Figurations

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Figurations

  • Artist
    Troy Emery
  • Dates
    2 May—1 Jun 2024
  • Gallery Location
    Eora / Sydney

The first solo exhibition from Troy Emery since joining our stable of represented artists, Figurations transforms our upstairs exhibition space with a cast of wild and magnificent creatures dazzlingly sculpted with a couturier’s precision and imaginative flourish.

Fringed and fabulous in languorous repose, Emery’s impossible fauna reflects an enduring fascination with nature. Drawing on art history, science, decorative crafts and camp sensibilities, the artist explores complex entanglements of human and non-human worlds.

Figurations follows the recent announcement of Emery’s major commission, Guardian Lion, which will see him produce a spectacular, kaleidoscopic, illuminated sculptural landmark soaring high above Melbourne’s Southbank and serving as a bold visual gateway to the city.

For preview and acquisition enquiries, please contact dean@michaelreid.com.au

Hoppé’s Australia: Photographs from the Oroton Collection

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Hoppé’s Australia: Photographs from the Oroton Collection

  • Artist
    E. O. Hoppé
  • Dates
    18—27 Apr 2024
  • Gallery Location
    Eora / Sydney

E O Hoppé (1878-1972): portrait, travel, and topographic photographer

When Emil Otto Hoppé arrived in Australia from London in 1930, the German-born photographer was at the height of his powers. Hoppé was widely considered to be the most famous photographer in the world. The dapper Hoppé, who was fond of wearing spats, cravats and sported a mane of luxuriant black hair, epitomised the celebrity portrait photographer, snapping such luminaries as George Bernard Shaw, Rudyard Kipling, Albert Einstein, Anna Pavlova, Vaslav Nijinsky and Virginia Woolf. Hoppé was in addition, a gifted observational photographer.

Commissioned in 1929 to create a photographic portrait of Australia, Hoppé approached the project with a thoroughness that still shines through. For a moment, let us consider Hoppé’s presence here. The seemingly simple act of traveling to Australia, and around this country in 1930, was not a matter to be taken lightly. The time, considerable expense, and project management of the commission in that day can be viewed in stark contrast to today’s contemporary artists, their abilities to move relatively freely, and the modesty of contemporary costs. Hoppé coming to Australia was a serious matter. Assisted by his 18-year-old son, Frank, the 52-year-old Hoppe seemed as drawn to inland Australia as to its coastal cities, and his photographs of remote First Nations peoples and their communities provide unvarnished portraits of their life almost 100 years ago.

Cecil Beaton, the British fashion, portraitist and war photographer – who studied Hoppé from first to last – called him “the Master”, and anyone might learn a great deal from his photographs. Indeed, learning was a central tenant to Hoppé’s approach. There are no preconceptions, you feel, controlling Hoppé’ s portraits: each sitter is someone to discover from the start, someone to converse with, to try to comprehend. Hoppé wanted the photographic technicalities to be as simple as possible, he said, so he could focus on his rapport with the sitter. He didn’t vanish the subject under metres of black stage cloth or bathe them in trick-up indoor lighting. Hoppé sat as close to his subject as possible, with a camera cable release, so the shutter could be operated unobtrusively. No fuss, and as little intervention as possible.

Within this evocative selection of photographs, from a most extraordinary private archive, we see Hoppé’s vintage print of three Aboriginal women dressed in European clothes studying a film poster at Hermannsburg Mission. This print captures the incongruity of life for many First Nations people in 1930; dressed for a new world; considering its popular culture from a palpable distance. Then we have photographs of traditionally dressed men, devoid of social judgment, or the early tendency to exoticise. We also see traditional men painted for ceremony, but instead playing football. A joyous performance; but not for the camera. Hoppé’s unsentimental humanity is a unifying theme in this exhibition.

Hoppé had an eye for the unconsidered. His print of a surfer, from 1930 ranks as one of only a handful of early images taken of that pastime in its early days. For a German living in London, to see a man on a plank on a wave must have been an extraordinary thing. There is much to see here. And consider. Hoppé’s brief, influential presence in Australia adds an important chapter to the history of our nation. It is not recorded whether a talented 19-year-old apprentice in Cecil Bostock’s Sydney studio named Max Dupain ever met the energetic German from London, but Dupain’s rapid mastery of modern photography might suggest he did so or at least, knew of Hoppé’s work.

Art Museum Collections
National Portrait Gallery (London)
Victoria and Albert Museum, London
Bibliothèque Nationale, Paris
National Media Museum, Bradford
George Eastman House at Rochester
Harry Ransom Center at the University of Texas at Austin (Gernsheim
Collection)
New York Public Library
National Gallery of Australia, Canberra
National Museum of American History, Washington, D.C.

© E.O. Hoppé Estate Collection/Curatorial Inc.

 

Gerwyn Davies – Artist Profile

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Showing at South East Centre for Contemporary Art (SECCA) until Wednesday, 3 April, Glisten is a glittering career survey for Sydney artist Gerwyn Davies. Conjuring characters through costumes fashioned with readymade and everyday materials that conceal, transform and abstract the body, the artist’s stylised transformations produce an ongoing inventory of photographic self-projections. Here, to mark his major museum show, we visit Davies in his Sydney studio and discuss the inspirations and creative processes that propel his celebrated practice.

To discuss acquisitions, available work and upcoming projects by Gerwyn Davies, please contact dean@michaelreid.com.au

What were your early creative influences?

If I’m being honest, my earliest influence was encountering the creative works of Tonia Todman on 90s daytime television. As a child, I was transfixed by Tonia’s capacity to transform even the most mundane object into something elaborate and new through the magical power of craft. There is a particularly mesmerising episode in which she decoupages a set of rocks into festive ornaments.

I know it sounds like I’m being facetious, but the idea of taking very ordinary materials, toying with them, teasing them, stretching them out and hot-glue-gunning if need be to create something playfully transformed has many similarities with my approach. Not being hemmed in by the form or intended purpose of an object or material but instead considering its potential … it’s a fun challenge to problem-solve your way through.

When I began working with costuming, I had no idea what I was doing. I had no formal training and I used a lot of trial and error to find my way through constructing something wearable. While frustrating and expensive, being self-taught is wonderful as it encourages you to adopt a more improvisational and canny approach. You break lots of rules as you aren’t aware of them.

Initially, I worked with materials from dollar stores and experimented with ways I could dissect, bend, stretch and shape them together to cover my body – like a decoupaged rock for your Christmas tree. Other influences tend to be less photographic and more from the realm of fashion. Designers such as Alexander McQueen, Viktor&Rolf and Gareth Pugh would begin with the mundane form of the body and turn it into something magical and sculptural and new.

What is the relationship between costume design and photography in your practice? 

When I first started making photographic work, it was very informal. I lived in a sharehouse where we spent Friday nights devouring cheap white wine and dressing up as characters. We would take turns operating the camera, running lighting (gathering all the bedside lamps and torches and modifying them), dressing up and modelling for the camera. It was a social, dynamic, playful approach that was really seductive to me and, from that, I decided I wanted to learn more about photography and studied at the Queensland College of Art.

I was never interested in taking pretty pictures of the real world but was enthralled by photography’s capacity to conjure fantasy. My earliest photographic works involved the construction of small dioramas by running paper through a sewing machine and using thread like a pen to give shape and detail. What I loved was the challenge of taking ordinary material like paper and finding a way to manipulate it, transform it and ideally suspend the moment of recognition. These dioramas lead to larger sculptural works, likewise with the emphasis on materiality and with the camera serving to document. The sculptural forms were then tacked onto the body.

The foundation I return to is my figure. Regardless of the material I’m working with, everything begins at the starting block of concealing the body, transforming its boundaries, extending it out in unusual ways and transforming myself into a kind of sculptural ‘other’. Another recurring element is the use of vibrant, animated materials: sequins, glitters, things that shimmer, shine, come alive under light and sing out to the viewer through the photograph. When I’m sourcing materials, I’m always drawn to tawdry, synthetic and shiny surfaces.

What is your relationship to the central ‘character’ in your work? 

When producing costumes, I’m not thinking of comfort or ease of movement but, rather, about creating the most dramatic, photogenic forms I can. As a result, the costumes are profoundly uncomfortable and hideously hot. They end up restricting rather than facilitating movement. I construct the costumes on a mannequin and rarely try them on before it’s time to photograph myself, so stepping into costume for the first time and appearing before the camera is a very real moment of transformation.

For the most part, I can’t see through the costume and I’m shuffling around trying to establish myself while the camera has already begun firing off shot after shot after shot. It always takes a moment to get my bearings and adjust to my body’s new coordinates – and then, that embodied performance really begins. I start to understand the new ways my body can and can’t move, and a kind of characterisation forms out of this.

In this way, the costume begins to dictate and define a character rather than this being something premeditated. As with the materiality, there is this very informal, improvisational, playful approach. After a period of panic, claustrophobia and overheating, I can start to enjoy moving around in this new skin. As the materials are so visually elaborate, I often find my first response to wearing the costumes is a feeling of real sexiness. Likewise, owing to their often large scale, there is a sense of grandeur and power.

If I were to think about performance traditions, I feel the work is far more indebted to the hammy canon of camp cinema and television – more akin to Dynasty and Sunset Boulevard than to the more earnest moments of performance art history. My performance ethos is more-is-more, an uncontainable camp excess which, to a degree, is what these costumes and photographic works require. Because the dimensions of the body are disguised and all facial gestures removed, I find I have to extend myself out and overact in elaborate ways for the character’s intentions to be realised in the photograph. Of course, like all good baby queers, my world was shifted upon encountering Leigh Bowery, and this remains an influence, particularly thinking about the way his body operated under such restrictive conditions.

I see the characters as completely distinct from me and that happens the moment I step into costume. It is a process of becoming ‘other’ – an erasure of the self as I disappear into costume and am consumed by material forms. When I look at the body of work as a whole, it is a single recurring character just appearing in different guises. The recurrence of tattoos and particular footwear reinforces that. There are small variations that come from the memory of making the works. If a costume is easy to produce, sympathetic to being manipulated and not horrendously uncomfortable, if the shoot is seamless and the temperature is not blisteringly hot, I remember the character more fondly. I have an affection for that work over others, like a favourite child.

How do you select the locations and what role does the environment play?

The landscapes vary between bodies of work. Sometimes I begin with a real-world environment, produce a costume that responds directly and shoot in situ. Other times, I begin with a costume and seek out a landscape that will accommodate or house it perfectly. Sometimes I shoot in a studio, constructing basic sets before stepping into the frame. Or the landscape is pure photographic fiction, a digital amalgamation of multiple sites shot and brought together through postproduction. Something I’m drawn to in all these approaches is landscapes or environments that are graphic and highly constructed with a degree of flatness. I am drawn to the architectural and artificial as it resonates with my approach to costuming. It is important that there is cohesion between the character and environment, whether via narrative or physical forms. I like to create digital habitats for the characters to be housed within, sealed inside image-worlds unto themselves.

As with the materials, I am drawn to the synthetic potential of photography. Often, even when shooting in situ, I will use postproduction to remove details from the image so that it takes on a strange, plastic, alien quality. The colours are a little too rich, the surfaces a little too slippery and the image manicured in a way that is not overt but definitely disconcerting. I may lightly skew the perspective of the landscape so the world inside the image takes on a confounding lack of depth. It helps build a world for the characters.

Is there a thread running through the works comprising Glisten at SECCA?

The works are drawn from a range of bodies of work – about half from the series Mustang, which was produced in 2022 and 2023 and is more cinematic in approach. These were intended as a sequence of 16 x 9 film stills – small vignettes plucked from a single, imaginary queer blockbuster. In each, a central character is adorned in distinctive costumes and acts out Hollywood tropes – car chases, cowboys, alien abductions. Performed by a single elaborate and ornamented hero, the scenes are designed to be interchangeable, so the narrative is not linear and the irresolvable storyline can be rearranged in its display. This work is indebted to late-70s Cindy Sherman, albeit reimagined by a faceless, tattooed, glistening queer figure.

The other works in Glisten are shot in the studio with an emphasis on the sculptural potential of costumes and figures. Simple monochromatic sets are produced for the figure to sit within. These works tease out the queer confusion of subject and object, still life and representation, sculpture and figure. This is at its most extreme in a series of busts in which the figure is cut off at the waist and mounted on a faux marble plinth.

While Mustang‘s narrative focus contrasts with the stripped-back studio works, materiality and sculptural forms – and my interest in playing with conventions of photography ‘portraiture’ – remain essential threads across all these works. Instead of revealing the subject to the viewer, I am creating works in which I dis/appear from view, both queerly there and nowhere to be seen, hiding in plain sight.

What other projects are you looking forward to in the coming year?

At the moment, I am completing a new body of work that began with a trip to southern Arizona in 2023. While the series comprises a set of performative photographic images, I am also exploring ways to give the costumes a life beyond the image. The use of materials is so central to my work; the sourcing, manipulating, constructing and wearing of costumes is 90 per cent of the process. It’s very labour-intensive, meditative, and equal parts frustrating and satisfying. But ultimately, that is kept buried inside the image and never encountered outside the studio.

What am I exploring is deconstructing these costumes after they have been shot, before re-combining the materials to construct something entirely new. At the moment, this is taking the form of landscapes and signs rendered in textiles. This extension of the process of constructing and deconstructing works has returned me to where my photographic journey began with the sewing of diorama environments and the use of thread as a drawing device. It’s rewarding for me to introduce the tactile and tangible quality of my studio process into the final works and uncover new ways of manipulating the materials that are so enticing and engaging.

Lux Aeterna

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Lux Aeterna

Michelle Gearin presents Lux Aeterna, her first solo exhibition at Michael Reid Sydney.

The centrepiece of the exhibition is AntiPrism, an installation comprising 42 circular panels. Each individual painting within AntiPrism symbolises a stream of light, collectively forming a polyhedron. The multifaceted lenses of AntiPrism extend on themes originating in the 49-panel work Prism, exhibited at Maitland Regional Gallery. AntiPrism is at once an evolution of Prism and its antithesis. 

Using oils and watercolours, Michelle creates hybrid mythological creatures that exude intricate threads of energy. Through the technique of pointillism these entities radiate vivid displays of colour from their eyes or genitals while appearing shrouded in a protective aura. For Gearin, the synergies within her compositions speak to a universal desire for connection, binding humanity to the natural and metaphysical worlds.

Frequently drawing from dreams, Gearin offers us a glimpse into private realms. Her compositions evoke transformative narratives in an attempt to rewrite her family histories. This authenticity and depth resonates on a profound level, creating an alchemy that connects her audience beyond the visual. In experiencing Lux Aeterna we are reminded that the multifarious ways we perceive and interact with the world are far from confined to a single archetypal lens.

For assistance with an acquisition from this exhibition, please contact dean@michaelreid.com.au

Unfolding

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Unfolding

  • Artist
    Carly Le Cerf
  • Dates
    10 May—21 Jun 2024
  • Gallery Location
    Perth Council House Gallery

Unfolding is a milestone exhibition for Carly Le Cerf which will see the public display of the artist’s largest ever painting. Showing at Perth Council House Gallery from May 10th, Unfolding is also the biggest exhibition of Le Cerf’s work to take place in her home state of WA.

Presented by Michael Reid Sydney + Berlin with adjoining Michael Reid Beyond programs, Unfolding is a painterly ode to the artist’s adoration of the Pilbara. Consisting of nine individual paintings, the singular components of this concertina work coalesce to form a truly breathtaking visual account of the Pilbara.

Acquisition enquiries are now being accepted. Any person interested in a private preview of paintings in this exhibition are welcome to contact danielsoma@michaelreid.com.au

All photographs by Bo Wong.

Into The Distance

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Into The Distance

  • Artist
    Narelle Autio
  • Dates
    2 May—1 Jun 2024
  • Gallery Location
    Eora / Sydney

Into The Distance assembles unreleased images from Narelle Autio‘s archive, pictures that were taken between 2003-2004 while on a road trip across Australia. Twenty years later, this exhibition precedes the forthcoming release of a major publication, one which provokes a conversation between Autio’s until now, very separate Watercolours and Outback photographs.

There will be ten key photographs on display that broadly encapsulate this period of Autio’s career, presented as one curated body of work. For the first time, photographs from two distinct periods of Narelle Autio’s career will collide. In addition, an installation of small prints will illuminate this entire period in compelling detail.

For private previews and acquisition enquiries, please contact danielsoma@michaelreid.com.au

Exaltation

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Exaltation

  • Artist
    Lucy Vader
  • Dates
    14 Mar—13 Apr 2024
  • Catalogue
    Download now
  • Gallery Location
    Eora / Sydney

Among the most adored and in-demand artists in the Michael Reid stable, Lucy Vader returns for her first solo exhibition at our Eora/Sydney gallery in four years.

A stunning suite of paintings that visually thread together to read as one continuous installation, Exaltation arrives after several successful presentations across our network – including at the most recent Sydney Contemporary – and will be celebrated with an opening reception on Thursday, 14 March.

A true iconoclast of pastoral painting, Vader’s deeply saturated scenes burst with energy, exuberance and vibrant undulations of paint, appearing as though they might momentarily break open to roiling undercurrents of pure colour that flow freely from one canvas to the next.

Reflecting her deep and enduring affinity for rural life, the artist imbues these bucolic pictures with dynamism and movement, evoking the landscape’s natural rhythms. As birds take flight against radiant skies and tumbling clouds, farm animals graze along rolling paddocks below.

Having moved to the Northern Rivers of NSW following the devastation of the 2022 floods, Vader’s visions of thick clouds bursting across heavenly skies read in Exaltation as an artist reaching for the sublime, while nodding to the resilience, grit and steely determination required to live and work in the country.

Private previews are currently being conducted at our Sydney Gallery ahead of the exhibition. To make an appointment, or to request a digital preview, please email danielsoma@michaelreid.com.au

Night Music

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Night Music

The first solo exhibition from India Mark since joining our stable of represented artists, Night Music forms a sequence of perfectly composed, intimately formed still-life paintings that shift between moments of quietude and tension in much the same way that a single piece of music might strike different chords and invite subtle variations in tone and textural nuance. “The same piece of music can be experienced in a variety of ways and interpreted differently depending on the interests of the conductor or musicians,” says the artist. “Composition notates the same objects, experiencing them in new ways. I am always fascinated that the same few objects can, with even the slightest difference in arrangement, be completely altered in feeling and nature.”

Working through the night hours to give her greater control of the light in her studio, Mark imbues her bijou canvases with velvety depth, glinting details and a featherlike haze emerging from fiery underpainting.

“This series leans mainly into my love for the paintings of Giorgio Morandi,” says Mark, who received the top award for an emerging artist in last year’s Lester Art Prize and was shortlisted for the 2023 Brett Whiteley Travelling Art Scholarship and Portia Geach Memorial Award. “In these works, I take reference from [Morandi’s] tendency to arrange objects in distinct units that draw emphasis on the connections and tensions between objects and the space around them.”

For information regarding acquisitions, please contact dean@michaelreid.com.au

Dr Christian Thompson AO + Marina Abramović:Adelaide Festival Takeover

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Dr Christian Thompson AO + Marina Abramović:Adelaide Festival Takeover

From March 1 – 4 Adelaide’s Space Theatre will host the Marina Abramović Adelaide Festival Takeover, exploring durational performance by leading artists from Australia and neighbouring countries. This will be the largest global communal participatory project curated by the Marina Abramović Institute, who have engaged Dr Christian Thompson AO to present a new performance work.

Coinciding with his Marina Abramović collaboration is the release of two new photographs that are now available to acquire. We warmly invite those interested to begin a conversation by being in touch.

Thompson newest works echo the sensibility of his sell out Future Ancestor, 2020 series, in which the artist presented alongside Regina Pilawuk Wilson and Djirrirra Wunuŋmurra.

Glisten

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Glisten

  • Artist
    Gerwyn Davies
  • Dates
    9 Feb—3 Apr 2024
  • Catalogue
    Download now
  • Gallery Location
    South East Centre for Contemporary Art, Beyond

In an age of endless self-imaging, my wider photographic practice explores the expanded potentials for self-representation that emerge on the stage of the digital image.

Where the camera is conventionally claimed to possess a unique capacity for revealing something of a subject to its viewer, in my own practice, I instead perform acts of queer photographic dis/appearance.

My figure is buried beneath elaborate costumes that mutually entice yet resist the viewer’s examination while the image itself is polished and manicured, taking on an implausible synthetic glow that renders the image’s graphic, shallow, cartoonish.

This double bind of a figure both conspicuously produced for the lens while remaining nowhere to be seen — hiding in plain sight — reflects my interest in the potentials for queer representational in/visibility in which subjects pass before the camera un/seen.

The photographic works within Glisten form part of an imaginary queer blockbuster. Cinematic stills in which a single faceless hero-cum-heartthrob shifts through a wardrobe of camp costumes and stages a series of cinematic clichés.

As a collection of images, the works are deliberately non-linear and devoid of a coherent through line. Glisten instead offers a cyclical and unruly queer narrative, freeze-frames of filmic tropes that can be reassembled in endless ways without ever offering a clear, cohesive or happy ending.

Gerwyn Davies

To register interest in Glisten please contact dean@michaelreid.com.au

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