SAM MARTIN

SAM MARTIN presents his second solo exhibition at ARC ONE Gallery, For the Problem is No Longer, 17 June - 12 July 2014. 

'Sam Martin’s recent paintings are literally covered with news content: he transfers newspaper directly to the canvas so it forms the ground upon which he works. But like the layout man he cares little for the transient vicissitudes of reported events, seeing only elastic boxes nested within a grid. Martin recognises the implicit emptiness of these figures and so treats the otherwise loaded surface as a space in which to act.

His first action is to undo the existing layout of the news and rearrange it to address his own concerns. To this end he corrals clusters of images according to colour, or overlays whole pages so that the white margins form a diagonal grid. Sometimes he accretes months of newsprint in one spot to inflict light-sucking wounds upon the canvas. These strategies serve to flatten the diachronic structure of the news to fit the synchronic arena of painting, where our customary reading collapses into the instantaneous radiation of colour and form.

The newspaper is a surface for the painter to work upon, but one that is distorted by magnetic influences. Martin responds to this by coaxing latent geometry to vault across pages, creating passages of egress between adjacent time frames. He creates visual echoes by methodically duplicating and enlarging images from the ground with pointillist strokes. The gaps around prose and stock market results become an armature to support descriptive line-work in place of a describable subject. The news is never lost under Martin’s brushstrokes, every halftone unit is held in comparison to its lustrous oil-painted cousin. The effect is of the news re-edited and luminously augmented to address the limits of painting and the compulsion that sustains its practice.

The accumulation of newspaper on the surface presents us with an overload of information, yet the paintings approach a mute and monolithic abstraction. This doesn’t signify Martin’s antipathy to world events, rather his consciousness of how the subject can be spoken in the language of painting. Unlike the newspaper, paintings aren’t designed to be used within a particular instant of time. With this in mind Martin draws out figures that address a potentially vast time-scale: the most pervasive and obdurate actors that narrate the blur of time, such as division, occlusion, exclusion, repetition and constraint.'

- Excerpt from Layout Man, essay by Bryan Spier, 2014

Sam Martin is a Melbourne based artist who graduated from Monash University in 2009 with a Bachelor of Fine Arts (Honours).  On graduating, Sam was awarded the ARC ONE Gallery/Monash Prize, culminating in his ARC ONE solo exhibition Crystalise Borders (2012) and now his second solo exhibition, For the Problem is No Longer (2014).  Martin has also been awarded a Commonwealth Education Scholarship, the Tolarno Hotel Painting Prize and the Australian Decorative and Fine Arts Society, Yarra Inc Award.  Martin’s career as an artist is developing in an impressive trajectory, as demonstrated by his inclusion in a number of group exhibitions and private collections. 

For all enquiries, please contact Annabel Holt at mail@arc1gallery.com

JANET LAURENCE & DANI MARTI

Janet Laurence, Dingo, 2014, video, 4'08".

Janet Laurence, Dingo, 2014, video, 4'08".

Dani Marti, The Golden Years, 2014, 4k video, 8'23", sound design by Alex Macia.

Dani Marti, The Golden Years, 2014, 4k video, 8'23", sound design by Alex Macia.

Nervous Tension, at Careof / DOCVA, Milan, is a screening including video works by JANET LAURENCE (Dingo, 2014) and DANI MARTI (Golden Years, 2014) on 17 June 2014. Nervous Tension is curated by Anabelle Lacroix, as part of an FDV residency at DOCVA, Milan.

Nervous Tension explores the notion of survivance, a sta­te of being between surviving and resistance. This video screening addresses survivance as a global concept and examines the responses by Australian-based video artists - artists as witnesses and artworks as testimonies.

Originally coined by French Canadians to describe the loss of their language, a frequently used term in Quebec be­fore the Quiet Revolution of the 1960s, survivance relates to cultural dispossession. The concept was popularised by well-known historian Gerald Vizenor to describe the con­dition of the indigenous peoples of the Americas as a sense of presence over absence and nihility; an active state of being through resistance as opposed to disappearance.

Nervous Tension aims at opening ideas of survivance as a lens to the wider contemporary context of cultural pro­duction and existence. This can be seen in the video works through different states or positions of resistance, whe­ther physical, metaphysical, personal, environmental, or to the artistic medium itself. Furthermore, concepts or truth and permanence underline this project by conside­ring Jacques Derrida’s take on survivance as tied to a wit­ness, someone who lives beyond an event. Here artworks are taken as testimonies, or perhaps as evidence. The wor­ks of Megan Cope and Inez de Vega particularly highlight this idea, and are also layered with personal histories.

Survivance as a contemporary notion evolves as a state of becoming and of potentiality. The remanning works in this screening are speechless, never silent, but wordless. In their distinct approaches the works of Dani Marti, Janet Laurence, Bar Yerushalmi, Diego Ramirez, Kieran Boland and Brie Trenerry, demonstrate to state of contemplation, of reflection and of poesies.

ANNE SCOTT WILSON

Anne Scott Wilson, First Movement 2012 (video still), 2012, 1'49'.

Anne Scott Wilson, First Movement 2012 (video still), 2012, 1'49'.

ANNE SCOTT WILSON’s video work, First Movement 2012, features in Deakin University’s group reel, now showing at Federation Square’s annual winter program, The Light in Winter.

In its eighth year running, this program's theme focuses on the circle of life. This idea is highlighted through art, music and performance and brought together by local and international artists. 

To view First Movement 2012, click here
For more information click here

JULIE RRAP

Julie Rrap, Loaded: Blue #1, 2012, digital print, face-mounted on Perspex, 126 x 126cm.

Julie Rrap, Loaded: Blue #1, 2012, digital print, face-mounted on Perspex, 126 x 126cm.

Glasshouse Port Macquarie Regional Gallery is currently showing Uploaded, an exhibition showcasing JULIE RRAP’s most recent body of work. This exhibition features the works of Rrap’s 2012 photographic series Loaded, as well as two new video works.

This pairing of past and current work continues Rrap’s investigations of performative art and how her body is used as a tool in the art making. As a result, Uploaded presents a series of abstract and vibrant works, with Rrap wearing cast frozen ink shoes to mark the canvas as they melt, simultaneously achieving elements of the artist’s presence and absence within the work.

Uploaded is open until Sunday 22 June 2014.

More information

GUO JIAN

News_Image_1401867147.JPG

Many are concerned for the welfare of artist GUO JIAN after hearing news of his recent detainment by the Chinese government due to the anniversary of Tiananmen Square.

We recommend all who are interested to listen to an ABC National Radio interview in which Linda Jaivin expertly discusses the situation.

Download the ABC National Radio segment here

Read an article written by his friend Madeleine O'Dea in The Guardian recently.

Guo Jian also recently appeared on ABC's Q&A - watch the program here

EUGENIA RASKOPOULOS

Vestiges #11, 2010-2014, digital pigment print on archival paper, 142 x 105cm.

Vestiges #11, 2010-2014, digital pigment print on archival paper, 142 x 105cm.

EUGENIA RASKOPOULOS' exhibition Vestiges has been reviewed in Robert Nelson's article, Artists pay tribute to the nameless in The Age. Nelson's latest comprehensive review addresses a certain recurrent theme in the Melbourne art world of late.

Read the article here