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Thursday, November 27, 2025 |
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| Andrew Browne: 'A kind of skin' now open at Tolarno Galleries |
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Andrew Browne 'A kind of skin - Vignette 1' 2025, dye-sublimation print on brushed aluminium, with black border, 56 x 68.5 cm, unique.
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MELBOURNE.- Photography is a process of transformation. Under one accommodating term, countless methods allow the cameras seeing to be transmuted into realms almost unrecognisable. Here, Andrew Browne gathers dye-sublimation photographic prints on brushed aluminium; photopolymer gravure; and a unique cast aluminium sculpture. These might be thought of as three versions of photographythough the term may need to be held with a loose grip. Before tracing their connection to the medium, its worth stepping back to the beginning of this chain of processes.
That first step is about lookingseeing something that might appear lowly, something many would pass without a second glancebut which, for the artist, prompts a leap. A passage of concentrated attention begins. Walking through Melbourne, we all recognise those ratty urban surfaces that make up the citys fabric. These crazed, grimy skins are uneventful, a little abject. In this context, the act of taking a photograph becomes less about the camera shutter than about a shutter snapping inside the artists mind. Synapses connect; an image is gathered. The process of translation begins as a series of risks and experiments, manipulations through which the composition is reconsidered with a painters sensibility. From there, the image is rebuilt into something only tangentially related to its original encounter with the world.
Perhaps because of these humble beginnings, theres an air of delight in the arcane services of photographic technique that binds these works to a web of formalist objectives and art-historical echoes. The translation is underway, shifting from captured image to three- dimensional object.
A suite of works has been realised as dye-sublimation prints: a process of heat, pressure, and saturated pigment that renders images indelibly onto brushed aluminium. The metals lustre radiates through the translucent dyes, somehow elevating the citys unprepossessing fabric into slippery visual impressions. Fields of colour turn diaphanous; cracks in forgotten surfaces become fissures in ice, or the cellular membranes of leaves, elastic in their associations, treasures behind glass, warmed and buffed by light and movement.
Photographs are, of course, copiesimpressions of what a lens receives, even when unbuckled from reality. A cast sculpture takes that logic one step further: a form is made, a void is filled, and a new medium establishes itself as the original. Much like a photograph re-forms a scene. In his conceptual dance through the studio, Browne begins with a photograph, uses it as the basis for a painting, and then transforms that painting into a cardboard sculpture. Dreadfully nice in its allusion to movements such as Arte Povera or Matterism, the cardboard form is cast in molten aluminium aluminium again, but not as you know it on the wall. Reworked and even painted into new life, it becomes something like a mute bust.
The final work is a photopolymer gravure. This is a process among the most beautiful and complex in photography. An image is transferred to a prepared plate, coated in ink, buffed back, and pressed onto rag paper. The result is a contact print: austere, highly detailed, an unreflective monochrome shadow of the original.
Pippa Milne
Melbourne based writer and curator
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Today's News
November 27, 2025
Three new Miami Art Week exhibitions illuminate narratives around migration, culture, and community
Piguet unveils a ferocious Late Cretaceous sea monster
Tim Van Laere Gallery opens major Franz West survey highlighting his radical sculptural legacy
Juan Uslé returns to the Reina Sofía with a landmark four-decade survey
Rob Lyon makes his New York debut at Hales with When There Were More Moons
The Jim Henson Company 70th Anniversary Auction brings in $2.6 million total at Julien's Auctions
MAXXI presents Frame Time Open, Italy's most extensive Rosa Barba retrospective
Andrew Browne: 'A kind of skin' now open at Tolarno Galleries
Thomas Hoepker's hidden East Germany comes to light in new Berlin exhibition
Cristea Roberts Gallery unveils Paula Rego's darkest, most personal works from 2005-2007
Philbrook presents first career retrospective for Tulsa artist Patrick Gordon
Gooding Christie's to offer the Curtis Leaverton Collection at 2026 Amelia Island Auctions
Tuula Lehtinen revives Baroque splendor in new exhibition at Galerie Forsblom
Shu Lea Cheang's radical digital worlds take center stage at Ludwig Forum Aachen
Farida Sedoc unveils monumental Social Capital triptych at the Stedelijk Museum
Duane Linklater reimagines museum structures with powerful 'cache' installation at the Secession
The Met to offer holiday experience featuring festive displays, dining, shopping, and more
Joel Sherwood Spring debuts Diggermode 2: Cloud Ceding at the Institute of Modern Art
South Australian artists in focus as AGSA announces 2026 exhibition program
MAAT-Museum of Art, Architecture and Technology presents tenth-anniversary programme
'A Minute of Shelter' by Narges Mohammadi unveiled in Rotterdam
Kevork Mourad unveils Memory Gates at Miami Basel Meridians with Leila Heller Gallery
National Gallery of Canada opens its first cross-cultural exhibition of Indigenous, Canadian settler and European art
Sale to offer photographic masterworks from an important private collection
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