EUGENIA RASKOPOULOS & NIKE SAVVAS AT THE CCC

Nike Savvas, Zero to Infinity, 2003, blown glass storks

Nike Savvas, Zero to Infinity, 2003, blown glass storks

EUGENIA RASKOPOULOS & NIKE SAVVAS are featured in the exhibition Whose Story Is This? Anyway! at the Chinese Cultural Centre, Sydney.

This exhibition is a dialogue between Chinese & Australian women artists, curated by Ll Hong. It reflects the the invaluable contributions and positive efforts made by women artists from China & Australia, and how such contributions influence, change and reconstruct both the culture & the society we live in.

The exhibition continues until 30 April.

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JANET LAURENCE SOLO SHOW IN TAIWAN

JANET LAURENCE opens a solo exhibition at the Yu-Hsiu Museum of Art in Taiwan today. In Entangled Garden for Plant Memory, Laurence uses the 'garden' to represent the interconnectedness of living creatures and to visualise the memory of plants, which differs from, and surpasses, the human experience.

Laurence and the Yu-Hsiu Museum have collaborated with the National Taiwan University's museums of zoology, geo-specimens & the herbarium, as well as the Taiwanese Council for Agriculture & the Endemic Species Research Institute. Using these collections of natural specimens, Janet's work foregrounds the beauty of Taiwan's forest & mountain ecology whilst also deconstructing their systems of classification in order to reinterpret the history and meaning of the collections.

The exhibition continues until 26 July.

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FLOOR TALK WITH JOHNNY NARGOODAH & TRENT JANSEN

Trent & Johnny in the Thirroul studio. Photo: Romello Pereira.

Trent & Johnny in the Thirroul studio. Photo: Romello Pereira.

Come to ARC ONE Gallery at 3:30pm tomorrow (Sat 14 March) to hear insights from JOHNNY NARGOODAH & TRENT JANSEN on the cross-cultural collaboration and experimental making processes that lead to Partu, their latest collaboration in furniture design, realised in animal skin.

Johnny Nargoodah is a Nyikina man who has spent much of his life working with leather as a saddler on remote cattle stations, and Trent Jansen is an avant-garde object designer from Thirroul in New South Wales, who regularly experiments with leather and animal pelts in his collectable design work.

The artists will be present for the floor talk from 3:30 - 4:30pm.

This event is part of Melbourne Design Week, an initiative of the Victorian government in collaboration with the National Gallery of Victoria⁣⁣.⁣⁣⁣⁣⁣⁣⁣⁣⁣⁣⁣⁣⁣⁣⁣⁣ The project is assisted by the Australian government through the Australia Council for the Arts.

JOHNNY NARGOODAH & TRENT JANSEN - 'PARTU (SKIN)'

Gallery Sally Dan-Cuthbert with ARC ONE Gallery are delighted to present Partu (Skin), an exhibition of functional art by collaborative designers Johnny Nargoodah & Trent Jansen, for Melbourne Design Week.

JOHNNY NARGOODAH & TRENT JANSEN, Ngumu Janka Warnti (All Made from Rubbish), Bench, 2020, New Zealand leather and aluminium, 48 x 240 x 60 cm

JOHNNY NARGOODAH & TRENT JANSEN, Ngumu Janka Warnti (All Made from Rubbish), Bench, 2020, New Zealand leather and aluminium, 48 x 240 x 60 cm

Johnny Nargoodah and Trent Jansen have been collaborating in the design and crafting of collectable furniture since they met in Johnny’s hometown of Fitzroy Crossing, as part of Fremantle Art Centre’s ‘In Cahoots’ project in 2016. For that project they worked with fellow Mangkaja artist, Rita Minga to design an armchair that was their interpretation of a local mythical creature called the ‘Jangarra’ (2017), now in the permanent collection of the National Gallery of Victoria, as well as the ‘Collision Collection’ (2017), born out of experimentation with leather in combination with old car panels found in the scrub around Fitzroy Crossing.

Johnny is a Nyikina man who has spent much of his life working with leather as a saddler on remote cattle stations, and Trent is an avant-garde object designer from Thirroul in New South Wales, who regularly experiments with leather and animal pelts in his collectable design work. Their ‘Collision Collection’ (2017) gave some insight into the unorthodox outcomes that might result from the coming together of these oddly mismatched sensibilities and skills in working animal skins. ‘Partu’ (2020) is the Walmajarri word for ‘skin’, and is their latest collaborative project experimenting with this combination of disparate sensibilities. This body of work is designed by Trent and Johnny and both designers have their own lens through which to view the processes and inspirations governing these works:

From Trent’s point of view, this project is an experiment in the generation of hybrid material culture. Material Culture Theory says that the artefacts we create embody the values, ideas, attitudes and assumptions (the culture) of the creator. But what if an artefact is created collaboratively by two people from different cultures? Does this artefact exhibit the cultural values of both authors? If so, how do these cultural values manifest?

From Johnny’s point of view, the project has a few different aspects to it: Making - we use rubbish, recycled frames, we make chairs and cabinets and use the leather to make it look good, to make it furniture that is usable and looks nice; recycling - it is important to reuse old rubbish we find, and the leather makes it special; history - the leather gives it a reference to the history of Fitzroy Crossing and station life. Saddlers used to come and repair saddles using leather, making twisted rope out of cowhide. This is what I think about when we are using the leather; and sensory - the smell of that leather is so good. It brings back memories, triggers those old memories of walking around the saddle room in Noonkanbah shed. There is a sensory response, that’s important.

The collaborative process and experimentation are key to this project. Trent and I work together on this, we both sketch, look at each other’s sketches and from there we mix it up. I’m really enjoying the skills sharing, learning from each other, we both have a lot of different ideas, we keep coming up with new works, keep experimenting.

Unlike their ‘Jangarra Armchair’, designed and made in Fitzroy Crossing, ‘Partu’ was developed in Thirroul on the New South Wales Coal Coast. Johnny and Trent came together three times over a period of 18 months, developing new methods for collaboration that could shape their incongruent knowledge, methods and skills in designing and making into co-authored outcomes. These methods include: ‘Sketching exchange’, a process of back and forth sketch iteration, allowing an idea to evolve with equal input from both creators; and ‘designing by making’, a method of working with materials at full scale, to design an object as it is being made. In this approach the prototype is the sketch and both collaborators work together to carve, construct and/or manipulate material, giving the object three-dimensional form as they design and make simultaneously.

JOHNNEY NARGOODAH & TRENT JANSEN, Saddle Armchair, 2020, Scandinavian leather, plywood, stainless steel, polyurethane foam and brass, 75 x 76 x 105 cm

JOHNNEY NARGOODAH & TRENT JANSEN, Saddle Armchair, 2020, Scandinavian leather, plywood, stainless steel, polyurethane foam and brass, 75 x 76 x 105 cm

Saddle’ (2020) gains its name from the first sketch that Johnny made for this collection, an elongated saddle that led to experiments in stretching supple Scandinavian upholstery leather between geometric timber and steel forms to generate new, complex transitioning forms. Sketch exchanges over an 18-month period eventually yielded an entire collection built on this beautiful capability of leather to stretch between forms and give shape to the space in-between objects.

Ngumu Jangka Warnti’ (2020) is the Walmajarri phrase for ‘whole lot from rubbish’. The design of this collection began with a trip to the local scrap metal yard, in a vague search for anything interesting. Johnny and Trent salvaged a selection of discarded aluminium mesh and used this found metal as the starting point for experimentation. Trent and Johnny designed these pieces as they made them, starting with a mesh substrate cut vaguely in the shape of a chair, and together beat the material with hammers, concrete blocks and tree stumps until it took on a form that they both liked. This beaten geometry was then softened by laminating New Zealand saddle leather to skin the mesh, masking its geometry and softening its idiosyncratic undulations.

Johnny Nargoodah and Trent Jansen are represented by Sydney’s Gallery Sally Dan-Cuthbert who are partnering with ARC ONE Gallery to bring this new body of work to Melbourne Design Week 2020. The creation of this body of work was funded by the Australia Council for the Arts, the National Gallery of Victoria via Melbourne Design Week, UNSW Art & Design, the Western Australian Department of Local Government, Sport and Cultural Industries and Mangkaja Arts Resource Agency.

 

JANET LAURENCE AT TARRAWARRA

JANET LAURENCE’s work Sacred Green is on show in TarraWarra's exhibition Making Her Mark: Selected Works from the Collection.

This exhibition offers a new appraisal of the work of leading women artists held in the collection of TarraWarra Museum of Art. It presents art by women as a catalyst, as opposed to a category.

Sacred Green combines elements from the Tarkine in Tasmania and the Sacred Forest in Bhutan. Interviewed this week in The Australian, director & curator Victoria Lynn says: “Laurence is renowned as one of Australia’s leading contemporary artists...her work is a call to the viewer to be both ethically and emotionally immersed in the precarity of our world.”

The exhibition continues until 16 April.

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Janet Laurence, Sacred Green, 2018, dibond mirror, dye sublimation archival print on to Chromaluxe aluminium & C-type silver halide on clear pollster and oil glaze on acrylic, 100 x 370 cm.

Janet Laurence, Sacred Green, 2018, dibond mirror, dye sublimation archival print on to Chromaluxe aluminium & C-type silver halide on clear pollster and oil glaze on acrylic, 100 x 370 cm.

DANI MARTI

ARC ONE Gallery is delighted to present Blue on Blue, a new exhibition by Barcelona-born artist, Dani Marti.

Red on Red - Take 2, 2019, customised corner cube reflectors on aluminium, 240 x 357 x 10 cm.

Red on Red - Take 2, 2019, customised corner cube reflectors on aluminium, 240 x 357 x 10 cm.

 In his latest exhibition, Dani Marti’s dynamic woven canvases and sculptural wall pieces explore the communion that exists between the artist and his materials. Marti’s use of industrial, factory-made objects and the nature of his making process – weaving by hand at a large scale – deeply involves his body, his self, in his practice.

Skilfully woven, bent and shaped from a sensuous melange of materials such as polyester and natural ropes, metal threads, beads, reflectors and wire, which Marti affixes onto bespoke aluminium frames, these sculptural constructions have a robust sense of the physicality of their making. The artist’s full body movement is engaged, and his gestural traces are inscribed in these works. For Marti, his process “goes from seconds of ecstasy to hours of torture. It is a very meditative way of working.”

Citing influences such as Lucio Fontana, Kasmir Malevich, and Frank Stella, these works partake of their abstract visual language. In Blue on Blue Marti’s interest in the formal qualities of his materials has reached new heights as he employs a reductive approach to arrest the viewer in the surface and encourage a moment of contemplation. With their luscious monochromatic palette, rich texture, repeated geometric forms, and pure materialism these woven canvases and wall sculptures bring the beauty of minimalism down to earth.

Green on Green (Light/Mixed) and Green on Green (Dark/Mixed), 2019, customised corner cube reflectors on aluminium frame, 105 x 85 x 12 cm (each).

Green on Green (Light/Mixed) and Green on Green (Dark/Mixed), 2019, customised corner cube reflectors on aluminium frame, 105 x 85 x 12 cm (each).

Dani Marti was born 1963 Barcelona, Spain and lives and works between Sydney, Australia and Glasgow, U.K. Working across video, installation and public art, his unorthodox woven and filmic works speak to notions of portraiture and sexuality in Modernism, Minimalism and geometric abstraction. Since 1998, Marti has held over 40 solo exhibitions including, Songs of Surrender, Lausberg Contemporary, Dusseldorf (2020); I AM, ARC ONE Gallery, Melbourne (2016); and BLACK SUN, commissioned for Perth International Art Festival (2016). Recent group exhibitions include Coterie to Coterie, The Biennale of International Reductive and Non-objective Art, Sydney (2019); Hunter Red: Corpus, Newcastle Art Gallery, Newcastle (2018); Australasian Painters 2007-2017, Orange Regional Art Gallery, New South Wales (2017); The Public Body .02, Artspace, Sydney (2017); Immerse, Sandneskulturhus, Sandnes, Norway (2016);  La Vida es Esto, Domus Atrium, Salamanca (2015); Dark Heart, the Adelaide Biennial (2014), ECONOMY, CCA Glasgow; Stills, Edinburgh (2013); Videonale-14, Kunstmuseum Bonn (2013); Let the Healing Begin, Institute of Modern Art, Brisbane (2011); TOUCH: The portraiture of Dani Marti, a major solo retrospective at Newcastle Regional Art Gallery (2011) ; Social Documents: The Ethics of Encounter, Stills Gallery, Edinburgh (2010); Vocal Thoughts, Contemporary Art Centre of South Australia (2010) and Cinema X: I like to Watch, Museum of Contemporary Art, Toronto (2010).  

Dani Marti’s work is held in the collections of the Museum of Contemporary Art, Sydney; Art Gallery of South Australia;  National Gallery of Australia, Canberra; Gallery of Modern Art, Glasgow; The University of Queensland Art Museum, Brisbane; Queensland Art Gallery & Gallery of Modern Art; Art Bank, Sydney; Chartwell Collection, Auckland; City Art Gallery, Auckland and the University of Wollongong, N.S.W; MUSAC, Leon, Spain. Marti has completed significant public works including one at Westfield Centrepoint 100 Market St, with John Wardle Architects.  The first major monograph of Marti’s work was published in 2012 by Hatje Cantz.