MELBOURNE.- The vibrant, provocative and pioneering work of leading Australian artist, designer and gay activist David McDiarmid is being presented in a retrospective exhibition at the
National Gallery of Victoria. Defying classification, McDiarmids work encompasses the complex and interconnected histories of art, craft, fashion, music, sex, gay liberation and identity politics.
David McDiarmid: When This You See Remember Me brings together more than 200 works, including the artists early gay liberation work; New York graffiti and disco quilts; fashion collaborations with Linda Jackson; his pioneering Rainbow aphorisms and Gothic aphorisms digital work; material he produced as Sydney Mardi Gras Artistic Director; posters created for the AIDS Council of NSW; and, his significant and highly influential international campaigns developed in the context of AIDS, sexual politics and safe sex in the 1990s.
Tony Ellwood, Director, NGV, said, The NGV is pleased to be staging this retrospective of an artist whose work had enormous impact on both the gay liberation movement and the international dialogue around AIDS, and whose clear messages of liberation, equality and emancipation continue to resonate today. David McDiarmid: When This You See Remember Me explores the social history, as well as political and art historical context, that informed McDiarmids work, which inspires through its courage, poetry, exuberance and cultural impact.
At once kaleidoscopic, celebratory and darkly humorous in tone, the artists idiosyncratic, highly personal and, at times, confessional work highlights the redefinition and deconstruction of identities from camp to gay to queer drawing on the experiences of a life intensely lived in Melbourne, Sydney and New York. Charting the shifts in politics and individual and community expression that unfolded across the decades of the 1970s, 80s and 90s, this exhibition also reveals McDiarmids artistic and grassroots political response to the impact of HIV/AIDS during the 1980s and beyond, for which he is best known internationally.
Recognising the cultural climate in which the artist worked, including the burgeoning of the gay rights movement, and a decade later, the advent of the AIDS crisis, the playful and provocative nature of McDiarmids work was critically related to changes that were occurring throughout this time to sexual identity and politics in Australia.
Dr Sally Gray, Guest Curator, said, McDiarmids work speaks so eloquently of its time yet its importance and relevance endures today. David McDiarmid: When This You See Remember Me is the first exhibition in which the full scope of McDiarmids creative oeuvre is on display and is the culmination of painstaking research, with the support of many of his collaborators, friends and fans.
David McDiarmid: When This You See Remember Me coincides with the 20th International AIDS Conference in Melbourne in July 2014.