Monday, April 30, 2012

my work showing at Lust for Life's "Viva La Femme" exhibit.

Holy shit this is SO DAMN EXCITING. One of my photographs will be showing at the "Viva La Femme" exhibition being held by Brisbane tattoo studio/espresso bar/gallery Lust for Life. Go right ahead and click on their link and check out why I'm spazzing with excitement. Shazam, guys. This is it. So zazzy.

This is their media release for the event:


Lust For Life gallery is proud to announce the successful artists and exhibition launch date of Viva La Femme - A Celebration Of Women.
In March Lust For Life invited women of Brisbane to submit their artwork for inclusion in the gallery’s first group show since launching in November 2011. After receiving an overwhelming response to the callout, curator Melanie Mason and the Lust For Life team selected a total of 19 artists to showcase a striking variety of paintings, photographs,drawings and mixed media works to communicate their shared perspective of celebrating all things woman.
'Viva La Femme’ - A Celebration Of Women launches on Thursday 3 May from 7pm - 9pm at Lust For Life located at 176 Wickham St, Fortitude Valley. Men, women and children are invited to attend this free, all ages event.
‘VIVA LA FEMME’ EXHIBITING ARTISTS

Sarah Hickey, Braidy Hughes, Symone Male, Anna Day, Caitlin Sheedy, Febe Zylstra, Skye Baker, Belinda Sinclair, Amy Tanner, Beatrice Oconnell, Joanne Brooker, Clarissa Bones, Kellie Jagoe, Gill Pyke, Michelle Aguis, Martine Cotton, Vikki Roy, Bri Lee and Nikki Morgan Smith.

So... the opening is this Thursday night and there will be cool drinks and cool people and cool weather - so please try and make it. A small covern of my foxy friends will be coming with me, and the more people the better.

I have one photograph on show, an image from my time in North Korea. I'm really proud of how it turned out, and I'm flattered to be showing beside such seriously talented artists.
  

Thursday, April 19, 2012

'Floundering' - Romy Ash at Avid Reader


Oh dear, oh dear, where to begin?! I just got home from another INCREDIBLE night at Avid Reader. Oh, such evenings unfailingly leave me with such feelings that I just want to guzzle the awesomeness of the world.

Tonight was the launch of Romy Ash’s new novel ‘Floundering’. I’ve read about 20 pages so far and I’ve already stumbled into an emotional attachment - the two young boys in the book are mesmerisingly portrayed. I can feel something harrowing is coming, and I’m thirsty. It’s a thing. I mean, the book makes you thirsty, it’s kind of a recurring theme but also a plot point but also head-exploding-symbolism-for-a-billion-different-intense-things. I guess that’s why I think she’s an incredible writer. Must just be some kind of bi-product of the words making my head explode. You know?

One of the most interesting things Ms Ash spoke about was how she didn’t want any “bad guys” in her book. I mean, the people in Floundering make mistakes (read: I’m looking at you, Loretta) and they aren’t small mistakes. Some other people are not exactly normal either, and yet all individuals are handled with such respect and delicacy that you aren’t given the easy road out by being able to hate the villain of the piece. What does that even mean? It means that Floudering is particularly harrowing. The interview was recorded for RN too – so tune in if you missed it. My tumblr has a picture of the evening too - you know, the whole real-time instagram thing. (Read: mostly I take douchey pictures of food.)

  


Ms Ash herself seemed honest and clear, albeit a little bit shy. She spoke plainly about her admirable achievements and when I was getting my book signed she found it very difficult to accept my compliments. It was lovely. You may know her from the incredible food blog ‘trotski & ash’ or perhaps the food column of Yen, or maybe from her contributions to (among other things) Frankie or The Big Issue and if you’re a fan of Four Thousand then this is what you should have seen a week or so ago and then written in your Moleskine and then turned up to tonight.

The great thing about Avid Reader is that it’s great and the people there are great. Floundering is the book for my next Young and the Restless book club meeting, and I have a feeling opinions and sentiment and discussion will be in a state of overflowal, so I’m going to take my idiosyncratic nerdy notes and report them back to you after the 3rd of May.

You know, just in case you aren’t already convinced. To buy and read this book. One more reason? Support Australian authors, people. Because it’s the right thing to do and they’re fucking fantastic.

Also - tonight I ran into 2 cool people. 1: Benjamin Law who will be teaching me lots of incredible things at this session run through the Queensland Writer's Centre, and who has a pee-my-undies hilarious twitter account full of great things from our silly sunny country. 2: Angela Goddard who is one of the curators of QAGOMA and who is currently running the stunning "Modern Woman: Daughters and Lovers" exhibit that we all have to go see when it opens on the weekend. 

See! Where was I supposed to start?! Some very zazzy stuff going down in Brisbane tonight. Oh yes.

Saturday, April 14, 2012

GoMA - Social Networking Exhibit 'In Conversation' with Pat Hoffie

Way back on the 29th of March, I went into GoMA for an 'In Conversation' event about their current 'Social Networking' exhibit. The curator Peter McKay was talking to Brisbane artist Pat Hoffie, and because I forgot my Moleskine, I had to type the whole damn think into my iPhone. I took some snappies and thanks to GoMA's free wifi they went straight up to my tumblr.
 
 
 
First off, it must be clarified that the exhibit isn't about 'social networking' in the same way that you're probably thinking. In fact, most people arrived at the exhibition expecting some sartorialist and clever insight into the role of social media in our lives. As someone that just quit Facebook, I was certainly looking foward to some critical discussion on the topic. However, this is how the exhibit is described:

"This exhibition shows how contemporary artists are exploring social contact with their subjects and audiences. Many are interested in historical events, but others look at the ways we perceive the world today and our place within it. Addressing themes including human rights, sustainability and cultural exchange, the works reflect on the ways that individuals shape, and are shaped by, their social networks."

So.... It's more about the process of humans creating networks with one another, than about the movie about El Douchebagorado Zuckerberg.  
 
The works themselves were not too numerous, but the photography by Darren Siwes was fucking incredible. SO DAMN EERY. Really moving. I'd never even heard of him before, but I did a little searching and found him to be a talented and accomplished indigenous photomedia artist. 
 
This is just one photo from a whole, breathtaking, series. I would also highly recommend reading into the story behind the photos. The whole thing is really powerful. 

But anyways, scooting right along to the part where the important ARTY people talked to each other then asnwered our (read: my) questions. These are the notes I took from the 'In Conversation' session. They're in chronological order as the talk progressed, so you can even map my opinoin of Pat and of the exhibit slowly changing:

  • These works [Pat Hoffie's pieces for exhibit] are actually a decade old and have been sitting in the GAG vault for all those years.
    Peter and Pat sitting in front of her works.
    She had impeccable white nail polish on her toes.
  • She comes across as quite pseudo intellectual, talking about anthropology and things.
  • I think perhaps she's some kind of lecturer or academic, she's name dropping and mentioning all these movements that the average punter wouldn't recognise.
  • She's at least open about the fact that she didn't make them herself. She's talking about 'where the artists is in this'. She says that having so many contributors reminds us to focus on the work itself instead of all the stuff around it. She's talking about art's interaction with change movements and the power of art to change the world.
  • But she is very very stylish. I'm being swayed... Also crushing on this curator - what's his name?
  • She makes an interesting point about how since Duchamp argued that anything could be art, but now essentially the gallery is enough. She suggests that the curators have great power and that it takes a brave one to show art that is t just from another gallery, you know, something totally fresh and new.
  • Think about the power of curators and then how there are no curators of the web.
    I don't know her name or a single thing about her,
    but this girl works at GoMA and just consistently
    wears very excellent clothing.
  • I asked him about the role of a curator. He says it's going towards artists being more self-powered. But he's not worried about his job because there is a big history of tangible art that needs to be curated. Also, they can adapt to the modern world, the ability to organise things online means they could adapt the idea of a traditional curator. - Perhaps this means a shift from the hegemony attached to the traditional ideas of gallery spaces etc?
  • These four where 'ideology and artifact' in adelaide. The curators of that time selected these 4 from for a larger collection, her favorite is at home.
  • There are lots of young people asking questions and attending in general. Apparently a class from one of the creative universities was told to come. Lol. This, of course, means that I'm admiring lots of cool outfits.
  • Pat challenges tertiary art education - hooray! I agree. It's not about what it used to be a about. Is it try about authenticity now? Go back to he author-centered point from which to judge the art. She seems to think we should look at the work itself.  

So there you go...

As a single exhibit, I wouldn't kick your ass out the door to see it. Darren Siwes' photography is obviously the highlight for me, but what I will also say, is that GoMA are currently showing a LOT of really great exhibits. There are some pictures of the great stuff on the 3rd and 4th levels of GoMA on my tumblr from that day, but what I'm saying is that if you haven't been into the gallery for a month or so, then definitely make the trip. The 'Lightness and Gravity', and the 'Across Country' were particularly strong showings.

Also, I'm not sure if this is open to non-members of GAQoMA too, but this Sunday at 11:30 there will be a little preview of some of the gallery's new acquisitions. It will be in the QAG not GoMA, but the details are all on their website (scroll to the very bottom of the page).

Night night!
  


Monday, April 2, 2012

Script Frenzy!

I’m a big stupidhead who has a squillion things to do and absolutely no free time but then also signed up to do this year’s Script Frenzy and so of course I’m really excited about it. My Finnish friend Hanna and I agreed to do it together, so I do feel somewhat compelled to make a ‘good and proper’ ‘go of it’. I swear, I am positive about this. No, really. I am.



Script Frenzy is organised by the same people who do NaNoWriMo (National Novel Writing Month in November. I wrote a bit about it back in China.) and it works on the same principle – except with a script, instead of a novel. Obviously. There aren’t many rules, but the main one is that you have to totally start fresh, which means you’re not allowed to work on any drafts, which is perfect for me seeing as how OF COURSE I don’t have any half-written scripts lying around the place. Not like novels though, that’s another story. But anyways, if you go to their website they have a whole plethora of great writing resources for writers and it’s really inspiring and exciting.

(Good poster design indicates cool people
take part in this activity.)
So what’s my screenplay going to be about? Well, I don’t want to give away too much (read: I have no fucking clue how it ends), but it’s an idea I’ve been throwing around in this dustbowl brain of mine for some time now. A comedy, about a boy whose childhood illness renders him wholly responsible for keeping his crumbling family together – he’s a young man with a kook plan and it involves drugs and also some sex and maybe just a wee little bit of rock and roll.

I hope you’re interested. I’d love some encouragement. If you’re into this sort of thing, then you should also sign up! I think you still can… surely? Also, Celtx is the software I’ll be using, so I suppose I’ll let you know how that goes as well.

Also, I’m going to (try to) begin making that cabin thing I was talking about this Easter long weekend too. I have this grand idea that I might sit in it and write this script, but I anticipate that might be a gross overestimation of my structure-creating skills. I mean, no, technically I have never felled a tree before. Doesn’t mean I didn’t google “how to build a cabin”. In truth I just ended up at Cabin Porn. So then I ate some Mint Slice and looked at pretty cabins in Scandinavia for ages. Then I got really excited thinking that maybe one day MY cabin would be on there! Then I got real and got down and so just watched Hot Fuzz and at the WHOLE pack of Mint Slice. It was a good night in the end.

I wasn’t sure how to end this post then my dog barked and I looked up to see him and saw that yet again, something kook is occurring in my house. The first banana harvest from the banana palm! Is hanging from our staircase balustrade! 


Just another sunny day in Brisbane town. 
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