibility on all humans for the rubbish. While some marine debris is generated on the oceans or shores, a considerable proportion starts inland, carried out by wind or rain.

Post-consumer debris from streets, creeks, parks and beaches is used. The majority of this litter remains single-use items, especially packaging, and has come to be made of increasingly seductive, fluorescent and translucent plastics, in the battle for market share; they become eye-catching for sea creatures. 

All hang from discarded foam sheets, that separate flat-pack furniture; like the furniture, this mobile can be disassembled for storage and reuse. Art is a second use for rubbish. In salvaging any plastics for art use, I am holding back the tide: a dam to impede progress, or a rubbish trap in the drain flowing to the sea.


Some efforts toward stemming the tide of plastic debris

Art is a temporary measure that draws attention to rubbish, normally beneath notice. After art, recycling is an option for the clean styrofoam, but for dirty plastics or those made from fused mixed plastics (as in toys and toothbrushes) there is no recycling. 

Reuse is preferable to recycling. Without the costs of recycling processes, reuse extends a product’s life and reduces its carbon footprint. Reuse is a pivotal key towards zero waste: Refuse, Reduce, Reuse/Repair, Recycle or Rot.

I am not focused on this weighty topic as I work; it is enjoyably challenging to be given such a large space with my rubbish, figuring ways to wedge and interlock foam forms to resist the southerly winds yet still appear precarious, like ecosystems. The best method to hold back the tide of rubbish is to resist the source. Resist the ploys of marketers who engineer artificial demands for products, ignore the advertisers that try to convince us to be unhappy with what we have, and the conglomerates that deceive by saying that consumerism is driven by customers. 

This artwork was instigated by deep concern over global warming and environmental degradation as a result of over consumption (all the pollution generated in manufacturing and transportation of short-lived goods). Instead of simply making a statement by bringing in lots of packaging waste, an immersive and interactive artwork was planned, playing balancing games with all my fantastic shapes again. My work often reconfigures the negative aspects of litter and waste into art that catches joy or awe, beauty or gentleness, curiosity or intrigue. The result is engagement, encouraging viewers to seek understanding.


Dell Walker

June 2021


Download as pdf


_______________________________________________________________

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 advertised dates, changed due to lockdown in Sydney
Open 11am - 5pm Fri-Sun 18 June- 11 July 2021
Opening event Saturday 26 June 2-5pm
(postponed till 10/11 July subject to lockdown)
Artists talks (postponed till 10/11 July subject to lockdown)
Saturday 26 June 2pm: Dell Walker, Aude Parichot, Alan Schacher
Saturday 3 July 2pm: Dell Walker

2.5.21

Aude Parichot - Open to Contingencies

Open 11am - 5pm Friday - Sunday 7-23 May 2021

Closing event Saturday 22 May 2-5pm

Artists' talks Saturday 22 May 3pm

Open to contingencies - Invitation to possibilities 

ROOMSHEET

For a period of three weeks, Aude Parichot will be working on an evolving series of works responding to the project space and occurrences linked to the creative  process. This experimental project aims to embrace a place as readymade for engagement and activation, over time. The work is an invitation for the audience to join an art-work in development and connect with an attitude of curiosity and poetic transformation, acknowledging a place and the possibilities of creation through care, attention and imagination.

 

Aude Parichot Open (first visit) 2021


 

Aude Parichot is a French born, Sydney-based artist with a practice that traverses drawing, installation, performance, photography and video. She believes art offers us an alternative way to engage with the world around us in a creative and poetic way, challenging finite and fixed ways of thinking. It allows us to unify our agencies with what surrounds us and let new things emerge in a transformation process.  In her practice Parichot embraces an open creative process to discover what ‘engaging’ can reveal that ‘designing’ cannot. By embracing chance events, her work reflects on the unpredictable, transient and transformative nature of life and art. 


This is another project space project at Articulate project space

Conditions of entry:
Please do not come if you are unwell or a contact of a COVID-19 case.
Use the hand sanitisers provided at the entrance to Articulate.
Complete your contact tracing information on entry to Articulate.
Keep 1.5 metres distance from others or wear a face mask

22.9.19

FIONA KEMP & VIRGINIA HILYARD: TO RUSSIA opening discussion Sunday 29 September 2-5pm


project space project #23: 24 - 29 September:

Open Sunday 29 September 2-5pm with discussion with the artists.
Virginia Hilyard/FionaKemp   PARE2019
During a residency on Kotlin Island in Russia last year we gathered together a visual and sound treasure trove. We intend to let this archive loose into the space of articulate to see how it responds with the space and to work on its development.
Fiona Kemp and Virginia Hilyard

http://fionakemp.com/
http://www.virginiahilyard.com

19.9.19

Elia Bosshard's BINARY FIELD (THE MEETING BETWEEN TWO SPACES) opens Friday 20 September 6-8pm

open 11am-5pm Sat-Sun till 22 Sept

Elia Bosshard BINARY FIELD in development, Studio One 2019. Still from video by Hospital Hill

A long path cuts through diagonally, dividing the room into two parts. Essentially one line, it is an active object that functions to vertically distinguish between high and low space. Where is high and low? There is no one point when the space transitions from being above to below you. That meeting point depends on one's relationship to height. The walk from one end to another is slow paced, through which our experience shifts. At what point do we perceive that our relationship with the path has changed or are aware of it changing? BINARY FIELD explores the immediacy of physical environments and how we inhabit and feel the presence of structures as we move by them.
Elia Bosshard

https://www.eliabosshard.com/

15.9.19

Architectural Amendments: Building Permits

Sue Callanan
project space project #21
open 11am-5pm 13-15 September

Chantal’s Ladder and painting paraphernalia found in the space, with accompanying set of instructions for preparation of smooth walls. I extracted a line of text from the instructions and stencilled it on to the adjacent wall.


Skylight shell left over from repairs turned into a lit object sitting on silver sarking material, aligns with actual skylight above

Sample bottles containing brick powder from holes drilled through wall for installation of IT and NBN equipment -reminders of engineering site tests that accompany building construction.



Photos: Chantal Grech

9.9.19

Three project space projects: Sue Callanan, Elia Bosshard and Fiona Kemp/Virginia Hilyard

10 -15 September
SUE CALLANAN
ARCHITECTURAL AMENDMENTS: BUILDING PERMITS
project space project #21

I intend to occupy the ground floor space of Articulate and investigate ways of adapting or altering its architectural features so as to displace the familiar elements and structure, giving them a new reading. I have, at intervals over the life of Articulate, undertaken interventions in different parts of the space. In this instance, I would like to treat the downstairs  space as a whole, using  industrial materials that I’ve gathered over time, turning them into  a new configuration that takes account of the whole of the downstairs space as a single, but multifarious form.

I’m curious about the slippage between art and its architectural surrounds, and how one can be seamed into the other, such that figure and ground oscillate between each other, creating uncertainty about what was meant to be there in the first place.

There will be no official opening for ARCHITECTURAL AMENDMENTS, but the artist will be available for discussion during the opening of Time and the Ocean at ArticulateUpstairs, on Friday 13th Sept 6-8pm, and on Sunday 16th Sept 2-5pm.


Sue Callanan
Sue Callanan​, Remnants: repairs and maintenance undertaken November 2016
17 - 22 September:
ELIA BOSSHARD
BINARY FIELD (THE MEETING BETEEN TWO SPACES)
project space project #22

Opening event: Friday 20 September 6-8pm; open 11am- 5pm Sat-Sun 21-22 September
Elia Bosshard BINARY FIELD in development, Studio One 2019. Still from video by Hospital Hill

A long path cuts through diagonally, dividing the room into two parts. Essentially one line, it is an active 
object that functions to vertically distinguish between high and low space. Where is high and low? There is no one point when the space transitions from being above to below you. That meeting point
depends on one's relationship to height. The walk from one end to another is slow paced, through which our experience shifts. At what point do we perceive that our relationship with the path has changed or are aware of it changing? BINARY FIELD explores the immediacy of physical environments and how we inhabit and feel the presence of structures as we move by them.
Elia Bosshard


24 - 29 September:
FIONA KEMP & VIRGINIA HILYARD
TO RUSSIA
project space project #23

Open Sunday 29 September 2-5pm with discussion with the artists.
Virginia Hilyard/FionaKemp   PARE2019
During a residency on Kotlin Island in Russia last year we gathered together a visual and sound treasure trove. We intend to let this archive loose into the space of articulate to see how it responds with the space and to work on its development.
Fiona Kemp and Virginia Hilyard
http://fionakemp.com/

20.8.19

Samuel James' INTERMINABLE PRESENT opens Friday 30th August 6-8pm


Open 11-5pm Thurs-Sun, Sat 31 Aug - Sun 8 Sept

INTERMINABLE PRESENT - Video drawings
project space project #20

Sam James is a video artist and projection designer based in Sydney, working with performance and live art. He is interested in the phenomenology of media, the relationship to body and its translation of phenomenal experience. He has made video light drawings on residencies in Iceland, Finland and Czech Republic as a response to site and local phenomena. This can take the form of idiosyncratic encounters with people, the in-betweenness of engagement with the unfamiliar and the senses provided by architectural and natural space.  The artist is often visible in the recorded videos, facing the camera and drawing blind. This project gradually integrates video drawings in response to the site of Articulate’s space.  Videos from other locations in the past will be phased gradually into the present.

www.shimmerpixel.blogspot.com

Samuel James  “Friends of Oneself” HD video still

Samuel James "Practicing Liberty to then be Jailed” HD video still

15.7.19

Opening 6-8pm Friday 26 July - Bonita Ely

Archeological Survey: Inner West Sector 

Project space project #19

Open 11am - 5pm Sat 27-Sun 28 July


A survey of a headland on the Australian continent's central East Coast has revealed a sector designated, ‘Inner West Sydney’. Remnants of concrete pathways and structures buried by sediments, evidence of high levels of social activity in a densely populated settlement, categorise the site as ‘worthy of study’. The excavation reveals artifacts comprised of randomly dispersed, thin sheets of printed wood pulp. Analysis of this synchronic detritus discloses mundane communal, economic, intra and inter-personal human activities underling a matrix of esoteric hierarchies.

Two diagnostic artifacts that contextualise this multiplicity are culturally encoded garments - a ‘hoody’ and ‘bridal gown’. They define the persistence of and conversely, erosion of, historic, binary-gendered epistemologies. In summary, archeologists have isolated the provenance of an undisturbed, early twenty-first century stratigraphy that details a typology of indoctrination alongside resistence to conformity, typical of this critical tipping point in the Anthropocene Era.

 ARTIFACTS:
Hoodie, dated 2018AD. Printed wood pulp.  Infrastructure – textiles.
Bridal Gown, dated 2019AD. Printed wood pulp. Infrastructure – textiles.
Epistemology at the Apogee, dated 2016 – 2019AD. Printed wood pulp.  Infrastructure – textiles.

https://bonitaely.com/

Bonita Ely Archeological Survey: Inner West Sector, artefact detail1: Hoodie, dated 2018AD. Printed wood pulp.  Infrastructure – textiles.)

Bonita Ely Archeological Survey: Inner West Sector,  artefact detail 2:: Hoodie, dated 2018AD. Printed wood pulp.  Infrastructure – textiles.)


13.7.19

Art & Situation opened last night

Open 11am-5pm till Sunday 14 July

ROOMSHEET



William Seeto. 3 Pairs Gray. 2019




William Seeto. 3 Oblique Squares – Fixed Point Perspective. 2019


William Seeto. 3 Oblique Squares – Fixed Point Perspective. 2019


William Seeto. 1 Oblique – Fixed Point Perspective 2019






















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

Photos: Margaret Roberts

The current project space projects are funded by an anonymous tax-deductable donation


3.7.19

William Seeto – Art & Situation - Work in Process

Opening event Friday July 12, 6-8pm

Open 11am-5pm 13-14 July

project space project #16

Art & Situation - Work in Process is a process-based project that develops over twelve days and
culminates with a closing event to mark the end of the project at Articulate project space, Sydney.

As a part of Articulate’s project space project series, it continues the use of the exhibition space at
Articulate to experiment with practice in order to develop artwork in relation to its location. Due to the short lead-up time for
participation, the project is entered into from an experimental viewpoint with unfinished ideas, few materials and
limitations in time. Although there are no set open hours for viewing, a link is available to view the progress of
work in process.

Art & Situation - Work in Process examines the space ‘in between’ sculpture and painting, site and artwork.
It is based on the use of everyday materials and seeks to extend the dialogue between sculpture and painting by
blurring the line between site and artwork in order to expand contextual meaning. In so doing it continues
connections and ideas sparked by deconstruction and reconstruction that is influenced by Arte Povera.

In a way Art & Situation - Work in Process looks at spatiality in a literal sense and as visual metaphor, which
explores and confronts space and environment. It offers a personal codex, a formalised dialogue where ‘site’ and
‘art’ is queried as to whether one or the other is more important and poses the question as to whether spatiality
interacts, informs or interferes with the work and location.


William Seeto,' Untitled (3 pairs gray+, work in process)'_2019


William Seeto, 'Untitled (3 pairs gray, work in process)'_2019


***
William Seeto is an installation artist and independent curator with a practice of 38 years. His site-specific
constructed installations examine perceptual qualities in built environments by reconstructing architectural space,
which incorporates immersive light, sensory perception and luminal effects of uniform light (Ganzfelds).
His ephemeral artworks are based on everyday materials that seek to extend dialogue and expand contextual
meaning. His work is a blend of minimalism, process art and kinaesthetic experience.

William Seeto, 'No Lines (work in process)'_2019.

1.4.19

Lesley Giovanelli - project space project #15

Lesley Giovanelli plans to work in Articulate project space during 2-22 April as the 15th project space project.  See her earlier work at Articulate here. 

There will be no opening on Friday as there are currently no plans for Lesley's project space project to be open to visitors at all. This is because the project space project is an experiment with exhibition practice in which artists develop artwork in Articulate project space over a 2-3 week period, leaving any decision about if or when to open it to visitors to later in that period. The purpose is to support the development of artwork that acknowledges the place in which it is located by being conceived and constructed there. It is also intended to protect artists from committing to exhibit artwork before they consider it sufficiently resolved, by planning no opening events or open hours. Images of what Lesley made during that time are given below. See earlier project space projects here.  







13.11.17

Be Afraid, Be Very Very Afraid - a project space project opening Friday 1 December at 6-8pm



Be Afraid, Be Very Very Afraid is an exhibition by Suzanne Bartos and Choi Ik gyu, timed to mark the completion of the Royal Commission into the Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse.  The exhibition includes Choi Ik gyu's work, The Journey.

Opening 1st December 2017, 6 - 8pm
Then open the weekend of 2nd and 3rd December 11am to 5pm
Artist talk 2.30 Saturday 2 December.




PHOTOS: SUE CALLANAN

On the long crush through the Vatican museum my sculptor friend tells me a story.  It was about taking her young nephew through a similar gallery years ago.  She explained to him that in art historical times the catholic church, offended by penises on nude statues, had chiseled them off and replaced them with fig leaves.   He quickly reasoned, that that must mean that there’s a store room full of all the offending organs.  And where was it?

I’ve been attending or listening live to the Royal Commission and have been working on images that have arisen for me over the five years it had been sitting.  Hearing my friends story I think perhaps that’s just what I’ve made:   A room where the things that the Catholic Church have not wanted to look at, are stored.
bartosculpture.weebly.com

The Journey
- Ik-gyu Choi

제목 : 여행

                                                          최 익규

이 작품은 나를 지배하는 모든 생각들에 대한 날것의 솔직한 기록이다.
이런 과정을 통하여 가장 지금 나와 가까운 자화상이 그려지길 기대하며 작업을 했다.
이를 바탕으로 조금은 의미있는 나만의 인생철학을 가지고
나의 남은 인생길을 걸어가는데 도움이 되길 바란다.
내 안에는 빛나는 행복한 모습도 있지만 
또 다른 깊은 곳에 자리 잡은 어두운 모습도 있다.
그것은 내가 몸담고 있는 이 세상의 모습도 그렇다.
문득 어두운 밤 소란스런 도시에 밝게 빛나는 교회의 십자가를 바라본다.
수없이 많은 욕망이 난무하는 술 취한 듯 방황하는 세상에서
밝게 빛나는 십자가의 의미를 생각해 본다.
이런 세상에 몸담고 살아가는 종교인이거나 아니거나,
모든 사람들은 자신의 길을 비추어 줄 희망의 십자가를 하나씩 가슴에 품고 있으리라.
방황하는 솔직한 나의 자화상과 내안의 길 위에 흔들리는 십자가와 
나의 위태로운 인생 여행과 나의 삶의 가치관에 대해 생각해 본다.
 (English translation coming)





This is project space project #14, a way of working in which Articulate is used as a project space for the development of artwork on-site, in the expectation that the work produced will develop 
    unplanned relationships with the location.