JOHN YOUNG at UTS Gallery

Manchurian Snow Walk, an early conceptual artwork by John Young is included in the exhibition A Moment in Extended Crisis, now open at UTS Gallery, Sydney curated by Andy Butler.

As Butler writes:

‘John Young’s Manchurian Snow Walk (1979) acts as an historical and conceptual touchstone for this exhibition . . . shown here as a performance documentation with instructions, [the work] was performed three years after the death of Mao. Young was sent away from Hong Kong in 1967 at 11 years old by his family, to protect him from the Cultural Revolution. As a 23-year-old art student, deeply entrenched in the Conceptualism, Minimalism, and Land Art movements of the 1970s, Young’s father bought him a train ticket to the farthest corner of mainland China for reasons still unknown, and too late to discover. Young traipsed back and forth from a single point, tracing lines in the snow, with the indication of his presence bound to disappear.’

The exhibition runs until 28 June 2024.

HONEY LONG & PRUE STENT Feature on the Cover of The Opéra

Honey Long & Prue Stent are on the cover of The Opéra's latest issue.

Published in Berlin, THE OPÉRA showcases work at the forefront of international, artistic nude photography. The Opéra's committed to presenting a predominantly female perspective on the human body in on show in The Phoenix Issue, featuring the work and accompanying statements by numerous female photographic artists.

More information >

JANET LAURENCE at Curtin University

Watch this magnificent behind-the-scenes film documenting Janet Laurence’s permanent site-specific installation CLIFF, installed at The School of Design and the Built Environment Building, at Curtin University, Perth.

“Imagine you are climbing a cliff, as you ascend the viewing staircase. CLIFF brings you the earth, not as a representation but as presentation of Earth itself, in the form of rocks each with its own story - of time, weather, movement, and formation." - Janet Laurence

This project was commissioned by Curtin University and completed with support from Event Engineering and Apparatus. The recently completed The School of Design building was designed by John Wardle Architects.

ART OF LUNCH

Celebrate the RACV City Club Gallery Lounge exhibition 'Performing Nature' with an intimate three-course lunch with the artists MURRAY FREDERICKS, PRUE STENT, and Robert Ashton. Hear from each of the artists, sip outstanding wine, and delight in culinary masterpieces made in response to the artworks.

Ticket includes three-course lunch, beverages, and artist talk.
https://events.racv.com.au/pub/pubType/EO/pubID/zzzz65f136d378569066/interface.html
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'Performing Nature' features Honey Long & Prue Stent, Murray Fredericks, and Robert Ashton. These artists create photographic performances of nature, using their bodies, endurance and artist intervention.

The exhibition continues until 24 May 2024 at the Gallery Lounge, RACV City Club.
Exhibition access is by appointment only. Email mail@arc1gallery.com to arrange a viewing.

PETER DAVERINGTON - PALIMPSEST

PETER DAVERINGTON, The Messenger, Oil, spraypaint and gold and copper metal leaf on canvas, 198 x152 cm.

PETER DAVERINGTON: PALIMPSEST
10 April - 11 May 2024
Opening: Wednesday, 10 April, 6PM, ARC ONE Gallery
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Using canvases that have been painted, painted again, abandoned (even destroyed), before being rescued, Daverington’s delicate surfaces are composed out of crumbling images, oxidisation, and entrancing lacunas. With each artwork containing traces of countless other paintings, this exhibition acts as a visual diary, even a retrospective.

Daverington’s intentional pentimenti reveal both problems and solutions that he has discovered. As the artist notes, “These paintings are an aggregate of imperfections. The scar tissue left after a fight between hope and despair. The beauty of painting is that you can always paint over it. Nothing’s irredeemable.”

Janet Laurence's Tears of Dust at Museum of Australian Photography (MAPh)

Janet Laurence's immersive installation Tears of Dust at the Museum of Australian Photography creates encounters with our changing planet. Her intensely seductive and haunting work evoke breathing forests, extreme weather events and dying glaciers. When encountering these otherworldly environments we become profoundly aware of the interconnection of all life forms and the alchemical regeneration of plants.

Janet’s installation is on display until 26 May 2024. For more information, click here.