Five of ARC ONE artists are featured in the newly published 'Doing Feminism: Women’s Art and Feminist Criticism in Australia'


Anne Marsh, ‘Doing Feminism: Women’s Art and Feminist Criticism in Australia’, published on 2 November, 2021, by The Miegunyah Press.

Five of ARC ONE artists – ANNE ZAHALKA, EUGENIA RASKOPOULOS, PAT BRASSINGTON, JULIE RRAP and JACKY REDGATE are featured in the newly published ‘Doing Feminism: Women’s Art and Feminist Criticism in Australia’.

Providing a comprehensive analysis of women’s art movements in Australia from the 1960s onward, this remarkable book by art historian Anne Marsh chronicles the struggles, contestations and achievements of women and feminism in Australian visual arts history. The book also acts as an divergent investigation into how the “doing” of feminism has shaped contemporary art and culture at home and abroad.

“…art and feminism are cyclical; they spiral in and out of time, and it’s interesting to see these younger women, very schooled in theoretical frameworks, turning back to an earlier time, and asking: why aren’t we doing that anymore?” ——Anne Marsh in conversation with Susanna Ling.

JANET LAURENCE & DANI MARTI INCLUDED IN 'TERRA AUSTRALIS REVISITED'

Dani Marti, Installation View, ‘Terra Australis Revisited’, Galerie Ernst Hilger , Vienna, 2021.

JANET LAURENCE and DANI MARTI are included in the group exhibition ‘Terra Australis Revisited’, at Galerie Ernst Hilger in Vienna.

The legend of Terra Australis dates back to Roman times being the unknown land of the South. Now for the second time to Austria comes a group show of diverse Australian artists curated by collector and philanthropist Simon Mordant AO.

The exhibition was supported by the Australian Embassy Vienna and continues until 18 December 2021.

JOHN YOUNG'S EXHIBITION AT BUNJIL PLACE EXTENDED

John Young, Installation View, Diaspora, Psyche, Bunjil Place, 2021

JOHN YOUNG’s exhibition ‘Diaspora, Psyche’ at Bunjil Place will open again from 6 November and continue until 7 December 2021.

There will be a panel discussion on Saturday 13 November from 3.30 – 5pm with John Young, James Nguyen, Sangeeta Sandrasegar, and moderated by Carolyn Barnes. In discussion will be how diaspora informs the reality of contemporary Australia and how different communities fit into this place?

For more information, visit here >

LYNDELL BROWN | CHARLES GREEN FINALISTS IN THE MORAN


Lyndell Brown & Charles Green, Portrait of Wukun Wanambi, 2021, oil on linen, 100 x 100cm

Congratulations to LYNDELL BROWN and CHARLES GREEN who are finalists in the 2021 Doug Moran National Portrait Prize with their portrait of Yirrkala elder and artist Wukun Wanambi.

’This portrait is of one of the most remarkable men we have ever met. In mid-2019 we travelled to Buku-Larrnggay Mulka, the Yolngu art centre at Yirrkala at the top of Australia’s Top End. Yirrkala is a small community, no more than a village, which serves as a hub for some 25 clan outstations of extended families or clans. As a living tradition, Yolngu culture has not turned its back on the incursions of the outside world but engaged with them. This is especially evident in Buku-Larrnggay Mulka, which is the vibrant art centre there, the nerve centre of the remarkable Yolngu campaign to impress their worldview upon the artworld in Australia and internationally. Taking its name from its location looking eastwards out over the ocean, Buku-Larrnggay means the feeling of the first rays of the sun on your face. Mulka means a sacred public ceremony that holds and protects knowledge. Our host—we were part of a 20-person conference of artists and academics that Charles had helped organise — was the well-travelled, charismatic Yolngu senior Elder and immensely distinguished artist Wukun Wanambi. An enthusiastic participant in our discussions throughout the week we spent there, he was keen to show us Yirrkala and introduce us to other Yolngu artists; he made us feel honoured guests despite his heavy cultural obligations and his own frail health. The portrait is a tribute to a remarkable man who impressed himself deeply upon us in our conversations with him and to whom we felt deeply grateful. While we were there we took a large number of photographs and made sketches from memory, including of Wukun. Afterward we sifted through all our memories and gradually abstracted from them the idea for this painting. When we realised the Moran Portrait Prize was to be held, it seemed to all instantly fit together, that we should show this image of a great Australian.’

– Lyndell Brown and Charles Green

The winner announced on 30 November. For more information, visit here >

JOHN YOUNG PANEL DISCUSSION

JOHN YOUNG will be speaking as part of a panel discussion on Thursday 21 October at 6pm (Melbourne time) on ‘Connecting hospitality and community with contemporary artists of diverse backgrounds’.

Moderated by Andrew Deane (Associate Director, Development and Partnerships, Asia Society Australia), the conversation will also include Professor Nikos Papastergiadis (Director of the Research Unit in Public Cultures and Professor in the School of Culture and Communication, The University of Melbourne), and Nasim Nasr (Iranian-born visual artist whose practice has engaged themes of intercultural dialogue between past and present, East and West).

John Young, The Field, 2018, HD video with color and sound: 8 min 5 sec

CYRUS TANG IN CONVERSATION WITH ART COLLECTOR

Watch CYRUS TANG in conversation with Charlotte Middleton at Art Collector speak about ‘Power Cables’, one of Tang’s works from her upcoming exhibition 'Remember me when the sun goes down' at ARC ONE Gallery.

In the video interview, Tang discusses the fleeting and ephemeral qualities in her work, and the importance of our collective experience for remembering history.

Cyrus Tang, ‘Power Cables’, 2020. Archival pigment print, edition of 5 + 2 A/P, 67.5 x 67.5cm and 90 x 90cm.