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Orientalism
A small token
“So I find myself in India, a guest returning.
Once again being warmly received, anticipating making new friends
and eager to meet with those already known. I present a small token.”
Mandy Ridley, artist statement from her Public / Private small token
exhibition in Bangalore, January 2005.For many years Australian
artists have traveled to, studied and lived in Asia. Asian culture,
in its rich diversity, has provided inspiration from a philosophical,
political, social and aesthetic perspective. The notion of presenting
a small token - from Mandy Ridley’s residency and exhibition
in India - seemed like a humble and low key way to think about this
exhibition. The seven contemporary Australian artists represented
in Orientalism each have completely different responses to everything
from Japanese costume designs, printmaking and storytelling to Southern
Indian rangoli designs.
Where the word orientalism conjures images of a bygone era –
a time when artifacts shipped from the exotic Orient found their
way into studios of curious and culturally attuned artists –
this exhibition actually embodies the opposite. It is not about
the physical travels to Asia and the idea of bringing something
entirely new back home. Our capacity to absorb information and images
of other cultures in a world of global exchange renders obsolete
a lot of those symbolic ideas of what might be Oriental. The works
in this exhibition are in a sense tokens of engagement with other
artists, with ideas, styles and processes of Eastern culture.
Mandy Ridley’s work explores colour, craftsmanship and pattern.
She uses hand and laser cutting technologies, at times merging the
distinction between drawing and embroidery.
In parts of Southern India wire bags made of floss were once very
popular for domestic use. When she was in Bangalore on an Asialink
residency in 2004, Mandy Ridley discovered these bags which are
now considered by the locals to be old fashioned, and not terribly
practical. Ridley’s fluorescent Shopping bags with Rangoli
designs are based on these wire bags, only she has placed on them
a pattern that doesn’t exist in Southern Indian bag weaving.
Inspired in part from sketches the artist made of plant forms in
her Brisbane neighbourhood – the sketches formed a concept
design for a public art project she was working on - Ridley translated
these motifs onto the plastic mesh bags. The vibrant coloured installation
is an ordered shopper’s paradise, the bags are lined up with
handles open and ready to be filled with goods.
A resident of Japan on and off since 1997, Marcel Cousins has completed
a degree at the Tokyo National University of Art, receiving a number
of awards and grants from his adopted home. Cousins’ work
has been described as having a cheeky humour as he graphically decodes
the popular images and historical icons of Japanese culture. Cousins’
draws inspiration from sources ranging from soft-porn manga comics
to traditional printmaking. He makes work that is finely crafted
and technically precise, incorporating bubble jet printing, painting
and stenciling for an end result that is part subversive, part stylized,
and part graffiti art. Cousins’ paintings successfully reflect
the contrasting landscape of Japan. His use of a cherry blossom
tree set as the foreground to a contemporary apartment building
signifies an aesthetic tension between traditional and contemporary
values.
Leah Santilli’s Response to trees is a paper cut-out work
inspired in part by the Japanese tradition of honoring nature and
in part by the abundance of tree life around the artist’s
home. It highlights the ephemeral and often unnoticed shapes that
form between tree branches. Santillli’s work recreates the
shifting nature of these shapes within shapes, the way light dances
across the surfaces, creating shadows that move with the hours of
the day, the changing of the seasons. Response to trees was made
during Santilli’s final year of visual arts study and the
artist has commented: “The vein-like nature of a branch beckons
onlookers to follow its form until it is lost among the many other
branches stemming from the tree.”
The idea of art making as a token fits beautifully with Lucy Griggs
work, whose paintings have been described as “referentially
humble and formally modest”.
Griggs’ creates paintings that are infused with romantic notions
of a hidden other life - the silent serenade between two birds,
awash in the poetic glare of a white day moon. Griggs looks for
underlying meaning and is fascinated with fables and myths steeped
in superstition but the inspiration for the three panels in this
exhibition came when she was reading the (exquisitely titled) book
As I crossed a bridge of dreams. The book was a translation of a
Japanese woman’s reflection on her life in 11th century Japan.
It created a space for Griggs to see things a bit differently, to
celebrate the happiness or the solemnity of a bird on a branch or
a fluttering leaf as a humble discovery along a footpath.
Harriet Parsons’ The Call Signs Project is an ongoing series
of wall pieces that have been exhibited widely (in various forms)
at the National Gallery of Victoria, Gertrude Contemporary Artspaces,
The Melbourne Art Fair, Westspace and the Eastlink Gallery in Shanghai.
Each numbered Call Sign is an improvised construction of domestic
and commercial litter, needle lace and electronics. The Call Signs
are linked by painting, drawings and construction, and they map
out imagined and dreamed landscapes. Call Signs#11 invites the viewer
to step into the space and contemplate the serene mountain vista
applied directly onto the wall and investigate the subtle sound
that emanates from an intricate tree form made from wire, electronic
parts and thread.
Between 2002 and 2004 Merric Brettle undertook a Master of Fine
Arts at Tokyo University and completed a series of works which traced
a journey through the streets and culture of Tokyo. When the artist
arrived in Japan in 1994 he was struck first by the homogeneity
of the international style architecture and multinational icons
but secondly, by the way the ‘global packaging’ had
been adapted to the local environment, (the green macha Japanese
tea/frappacino at Starbucks being a classic example). This interface,
whether it be between different cultures or between individuals
and their environment or even between an art object and its audience
has been a key area of interest for Brettle in the past 5 years.
The objects which make up the installation Tundra are crafted out
of polyester resin concrete and painted with plastic polyutherane.
The series of forms both mimic and mock the homogenised global objects
and signs in Brettle’s Japan.
Eisen1a by Natalya Hughes is a scaled down ‘remix’ of
a larger work which is currently hanging in the Queensland Art Gallery
exhibition Prime 2005: New Art from Queensland. The work is inspired
by the Japanese Ukiyo-e tradition of woodblock printing and Hughes
sourced the images from a 1960s publication of Ukiyo-e works called
‘The Decadents’. Hughes took the reproductions of Ukiyo-e
artist Keisai Eisen (1790-1848) and digitally removed the exposed
parts of the female body, placing the image in a blank field and
then creating her own version of these elusive and lyrical figures.
In the original Eisen work the women were gazing at their lovers
who were out of the frame. Hughes thinks of her absent women as
ghosts – a presence for the viewer to create when looking
at the detailed patterning of the fabric, placing a delicate wrist,
a tilted head, a coquettish smile into the contorted, staged poses.
Text by Kirsten
Matthews
Curated by Renai Grace
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Mandy Ridley
'Shopping Bags with
Rangoli Designs'
Plastic
2005

Marcel Cousins
'Apartment with a view'
Enamel on Canvas
130 x 180cm
2005

Natalya Hughes
'Eisen1a'
Oil on Canvas
30cm x 40cm
2005
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