LONG & STENT FINALISTS IN FISHER'S GHOST

Honey Long & Prue Stent, Somatic Stalk, 2019, archival pigment print, 58 x 87 cm & Hydro, 2020, archival pigment print, 108 x 72 cm.

Honey Long & Prue Stent, Somatic Stalk, 2019, archival pigment print, 58 x 87 cm & Hydro, 2020, archival pigment print, 108 x 72 cm.

HONEY LONG & PRUE STENT are finalists in the Fisher’s Ghost Art Award with their pair of photographs Hydro and Somatic Stalk!

The Fisher’s Ghost Art Award is an annual art prize now in its 58th year which coincides with Campbelltown’s annual Festival of Fisher’s Ghost.

The exhibition will be held from Saturday 31 October - Friday 11 December 2020 at Campbelltown Arts Centre, with all finalists’ works available for purchase.

More information >

SYDNEY CONTEMPORARY GOES LIVE ONLINE

Sydney Contemporary is taking a different shape this year. From tomorrow, the art fair will be live online for the entire month of October!

ARC ONE Gallery will be featuring new works by PETER DAVERINGTON, MURRAY FREDERICKS, HONEY LONG & PRUE STENT, JACKY REDGATE and GUAN WEI.

This year’s art fair is free to browse! The SC Team have worked tirelessly to build a custom platform to connect artists & galleries with the arts community.⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀

VIP Preview: 1 October 10am
Public Viewing: 1 October 2pm

Visit the fair HERE!

HONEY LONG & PRUE STENT - TOUCHING POOL

ARC ONE Gallery is delighted to present Touching Pool, a highly anticipated solo exhibition by one of Australia’s leading artist collaborations, Honey Long & Prue Stent. The exhibition runs from 21 August - 5 December.

What if there was a force that flowed between everything and connected us? Water? Love?
In ‘Touching Pool’ we turn a loving and somewhat provocative gaze upon wet bodies and environments that stir something deep inside. These evocative moments and textures have been gathered from our ongoing practice of abstracting bodies and materials within environments. Condensed morsels, they provoke a host of feelings: affection, repulsion, lust, wonder, hunger, joy. Despite the fractures that exist, when one starts to string bodies and scenes together, these seemingly disparate things seem to sing to each other.

- Honey Long & Prue Stent, 2020

Inspired by the touching pool often found at aquariums and the sensorial connections with nature they elicit, this exhibition speaks to the conflicted and estranged relationship we have with the natural world. Using a pared down visual language of colour, texture, and form, Touching Pool captures performative encounters between bodies and the natural environment. In these works, submerged bodies writhe, dance, bend and twist into organic matter while materials adeptly used by the artists such as shimmering transparent fabrics, wax, glass and netting, blend and merge the body and landscape. Zoomed-in, tightly cropped, abstracted, and enveloped, bodies become creaturely while aquatic animals, river beds and rock formations evoke human forms, revealing sights/sites of commonality and connection that “sing to each other”.

Working across photography, performance, installation and sculpture, Honey Long and Prue Stent (both b. 1993, Sydney, Australia) have been making art together since they were teenagers. Long completed her Bachelor of Fine Arts at Sydney College of the Arts, Sydney, in 2015 and Stent completed her Bachelor of Arts (Photography) at RMIT, Melbourne, in 2014. Their work has been shown across Australia and in various countries internationally, including Switzerland, Spain,

the United Kingdom and the United States. Recent exhibitions include Bowness Photography Prize, Monash Gallery of Art, Melbourne (2020); In Her Words, Horsham Regional Art Gallery, Horsham, Victoria (2019); ‘Eyes on Main Street’ Wilson Outdoor Photo Festival, Wilson, North Carolina (2019); Josephine Ulrick and Win Schubert Photography Award, HOTA, Queensland (2018); Phanta Firma, ARC ONE Gallery, Melbourne (2018); Oceans From Here, Australian
Centre of Photography, Sydney (2018); Anticipation is part of the seduction, BLINDSIDE Gallery, Melbourne (2018); London Photo, The Female Lens: 9 Contemporary Female Photographers, Huxley- Parlour Gallery, London (2018); Future Feminin, Fahey/ Klein Gallery, Los Angeles (2018); Long and Stent, Nicola Von Senger Gallery, Zurich (2018); Players, curated by Cristina De Middle Puch, Photo Espanña Festival, Madrid (2017); and Sites of the Imagination, ARC ONE Gallery, Melbourne (2017). They have participated in a number of projects, including City of Sydney Site Works, Sydney (2019); The Billboard Project, Incinerator Gallery Moonee Valley City Council, Melbourne (2019); This _ _ _ _ _ _ _ may not protect you but at times it’s enough to know it’s there, collaboration with Amrita Hepi, Underbelly Arts Festival, Sydney (2017); Sound and Vision, Sydney Opera House, Sydney (2016); and Gucci #24 Hour Ace, LA. Their work is held in the collections of Horsham Regional Art Gallery, Deakin University Art Collection, Artbank, HOTA, and the City of Sydney.

> Exhibition essay by Kathleen Linn

> View exhibition

Honey Long & Prue Stent, ‘Touching Pool’ exhibition view, ARC ONE Gallery, 2020.

Honey Long & Prue Stent, ‘Touching Pool’ exhibition view, ARC ONE Gallery, 2020.

ANNE ZAHALKA IN EXHIBITION OF AUSTRALIAN PHOTOGRAPHY IN FLORIDA

ANNE ZAHALKA is a featured artist in the exhibition From All Points of the Southern Sky: Photography from Australia and Oceania, open now at the Southeast Museum of Photography in Florida.

Curator Ashley Lumb has chosen thirteen artists who incisively explore the Australian continent. The artists drag Australia’s contentious past into the light of the present, visualising the ghostly legacy of colonialism and bearing witness to the devastating impact of human-induced climate change.

Conveying a singularly Australian experience but one with innumerable global parallels, From all Points of the Southern Sky continues at SMP until 16 December.

More information >

Interview with curator Ashley Lumb >

Review in This Is Tomorrow art magazine >

IMANTS TILLERS FINALIST IN 2020 WYNNE PRIZE

Congratulations to IMANTS TILLERS who is a finalist in the Wynne Prize 2020! His work Prayer for rain will be on view at the AGNSW from 26 September. 

Read Imants’ poignant artist statement below:

“A flower meadow is an unusual subject for an Australian landscape – we are more familiar with the harsh realities of fire, drought and flood. Yet such gentle, quiet and fecund places exist on our continent – notably in the subalpine areas of NSW, Victoria and Tasmania. And indeed proximity to the summer meadows of the Kosciusko National Park was one of the reasons I moved with my family to Cooma, 25 years ago. But here the meadow of daisies is also a metaphor for the self. So we pray: ‘MINE THOU LORD OF LIFE, 
SEND MY ROOTS RAIN’.”

More information >

Imants Tilers, Prayer for rain, 2020, synthetic polymer paint, gouache on 54 canvas boards, 227 x 212 cm

Imants Tilers, Prayer for rain, 2020, synthetic polymer paint, gouache on 54 canvas boards, 227 x 212 cm

TEN CUBE RELEASES LANDMARK PUBLICATION

Ten Cubed has released a publication to celebrate their tenth anniversary and the conclusion of their project - 2010 - 2020: TEN CUBED CONCEPT, COLLECTION, GALLERY.

Ten Cubed is an art experiment begun in 2010 whereby an evolving top ten contemporary artists were collected in depth. Their collection includes ARC ONE artists PAT BRASSINGTON & CYRUS TANG. 

This beautifully designed book records various stages of their wonderful journey - from conception, building the gallery, acquiring the collection to exhibiting the works of the many artists they are proud to have supported.⁣

Purchase your copy here!

PAT BRASSINGTON IN 'LEGACY' EXHIBITION

PAT BRASSINGTON is part of the exhibition LEGACY, now open online via Wyndham Art Gallery. This exhibition opens up a dialogue between six artists to consider what we keep, what we share and what we leave behind.

Brassington’s surrealist photo-media works are eerie and inviting, like snippets of dreams hiding in the corners of memory. They act as a counterpoint to Liam Benson’s photo and video pieces that feed on the aesthetic of the Australian gothic.

“Brassington has never stopped making works that startle and astonish, that create chills and uncanny flushes, night sweats and eerie incantations of strange eroticism. In many ways she forms a bedrock to this exhibition. Brassington has never eschewed crediting other giants in her creative evolution, from the early Surrealists to the bleak majesty of literary giant Cormac McCarthy. And there can be no doubt that her legacy has helped carve new spaces for younger Australian artists (especially, but by no means exclusively, female artists) to traverse,” writes Dr Ashley Crawford in the catalogue essay. 

LEGACY is co-curated by Caroline Esbenshade & Dr Megan Evans, and continues until 11 October.

View the exhibition here

Read the catalogue essay here

MURRAY FREDERICKS AT ANU - VIRTUAL TOUR

MURRAY FREDERICKS’ striking cube in the outdoor gallery at ANU looks great from every angle! These impressive steel cubes are a new permanent fixture on University Avenue in Canberra, providing a year-round, free and public ‘walk of art’.

Four of Murray’s photos are displayed on this cube in the inaugural exhibition ‘Where I Stand’ - a stirring collection of photographs from six iconic Australian photographers. The installations can be taken singularly, or read end to end, with themes such as rejuvenation and connection to country linking the works.

Where I Stand is produced by AMBUSH Gallery and curated in partnership with Head On Photo Fest, and will be showing at Exhibition Avenue, Kambri at ANU until 31 October.

If you’re unable to get there in person, you can now enjoy the works in a 4-minute online video that guides viewers through the outdoor exhibition. Watch it here!

Images: Install photography of Where I Stand by Martin Ollman

EUGENIA RASKOPOULOS IN ARTIST PROFILE MAGAZINE

EUGENIA RASKOPOULOS is profiled in the latest edition of Artist Profile magazine!

“Throughout Raskopoulos’ forty-year career, the artist has maintained a deep interest in changing the present by challenging the ways in which we describe the past. She has woven her own image and experiences into a series of photographs, films and installations to articulate the constant negotiation that migrant bodies face in foreign cultures,” writes Michael Do.⠀

Raskopoulos is currently working towards her solo show at ARC ONE Gallery opening in March 2021. Pick up the magazine for a peek inside her studio!

DANI MARTI IN CONVERSATION

Join DANI MARTI in conversation with director & curator of UNSW Galleries José Da Silva this afternoon at 5:30pm. Dani will discuss his video and painting practice, in particular his work in the exhibition Friendship as a way of life.

This event will be live-streamed - register your attendance here!

Dani Marti, Notes for Bob, 2012-16, installation view at UNSW Galleries, 2020. Photo by Zan Wimberley

Dani Marti, Notes for Bob, 2012-16, installation view at UNSW Galleries, 2020. Photo by Zan Wimberley