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  • Writer's pictureBelinda Keyte

Research Week 10

I couldn’t really see the relevance of looking at John Baldessari for his use of shape and colour as a way to direct viewer to my work (any more so than any other artist), but any excuse to revisit his work. Baldessari re-evaluated traditional notions of what constitutes art and has an endearing sense of humour.

I saw this at ‘The Broad’ LA

Baldessari, J, Tips for Artists Who Want to Sell, 1966-68, acrylic on canvas


The Broad says about this work - John Baldessari never touched this painting. He did not paint it. He did not write the text. “There is a certain kind of work one could do that didn’t require a studio,” Baldessari said, “It’s work that is done in one’s head. The artists could be the facilitator of the work; executing it was another matter.” This concept — that an artist could present an idea rather than a material object from their own hand — was a way for Baldessari to take apart the notion of what art could be. In 1966 art meant painting, sculpture, or drawing, and with wry humor, Baldessari challenges this expectation. The viewer receives a painting in Tips for Artists Who Want to Sell, but the painting is completed by sign painters. The viewer is presented with a painting’s content, but the content is text taken from an art trade magazine dictating what content should be.


This led me to the 1st work in my hometown that turned me onto his work. Way before I was an artist. Kaldor’s (Kaldor Public Art Project) Project 23, Your Name in Lights. Presented in partnership with the 2011 Sydney Festival.

Like earlier works, the new work he created for the 23rd Kaldor Public Art Project, Your Name in Lights, reflects the changing cult of celebrity in modern society, drawing on ideas of fame in the modern world and the conflation of the roles of celebrity and artist.

Using imagery taken from historic symbols of celebrity, such as Broadway neon theatre displays and Hollywood film / lights, Baldessari gives any participant a glittering moment of fame. A snipped up and fastened version of Andy Warhol’s prediction that in the future everyone will have their 15 minutes, Your Name in Lights lasts for just 15 seconds.

It’s colourful, catchy and certainly directs, even intoxicates he viewer…but not by its visual means. By our human nature to seek out immortality. Fame & celebrity is contemporary society’s answer to this. And we are drawn to it like a moth to a flame.

Baldessari, J, Your Name in Lights, January, 2011, Australian Museum façade, Sydney


So that brings me to Kaldor Public Art projects.


John Kaldor is a philanthropist that established this arts organisation from a vision he had had in the 1960’s. Kaldor Public Art Projects became a pioneering organisation, dedicated to taking art outside museum walls and transforming public spaces with innovative contemporary projects. Over the years the projects have changed the way the Australian public sees and experiences the art of today. They are now supported by all three levels of government, as well as a group of corporate, philanthropic and private supporters.


Making Art Public brings together 34 ephemeral (Kaldor) projects, creatively re-imagined and presented together for the first time, always free to the public.

A celebration of 50 years of Kaldor Public Art Projects at the Art Gallery of New South Wales (7 September 2019 – 16 February 2020) it revisited every project since inception including Bill Viola and Thomas Demand.

Viola’s video works utilise sophisticated media technologies to explore the spiritual and perceptual side of human experience. Focusing on universal human themes of birth, death and the unfolding of consciousness, they have roots in both Eastern and Western art, as well as the spiritual traditions of Zen Buddhism, Islamic Sufism and Christian mysticism.


The images don’t do it justice, these works demand your attention for the entire 10-15 minutes and absorb you into their world. I’ve never seen any video art work quite like it. Highly charged emotionally & visually.

Thomas Demand is known for his life-size recreations of environments made entirely from paper and card that he photographs and then destroys. Maybe it’s architect in me, but I love his work, simply as photographs. It wasn’t until I researched him for my undergraduate Vis Arts that I realised the photograph of the aeroplane I was looking at was a cardboard model.

For the 25th Kaldor Public Art Project he presented a new series of images, The Dailies, within a space inside Harry Seidler's fantastic 1970’s space age MLC Centre in Martin Place. The work occupied an entire hotel floor on level 4. His installation, displayed throughout the bedrooms that extend out from a circular corridor, had a disorientating effect.


Kaldor’s latest project is ‘Do it (Australia)’. Envisaged in this time of global lockdown, the project invites audiences to follow an artist’s instructions, enter their world and realise an artwork of their own. 


This project is the latest incarnation of do it, the longest-running and most far-reaching artist-led project in the world. Initiated by Hans Ulrich Obrist in 1993, the project asks 16 artists to create simple instructions that generate an artwork, whether an object, a performance, an intervention, or something else entirely.


The instruction were not yet up for the artists I was interested in Tracey Moffat & Glenn Murcutt (I wouldn’t actually call him an artist…we really don’t want to claim someone that is so heavily entrenched in an ‘old school’ patriarchal architecture system). I chose from the 4 or 5 of the artists instructions already in the online exhibition. The exhibition started only 4 days ago (May 13th) and has no ending date as yet.


Rafael Bonachela is a choreographer working across art forms, including contemporary dance, art installations, film and fashion:

Find yourself alone in a place. Play some music (or not). Stand, sit or lie down. Find a position you feel comfortable in. Be still for a while. Imagine you are surrounded by blinding light. It feels heavy. You want to break through. Use as many parts of your body (or not) to physically push the light away from you. Take your time. Move from a gentle state, to a state of frenzy. Explore different possibilities with your body. There is no right or wrong. When you feel you have broken through the light, find your way back to stillness. A state of weightlessness (or not).


Options

  1. Explore this task anywhere by yourself for yourself.

  2. Place your smartphone camera anywhere to record your experience using the slo-mo option.

  3. Share a section of the film on social media, send it to a friend, (or not).




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