Brook Andrew
Guy Benfield
Mladen Bizumic
Lisa Crowley
Bill Culbert
Destiny Deacon
Virginia Fraser
Ex de Medici
Mikala Dwyer
Shaun Gladwell
Matthew Griffin
A.L.A.N. Hsu
Peggy Napangardi Jones
The Kingpins
Maddie Leach
Daniel Malone
MINIT
Jasmine Guffond
Torben Tilly
Tracey Moffatt
TV Moore
James Morrison
Callum Morton
Ani O'Neill
Michael Parekowhai
Patricia Piccinini
Rachel Rakena
Scott Redford
Ann Shelton
Jim Speers
Kathy Temin
Yvonne Todd
Francis Upritchard
Ronnie van Hout
Suzann Victor
Louise Weaver
Boyd Webb
Magda Kardasz
Simon Rees
A bi-national survey exhibition presenting work by 32 artists and two collectives from Australia and New Zealand. The show presents work across a range of media including drawing, painting, photography, sculpture, video and performance. As a special feature a number of artists have traveled to Warsaw to produce newly commissioned site-specific art works, some of them reflecting on the artists' engagement with Polish culture.
Curated by
Magda Kardasz for Zacheta National Gallery of Art in Warsaw
and
Simon Rees for the Contemporary Art Centre in Vilnius in Vilnius
HIGH TIDE is a bi-national survey exhibition presenting work by 32 artists and two collectives from Australia and New Zealand. It is the first major exhibition of its kind presented in Poland and the largest-scale exhibition combining artists from both nations staged internationally. The exhibition presents work across a range of media including drawing, painting, photography, sculpture, video and performance. As a special feature of the exhibition a number of artists have traveled to Warsaw to produce newly commissioned site-specific art works, some of them reflecting on the artists' engagement with Polish culture.
HIGH TIDE is loosely framed by three themes "Popular Visions", "the Suburban", and "New Outlooks" and collects three generations of artists from Bill Culbert (b. 1935) to A.L.A.N. Hsu (b. 1981). The starting point for the exhibition, "Popular Visions", looks at Australian and New Zealand art from a Polish point of view and locates themes and motifs in the work that match expectations, such as: big and beautiful nature; "exotic" and strange nature; the ocean; and the importance of indigenous people in both cultures. Even though many artists from both nations make work that reflects the popular imaginary it is often for the purpose of making humorous commentary or revealing a hidden underbelly of this imagination. Environmental concerns are repeated in the exhibition as artists point to the impact that human contact is having on the unique and often fragile ecologies of both geographies. Ironically, the more people who visit this nature the faster its beauty fades. Similarly, t he Aboriginal, Maori, and Pacific Island artists in the exhibition chart the complicated impact that European colonization has had on their homelands and peoples.
Despite the important role nature plays in the characterization of Australia and New Zealand they are both urban cultures; more than 85% of the population in both nations live in cities. Sydney the region"s largest city has a population approaching 4.5 million people so can truly be considered a metropolis. It is hardly surprising, therefore, that a number of artists in HIGH TIDE make work that refers to urban/street culture relating to "the Suburban" theme. As is often the case with art made in large cities there is even a tendency to withdraw from the space of the city itself to the privacy of domestic, truly "suburban" spaces: what are known in Australia and New Zealand as the "living room" and the "the back yard".
In the last five years an increasing number of artists from Australia and New Zealand have begun to live and work internationally; concentrated in the United States and western Europe. Naturally, artists belonging to this group have begun to make art works that reflect their new living spaces and the cultures and art histories they are now engaging with. A different version of this process is artists who emigrate to Australia and New Zealand from elsewhere in the world, often as art students, whose work makes new cultural connections or reflects multi-national concerns. This group of artists produces "New Outlooks" on the art produced in both countries.
HIGH TIDE is an exhibition that aims to introduce Polish audiences to contemporary art from Australia and New Zealand and reflect upon culture from both countries in an insightful and humorous fashion.
The exhibition is co-organized with the Contemporary Art Centre in Vilnius, where it is going to be presented from June till August 2006.
Artists presented at the exhibition:
Brook Andrew, Guy Benfield, Mladen Bizumic, Lisa Crowley, Bill Culbert, Destiny Deacon and Virginia Fraser, Ex de Medici, Mikala Dwyer, Shaun Gladwell, Matthew Griffin, A.L.A.N. Hsu, Peggy Napangardi Jones, The Kingpins, Maddie Leach, Daniel Malone, MINIT (Jasmine Guffond and Torben Tilly), Tracey Moffatt, TV Moore, James Morrison, Callum Morton, Ani O'Neill, Michael Parekowhai, Patricia Piccinini, Rachel Rakena, Scott Redford, Ann Shelton, Jim Speers, Kathy Temin, Yvonne Todd, Francis Upritchard, Ronnie van Hout, Suzann Victor, Louise Weaver, Boyd Webb
Klaudia Madejska press spokesman (48 22) 8275854 ext. 155 rzecznik@zacheta.art.pl
Zacheta National Gallery of Art
Pl. Malachowskiego 3 00-916 Warsaw, Poland
Gallery opening hours:
Tuesday-Sunday 12 a.m. - 8 p.m.
Thursdays entrance free.