Visit artequity.com.au SINCE 2005

ART INSIGHT

March 07

Art Insight, June 08
Ralph Hobbs Ralph Hobbs
Art Director
Art Equity


Dear Subscribers,

Welcome to Art Insight.

As worldwide drama pervades investment houses, the art market continues to travel well with investors in the search for less volatile havens.  Scroll down to Market Watch for a snapshot of the current climate.

We review the first of the mid-year auctions which commenced last week with headline results.  Deutscher Menzies celebrated the $6.9 million sale of Picasso's Sylvette setting a new auction record and raising the bar for seven figure art sales. 

Today we release stunning editioned works by two of Australia's leading Indigenous artists - Judy Napangardi Watson and Bill Whiskey Tjapaltjarri.  Both artists have been held in exhibitions throughout Australia and overseas and are included in major collections across the globe. 

Next month we launch the highly anticipated exhibition of new works by Jeff Makin.  Don't miss the powerful imagery of inland Australia in Red Centre - it opens on July 10th.

 

Regards,
Ralph



In Focus

In Focus

Jeff makin



RED CENTRE 2008

Ever since the first reports from the 19th Century explorers who confronted the vast interior of Australia (often with fatal consequences), the red centre has held the attention of the Australian people. The outback landscape has pervaded all aspects of our culture. It has been an ever-present force, not always understood.

Jeff Makin has pursued the very essence of the Australian landscape in his long career, spanning four decades. He holds a particular fascination for the true red interior of this continent -its harsh yet uniquely beautiful landscape. Prone to visual clichés, the centre commands much more from an artist than banal references to red earth and vastness of view.

Red Centre is the culmination of Makin's epic challenge to image this landscape with visual intensity and an understanding of the spirit of place. The crumbling walls of the McDonald Ranges give way to hidden gorges where an oasis of life springs forth -where none should exist. Throughout this body of paintings the searing blue sky is ever present, cutting across the ridgelines. For Makin, this is pictorial nirvana. Prominent landforms juxtapose against the flatness of the desert plane whilst intense colours give weight to the artists' natural inclination to order the composition.

As one of Australia's most articulate art historians and commentators, Makin also gives a nod throughout to those who have played such a fundamental role in the construction of our visual culture. Namatjira, Drysdale and Williams are all acknowledged within the unmistakably personal picture plane of this foremost Australian landscape painter.

Ralph Hobbs, 2008


 

MAIN IMAGE: Jeff Makin, Boabs and Emus 2008, Oil on canvas, 168x168cm (*Available) TOP: Jeff Makin, Brachina Gorge2008, Oil on canvas, 168x168cm (*Available) ABOVE: Jeff Makin, MacDonnell Ranges at Glen Helen 2008, Oil on canvas, 168x168cm (*Available)



Media View

Art Equity News









TOP: Raj Nanda and Patrick Grieve at the opening of Farmland Coastal Series on June 12th  NEXT: Jeff Makin, Brachina Gorge2008, Oil on canvas, 168x168cm (*Available) NEXT: Laura Matthews, Blue Mountain Dreaming, oil on canvas, 153x130cm (*Available) BOTTOM: Ralph Hobbs photographed for the Sunday Telegraph (22nd June) Photo courtesy: The Sunday Telegraph.

Patrick Grieve show draws the crowds

The opening of Patrick Grieve's Farmland Coastal Series attracted a keen crowd last Thursday evening.  The stunning oil paintings dipicting the dramatic coastal landscape of north western Tasmania have excellent corporate rental appeal. 

Many clients have bought works as part of a rental portfolio which will earn them immediate rental income and exposure of their artwork in a corporate environment.

Click Here to view all works



abc Lateline business interviews raj nanda - 18 June 2008

 

Justin Tjungurrayi Corby

The $6.9 million sale of Picasso's Sylvette at auction last week put art firmly in the media spotlight. 

Raj Nanda was interviewed along with Deutscher Menzies' Head of Art, Timothy Abdallah and David Baker, Director of Australian Fine Art Management to discuss the position of the art market amid the financial market volatility. 


All three agreed that while the market had softened, a new type of buyer is entering the market. 

Click here to read transcript in full


art equity sponsors the kings school art show

Art Equity is thrilled to support the 2008 King's School Art Show.  Visitors far beyond the school community attend this event which is regarded as one of the most prestigious shows of its kind in Australia. 

The $15,000 Kings School Art Prize is a key feature of the three day festivities and is highly anticipated by the art community each year. 

Art Equity will be running art education seminars across the weekend and have donated a stunning Criss Canning artwork as a raffle prize. Three Art Equity artists, Adam Nudelman, Laura Matthews and Andy McIlroy have been selected for coveted "entry by invitation only" art prize.

The Kings School has extended a warm invitation to you, your friends and family to the opening of The Kings School 29th Art Show on the evening of Friday 15th August and to enjoy the events over the weekend.


For further information
CLICK HERE


Ralph hobbs interviewed by the sunday telegraph
22 june 2008

A feature article in the Property section of the Sunday Telegraph last weekend discussed alternatives to investing in property in the current economic climate. 
Art, of course, was a key pick.

Click Here for full article

Top Movers

Top Movers

Kathleen Petyarre

Kathleen Petyarre's Thorny Desert Lizard Dreaming 2003 has been selected by the Bridgestone Museum of Art, Ishibashi Foundation in Tokyo as one of its first contemporary acquisitions.  Imants Tillers' Nature Speaks H, a major work comprising 16 canvas boards was also acquired along with the work of American artist Sean Scully.

The art collection amassed by the Ishibashi family ranks as one of the finest in Japan.

Find out more about this artist >


George Gittoes

Australia’s international festival of contemporary art officially opened last week. The theme of the 16th The 2008 Biennale of Sydney Revolutions – Forms That Turn, suggests the impulse to revolt, a desire for change, and seeing the world differently.

Click here for the official website

George Gittoes is one of 180 exhibiting artists (from 42 countries) in the Biennale.  THE TIME: A Season in Pakistan on show at Hazelhurst Regional Gallery from July 5th, shows glimpses of the inner Gittoes creating his latest period of work.  THE TIME: A Season in Pakistan (2007-08) began when Gittoes set up his studio for six months in the ancient city of Peshawar in the North West frontier of Pakistan.  This 'season' includes his new feature film The MISCREANTS on which he is both director and cinematographer. This major work will be released in international film festivals and galleries in 2009.

Film loops from The MISCREANTS feature in this exhibition and self-portraits from the film are on the billboards in the Hazelhurst gardens.  Showing Gittoes' simultaneous, compulsive use of every medium available to him, the exhibition also includes ink drawings and oil paintings - two major works where exhibited at his 2007 Art Equity exhibition and are on loan by their owners.

Curated by Gabrielle Dalton, THE TIME: A Season in Pakistan opens on 5th july and runs until 17th August.

Click here to view the catalogue.

Find out more about this artist >

 

Lily Kelly Napangardi

Art Equity will showing major new works by Lily Kelly Napangardi in an exhibition in late August.  Work by this leading Indigenous artist is in high demand as paintings continue to be acquired for major public and private collections around the world.  A new auction record was set at Sothebys last year for Lily Kelly's Sandhills Around Mount Leibig, 176 x 120cm.  The work sold for $39,600.00 against the pre-sale expectation $12,000- $16,000.

Find out more about this artist >


Bill Whiskey Tjapaltjarri

Today, Art Equity is releasing the first editioned work by Bill Whiskey Tjapaltjarri, based on a painting which was exhibited in a highly successful joint exhibition held in London in May 2008. 

Whiskey has held near sell out shows in 2006 and 2007 in Australia and has exhibited internationally in Copenhagen and London. "He is simply a knockout painter"- exclaims writer Susan McColloch- "his works also have a consistency of quality-impressive for their balance of colour, design, fluidity and formalism".

He is currently in the Australian Art Collector's 2008 list of the 50 most collectable Australian artists.

CLICK HERE to view a full image and further information


Judy Napangardi Watson

Also released today is a collagraph by the acclaimed and widely collected artist, Judy Napangardi Watson.  Watson has completed two highly successful sell out editioned works over the last 5 years. There is considerable demand for her work both in the primary and secondary markets, with collectors joining a waiting list for this next superb collagraph.

CLICK HERE to view a full image and further information

Find out more about this artist >











TOP:
Kathleen Petyarre, Mountain Devil Lizard Dreaming,  (AEPETKA14802MM), Acrylic on canvas, 200x200cm (*Available) NEXT:George Gittoes, Crossroads, 2005, Oil on canvas, 198x310cm (SOLD) Included in Gittoes Biennale exhibition; THE TIME: A Season in Pakistan on show at Hazelhurst Regional Gallery NEXT: Lily Kelly Napangardi, Sandhills, (AENALKA10101MM), Acrylic on linen, 180x300cm (*Available) NEXT:Judy Watson Napangardi, Mina Mina Dreaming, (detail) Collagraph, Printmaker: Paul Smith, Edition Size: 50, 61x80cm (*Available) NEXT: Bill Whiskey Tjapaltjarri, Rockholes near Pirupa, (detail) Collagraph, Printmaker: Paul Smith, Edition Size: 50, 84x60cm (*Available) LEFT: Dean of COFA, Professor Ian Howard welcomes Gittoes and Nelson to UNSW's highest honour, The Honorary Doctorate at UNSW.

Market Watch

Market Watch


A WATER lily painting by impressionist master Claude Monet has been sold for more than STG40 million ($A82.59 million) at auction in London, kicking off a week of modern-art sales expected to reach records that defy the global economic downturn.

The painting Le bassin aux nympheas, or Water Lily Pond, was sold by Christie's, making it the most expensive work of art ever sold by the auction house in Europe.

This past six months has seen the emergence of contemporary art taking precedence on the global stage culminating in major results for Freud, Koons and Francis Bacon.  Yesterday a waterlily painting by Claude Monet sold for more than $A82 million at auction in London - almost doubling the previous record for the artist. The sale sets the scene for a week of modern-art sales expected to reach records that defy the global economic downturn.

On the domestic front, the market has certainly not been as spectacular as 2007 but definitely has demonstrated its relative resilience through solid results and performance. 

Year to date, we have seen AU$58 million pass under the gavel, which sees the market on track for exceeding AU$100 million for the third year running.

The major result in the past few weeks domestically is undoubtedly the sale of Picasso’s Sylvette for AU$6.9 million (including buyers





premium) through Deutscher-Menzies.  The sale swept aside the record for an Australian Artist at auction - Whiteley’s The Olgas for Ernest Giles which sold for AU$3.48M in 2007.

The Picasso (below) is one of a handful of works that have traded at auction in Australia this year that have surpassed the AU$1 million mark. 

Compared to 2007, where the top 15 or so lots for the year were all in excess of AU$1 million, so far this year we have seen only four paintings selling for seven figures or more. 

This is undoubtedly going to have an impact on the overall turnover at auction.  What did impress at the Deutscher-Menzies auction was the clearance rate by volume of 85% and on value at 106% (against low-end estimates). 

Mossgreen had similar success with a clearance on value of 97% which included a new auction record for David Boyd at AU$200,000.00 for the 1958 oil painting King Found.  The Boyd is one of 32 new auction records for Australian and Aboriginal artists set at auction for 2008, alongside the likes of Drysdale, Judy Watson Napangardi, Tim Storrier and Walangkura Napanangka.  

Is the secondary market going to see a turnover of AU$170 million plus in 2008? – We doubt it.  Does this mean that the market is in decline?  We doubt that too.  The growth in 2007 was extraordinary and the turnover at auction was in part consistent with the number of multi-million dollar lots hitting the market, along with the major sale of Sotheby’s auction of the QANTAS collection. 

The market is on track for a third successive year at AU$100 million plus at auction and trading on the private treaty and primary markets have been solid.  Tim Abdallah from Deutscher-Menzies made the point in an interview on ABC’s Lateline last week, that the nature of the art buyer is different to 10 – 15 years ago.  Art buyers are not only making aesthetic decisions in their purchasing of art, they are also making investment decisions and assessing the associated risks of art investing.   This includes managing and awareness of liquidity in their art portfolios. 

Investment lies in the quality.   

TOP: Jason Benjamin, We're at the gates, 2007, Oil on linen,180x240cm (*Available) LEFT: Picasso's Sylvette which sold for $6.9 million (including fees) at Deutscher Menzies last week. (Photo courtesy abc.net.au)

Rental News

Rental News

ART EQUITY RENTAL PORTFOLIOS allow you to earn income from your art.

We guide you in buying a quality art portfolio which we then rent to the corporate sector. You will earn a rate of return of between 6.5% and 10% per annum.

It’s a low-risk, affordable way to enter the art market, and make some money in the short-term - from rental income - as well as the potential appreciation of your artworks over time.

Art Equity Rentals Offer

What's On

What's On

Art Equity Gallery

Laura Matthews
Devils' Heart
7 – 22 August

Lily Kelly Napangardi
New Works
28 August - 11 September

Andrew McIlroy
New Works
11 - 26 September

Exhibition Openings To join our Exhibition mailing list, please click here and leave your name, address and email address.

Educational Seminars If you are interested in attending a seminar at Art Equity Gallery, please click here.

NSW

Biennale of Sydney 2008
Revolutions -Forms that Turn

The 2008 Biennale of Sydney, under the artistic direction of internationally renowned curator, Carolyn Christov-Bakargiev, will brings significant historical works with the art of today and investigate revolving, rotating, mirroring, repeating, reversing, turning upside down or inside out and changing perspectives.

The Biennale includes over 180 artists from 42 countries exhibiting at galleries and public spaces across Sydney. 

Click here
to view the website

18 June - 7 September 2008

Art Gallery of NSW

Bill Viola

Bill Viola is internationally recognised as one of the most important artists working in video today. Fall into Paradise is part of a series inspired by Wagner's opera Tristan and Isolde.

10 April - 27 July 2008


Ghosts in the Machine

The most prolific and the most eclectic artists of the 20th century are unknown photographers. This exhibition draws from a number of collections of discarded amateur photographs.

10 April - 16 July 2008


Jan Senbergs

This exhibition comprises a generous selection of Jan Senbergs' screenprints, presented within the context of his work as a whole, underlining their central importance to his evolution into a remarkable, idiosyncratic and admired draughtsman and painter.

5 April - 25 May 2008


Adam Cullen Lets Get Lost

Adam Cullen is a unique figure in contemporary Australian art, a larger-than-life artist whose abrasive yet expressive paintings are a confronting and incisive view of contemporary life. His often satirical works are a form of social allegory, a cutting portrait of our national psyche caught in a suspended stage of development.
15 May - 27 July 2008


Taisho Chic Japanese Modernity, nostalgia and deco

Japan in the early 20th century was a place of great change. The essential question of the day was: how could one be both Japanese and modern at the same time when modernity was defined as Western?

22 May - 3 August 2008

 

Judy Cassab Landscapes from the collection
Emigrating to Sydney from Europe in 1951, Judy Cassab quickly established a reputation as a portrait painter, however it was her experience of Central Australia in the late 1950s that made her first feel fully at home in this country.

29 May - 31 August 2008

 

Harold Cazneaux Artist in Photography
Harold Cazneaux was a luminary in Australian photographic circles; a pioneering photographer whose aesthetic style and impressive output had an indelible impact on the development of photographic history in this country. As a teacher, prolific writer, judge and regular participator in national and international exhibitions, Cazneaux was unfaltering in his desire to contribute to the discussion about the photography of his times. This major exhibition has been drawn from the collections of the Art Gallery of NSW, National Library of Australia and National Gallery of Australia.

5 June - 10 August 2008

COMING...

Francis J Mortimer
In the first decades of the 20th century, English artist FJ Mortimer was an acclaimed pictorialist photographer. A pioneer of the bromoil process, famed for his dramatic seascapes, he strove as both an artist and editor for photography’s recognition as an art form.

26 July - 26 October 2008


Kate Beynon Auspicious Charms for Transcultural Living
Melbourne-based artist Kate Beynon presents a new series of paintings in which she explores ideas of transcultural identity and the ‘global citizen’.

7 August - 26 October 2008




-------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Museum of Contemporary Art

THE 2008 BIENNALE OF SYDNEY

REVOLUTIONS - FORMS THAT TURN

Established in 1973, the Biennale of Sydney is Australia’s largest and most exciting contemporary visual arts festival.
Billed as a celebration of the defiant spirit, the 2008 Biennale brings together some of the world's most respected artists, under the direction of international curator, Carolyn Christov-Bakargiev.

18 June - 7 September 2008

They are meditating: Bark Paintings from the MCA’s Arnott’s Collection
Since the 1950s the practice of bark painting has responded to new contexts and has become increasingly pertinent to the outside world.

14 February - 3 August 2008

COMING...

Video Logic

Video Logic features new and recent work by six artists who have been
involved with video and screen-based artwork for a decade or more.
The exhibition celebrates the dynamism and depth of Australian video
art, a medium that has reached prominence in recent years.

19 August - 2 November 2008

 

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Australian Centre for Photography

Hijacked
Providing a voice for some of the most diverse and exciting new photography from Australia and America, the Hijacked exhibition at the Australian Centre for Photography takes a road less travelled. Presenting a diverse and provocative selection of new photography from Australia and America, the exhibition erases traditional boundaries between artists, professionals and emerging talent and points towards the future of contemporary photography.

13 June - 19 July 2008

COMING...

Darren Sylvester: Our Furture Was Ours

Darren Sylvester's photographs tackle life's big issues: the fleeting nature of happiness; the importance of friendship; disappointment in love; the inevitability of death. Intuitive rather than didactic, each image is a contemporary parable; each title a distilled prose poem.

25 July - 30 August 2008

Marian Drew: Every Living Thing

In Every Living Thing, Marian Drew embraces the formal properties of seventeenth century European painting in a series of works which contrast the violence of road-kill with the gentrified traditions of the still life.

25 July - 30 August 2008

James Brickwood: Schoolies

In researching this series of works, Sydney photojournalist James Brickwood accompanied two groups of teenagers on the annual end-of-high-school pilgrimage to the Gold Coast known as Schoolies week.

25 July - 30 August 2008

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Historic Houses Trust

Sydney's pubs: liquor, larrikins & the law
Justice & Police Museum

Sydney’s pubs: vibrant, noisy, democratic, character-filled, sometimes controversial, always handy for a celebration or a quiet drink at the end of the day – the landscape of the city is unthinkable without them. More than mere commercial purveyors of alcohol, pubs define the pulse, personality and tempo of a city.

23 February – 2 November 2008

 

ACT

 

National Gallery of Australia

Richard Larter
a retrospective

Richard Larter is widely considered to be one of Australia’s most distinguished artists. Born in 1929 he arrived in Australia from England in 1962 and, over the ensuing four decades, created an impressive, provocative, lively body of work.

20 June - 14 September 2008

COMING...


Picture Paradise
Asia–Pacific photography 1840s–1940s

In mid 2006 Director Ron Radford announced that over the next decade the National Gallery of Australia’s collecting and exhibition programs would more strongly demonstrate Australia’s geographic, political and cultural position within the Asia and Pacific region and play an active role in the appreciation, nationally and internationally, of the art of our region.

10 July – 9 November 2008


-------------------------------------------------------------------------------


National Portrait Gallery - Old Parliament House

The new National Portrait Gallery opens December 2008

Animated: Self Portraits Online
The National Portrait Gallery is proud to announce the launch of Animated, our first online exhibition. Comprising animated self portraits by fourteen of Australia’s most innovative artists, the exhibition revels in its diversion from conventional portraiture.

Launched Friday 26 October 2007  

VIC

National Gallery of Victoria - International (NGVI)

War
The prints of Otto Dix

I did not paint war pictures in order to prevent war. I would never have been so arrogant. I painted them to exorcise the experience of war. All art is about exorcism.’ Otto Dix’s series War [Der Krieg], 1924, arose out of his personal experiences as a soldier in the First World War. Dix (1891–1969) fought as a machine-gunner on the Western Front, where he was wounded a number of times. War profoundly affected him as an individual and as an artist.

12 April – 10 August 2008

Resonant Visions
Contemporary video from Latin America
This exhibition focuses on small but diverse selection of works by four contemporary artists who have used video to explore different dimensions of the changing conditions of our times.

Until 17 August 2008

Moon in Reflection
The art of Kim Hoa Tram
Kim Hoa Tram (Shen Jinhe in Chinese) was born in Saigon, Vietnam in 1959 to a family originally from Fujian province in China. Kim migrated to Australia in 1984 and is now living in Melbourne. For more than ten years, Kim has immersed himself in Zen (Chan in Chinese) Buddhism. In his art, he draws inspiration from his spirituality in Zen and from his roots in the Chinese tradition, its art and culture, especially Chinese ink painting and calligraphy.

11 April - 21 September 2008

291
Photographers in the circle of Alfred Stieglitz
Alfred Stieglitz (1864-1946) was a monumental figure in the history of twentieth century photography. In the opening decades of the century, Stieglitz championed the cause of artistic photography with the Photo-Secession group, and went on to become an important and influential modernist photographer.

2 May – 28 September 2008

COMING...

Art Deco 1910–1939
This winter 2008, the National Gallery of Victoria is the exclusive Australian venue for a major exhibition of the celebrated and popular style, Art Deco. The exhibition is the most popular program ever mounted at the Victoria and Albert Museum, London, which houses one of the world’s great collections of Art Deco.

28 June - 5 October 2008

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------

National Gallery of Victoria - The Ian Potter Centre at Federation Square (NGVA)

Black in Fashion Mourning to Night

(NGV International and Ian Potter Centre)
Black in fashion is a perennial topic of discussion. Throughout history the wearing of black clothing has had multiple and often contradictory meanings. At times, it has signified death, power, elegance, urbanity, subversion and sex appeal. Black in Fashion: Mourning to Night explores the symbolism and enduring use of black in Australian and international fashion.

8 February – 24 August 2008
29 February – 31 August 2008

Preseserving the past, enriching the future: Hugh Williamson's legacy

A National Gallery of Victoria Touring Exhibition Although he moved at the highest levels of corporate life Hugh Williamson neither forgot his modest beginnings nor lost sight of the values of kindliness, integrity and honesty. The foundation he established has carried on these values and has been responsible for enormous service to the community. Hugh Williamson’s legacy has been immense and has touched the lives of many people.

14 March - 24 August 2008


SA

Art Gallery of South Australia

S.T. Gill

on display at Carrick Hill House, Springfield
Samuel Thomas “S.T.” Gill was one of the first professional artists to work in South Australia and worked prolifically here in the 1840s. Many of his vivid depictions have now become iconic images of colonial South Australia.

9 April - 29 June

The Ballets Russes in Australia
Between 1936 and 1940 the Australian public was introduced to a brilliant and exotic company of dancers, productions, stage designs, costumes and music, the likes of which had never been seen or heard here before. The Ballets Russes, Sergei Diaghilev’s dazzling company of artists (presented in Australia by his successor, Colonel Wassily de Basil), revitalised the art form of ballet and had a profound effect on Australian cultural life.

2 May - 6 July

Empires and Splendour: The David Roche Foundation
For more than forty years, Adelaide collector and Art Gallery benefactor, David Roche has been developing an outstanding, internationally important private collection of eighteenth and nineteenth century French, Russian, German and British decorative arts. Exquisite porcelain, metalware, furniture and other luxury objects, by manufacturers Meissen, Chelsea, Gardner, Bullock, Faberge and more, will go on show for the first time publicly in this special exhibition. The full extent of treasures in this remarkable collection will also be revealed through an accompanying exhibition book, which will be lavishly illustrated.

6 June - 27 July

Culture Warriors: 2007 National Indigenous Art Triennial
The Art Gallery of South Australia is delighted to showcasethe inaugural National Indigenous Art Triennial. Travelling from the National Gallery of Australia, Culture Warriors provides a highly considered snapshot of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander contemporary art practice. The work of thirty artists has been selected, representing the diversity of regions around Australia and demonstrating the incredible range of contemporary Indigenous art practice.

20 June - 31 August

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Contemporary Art Centre of South Australia

SOFTPOWER: ASIAN ATTITUDES

LIDA ABDUL, GULNARA KASMALIEVA & MURATBEK DJUMALIEV, CHEN CHIEH-JEN, LEUNG MEE PING, MAHMOUD YEKTA, QIU ZHIJIE

The term 'soft power' was coined in the 1990's by Harvard Professor Joseph Nye to describe an international relations strategy to modify behavior of others without use of force or financial incentive. In this context Soft Power: Asian Attitude investigates the phenomenal international success experienced by Asian Artists in recent years, and the complex cultural exchange and development that has resulted.

6 June - 13 July 2008

TAS

Tasmanian Museum and Art Gallery

ningenneh tunapry
Tasmanian Aboriginal Gallery

Personal Perspectives : Artists and Their Portraits

Personal Perspectives is an exhibition that reveals the sense of community within the Australian art world. Using paintings, drawings, prints and photographs from the TMAG collection, audiences can view work in new contexts along with other items not seen before.

18 April–29 June 2008

COMING...

Cabinet of Curiosities

The Cabinet of Curiosities is a captivating and curious exhibition from the National Museum of Australia that has been wending its way around the country and the Tasmanian Museum and Art Gallery is excited to showcase it in late June. The 36 drawers of the cabinet all contain something interesting that is set to intrigue and captivate adults and children alike.

From 30 June 2008

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Queen Victoria Museum and Art Gallery
(Inveresk)

Artstart—Reflections

Artwork by primary school students from northern Tasmania
23 May – 14 August 2008

Wildlife of Gondwana

This exhibition will provide a 'world first' display of the fossil record from Australian and South American sources and will describe the Wildlife of the Great Southern Super continent—Gondwana, from 3.8 billion years ago to the present.

3 May to 3 August 2008

360 Professions - China Trade Paintings
360 Professions highlights the street trades and professions of 19th century China. This exhibition touches upon the rich diversity of 19th century China and includes images ranging from Imperial noblemen and women to sandal makers and chicken castrators.

28 June to 7 September 2008

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------

WA

Art Gallery of Western Australia

Circle of Friends

'Circle of friends' is a small Collection-plus exhibition of work by two Melbourne-based artists David Rosetzky and James Lynch. It will feature the newly purchased DVD projection by Rosetzky, Nothing like this, 2007, that explores the nuances of friendship amongst a group of twenty-somethings over a holiday weekend. The show will also include a new work by Rosetzky called No fear, a sound piece based on self-help tapes that involves subtle interaction between the work and its viewers.

22 March - 25 August 2008

COMING...

PEEP: GLIMPSES OF THE LAST 4 DECADES FROM THE KERRY STOKES COLLECTION

30 May - 25 August 2008

GRACE CROWLEY BEING MODERN

'Grace Crowley: being modern' is an important retrospective exhibition of paintings and drawings by one of Australia's most influential modern artists. This is the first exhibition of Grace Crowley's work since 1975. It includes important works from public and private collections and traces her remarkable artistic journey from traditional landscapes to avant-garde experimentation and pure abstraction.

14 June - 21 September 2008

Frank Hinder

This exhibition presents a selection of works on paper by Frank Hinder, drawn exclusively from the State Art Collection.

14 June - 21 September 2008

COMING...

Wonderlust

Wonderlust is a dynamic new presentation of the State Art Collection, featuring Indigenous, Australian and international art, craft and design acquired since the Gallery's inception in 1895. This exhibition brings together painting, sculpture, photography, works on paper, craft and projections.

Begins 28 June 2008

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Perth Institute of Contemporary Art

An Ever Expanding Universe

Artists: Maria Cruz, Tim Johnson, Lara Merrett, Viv Miller, Pip and Pop (Nicole Andrijevic and Tanya Schultz, Ben Pushman, Nusra Latif Qureshi, Noël Skrzypczak, Gulumbu Yunupingu. Featuring exquisite miniatures, work grounded in both Indigenous and Buddhist traditions, images of the cosmos and contemporary abstraction An Ever Expanding Universe brings together a constellation of ten leading artists.

12 June - 3 Aug 08

Oottheroongoo (Your Country)

Julie Dowling Making her first foray into multi-media, Julie Dowling is a Perth based Badimaya artist known for her paintings detailing land, country and family. At once gentle and incisive, this installation is both a self-portrait and a wider history. It reveals an unfolding personal journey and offers glimpses of her physical and spiritual reconnection with her ancestral country - an experience Dowling has meticulously documented via film and photography.

12 June - 3 Aug 08

Australian Gothic: Video Art Now

Artists: Alex Avzoglou, Marsha Berry, John A Douglas, Robert Hecimovic, Larissa Hjorth, Tammy Honey, Sam Keene, Brendan Lee, David McDowell, Aaron McLoughlin, Krystal Shultheiss, Brie Trenerry, Shaun Wilson, Marco Kin Ming Wong. Well before Australia was charted it was 'imagined as a grotesque space peopled by monsters'¹. Early settlers found their new land eerie, disorientingly unfamiliar and hostile - a response which became ingrained n our national consciousness, literature and cinema. 12

June - 3 Aug 08

 

NT

Museum and Art Gallery of the Northern Territory

Windows on Australian Art - Focus Inspire / Expire

Windows on Australian Art offers rotating selections from the MAGNT Visual Arts collection. Artists are inspired by people, landscape, nature, human endeavour, religion, science and inanimate forms.

Until 20 July 2008

 

QLD

Queensland Art Gallery

Gordon Bennett

Presenting work from 1987 to the present this comprehensive retrospective exhibition brings together many of the Notes to Basquiat 1998–2001 paintings and selected works from the Home Décor series.

10 May – 3 August 2008 GoMA

Lee Mingwei Gernika in sand

This project developed by artist Lee Mingwei re-creates Picasso’s famous work in sand. Midway through its display the artist returns to alter the work.

3 May - 6 July 2008, GoMA

Picasso & his collection
Art Exhibitions Australia and the Queensland Art Gallery in association with the Musée national Picasso, Paris, present an Australian first, Picasso’s personal collection, exclusive to Brisbane.

9 June - 14 September 2008 GoMA

Sidney Nolan: A New Retrospective
Sidney Nolan’s first major retrospective since his death presents an opportunity to unravel something of the artist’s enigma and understand his achievement throughout an entire career.

6 June – 28 September 2008

Jacques Prévert

A special program celebrating French poet and screenwriter Jacques Prévert (1900-1977), considered by many as unequalled in the history of French screenwriting. His striking surrealist collages are also included in the Picasso and his Collection exhibition.


COMING...

Xstrata Coal Emerging Indigenous Art Award (2008)
The ‘Xstrata Coal Emerging Indigenous Art Award’ is an acquisitive prize awarded to an emerging Aboriginal or Torres Strait Island artist.
11 July - 12 October 2008

Modern Ruin
A rich vein of contemporary artistic practice critically and visually revaluates the utopian dreams of the modern period within an exploration of the relationship between art, architecture and design.
12 July - 12 October 2008

 

------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Museum of Brisbane


Annie Hogan: A Survey
A survey of works by this US-based Australian photographer.

4 April - 6th July 2008

State of Play

Created in conjunction with C&K, founded in 1907 as Queensland’s Creche and Kindergarten Association, State of Play illustrates the importance of play through heart-warming historical photographs of Brisbane children at play. These wonderful images are accompanied by information from early childhood experts and incredible insights from C&K kindergarten-aged children sharing their thoughts about how they play.

23 May - 19 August 2008

David Nixon: A Quiet Immanence

A series of linoblock prints that are quietly meditative in their beauty and suggestive of something sacred. Nixon's work also celebrates the notion of art being true, simple and direct.

13 June - 10 August 2008

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------

QLD Centre for Photography

COMING...

Blaze by Tatjana Plitt
Tatjana Plitt presents in 'Blaze' a series of photographs that recreate the imaginary world of 'Mills and Boon,' using real couples who strike a romantic pose in their own domestic environments.

29 June - 20 July

The Rapture by Kate Kirby
Kate Kirby’s series 'The Rapture' is inspired by the biblical belief that the world will soon come to an end. This series embraces the underlying theme of awe, fear of the unknown and wonder of what is to come

29 June - 20 July

Details by Danielle Walpole

The heart nourishes the eyes with new blood as the darker blood drains away like old news.

29 June - 20 July

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Institute of Modern Art

The Dating Show at IMA@TCB
The cliches of everyday romantic discourse are as profound as they are silly. This exhibition explores the habits, language and practices of dating — the rules of romantic engagement.

27 June — 27 July

 

COMING...

Rose Nolan Why We Do The Things We Do

Melbourne artist Rose Nolan traffics in forms, codes and ideals founded in utopian strands of 20th Century avant-gardism.

28 June — 16 August

Johan Grimonprez Dial H-I-S-T-O-R-Y

Belgian artist Johan Grimonprez achieved international acclaim with his collage video Dial H-I-S-T-O-R-Y. Premiering at Paris's Centre Pompidou and Documenta X in Kassel in 1997, it eerily foreshadowed the events of September 11.

28 June — 16 August






TOP:
Laura Matthews, Escarpment, Oil on canvas, 140 x 90cm (*Available) BOTTOM: Opening night at Patrick Grieve's Coastal Farmland Series
Visit artequity.com.au