Fly through the candle’s mouth like a singeless moth

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Fly through the candle’s mouth like a singeless moth

  • Artist
    Petrina Hicks
  • Dates
    15 Jul—7 Aug 2021
  • Gallery Location
    Eora / Sydney

Taking its title from Sylvia Plath’s 1959 poem Witch Burning, Petrina Hicks’ 2021 exhibition at Michael Reid Sydney explored the female position in contemporary society. Fly through the candle’s mouth like a singeless moth followed the artists landmark international exhibition Gothique Blanc, a mid career survey which took place at the Australian Embassy in Paris.

Historically women with knowledge, power or talent were swiftly labelled witches; a dangerous sentence which justified their murder. Most renowned are the stories of Joan of Arc and Anne Boleyn who suffered such destinies. Fast forward to today and we see women in power cast much the same: Hilary Clinton, and closer to home, Tony Abbot’s 2011 campaign against Julia Gillard, ‘Ditch the Witch’. In Fly through the candle’s mouth like a singeless moth, Hicks explores the female position in contemporary society.

Sylvia Plath’s 1959 poem Witch Burning reveals for Plath being ‘burnt at the stake’ is a metaphor for self-transformation. Plath’s poem considers that just like a knife can both harm and heal, being considered a witch was both the ultimate freedom yet her perilous demise.

By contrasting semiotics of the witch hunt, the whistleblower and the Joan of Arc figure, Hicks reveals the absurdity of our perceptions and how much we have changed throughout history or perhaps how we haven’t…

Our Country

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Our Country

Betty Chimney & Raylene Walatinna are a mother and daughter artist duo based in the Iwantja Arts Indulkana Community in South Australia. They have exhibited together since 2016, showcasing strong collaborative paintings which are about their home country, their rich family history and more broadly important Tjukurpa (cultural history) for the Yankunytjatjara people.

Iwantja is the name of a creek where the Indulkana Community was established. The creek runs from high up in the rocky ridge all the way down to the community. There’s tjukitji (soakage), different tjukula (rock-holes) and a very special site: a specific tree that holds the Tjurki (native owl) Tjukurpa. Chimney and Walatinna’s paintings include many of these sites, and their vibrant colour choices and shimmering marks making reflect how the landscape changes from the rocky ridge to the sandy creek beds in this ancient land.

‘Sharing the process of painting with my daughter Raylene is really special. As we work I share stories with her about what it was like here when I was growing up, how it has changed over the years. When I was younger, the older ladies here taught me all about the important cultural stories and I love sharing these with my daughter through our paintings… We love making these beautiful big paintings together, we’re showing the next generations how special this place is.” Betty Chimney speaks about her close relationship with her daughter and collaborator Raylene Walatinna.

“Our collaborative paintings are about the country around Indulkana Community on the APY Lands in north-west SA. This is our home, there is a lot of important family history here for us, and this country holds a lot of important Tjukurpa (cultural history) for us Yankunytjatjara people too.’

John Honeywill

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John Honeywill

In 2020 the latest solo exhibition from Brisbane-based artist John Honeywill opened at Michael Reid Sydney. Of his realist, sensitive oil paintings John explains, ‘I paint the quiet visual conversations between everyday objects; paintings that explore presence and stillness in the genre of the still life– ​a genre that links the intimate world with the public.’

 

Future Memories 2020

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Future Memories 2020

Catherine Nelson’s latest suite of photographic artworks Future Memories was an extension of her 2010 series of the same name which speaks to the undeniable links between climate change and human activity. With the tumultuous events of 2020 presenting new challenges daily, the undeniable link between the destruction of the natural world and mankind can no longer be ignored.

It felt timely to return to the themes from that series [Future Memories, 2010] which talks about our planet, ecology and the importance of protecting what we have.
-Catherine Nelson

The large format photographic composites of Future Memories are created using a database of images captured during excursions spanning three years across four continents. From the lush, tropical flora of Costa Rica and far-north Queensland, to the rolling hills of the Greenland tundra, the fragile worlds that Catherine Nelson creates rouse cultural and environmental debates that are more critical than ever.

Catherine Nelson chose to present this exhibition using a recently developed print and paper technology that allows the works to be dry mounted and framed without glazing. By removing the need for acrylic or glass glazing, the rich colour and textures captured in Future Memories present with remarkable depth and detail, and crucially with no reflective surface.

Awakening

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Awakening

Thou wast not born for death, immortal Bird!

John Keats, Ode to a Nightingale

McGlennon’s parrots stand in opposition to the cultural roles that have been mapped out for these birds. They are not subject to human whims, nor obliged to play the comedian to an audience. In these impossibly sharp-focused vignettes they appear as indigenous warriors standing guard over their ancestral lands, their plumage exhibited with pride and defiance. They are lords and guardians of the bush overseeing the grand, Romantic spectacle of life returning from the ashes.

John McDonald, 2020 full essay on page 13 of the exhibition catalogue.

Awakening was Jospeh McGlennon’s 9th solo exhibition with Michael Reid in the Ballroom of The Bond Building, Woollahra. In Awakening McGlennon presents the native Australian birds as heroic survivors of the bushfires displaying themselves triumphantly against bare landscapes and brooding, cloudy skies. They are romantic figures: as indomitable as the earth itself, as proud as soldiers who have won a victory over a deadly enemy.

Spéirling

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Spéirling

  • Artist
    Luke Shadbolt
  • Dates
    23 Jul—18 Aug 2020
  • Gallery Location
    Eora / Sydney

Spéirling was Luke Shadbolt’s 2020 exhibition which took place at our former Surry Hills Gallery. Following on from his previous series Maelstrom and Acquiesce The Front, Shadbolt has drawn from sculptural and painterly influences to capture an intriguing frontier, creating a resonant point somewhere between art and raw nature.

Inis Meáin is the location of these striking images, located in the middle of the three Aran Islands off the Western Coast of Ireland. A land of sharp contrasts carved over eons; of pristine temperament punctuated by moments of crushing violence. The sheer power of the surrounding ocean attested to by the boulders littered atop the island’s mighty cliffs, tossed over 150ft from the very depths of the dark waters below.

Master Weavings

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Master Weavings

MANINGRIDA Arts & Culture is a pre-eminent site of contemporary cultural expression and art-making, abundant with highly collectable art and emerging talent.

Through their homelands resource organisation, Bawinanga Aboriginal Corporation, artists turned an art trade that began just over 50 years ago into an arts and cultural enterprise.

Ways of learning and schools of art in Arnhem Land are based around a system of passing knowledge and information on to others. The art here has its genesis in body design, rock art and cultural practices, in concert with more than 50 years of collaborations, travel and political action to retain ownership of country. Values and law are expressed through language, imagery, manikay (song), bunggul (dance), doloppo bim (bark painting), sculptures, and kun-madj (weaving) – the arts.

Maningrida Arts & Culture is based on Kunibídji country in Arnhem Land in Australia’s Northern Territory. The area where artists live encompasses 7,000 square kilometres of land and sea, and over 100 clan estates, where people speak more than 12 distinct languages. Aboriginal people in this region are still on country, surviving and resilient because their country is the centre of their epistemology, their belief system, culture – djang.

This exhibition of recent weavings contains handiwork by Dorothy Bunibuni, Vera Cameron, Winnie Mason, Indra Prudence, Margot Gurawiliwili, Roxanne Carter & Jessie Rostron.

Eclectus Australis & McGlennon’s Audubon Folio

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Eclectus Australis & McGlennon’s Audubon Folio

Jospeh McGlennon’s Eclectus Australis series and Audubon Portfolio made their worldwide debut at Melbourne Art Fair 2018.

The 19th Century saw a rapid evolution in the publication of natural history books. Magnificent large-scale tomes, sumptuously bound and illustrated with hand-coloured plates, celebrated all the latest discoveries of exotic birds and animals around the world. The ornithological genius that was John James Audubon (1785-1851) had as his magnificent contribution to the world, an “elephant folio” of such engravings entitled; The birds of America: from drawings made in the United States and their Territories, 1840-1844.

It was however, Audubon’s user-friendly far more accessible library folios, of bird studies that circulated his reputation across the globe. The contemporary artist Joseph McGlennon, drawing on Audubon’s twin notions of the grand and lavish alongside the lavish and accessible – inspired the artist to undertake Australian Bird Studies from McGlennon’s Audubon Folio, 2018.

Capturing many of the birds to be found in the large-scale series Eclectus Australis, 2018, the McGlennon folio channels the 19th century notion of art as an intimate collecting pleasure. An older style of viewing to be experienced in the art of now. A viewing to be experienced slowly, colour plate by colour plate; to be savoured in private and at the collector’s leisure.

Joseph McGlennon
Eclectus Australis – Two Galahs, 2018
$4,000$8,000
Joseph McGlennon
Eclectus Australis – African Grey Parrot, 2018
$4,000$8,000
Joseph McGlennon
Eclectus Australis – Black Cockatoo, 2018
$4,000$8,000
Joseph McGlennon
Eclectus Australis – Two Cockatiels, 2018
$4,000$8,000
Joseph McGlennon
Eclectus Australis – Indian Peacocks, 2018
$4,000$6,000
Joseph McGlennon
Eclectus Australis – Brown Goshawk, 2018
$4,000$8,000
Joseph McGlennon
Eclectus Australis – Galah, 2018
$4,000$8,000
Joseph McGlennon
Eclectus Australis – Three Cockatiels, 2018
$4,000$8,000
Joseph McGlennon
Eclectus Australis – Australian Barn Owl, 2018
$4,000$8,000
Joseph McGlennon
Eclectus Australis – Salmon Crested Cockatoos, 2018
SOLD
Joseph McGlennon
Australian Bird Studies from McGlennon’s Audubon Folio, 2018
$8,800
Joseph McGlennon
Australian Bird Studies from McGlennon’s Audubon Folio – Black Cockatoo
Joseph McGlennon
Australian Bird Studies from McGlennon’s Audubon Folio – Eclectus Green Parrot
Joseph McGlennon
Australian Bird Studies from McGlennon’s Audubon Folio – Eclectus Red Parrot
Joseph McGlennon
Australian Bird Studies from McGlennon’s Audubon Folio – Gang-Gang Cockatoos
Joseph McGlennon
Australian Bird Studies from McGlennon’s Audubon Folio – Grey Goshawk
Joseph McGlennon
Australian Bird Studies from McGlennon’s Audubon Folio – Kookaburra
Joseph McGlennon
Australian Bird Studies from McGlennon’s Audubon Folio – Lord Derby’s Parakeet
Joseph McGlennon
Australian Bird Studies from McGlennon’s Audubon Folio – Palm Cockatoo
Joseph McGlennon
Australian Bird Studies from McGlennon’s Audubon Folio – White Breasted Sea-Eagle
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