PAT BRASSINGTON & ANNE ZAHALKA IN NEW GEELONG GALLERY SHOW

PAT BRASSINGTON & ANNE ZAHALKA are featured in Geelong Gallery’s new exhibition Framing the Figure - contemporary photography and moving image works from the collection.

This exhibition explores artists’ use of the camera to capture their human subjects in both still and moving images. Through performative gestures, constructed narratives or a focus on specific body parts, these lens-based artists work closely with their subjects to compose the figure within the camera’s frame.


Framing the figure opens today and continues until 25 April 2021. Book a free, timed-entry ticket ahead of your visit!

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Pat Brassington, Akimbo, 1999, pigment print, 72 x 52 cm

Pat Brassington, Akimbo, 1999, pigment print, 72 x 52 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

MAJOR FEATURE ON PAT BRASSINGTON IN ART COLLECTOR MAGAZINE

PAT BRASSINGTON is the cover artist of the latest Art Collector Magazine, which features a massive 12-page spread on her work.

Rex Butler examines Brassington’s groundbreaking practice, exploring her “in-your-face sensuous and psychically charged subject matter” and how “behind it lies an extraordinarily refined and self-challenging organisational principle. As Brassington puts it herself: “I am walking the fine line between something that is beautiful and its antithesis”.

Dr Anne Marsh, author of ‘Pat Brassington: This is not a photograph’, is interviewed for the article and describes Brassington’s work as a “tantalising mix of surreal mystery and psychological menace”, and admires the way the artist “works with an incisive eye on our cultural uncanny. Her work encourages us to look deeper into our psycho-social landscape and investigate the hopes, fears and stereotypes that hide there. It’s a very sophisticated practice that looks seamless.”

In February ARC ONE Gallery will present ‘Night Swimming’ – a new body of work by Pat Brassington for the inaugural PHOTO2021 Festival.

Buy the current issue here >

MGA 30 YEAR ANNIVERSARY CATALOGUE

'VIEW FINDING Monash Gallery of Art 1990—2020', designed by Pidgeon Ward.

'VIEW FINDING Monash Gallery of Art 1990—2020', designed by Pidgeon Ward.

The MGA recently launched a landmark 30 year anniversary publication - VIEW FINDING Monash Gallery of Art 1990—2020. 

This fully illustrated catalogue features image plates by ARC ONE artists Pat Brassington, Lyndell Brown & Charles Green, Rose Farrell & George Parkin, Robert Owen, Jacky Redgate, Julie Rrap, Lydia Wegner and Anne Zahalka. It charts the history of the gallery, its present, and the future of photography in Australia. 

Over the last 30 years MGA has developed one of Australia’s most important cultural assets — the only public collection solely dedicated to Australian photography. MGA’s artistic program has explored the diversity of photographic practice in Australia, and has placed Australian photographers and photography within a global context. 'View Finding' looks at the past, present and future of photography in Australia, presenting moments that have defined MGA, its collection and exhibition history.

A selection of leading lights who specialise in photography in Australia have contributed essays to the publication. You can purchase it here.

PAT BRASSINGTON AT THE NGA

PAT BRASSINGTON has a number of works on display in the NGA's exhibition The Body Electric, now open to the public.

The Body Electric presents work by women artists on the subjects of sex, pleasure and desire. Included are celebrations of woman’s erotic experience; stories of intimacy and the emotional experience of love; works that interrogate the ways that women’s sexuality has historically been represented; and pictures that deal with the pleasures and repressions of sexuality and pleasure. The images in this exhibition show how sex, love and loss are an animating part of the human experience.

The exhibition will continue until January 2021.

More information >

Review in The Canberra Times >

PAT BRASSINGTON AT MGA

Pat Brassington, Untitled VII , 1980–2002, printed 2010, pigment ink-jet print, 370 x 249 mm

Pat Brassington, Untitled VII , 1980–2002, printed 2010, pigment ink-jet print, 370 x 249 mm

PAT BRASSINGTON has three works featured in the exhibition Dressing up: clothing and camera, closing soon at the Monash Gallery of Art (MGA).

This exhibition draws together photographs from the MGA collection that feature dress or clothing as a significant element in their making

The exhibition will close this Sunday 9 February.

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PAT BRASSINGTON

Pat Brassington, The Permissions #4, 2013, pigment print, 21 x 18 cm

Pat Brassington, The Permissions #4, 2013, pigment print, 21 x 18 cm

PAT BRASSINGTON's work is on show in the exhibition 'Contemporising the Modern: Australian Modern & Contemporary Photography', now showing at Town Hall Gallery, Hawthorn.

Showcasing photographic works that speak of 20th- and 21st-century Australia, this exhibition explores the development of Australian photography and its coming of age in a period when photographers were still pushing for their work to be accepted as a pure art form. The works are drawn from the Russell Mills Collection and are touring from MAMA (Murray Art Museum Albury).

The exhibition runs until 15 December.

More information >

PAT BRASSINGTON

Pat Brassington, The Wedding Guest, 2005, pigment print, 84 x 62 cm.

Pat Brassington, The Wedding Guest, 2005, pigment print, 84 x 62 cm.

PAT BRASSINGTON is featured in the latest edition of Art Collector Magazine, with her work The Wedding Guest.

"At her best, which she is most always at, Brassington's images strike like lightning and then in the aftershock seep into us with he bloom of an infection, or burrow in like a worm...At it’s best, as in The Wedding Guest, her photographic work is visionary but as a stolen glimpse of something unacceptable, unpalatable, the taste for which is fuelled by a cocktail of phobia and fascination", writes Edward Colless.

Art Collector (OCT - DEC) is available in stores now.

PAT BRASSINGTON | JACKY REDGATE

PAT BRASSINGTON and JACKY REDGATE are included in the important exhibition Defining Place/Space: Contemporary Photography from Australia at the Museum of Photographic Arts in San Diego, opening tomorrow. The exhibition reflects upon the current state of contemporary photography in Australia through the work of thirteen artists. . The exhibition is open from 6 March – 22 September.

More information here >

Review here >

Defining Place/Space: Contemporary Photography from Australia, installation view, Museum of Photographic Arts, San Diego, 2019. Courtesy of the Museum of Photographic Arts, San Diego.

Defining Place/Space: Contemporary Photography from Australia, installation view, Museum of Photographic Arts, San Diego, 2019. Courtesy of the Museum of Photographic Arts, San Diego.

PAT BRASSINGTON | JULIE RRAP | HONEY LONG & PRUE STENT

Pat Brassington, The Wedding Guest, 2005, pigment print, 84 x 62 cm.

Pat Brassington, The Wedding Guest, 2005, pigment print, 84 x 62 cm.

PAT BRASSINGTON, JULIE RRAP and HONEY LONG & PRUE STENT are included in In Her Words at Horsham Regional Art Gallery, opening this weekend. .

In Her Words focuses on women behind and in front of the camera. Women who are in control of their own story; whether they are speaking their own truth or re-enacting the accounts of others. The exhibition aims to get to the core of the female experience, rights and challenges. The exhibition continues until 19 May.

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PAT BRASSINGTON

Pat Brassington, Heart's Blood, 2017, pigment print, 90 x 65 cm.

Pat Brassington, Heart's Blood, 2017, pigment print, 90 x 65 cm.

PAT BRASSINGTON'S latest body of work, Nonetheless, is currently on show at Latrobe Regional Gallery. An opening reception will be held tomorrow evening, Friday 22 February, 6pm - 8pm. The exhibition continues until 7 April.

Informed by feminism, psychoanalysis and contemporary critical theory, Brassington has developed a unique oeuvre of enigmatic and visually intriguing photomontages constructed from seamlessly joined found and taken images. Suffused with suggestions of fear, repulsion, desire, sex, and memory, but with few clues to decode their narrative contexts, these images exist in an ambiguous space that triggers unexpected associations.

Nonetheless was shown at ARC ONE Gallery in July last year.

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PAT BRASSINGTON

PAT BRASSINGTON's work A's Joy has been featured on the cover of the book, 'The Mummy’s Foot and the Big Toe: Feet and Imaginative Promise'. In this book Alan Krell addresses the absurd, the abject, the banal and the romantic, as he describes the appearance of the foot in literature, photography, art and film.

More information >

Pat Brassington, A's Joy, 2005, pigment print, 84 x 62cm.

Pat Brassington, A's Joy, 2005, pigment print, 84 x 62cm.

PAT BRASSINGTON

A selection of works by PAT BRASSINGTON are currently on display at the Monash Gallery of Art as part of 'LEGACY +...collecting contemporary'. This offshoot of 'LEGACY. Your collection. Our Story,' showcases the work of artists who create incredibly potent narratives within their practice, with performative, experimental and chance encounters tying these works together.

The exhibition continues until 19 August. 

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Pat Brassington, Starlight from the series  Gentle, 2001, pigment print, 65 x 43.5cm.

Pat Brassington, Starlight from the series  Gentle, 2001, pigment print, 65 x 43.5cm.

PAT BRASSINGTON

Pat Brassington, Heart's Blood, 2017, pigment print, 90 x 65cm. 

Pat Brassington, Heart's Blood, 2017, pigment print, 90 x 65cm. 

PAT BRASSINGTON currently has her second solo exhibition on at Ten Cubed. 

Ten Cubed first began collecting Brassington's works in 2010, acquiring two prints – 'Going' and 'By the Way' – from her self-titled exhibition here at ARC ONE held in the same year. Early on, Brassington was selected as a core artist in Ten Cubed's collection and her first solo exhibition was held in 2014.

The exhibition will continue until 8 September, 2018.

More information >

PAT BRASSINGTON

Pat Brassington, Camourflage #2, 2018, pigment print, 78 x 56 cm.

Pat Brassington, Camourflage #2, 2018, pigment print, 78 x 56 cm.

One of Australia’s most significant and influential artists, Pat Brassington, returns to ARC ONE with Nonetheless, a new body of work that provokes, delights, and disturbs the senses.

Since the mid-1980s Pat Brassington has worked predominantly in photo-media within a disrupted surrealist aesthetic. Informed by feminism, psychoanalysis and contemporary critical theory, she has developed a unique oeuvre of enigmatic and visually intriguing photomontages constructed from seamlessly joined found and taken images. Suffused with suggestions of fear, repulsion, desire, sex, and memory, but with few clues to decode their narrative contexts, these images exist in an ambiguous space that triggers unexpected associations.

Pat Brassington, The Sleeper, 2018, pigment print, 90 x 68 cm.

Pat Brassington, The Sleeper, 2018, pigment print, 90 x 68 cm.

In Nonetheless, images and motifs familiar from previous series evolve and shift, becoming bearers of new meanings and insinuations. Bodies are fragmented, distorted and foreshortened, female lingerie is submerged and sodden, flowers are erotic, reds and fleshy tones pulsate, feet are hyper-pointed and elongated, and shoes are fetishised. Digitally manipulated, evocatively juxtaposed, and placed within claustrophobic, eerily lit interiors, these innocent forms and bodily fragments are rendered abject and sublime, unsettling and seductive through their superbly loaded connotations.

These works are provocatively ambiguous. Drawing influence from the Surrealists, notions of the uncanny, and Walter Benjamin’s ‘optical unconscious’, as well as literary references such as Alice in Wonderland, Brassington employs photomontage to reveal the incredible power of the mind to transform mundane objects and situations into sites/sights of horror, menace, sensuality, and desire.

As Brassington explains: When morphing an image I baulk prior to resolution and prefer to leave it hovering in uncertainty. Our visual brain endlessly seeks resolution and hence the real exerts a magnetic attraction. My aim is to use this gravitas to spin off towards other possibilities.

With a career spanning more than three decades, Pat Brassington is one of Australia’s leading contemporary artists. This year, Brassington won the prestigious Australia Council Award for Visual Arts. In 2017, she was awarded the inaugural Don Macfarlane Prize. In 2013, she won the Monash Gallery of Art Bowness Photography Prize. In 2012, she was honoured with a major nationally touring survey of her work, A Rebours, by the Australian Centre for Contemporary Art (ACCA). Brassington’s work has also featured extensively in major exhibitions, including The Shape of Things to Come at Buxton Contemporary, Melbourne (2018); Today Tomorrow Yesterday at the Museum of Contemporary Art, Sydney (2017); Lurid Beauty: Australian Surrealism and its Echoes, National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne (2015); Adelaide Biennial Parallel Collisions (2012); Feminism Never Happened at the Institute of Modern Art, Brisbane (2010); the Biennale of Sydney (2004); World Without End - Photography and the 20th Century at the Art Gallery of New South Wales (2000); and Fotokunst Aus Australien, Berlin (2000), curated by Bernice Murphy.

Selected recent solo exhibitions include Pat Brassington at Ten Cubed, Melbourne (2018); The Body Electric, Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney (2017); Just So, ARC ONE Gallery, Melbourne (2016); In search of the marvellous at CAST Gallery, Hobart (2013); a survey exhibition at the Lönnstrom Art Museum, Finland (2008); Pat Brassington at the Institute of Modern Art, Brisbane (2007); a major solo retrospective at the Ian Potter Museum of Art, Melbourne (2002) and Gentle at Australian Centre for Contemporary Art, Melbourne (2001).

Pat Brassington’s work is held in many public collections including the Art Gallery of NSW; Queensland Art Gallery; National Gallery of Australia; Museum of Contemporary Art, Sydney; National Gallery of Victoria; Art Gallery of Western Australia; Museum of Old and New Art, Hobart; Buxton Contemporary, Melbourne; ArtBank, Sydney; Monash Gallery of Art, Melbourne; Cologne Museum of Contemporary Art, Germany; Heide Museum of Modern Art, Melbourne; Geelong Art Gallery; Ian Potter Museum of Art, Melbourne; City of Yarra Collection; University of Technology, Sydney; Banyule City Council; Horsham Gallery of Art; Murdoch University, WA; Devonport Art Gallery, Tasmania; Burnie Regional Gallery, Tasmania; Fremantle Arts Centre, WA; University of the Northern Territory, Darwin; La Trobe University Art Collection, Melbourne; Collection of Legal Aid Victoria.

Pat Brassington lives and works in Hobart, Tasmania.

PAT BRASSINGTON

PAT BRASSINGTON has been selected for an upcoming exhibition on contemporary Australian photographic artists at the Museum of Photographic Arts in San Diego. The exhibition will occur in 2019.

 

  

Pat Brassington, Mantle, 2017, pigment print, 90 x 76.5cm.

Pat Brassington, Mantle, 2017, pigment print, 90 x 76.5cm.

PAT BRASSINGTON

PAT BRASSINGTON's work can be seen in The Design Files latest article about Buxton Contemporary. The Gallery dedicated to The Michael Buxton collection will open Friday 9 March.

To read the full article, please click here.

Pat Brassington, By the Way, 2010, Pigment Print, 72 x 90 cm

Pat Brassington, By the Way, 2010, Pigment Print, 72 x 90 cm

PAT BRASSINGTON

Brassington_Portrait.jpg

Congratulations to PAT BRASSINGTON for receiving the Australia Council Award for Visual Arts 2018! The prestigious peer-nominated award recognises and celebrates the significant contributions of  eight leading artists from different fields to Australia’s artistic and cultural vibrancy. The recipients will be honoured tonight during a special ceremony at Carriageworks, Sydney.

More information here.

Art Guide Australia article here > 

 

PAT BRASSINGTON

Pat Brassington, A's Joy, 2005, pigment print, 84 x 62 cm.

Pat Brassington, A's Joy, 2005, pigment print, 84 x 62 cm.

PAT BRASSINGTON is included in La Trobe Art Institute's current exhibition, A Gathering. The show brings together a selection of artwork from the La Trobe University Collections. The exhibition represents a static snapshot of the variety of artworks in a large collection as well as a dynamic expression of the relationships that exist between artworks, eras and styles. An assembly of individual works is both many pieces and one entity. A Gathering is also an acknowledgement that choice, selection and positioning are important factors in bringing together an exhibition and aims to illuminate this aspect of exhibition making.

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