Top 5 Biennale moments

1. Dan Graham and Atelier Bow-Wow’s powers combined!

Seeing these two (well three really) people work together on their tour of Sydney is one of those moments that only a Biennale could create. More

REVOLUTION

Ben SymonsTracey Moffat’s collaboration with Gary Hillberg, REVOLUTION, 2008 made for this Biennale is one of the most engaging works at the MCA. Although León Ferrari’s, La civilización occidental y cristiana / Western Christian Civilization, 1965 (Jesus nailed to a airplane cross) and Maurizio Cattelan’s, Novecento,1997 (stuffed dead horse) * have both received a lot the media attention, however it was works like Moffat’s and Hillberg’s which really stood out. *Brackets my addition More

Congratulations to Doreen Reid Nakamarra

A couple of weeks ago (14th-16th of August) I attended the Darwin Aboriginal Art Fair as well as the 2008 National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Art Awards. The weather in Darwin was rather warm (34 degrees celsius every day) which made a nice change from the particularly cold Sydney weather that we have been plagued with of late. For those of you not familiar with the Telstra Awards, the award was established in 1984 to recognise the important contribution that Indigenous artists make to the visual arts in Australia. According to the awards website ” The Award attracts a range of Indigenous artists from all parts of the country and about 100 works are selected each year from around 300 entries. The diversity and style of work submitted each year reflects the changing face of contemporary Aboriginal art practice”

In total there five different prizes given in four different categories. The prizes are:

* Overall Award - $40,000 prize
* the Telstra General Painting Award - $4000 prize
* the Telstra Bark Painting Award- $4000 prize
* the Telstra Work on Paper Award- $4000 prize
* the Wandjuk Marika 3D Memorial Award (sponsored by Telstra)- $4000 prize

You can see a list of the winners here:
http://www.nt.gov.au/nreta/museums/exhibitions/natsiaa/25/pdf/room_brochure.pdf

Doreen Reid Nakamarra, \"Untitled\" Synthetic polymer paint on linenWhat does the Telstra Aboriginal Art Awards have to do with the Biennale I hear you ask, well, the winner of the general painting award was Doreen Reid Nakamarra (see bio details here) who happens to be one of the artists who created a work for the biennale. The work that won the $4,000 Telstra General Painting Award (image 1) is an untitled work that depicts designs associated with the rockhole site of Marrapinti, west of the Pollock Hills in Western Australia. “The lines in the painting depict the creek at the site and the sandhills that surround it. In ancestral times, a group of women of the Nangala and Napangati kinship subsections camped at this site during their travels towards the east. While at the site the women made nose bones, also known as marrapinti, which are worn through a hole made in the nose web. During ceremonies relating to Marrapinti, the older women pierced the nasal septums of the younger women who were participating in the ceremony. Nose bones were originally used by both men and women but are now only inserted by the older generation on ceremonial occasions. Upon completion of the ceremonies at Marrapinti, the women continued their travels east passing through Wala Wala, Ngaminya and Wirrulnga, before heading north-east to Wilkinkarra (Lake Mackay)”. (description from Papunya Tula Artists)

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Day 62: Big May Be Better, But When is Long too Long?

Day 62 and I finally made it to Pier 2/3. I have to admit I’d been putting it off, never feeling quite in the mood to make the time commitment needed to appreciate the sound piece by Janet Cardiff and George Bures Miller. I’d heard a rumour that it took 45 minutes to get through. In the way of rumours, its length stretched and extended until my friend Vernon (and yes this is his real name, he is not so innocent as to need protection) said to me, as I tried to convince him to keep me company, “I heard it’s 2-3 hours long.” “No,” said I, “It’s only 45 minutes.” But this, it seems, was not a particularly persuasive argument.
As it turns out, the piece titled, “The Murder of Crows”, is only 30 minutes long, but the point is that even this seems like a long time to our fast paced, attention deficient, channel surfing minds. Perhaps too long? More

Drool for Dollars

Did you know that human saliva contains a chemical that has pain killing properties? I certainly didn’t until I encountered the work of the Serbian born, Singapore based artist Ana Prvacki. For the Biennale of Sydney, Prvacki created a musical performance work that explores the provision of a pain eliminiating service as well as the tangible by-products of music production. As a result of playing her flute for a period of two hours, Prvacki produced an amount of saliva that was collected and then transformed into a music-derived pain killer through a simple alchemical process. The music-derived pain killer was then used to create a wet wipe product called salivesalve which was then wrapped in shiny foil packaging exactly the same as that of commercially available wet wipes.
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Behind the scenes insights, reviews, conversations and observations on the 2008 exhibition and events.
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