Tag Archive for 'art'

Road signs as art

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97/6/1 Road sign, manipulated 'Sing'by Richgard Tipping, NSW, 1982-97. Collection Powerhouse Museum

Surrounded by signs in our daily city existence sometimes we notice them, hopefully when driving or crossing the road. But often they meld into an overall of street scenery. There is an abundance of signs in urban landscapes as captured by photographer David Mist in the 1960s pictured below.
Continue reading ‘Road signs as art’

Wireless and Handheld Devices at the Museum of Old and New Art

Museum of Old and New Art, Hobart, Photo G. Barker, 2011

Museum of Old and New Art, Hobart, 2011

The alarm was set for 5:00am but the rain outside, and five hours sleep, did little to renew the enthusiasm so confidently expressed when Nick’s initially suggested we fly to Tasmania for the day to visit the Museum of Old and New Art ‘MONA’ in Hobart. Four others from the Powerhouse Museum’s Digital and Emerging Tech team were going and that combined with the non-refundable flight and my partner’s ‘you will be going’ looks ensured that somehow by 6.30 I was in line to get on the plane to visit David Walsh’s privately owned museum.

One of the main reasons for the visit was to look at how this museum has integrated handheld technologies into as its core function for interpreting the space, instead of using labels. Another was to look at how Walsh’s personal vision and complete control of the space influenced the kinds of objects selected and the way they were displayed.

We arrived by cab from the airport before the museum had opened and rather than queue up we wandered around the grounds. The first thing that struck me was how from the outside the project looked almost like a military fortress embedded in hillside above the Derwent River. From the outside its all concrete, rusty metal, and vast slabs of sandstone facing off against the suburban homes and family lives that surround it. This seems to reflect the confrontational nature of much of the collection housed in the darkened halls beneath, and its owners delight in challenging the norms and poking a finger into our collective brain matter.

However iconoclasm isn’t a question here for ironically MONA seems to have achieved what many state and federally run institutions find so difficult – it has populist appeal. The displays may be sexually explicit, violent, irreverent, and controversial but more importantly they are, almost without exception, NOT BORING.

What you are in for is made clear from the very beginning of the visit when you are receive your personal i-phone for the tour from the friendly front of house staff. One of the first things you notice after logging in is two buttons on the bottom which gives you information about the objects. One is called ‘gonzo’ and if clicked gives and brief account of how the object was purchased or a visitors or artists impression of the object. The second, with the graphic of a penis, is titled ‘art wank’ and clicking this gives you a detailed account of the object, the artist etc. From personal experience I am almost certain that this sentiment, if not vocalised by visitors to art museums, was often what they actually thought about the kinds of text usually provided. Even better was seeing how many of the mainly elderly audience were happy to read an ‘art wank’ and I couldn’t help feeling they were probably reading more than when it was presented in a more formal way.

One thing I wasn’t so keen on was the set of buttons, which effectively replaced the ‘like’ button concept from Facebook with ‘Love’ or ‘Hate’. I thought these were a bit constrictive as many of the works didn’t conjure up those kind of extremes of emotion in me. But then again the sentiments were quite in keeping with Walsh’s overall feeling his collection was indeed pushing the boundaries, and were extreme.

So where was I – that’s right we’re at the reception area, with I-phone, hand poised to press LOVE or HATE, and feeling like I’m about to take a Dante-esque trip in this high tech lift though the bedrock to some subliminal realms below.

Lift, Museum of Old and New Art, Hobart, photo G. Barker, 2011

Lift, Museum of Old and New Art, Hobart, 2011

This first thing that strikes you when you step out of the lift is the Egyptian scale of the space carved out of the rock. It’s like being it some kind of futurist movie set, walkways above a high tech bar which are a precursor to a series of dark recesses and corridors going off in different directions. This is where you really start to get to grips with the tour guide you have in your hand. Press the pink ‘O’ and it gives you your location and lists the artworks nearby. It also allows you to enter your email address at this point and this will record the objects you visit (although this did appear to be linked to whether you actually ‘loved’ or ‘hated’ an object rather than just stood in front of it) and – this was pretty cool – sent the list with pictures though to your email for after your trip. It even lists the objects you didn’t see for another visit – all of which is a great help right now as I write this post.

Basement level entry, MONA, Hobart, photo G. Barker, 2011

Basement level entry, MONA, Hobart, 2011

Then its time to set off on the journey and make your way back to the surface. One of the other things you quickly notice is how dark everything is. This one feature makes a tremendous difference to the entire experience and is one which I couldn’t help but feel has the potential to transform any museum.

The other thing I noticed at this point was that although visitors can take photos without a flash the Mona handheld did not have a camera. And even though I tried juggling using my own phone camera, it limited the way I could capture my experience. So bring a good camera if you are serious about documenting your visit.

I guess this will mean having three pieces of tech to carry around which does seem a little unnecessary. Perhaps it would be nice if the MONA phone had a camera so at least you could take some happy snaps and load these into your museum experience to send to your email.

So what about the work? The great thing as I have said was it was interesting NOT BORING, stuff moved, was well lit and even when potentially boring stuff (like pieces of flint) were displayed they were arranged in interesting artistic patterns. Again I think museums could do a lot here in simply looking at how objects are arranged or combined can potentially create a new level of interest. I also liked the way ‘all roads led to Rome’ there were no dead ends or cul-de-sacs to escape from. A great example of this was after looking at the skinned kitty and the hanging wax horse (PXIII by Berlinde De Bruyckere) I rounded the corner to be confronted with a black wall which on closer inspection opened when I pushed on it and brought me back to the main corridor. Interesting, exciting and relies on humans exploring rather than being directed.

Another example of this was the opaque white cube, Queen (A Portrait of Madonna) by Candice Breitz, which was in the centre of the displays on one level. From the outside I could see shadows moving inside and walked around it wondering what was going on when I came upon a door. On opening it and walking inside I was confronted by a bright wall of TV’s which contrasted strongly with the outside ambience, even more jarring was the Capella voices, mostly not very good, singing Madonna hits, kinda in time, but the longer I stayed the more embarrassed I felt watching them.

One of my favourite objects Artifact, by Gregory Barsamian, was a huge metal head lying on its side at the top of some stairs. But it was the flashing light coming from inside that attracted my attention and in this case curiosity was rewarded with a stunning stroboscopic light show inside the coil of wires lining the interior of the head.

I won’t go on to list all the great stuff at the museum as my advice is to see and experience it for yourself. This is a great experience and I’d like to congratulate David for making this one of the more successful and expensive examples of entrepreneurship in the cultural sector. By the time we made our way back to the surface hours has gone by, our group of five had met, wandered off, got lost, bumped into each other at video screenings, seen each other from afar on stairways going to other unknown places and eventually sat down to discuss the experience at lunch.

Overall I liked the way the lines were blurred between art, architecture and the more traditional museum objects, albeit weird and eccentric ones. No thematic schema, no one way to view the works, lots of accident and serendipity, no text, and dark catacombs of walkways and stairs and stone making for an experience I hope other museums embrace. My five hours sleep was rapidly catching up on me as the five of us made our way to Hobart airport and back to Sydney. I can barely remember the plane trip and journey home but I think we all agreed it was a day-trip to remember. Thanks Mr. Earnshaw.

Lynne, Nicholas, Estee and Carlos, Hobart, photo G, Barker, 2011

Lynne, Nicholas, Estee and Carlos, Hobart, 2011

Sketching the Museum

A special gem popped up in our google alerts this morning, we found out that the Museum had been visited by the Sydney Urbane Sketchers on the weekend!

We contacted sketcher David Jack (you can check out his blog here) to find out a little bit more.

David tells us:

The Powerhouse Museum was chosen by a group of Sydney Artists and aficionados as part of the International Sketchcrawl (a Global Drawing Marathon celebrated in the major cities of the world).

I deeply love trains and train stations. So the train was an obvious theme.

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Artwork by David Jack © all rights reserved

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Locomotive No 1. Photography Powerhouse Museum.

I like the Powerhouse Museum as in some galleries you are able to feel part of the past, and that was specially true with the stagecoach.

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Artwork by David Jack © all rights reserved

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Horse drawn omnibus. Photography Powerhouse Museum.

Even when I’m not fond of cars, this one was specially beautiful, like a work of art.

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Artwork by David Jack © all rights reserved

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Type 37A Grand Prix Bugatti. Photography Powerhouse Museum.

Finally, the plane, reminds me of all traveling. I’m born overseas, in Barcelona (Spain) and I’ve been flying around the world before settling in Sydney.

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Artwork by David Jack © all rights reserved

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Transavia Airtruk light aeroplane. Photography Powerhouse Museum.

Thanks David!, we love seeing the Museum’s collection used in different ways.

The league table: The world’s most popular museums and exhibitions

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Crowds at the British Museum. Image courtesy of Drumaboy shared with a Creative Commons license

The Art Newspaper’s annual survey of the world’s most popular museums and exhibitions is just out. For anyone who wants to know what brings people to museums in big numbers, this is required reading. You can download the pdf here

Some of the results are predictable: The Louvre remains the most visited museum in the world (8.5 million visitors during 2010) followed by the British Museum and New York’s Metropolitan Museum. In Australia the Queensland Art Gallery and Gallery of Modern Art head the list with 1.8 million visitors during 2010. Next up is the National Gallery of Victoria’s two museums and the Melbourne Museum.

Image courtesy of PB-PSBear, shared with a creative commons license

Image courtesy of PB-PSBear, shared with a creative commons license

Sydney’s top museum attraction is the Art Gallery of NSW though its usual third or fourth place in the Australian rankings is usurped for 2010 by Melbourne’s Australian Centre for the Moving Image (1.1 million), largely as a result of ACME’s hosting the hugely successful Tim Burton show from the Museum of Modern Art, New York.

And it’s the exhibitions that make the most interesting reading. The Art Newspaper focuses on art museums of course, so natural history, technology and science museums are largely ignored. Yet numerous design and decorative arts exhibitions and museums make the lists. In fact the third most popular exhibition world-wide was Designing the Lincoln Memorial, which attracted almost three million visitors to the Washington National Gallery. No doubt the exhibition’s proximity to the actual Lincoln Memorial (no minor attraction in itself) helped, but other more esoteric design shows also did well.

Among these was MOMA’s Bauhaus 1919-33: Workshops for Modernity, the Pompidou’s Patrick Jouin, the Guggenheim’s Frank Lloyd Wright and the Serpentine Gallery’s Jean Nouvel – big design names clearly have allure, even if a couple of them are still alive and working!

Most of the popular dec arts shows were frock affairs though interestingly retrospectives on YSL and Cartier at Paris and San Francisco drew fewer people than Hats: An anthology by Stephen Jones at Brisbane’s Gallery of Modern Art. This Victoria & Albert show did better in Brisbane than at its home museum in London.

In certain museums it is an item of faith that cultural phenomenon with mainstream popularity will produce popular exhibitions. The survey doesn’t contain much evidence of this. Instead, what is clear is the popularity of the difficult and the esoteric – for example contemporary art. Often dismissed as a minority taste, numerous contemporary art shows are a feature of the top 30 exhibitions, including those featuring Rebecca Horn, Regina Silveira, Marina Abramovic and William Kentridge (who we’ve been lucky to enjoy in Sydney thanks to the MCA and Biennale).

The survey is also further evidence of increased museum attendance world-wide, underlined by healthy attendances at museums in China, Japan, Korea, India and Brazil. In fact, the most popular exhibition in 2010 was the Tokyo National Museum’s Hasegawa Tohaku, marking the four hundredth anniversary of this home-grown artist. More than 12,000 people visited daily (one presumes 24-hour opening).

Although the usual blockbuster names are in evidence – Picasso, Van Gogh, Turner et al – scrolling down the list produced plentiful evidence than even apparently arcane subjects can draw hundred of visitors per day. For example: One hundred years of business in Italy (Museo dell’Ara Pacis, Rome) Curious George saves the day (Jewish Museum, New York) La Dolce Vita: 1950s Italian celebrities (Mercati di Tiaino, Rome) and The man with the case: A history of baggage (Borgo Medievale, Turin).

Too many exhibitions, not enough time.

Guest Curator- Deb Mostert: tin toys inspire art

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Collection: Powerhouse Museum

Deb Mostert © all rights reserved

Deb Mostert © all rights reserved

My name is Deb Mostert and I am a visual artist working in Brisbane. My art practice involves me using vintage and veteran toys and household objects as subject matter and finding collectors who are willing to let me ‘play’ with their toys is always exciting. Last  year I received an RADF (Regional Arts Development Fund) grant for concept development which enabled me to visit the Powerhouse Museum to view the collection of vintage toys.

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Collection: Powerhouse Museum

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Deb Mostert © all rights reserved

 I worked with the curator of Transport and Toys, Margaret Simpson, looking through the toys which languished in storage but very rarely ever see the light of day! Margaret allowed me to have a few toys out at a time and as I wasn’t allowed to touch anything myself, I directed her to move them (with the white gloves on!) In this way we set up quite a few scenarios and ‘conversations’ between toys, hinting at narrative and enjoying the potential stories that could emerge, which I then photographed and painted back in my Brisbane studio.

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Collection: Powerhouse Museum

Deb Mostert © all rights reserved

Deb Mostert © all rights reserved

Narratives were in fact plentiful and the potential for stories endless when the static objects were put into relationship with each other. The objects taken from museum storage and played with came into a new existence. Without the interaction they ceased to really exist beyond being merely a record, a sample of what had been.

It struck me how much this is like our lives.  We all have a kind of quirky charm begging for animation and interrelation.  All the allure, history, and value are meaningless without the spark of interaction.  It drew me back to words that animate my life: 

If I speak in the tongues of men and of angels, but have not love, I am only a resounding gong or a clanging cymbal.  If I have the gift of prophecy and can fathom all mysteries and all knowledge, and if I have a faith that can move mountains, but have not love, I am nothing. If I give all I possess to the poor and surrender my body to the flames, but have not love, I gain nothing.”  Without love our lives are static, our narratives limited and our stories are stifled.  In painting these scenes, animating the inert through story, perhaps you’ll sense my hope that there is a way back to reconnect with love at its source. 

Additionally, these works represent a continuing desire to look for paradoxes. These paintings show emptied items… forgotten and passed over objects…yet they also show the wear of service, of play, they hold memory and they startle us with recognition. They are at once both sacred and banal. They are painted to look real but they are obviously not. They are worthless to some and at the same time precious to a collector. 

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Collection: Powerhouse Museum

Deb Mostert © all rights reserved

Deb Mostert © all rights reserved

 The works can be read in many different ways as the objects become reflectors of the experiences of the viewer. My works aim to reveal the narratives that can lurk beneath the humble surfaces of plastic, porcelain and tin. 

I painted 21 works on plywood, to allow the humility of the toys to be explored. I also made 7 larger oil on canvas paintings. The entire show can be viewed at here.

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Collection: Powerhouse Museum

Deb Mostert © all rights reserved

Deb Mostert © all rights reserved

I really enjoyed my (all too brief) time in the collection store and must thank Margaret for her patience in setting things up for me which enabled me to access a truly delightful collection.

Deb Mostert

Editors note:
You can see the following toys in our collection
The Pig
The Turkey
The ‘tut tut’ car