Back to Sculpture on the Edge…

18 03 2009

beauties-the-beast

 

Sculpture on the Edge again had a strong Canberra connection this year – not the least courtesy of Nigel’s carload of fillettes (see ArtWranglers’ breaking news post.) And we’d have to concur with him that apart from Randall Sinnamon’s marvellous crucified ape, the field lacked the impact of last year’s event, though there were plenty of stand-outs, of course. The animals stole the show this year…[in our ever so humble opinion. n(Ed)]

 

adrift

(above)  Andy Townsend and Suzie Bleach, Adrift

 

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(above) Amanda Stuart, Alpha Myths

 

randalls-pig

(above) Randall Sinnamon, Boar

 

chloe-bussenschutt

 

(above) Chloe Bussenschutt, Pitch

The event will culminate in a Yuri Wiedenhofer fire sculpture on the beach on the 20th March…

For happy snaps go here.





The country’s going to the dogs, we tells ya…

25 06 2008

 

The Canberra-Bombala connection…

 

Amanda Stuart’s show Mongrel Dogs (Nil Tenure) opened at CCAS Manuka last Thursday night, and it’s another bottler (you’ll no doubt recall her fabulous Bush Pack at Bermagui’s ‘Sculpture on the Edge’ earlier in the year.) It’s hard to imagine they could be as effective in a tight, interior setting – but they most certainly are.

The analogy of their elusiveness (sudden appearance and disappearance through the walls) works wonderfully well, and they literally bound across the gallery with a reckless impunity that speaks volumes about the feral dog scourge  wreaking terrible havoc across vulnerable bush environments (not to mention the attacks on stock on adjoining farming properties…) These dogs, escapees from domestica, are a clear and present danger to native habitat and a huge concern to all those charged with the protection of our vast National Parks.

The exhibition was opened, appropriately, by the Bombala Area Manager of the National Parks and Wildlife Service, Franz Peters (adding a nice little dovetail for the Gang; Bombala being a mere hop-skip-and-jump from the hide-out!), who reiterated in no uncertain terms the mounting difficulties faced by his NPWS rangers. (Gawd, we can just imagine his opinion regarding the imminent importation of ‘Savannah’ cats…)

It’s a great show – and we’re looking forward to the next installment. (Amanda, who’s a candidate for PhD in sculpture at the ANU School of Art, will soon be doing a stint of fieldwork in the Far South Eastern forests, so we’ll make sure we hook up with her then and follow some of her work-in-progress.)

You’ll find more sculptors than you can poke a stick at, and plenty of feral action, in the mugshots from opening night…

http://www.flickr.com/photos/glasscentralcanberra/sets/72157605798907658/ 

 

…and you’ll have to be super quick off the mark if you want to catch the show - it finishes this coming weekend…

                                        

 

Related articles:

http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,25197,23916745-5013571,00.html

 





‘Sculpture on the Edge’ at Bermagui (part one)…

9 03 2008

hanna-hoynes-work.jpg

(above) Hanna Hoyne’s Soulsearchanaut About to be Born.

The Gang was on the headland at Bermagui yesterday morning to witness the opening of the third annual ‘Sculpture on the Edge’ event – and it was definitely worth the early morning start and drive. (We’re going to have to get used to the distances we now need to travel just to get our regular culture fix!)

‘Sculpture on the Edge’, brain-child of co-ordinator Jan Ireland, has had a most interesting beginning of the bête noir variety; it’s been positively dogged by contention. In the inaugural year Richard Moffat’s piece (a huge metal knot) attracted great ire from members of the local community who pronounced it ‘a big unsightly turd’. [Megsie's sorry she missed it!!] Which, of course, was merely the classic rote reaction to contemporary art out on the conservative country fringe… 

The second year brought even more hysteria when a work by Greg Taylor, ‘If The Boots Don’t Fit’, had a life-size bronze of Johnny Howard in full AIF (WWI) rig standing on gormless guard against terrorism at the Horseshoe Bay beach. (See http://www.abc.net.au/illawarra/stories/s1904152.htm) It was Dad’s Army personified – absolutely bloody marvellous – and sooo Johnny. Anyway, the local council got the vapours and banned the work from public site (sic) - completely disregarding the fact that the artist had gifted it to the local community, which, by all accounts, was dead keen to keep it. (Mind you, that bayonet would’ve posed no end of OH&S grief…)

There are them-what-might regard such tribulations as a blight. But let’s face it, genuine controversy in the arts lends a certain cachet that can’t be bought for love nor money. Jan Ireland and her ‘Sculpture at the Edge’, ergo, is off to a propitious start – especially if the event remains edgy enough to attract ongoing critical debate. Fingers crossed.

‘Sculpture on the Edge’ is a two-part affair, run in tandem with Bermagui’s Seaside Fair. Large sculptures are planted on the headland, small works are exhibited in the Community Hall. To avoid unwieldiness we’ll break our coverage into two posts, starting with the former…

This year’s entries were a mixed bag – everything from farm forge-ery to out-of-towner sophistry. Our stand-out picks were John Ramsey’s Fishing Floats, Amanda Stuart’s Bush Pack, Hoon Hoyne’s Soulsearchanaut (a clear crowd favourite) and Mark Frith’s Pulp Friction. And we loved the deck chair. And the utter freakiness of Rachel Bowak’s Container in the Bermi setting – now there’s a artwork that’ll have the mob at the bowling club muttering into their vo-vos.

Pulp Friction, of course, was a protest work (against woodchipping) which doubled as a handy performance piece - Mark unhooked the bike and front trailer and rode the ensemble through town in Saturday’s Seaside Fair Parade. He reckons he’s not an artist, but used the event as a protest opportunity. We beg to differ – he’s a classic ‘outsider artist’ if ever there was one. 

There was a swag of ‘Berra-buggers down for the show, taking advantage of the Canberra Day long weekend. And plenty of familiar work.

Check it out on…

http://www.flickr.com/photos/glasscentralcanberra/sets/72157604074601801/

And ArtWranglers has a terrific profile of the event at…

http://artwranglers.com.au/finding-sculptures-edge/

But wait, there’s more…

http://www.transitlane.net/bermaguis-sculpture-on-the-edge/