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Showing posts from February, 2026

Melbourne Art Fair 2026

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Being in the southern capital for a week I made time to see this show. Attendance was hardly exceptional, I queued up at morning with the doors opening. Not surprisingly I fixed on the colour, such as (below) Lydia Wegner. I also really liked (below) Cassandra bird's work. Again colour features strongly in these works. Alex Walker's (below) photoprints also strongly use colour. The out of focus really drew my eyes. From New Zealand Christian Dimick (below) reminded me of a Sydney artist and I mentioned this to the gallery staffer on the booth. We chatted for a minute or two. First nations artist Janet Koongotema (below) offered some more strong colour. Keturah Zimran is another First nations artist (below) and she uses the famous Basquiat crown in her compositions, which have a sort of pop sensibility which I liked. Once again coilour is strong. Another artist I liked was Henry Lewis (below) who sort of uses the same patch effect as me in my paramontages, or at least some of th...

'Dangerously Modern' - AG NSW

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An impressive show with over 200 works, so curators have basically hoovered up a majority perhaps of what is available in this category of art made in Europe by women at end of 19th and beginning of 20th centuries. These works are of high quality and there are some names I never learned before, which is a testament to how necessary this show is. I was struck by the variety of subject matter, though the Impresionists in the 1870s and around that time had also focused on domesitc scenes, for examples paintings of children. In the 'Dangerously Modern' show this necessary preoccupation is repeated. But there are other more traditionally masculine themes such as the nude or war, for example the painting (above) by Iso Rae, whose name I had not know previously. She was born in 1860 the label tells me, in Melbourne. A very improtant show; I thought the curators did a great job putting together such a large number of works from so many painters in this class.

'Ambiguity' show - M da Silva - Macchiarto Cafe

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This was my second solo show this year. We had a nice number of very friendly people including Edmund Thommen who did me the favour of taking some photos (see below). Christopher Michaels who also came on the day made a remark about the work to my left in the above photo. The work is Polyp 2, and contains a poem. I have known Christopher for years and we sometimes discuss philosophy, which I never read. So on the opening day he said something like You don't like philosophy but this poem sounds like it. Maybe it is time to write more. There were three series of works, all started since November last year when I was in Newcastle for the Rising Tide event. The polyp works (only one in this show due to size) use collage cutouts scanned and placed using software. I made the entire series of works only using two shapes.  There was also the ambiguity series which are photos with words layered over them, in fact the subject lines of the sorts of emails that men often get from (apparently) ...

Tree Veneration Society - Whispers From the Canopy

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This show at Hazlehurst Art Centre in Gymea. The opening was last week. I am in this show with a photomontage of photos taken during a road trip in 2008. Penny Simons held the talk (above photo) and a fairly good crowd attended on the day. It was a fun event and i found I was talking people through the work I made for the show, not once but several times. This an interesting exercise because I hadn't really discussed the work with anyone prior to the event. The Tree Veneration Society is mainly comprised of artists. The goal of the organisation is to celebrate trees, to go with the name. The range of works on display was quite surprising, even to me who had spent the month prior organising social media content for the show. I got to meet some people in the group I nhad not spoken to before, which was appealing. The show runs til next week.