Gordon Shepherdson
The stoning of St Stephen - After the last stone 1991
oil and wax on paper
Collection of The University of Queensland
Gift of Gordon Shepherdson in memory of his wife Noela Shepherdson, through the Australian Government's Cultural Gifts Program, 2011 (pending)
Reproduced courtesy of the artist and Philip Bacon Galleries, Brisbane. Photo: Carl Warner

NEW 2011: Selected recent acquisitions

9 January – 25 March 2012

NEW 2011 features a selection of artworks acquired for The University of Queensland Art Collection during 2011. The exhibition highlights the University’s active acquisition program, which continues a tradition of acquiring innovative artworks that respond to the contemporary moment. Also featured are works from earlier periods, which enter the Collection primarily through donations (including gifts under the Australian Government’s Cultural Gifts Program), donations and bequests. Works range in media, and address subjects such as the environment, cultural history, abstraction, and the self.

Artists include Richard Bell, Gordon Bennett, Pat Brassington, Celeste Chandler, Debra Dawes, Destiny Deacon, Ian Friend, Helga Groves, Tim Johnson, Peter Kennedy, Rosemary Laing, Janet Laurence, Rhys Lee, Norman Lindsay, Gabriella Mangano and Silvana Mangano, Ricky Maynard, Danie Mellor, Graeme Peebles, Cecilia Peter, Ryan Presley, Stuart Ringholt, Gordon Shepherdson, Tim Silver, Darren Siwes, Gemma Smith, Paul Wrigley, and Bill Yaxley.

Curators: Michele Helmrich and Samantha Littley

 

Publication

View the publication NEWv2: Selected recent acquisitions 2009–2011 here

Euan Macleod
Present 2008
oil and synthetic polymer paint on canvas
Tweed River Art Gallery Collection

Surface tension: The Art of Euan Macleod 1991-2009

29 October – 11 December 2011

Surface Tension: the art of Euan Macleod 1991 – 2009 is the first major touring exhibition of work by Macleod, an innovative artist who is considered to be one of the finest painters of his generation. Euan Macleod’s work has received critical and public acclaim, as well as major awards including the Archibald Prize in 1999, the Sulman Prize in 2001 and the Blake Prize in 2006.
 
Surface Tension showcases the best of Macleod’s major works, sourced from the collections of public galleries, corporations and private collectors. It traces Macleod’s concentrated distillation of elements from both the Australian bush and the land of his birth, New Zealand. Visitors to this exhibition will witness the artist’s tense wrestle with duality – thick and thin pigments, Australia and New Zealand, father and son, absence and presence. The striking, painterly quality of Macleod’s work is evident through his deft deployment of symbolic imagery which engages audiences in a range of issues including identity, alienation, displacement, security and mortality.

Euan Macleod is represented by Watters Gallery, Sydney; Niagara Galleries, Melbourne and Victor Mace Fine Art Gallery, Brisbane.


Tour dates:
 
SH Ervin Gallery 12 November – 19 December 2010
Tweed River Art Gallery 28 January – 27 March 2011
Orange Regional Gallery 29 April – 12 June 2011
Mornington Peninsula Regional Gallery 30 June – 7 August 2011
Newcastle Region Art Gallery 27 August – 16 October 2011
The University of Queensland Art Museum 29 October – 11 December 2011

Interpretive Resources

    • Surface Tension: the art of Euan Macleod 1991-2009 Education Resource available here 
       

Media

View 'Award-winning art looks to Australia and beyond' here

 

Public Program

Friday 28 October
5.00 pm – 6.00 pm: Join Euan Macleod in conversation with Susi Muddiman, Director, Tweed River Art Gallery

Saturday 12 November
11.00 am – 12.00 pm: Join Curator Gavin Wilson on a guided tour of the exhibition

 
            



Surface Tension: the art of Euan Macleod 1991 – 2009
is a Tweed River Art Gallery touring exhibition, curated by Gavin Wilson.






This exhibition is supported by Visions of Australia, an Australian Government program supporting touring exhibitions by providing funding assistance for the development and touring of Australian cultural material across Australia.


     
                 


Tweed River Art Gallery is assisted by the NSW Government through Arts NSW

 

National Artists' Self-Portrait Prize 2011

24 September 2011 – 12 February 2012

The University of Queensland National Artists’ Self-Portrait Prize 2011 has been awarded to Domenico de Clario for his work 2047 (the immortal).

Life is risk / Art is risk

What is contemporary art if not a risk, a monumental folly? Could there be a riskier venture than creating art—painting, music, dance— and showing it to an audience, with no control of how it may be received or understood? Does not art, broadly speaking, reflect the human condition? Not in the sense of emotions, but rather in the idea that life itself is a risk: we are born, we live and we die. All that happens in between is a calculated risk: we sink or swim.

Making and exhibiting art is a risky pursuit. The artist need not be rewarded financially or be critically well received, or even acknowledged on the cultural landscape. The artist risks their work being reviled, celebrated or, in the worst-case scenario, ignored. To make a self portrait then is to add to the calculated risk, for it is to say something about oneself explicitly, to risk exposure. Herein lies its strength. The 2011 Self-Portrait Prize invites artists to take a risk, a risk that the work may not be revered, but instead may provoke.

The University of Queensland National Artists’ Self-Portrait Prize highlights The University of Queensland’s commitment to developing a National Collection of Artists’ Self-Portraits.

Curator: Alison Kubler
Judge: Rhana Devenport

Exhibiting artists

Alfredo & Isabel Aquilizan
James & Eleanor Avery
John Barbour
Polly Borland
Daniel Boyd
Eric Bridgeman
Dadang Christanto
Daniel Crooks
Domenico de Clario
Michael Doolan
Cherine Fahd
Nicholas Folland
Louise Hearman
Narelle Jubelin
Laith McGregor
Noel McKenna
Tim McMonagle
Kate Murphy
Raquel Ormella
David Ray
Joan Ross
Rebecca Smith
Grant Stevens
*Entry to the Prize is by invitation only

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Judge's comments:

Domenico de Clario's work 2047 (the immortal) is a deeply considered and complex meditation on memory and mortality. Taking poignant moments from each decade of his own life since 1947 and projecting possible moments into an imaginary future, de Clario coalesces 100 years of a life lived. Each decade is marked with a painting and a chair from which it could be viewed. These elements are presented in a vividly painted room that itself recalls the artist's overpowering first encounter – via his own father's hand at aged ten – with 'modern art'.
 
2047 (the immortal) explores, in the artist's own words, 'how paradoxical ideas about risk and failure and expectation can be negotiated in one's life'. The self constantly evolves in a never-ending circular quest, and 'momentariness' hones our experiences, memories and sense of self. As always in de Clario's work, European literature infiltrates and informs his questions, this new and vast constellation of thoughts and painted forms registers an unveiling and a revealing of human sensitivity.

Rhana Devenport
Director, Govett-Brewster Art Gallery
New Plymouth, Aotearoa New Zealand
 

Learning

  • Portraiture/Self Portraiture/Identity Learning Resource here
  • View 'Professional Development Seminar for high school teachers' here  
  • Listen to or download MP3 panel discussion on Portraiture/Self Portraiture, 8 October 2011 here
  • Listen to or download MP3 artist talk by Domenico de Clario, winner of the National Artists' Self-Portrait Prize 2011, 8 October 2011 here
     

Public Programs

Saturday 24 September

10.30 am – 11.30 am: Alison Kubler in conversation with Rhana Devenport
11.30 am – 12.30 pm: Artist talks by Louise Hearman, Nicholas Folland, Raquel Ormella and David Ray
 

Media

  • Watch Life is Risk / Art is Risk on Vimeo here 

View 'Adelaide artist takes out top national artist's self portrait prize' here
View 'Artists embrace risk for top self-portrait prize' here

Albert Tucker(1914-1999)
Psycho 1942
pastel on paper
National Gallery of Australia, Canberra. Purchased 1976
©Barbara Tucker

Inner Worlds: Portraits & Psychology

13 August – 23 October 2011


Inner Worlds: Portraits & Psychology
highlights points of intense connection between psychology and portraiture in Australian art and social history. It includes portraits of influential women and men of psychology from World War I to the 1950s, and portraits by artists inspired by the inner worlds of the subconscious from the 1940s to now.

The exhibition brings together portraits and depictions of faces and figures created in the 1940s by Albert Tucker, Sidney Nolan and Joy Hester that reflect psychological trauma, an interest they shared with psychologist Reginald Spencer Ellery. Portraits and imaginary faces created by mental health patients in the 1950s and 1960s, collected by Dr Eric Cunningham Dax, reveal unique experiences of the mind. (These images are legally considered to be medical records and, therefore, the artist-patients’ names are withheld and the works cannot be reproduced but are granted exemption for exhibition within the context of the exhibition.) From the 1980s and 1990s experimental self portraits and figure studies by Dale Frank and Mike Parr explore highly intense mental states. The exhibition’s coda is a new portrait of Australian philosopher of consciousness David Chalmers by artist Nick Mourtzakis, commissioned by the National Portrait Gallery.

This exhibition will also tour to the Ian Potter Museum of Art in Victoria from 18 April - 22 July 2012.

Curator: Dr Christopher Chapman, National Portrait Gallery

 

Interpretive Resources

    • Watch online or listen to National Portrait Gallery on Inner Worlds: Portraits & Psychology here   
       

Media

View 'Art and psychology combine for a portrait exhibition' here







This exhibition is supported by the National Collecting Institutions Touring and Outreach Program, an Australian Government program aiming to improve access to the national collections for all Australians.

 

Lorna Fencer Napurrula
Untitled n.d.
synthetic polymer paint on canvas
Collection of The University of Queensland
Gift of Christopher Thomas and Mark Alexander to commemorate the University’s Centenary through the Australian Government’s Cultural Gifts Program, 2010 (pending)
© estate of the artist 2011 licensed by Aboriginal Artists Agency Ltd
Photo: Carl Warner

Painting Country: Recent Acquisitions of Indigenous Art

9 JULY – 18 SEPTEMBER 2011

Painting Country celebrates the richness of The University of Queensland Art Collection. Representation of Indigenous artists in the Collection was boosted in 2010 by gifts, including artworks donated by Patrick Corrigan AM, and Christopher Thomas and Mark Alexander, which are showcased in this exhibition. The paintings reveal the artists’ connection to Country and ongoing engagement with their culture and land through art.

Works by Donald Moko, Margaret Baragurra and Rusty Peters from Western Australia will be shown along with paintings by Desert artists Kathleen Petyarre and Elizabeth Marks Nakamarra. Queensland artists Kurruwarriyingathi Bijarrb Paula Paul and Birrmuyingathi Maali Netta Loogatha from Mornington Island, and Dennis Nona from the Torres Strait, are also represented in this diverse display.

Curator: Samantha Littley

 

Media

View 'Connections to Country frame art exhibition' here

 

Public Program

Wednesday 7 September 6.00pm - 7.00pm
Curator Talk: Samantha Littley

Jon Cattapan
Possible histories: Valley nights 2008 (detail)
oil on linen, four panels
Collection of The University of Queensland, purchased 2009
Reproduced courtesy of the artist and Milani Gallery, Brisbane
Photo: Carl Warner

Story Bridge

9 JULY – 18 SEPTEMBER 2011

The Story Bridge, linking Brisbane’s Fortitude Valley to Kangaroo Point, was declared open during the Second World War on 6 July 1940. At the time of its construction, this steel cantilever bridge was the second largest bridge in Australia after the Sydney Harbour Bridge. Designed by Dr John Bradfield, it was named after John Douglas (J.D.) Story, The University of Queensland’s first full-time Vice-Chancellor and former Queensland Public Service Commissioner. His grandson, John Story, was appointed the 13th Chancellor of The University of Queensland in 2009.

Artworks by Jon Cattapan, Louise Forthun and Ron McBurnie take as their subject the Story Bridge, both as an icon of progress and optimism and a landmark amidst the life of nearby Fortitude Valley.

 

Public Program

Saturday 17 September 11.00am - 12.00pm
Artist Talk: Louise Forthun

John Conomos
Shipwreck 2011 (detail)
multi-media installation
Reproduced courtesy of the artist and Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, Sydney
Film still from The Lady from Shanghai 1948 (Director: Orson Welles)

John Conomos: Shipwreck

9 JULY – 18 SEPTEMBER 2011

John Conomos’s mixed-media installation Shipwreck presents a meditative reflection on the ephemeral nature of life itself. The artist centres his work on the famous concluding scenes of Orson Welles’s film The Lady from Shanghai (1948), where, following a shoot out in a fun-house hall of mirrors, the dying Rita Hayworth expresses to Welles her horror of impending death.

From this classic moment of American film noir, Conomos explores the theme of death in our personal and social lives. As he says, we tend ‘to see our individual lives “time-lapse” like a celluloid strip before our eyes as we approach mortality’. Shipwreck is the first part of a trilogy.

John Conomos is an Associate Professor at the University of Sydney.

 

Public Program

Saturday 3 September 11.00am - 12.00pm
Artist Talk: John Conomos

 

Dennis Del Favero
Todtnauberg 2009 (video still)
single-channel DVD video installation
4 minutes
Reproduced courtesy of the artist and Boutwell Draper Gallery, Sydney.

Dennis Del Favero: Todtnauberg

9 July – 18 September 2011

Todtnauberg is a video work dealing with the ‘epoch making encounter’ between the Jewish poet Paul Celan and the German philosopher Martin Heidegger in 1967, commemorated by a poem of the same name. On one hand, is Celan’s attempt to remember the dead counterpointed by the guilt he feels towards his parents who died in the death camps? On the other hand, is Heidegger’s silence regarding his official collaboration with the Nazis, and their extermination of countless millions, counterpointed by his attempts to remember his philosophical interventions?

 

Public Program

Saturday 3 September 11.00am - 12.00pm
Artist Talk: Dennis Del Favero

 

John Cattapan
Imagine a raft 2003
oil on linen
Private collection, Brisbane
Reproduced courtesy of the artist and Milani Gallery, Brisbane.

Collaborative witness: Artists' responses to the plight of the asylum seeker and refugee

11 June – 7 August 2011

Intense media coverage of events surrounding asylum seekers creates witnesses of all Australians. Through multiple styles and materials, artists challenge one-dimensional portrayals and become not only witnesses, but also collaborators on the complex story of those seeking asylum. Works produced over the past decade question the nation’s response to the plight of the refugee. Artists include Benjamin Armstrong, Lyndell Brown and Charles Green, Jon Cattapan, Tim Johnson and Karma Phuntsok, Rosemary Laing, David Ray, Judy Watson, and Guan Wei.
 
Curators: Dr Prue Ahrens and Michele Helmrich

 

Media

View 'Asylum art strikes a chord at UQ' here

Ross Gibson and Carl Warner
‘protection’ 2011
C-type photograph and blackboard paint
Source material courtesy of Fryer Library, The University of Queensland
Reproduced courtesy of the artists

Waiting for Asylum: Figures from an archive

11 June – 7 August 2011


Ten years since the SIEV X tragedy, the plight of the asylum seeker still provokes strong political, emotional and ideological responses across all ranks of Australian society. Working with the Fryer Library archive of refugee ephemera, collaborating artists Ross Gibson and Carl Warner interpret the precarious position of the asylum seeker in Australia past and present. 

Curators: Dr Prue Ahrens & Michele Helmrich
Project Researcher: Professor Gillian Whitlock


Interpretive Resources

    • Watch or share video on Waiting for Asylum: Figures from an archive (2.47mins) here 
       
    • Listen to or download MP3 Soft Power: Art, museums and international diplomacy panel discussion 3 August 2011 here
       

Media

View 'Asylum art strikes a chord at UQ' here

 

John Young
Safety Zone (detail) 2010
Digital prints on photographic paper and chalk on blackboard-painted archival cotton paper
Reproduced courtesy of the artist and Anna Schwartz Gallery, Melbourne

John Young: Safety Zone

11 June – 7 August 2011

In 1937, during the ‘Rape of Nanjing’, a group of 21 foreigners saved the lives of some 300,000 Chinese citizens by sheltering them in the city’s international ‘Safety Zone’. John Young’s exhibition responds to this little-known but great humanitarian event, and is the latest in his series dedicated to cross-cultural humanitarianism.
 
 
This project has been assisted by the Australian Government
through the Australia Council, its arts funding and advisory body.


Media

View 'Asylum art strikes a chord at UQ' here

 

Tim Maguire
Redleaf II 2010
Duratrans in lightbox, edition 1/2
Collection of The University of Queensland, purchased 2011
Reproduced courtesy of the artist and Tolarno Galleries, Melbourne
Photo: Carl Warner

7 May – 3 July 2011

In recent years psychedelic ideas and aesthetics have made a notable return to contemporary art.

The current influence of psychedelia has developed in response to the growing impact of global capital and technology on daily life. New Psychedelia presents a range of contemporary Australian artworks that display psychedelic influences and strategies for addressing the themes of consciousness, capitalism and technology. The exhibition will feature existing artworks alongside new site-specific works commissioned for the exhibition.
 
SEAN BAILEY | BELLE BASSIN | GUY BENFIELD | CHRIS BENNIE | DAMIANO BERTOLI | MATT DABROWSKI AND THE MANY HANDS OF GLAMOUR | JAMES DEUTSHER | ANITA FONTAINE | DALE FRANK | BEN FROST | NATHAN GRAY | IRENE HANENBERGH | MATT HINKLEY | NATALYA HUGHES | BRENDAN HUNTLEY | TIM JOHNSON | MADELEINE KELLY | GEOFF KLEEM | TIM MAGUIRE | ROSS MANNING | DYLAN MARTORELL | LAITH MCGREGOR | ROY MCIVOR | TV MOORE | JOSHUA PETHERICK AND CHRISTOPHER L. G. HILL | NIKE SAVVAS | CARL SCRASE | NICK SELENITSCH | SANDRA SELIG | KATE SHAW | NOËL SKRZYPCZAK | BRENDAN SMITH | GEMMA SMITH | JOEL STERN AND WTEM | MASATO TAKASAKA | DARREN WARDLE | ROHAN WEALLEANS | JEMIMA WYMAN | JOHN YOUNG

Curator: Sebastian Moody

Interpretive Resources

    • New Psychedelia Interpretive Learning Resource available here

    • Listen to or download New Psychedelia panel discussion 7 May 2011 here  

Publication

View exhibition catalogue here

Media

Watch ''Psychedelic art exhibition tunes in, turns on' on 7.30 QLD here

View 'Art exhibition offers a psychedelic experience' here





This project has received assistance from the Queensland Government through Arts Queensland
 

   



Supported by the Gordon Darling Foundation

Meek
Begging for change 2004
stencil
National Gallery of Australia, Canberra
Gordon Darling Australia Pacific Print Fund 2007
© Meek

9 April – 5 June 2011

A National Gallery of Australia Exhibition

Playful, edgy, clever and satirical, the works in Space invaders have appeared in city streets around Australia. Street art has significantly altered Australian visual culture, especially over the past decade. It has announced the arrival of a new generation of contemporary artists.

This exciting exhibition looks at street art of the past 10 years by more than 40 of the most prolific and infamous street artists working in Australia today. The works are from the National Gallery of Australia’s growing collection of street art—the only one of its kind in an Australian public gallery.

View the Space invaders website here
 

Interpretive Resources

    • Secondary School Education Resource published by the National Gallery of Australia available here

    • View masterclass for senior high school students with Jaklyn Babington, Miso and Ghostpatrol here.
       

Media

View 'Street art takes centre stage at UQ' here




 

Michael Doolan
Chess, a cautionary tale 2010 (detail)
Polystyrene, polyurethane, earthenware, auto enamel
Courtesy of the artist and Karen Woodbury Gallery, Melbourne
Photo: Ian Hill

YOUR MOVE: Australian artists play chess

26 February – 24 April 2011

Inspired by the international exhibition The Art of Chess, Bendigo Art Gallery has commissioned thirteen of Australia’s leading artists to respond to the notion of the game of chess.

This exhibition will also tour to McClelland Gallery + Sculpture Park, Victoria; and the Samstag Museum, South Australia.

The works in this exhibition engage with a multiplicity of concepts – from Ken Yonetani’s ethereal porcelain sculptures engaging with issues of climate change and environmental degradation, Sebastian Di Mauro’s sculptural discourses on the impacts of colonisation, to Sean Cordeiro and Claire Healey’s more psychological approach – using this game of strategy as a metaphor for the First World War with beer bottles and coasters comprising the key players all displayed on the classic Australian picnic table.

Other artists featuring in this exhibition are Robert Jacks, Danie Mellor, Kate Rohde, Caroline Rothwell, Sally Smart, Benjamin Armstrong, Lionel Bawden, Michael Doolan, Emily Floyd.

A full-colour catalogue is available from the gallery for $20.00.

A Bendigo Art Gallery travelling exhibition 
 

Interpretive Resources

    • Education Notes published by Bendigo Art Gallery available here.


Media

View 'Extraordinary exhibitions explore the art of chess' here




 
Bendigo Art Gallery is proudly owned and operated by the City of Greater Bendigo with additional support provided by Arts Victoria

 

Yayoi Kusama
Pumpkin chess set 2003
Hand-painted porcelain, leather and timber
© Courtesy of the artist and RS&A Ltd, London

The Art of Chess

26 February – 24 April 2011

‘From my close contact with artists and chess players I have come to the personal conclusion that while all artists are not chess players, all chess players are artists’
Marcel Duchamp

The UQ Art Museum is one of two Australian venues for the travelling exhibition, The Art of Chess from RS&A Ltd, London. The Art of Chess is an ongoing project featuring chess sets designed by some of the world’s leading contemporary artists in a celebration of the game of chess and its continued relevance to the creative arts.

The project will intrigue not only chess enthusiasts but also followers of contemporary art. The following artists are included in The Art of Chess: Maurizio Cattelan (Italy), Jake and Dinos Chapman (UK), Oliver Clegg (UK), Tracey Emin (UK), Tom Friedman (USA), Paul Fryer (UK), Damien Hirst (UK), Barbara Kruger (USA), Yayoi Kusama (Japan), Paul McCarthy (USA), Alistair Mackie (UK), Mathew Ronay (USA), Tunga (Brazil), Gavin Turk (UK), Rachel Whiteread (UK).

A full colour catalogue is available from the gallery for $40.00.

Organised by The University of Queensland Art Museum in association with RS&A Ltd, London.

 
 
 


Interpretive Resources

    • Education Notes published by Bendigo Art Gallery available here.


Media

View 'Extraordinary exhibitions explore the art of chess' here

Napier Waller
Christian Waller with Baldur, Undine and Siren at Fairy Hills 1932
oil and tempera on canvas mounted on composition board
121.5 x 205.5 cm
Collection of The National Gallery of Australia

Australian portraits 1880–1960

29 January – 27 March 2011

A National Gallery of Australia Exhibition

This exhibition takes a fresh look at portraits from the National Gallery of Australia's collection, from the 1880s late colonial period to the mid 1960s and the move into abstraction. It features 54 portraits by 34 leading Australian painters, including Tom Roberts, E Phillips Fox, Hugh Ramsay, George W Lambert, Max Meldrum, Rupert Bunny, Violet Teague, Margaret Preston, Stella Bowen, Napier Waller, Albert Tucker, Arthur Boyd, Sidney Nolan, Roy de Maistre, Russell Drysdale and John Brack.

Australian portraits 1880–1960 considers the international influences upon Australian portrait painting and the more distinctive turns that Australian portraiture has taken in its own right. Australian artists have often challenged the possibilities of portraiture, rejected the predictable and pushed boundaries in both their choice of subject and their painterly approach.
 

Interpretive Resources

    • Secondary School Education Resource published by the National Gallery of Australia available here

Media

View 'Australia's best-loved portraits on show at UQ' here