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Established in 1996 |
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Friday, October 4, 2024 |
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"The Biography of Things" on view at the Australian Centre for Contemporary Art |
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Brook Andrew, Harvest, 2015. Victorian redgum, carbonised Victorian redgum, glass, brass. Installation view at The Ian Potter Museum of Art (2015). Collection of the artist. Courtesy of the artist and Tolarno Galleries, Melbourne.
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MELBOURNE.- The Biography of Things is an international exhibition curated by Juliana Engberg, Annika Kristensen and Hannah Mathews, bringing together artists who use objects, archives and collections to reveal narratives of loss, intrigue, histories and people.
Working as if detectives, the artists in this exhibition bring a lively approach to object encounters, using both objective and subjective approaches to reveal much about what time has concealed or forgotten.
Highlights included:
New York-based, French artist Camille Henrots Gross Fatigue (2013), hailed as groundbreaking when it was awarded the Silver Lion at the 2013 Venice Biennale, draws on the collections of the worlds largest scientific museum, the Smithsonian Institute, to tell the story of the creation of the world.
Narelle Jubelins Case no: T961301 (1998), a monumental installation where the worlds of diplomacy and trade meet in a reflection on colonial histories. Jubelin, Sydney-born and Madrid-based, has a research-based practice that directs our attention towards tiny fragments of large histories with great exactness.
Renowned Lebanese-born artist Walid Raads Preface to the Fifth edition, a series initiated by the Louvre, Paris, in 2014 for their new Islamic Art spaces. Since the late 1980s, Raad has been focused on creating works that archive the Lebanese wars in fictional form through his Atlas Group project.
Other artists include Brook Andrew (Aus), Ilit Azoulay (Israel) Aurélien Froment (French born, Ireland based), Camille Henrot (U.S) Nicholas Mangan (Aus), Rosalind Nashashibi & Lucy Skaer (U.K), Kirsten Pieroth (Germany) and Paul Sietsema (U.S).
The Biography of Things is accompanied by a catalogue of new texts and a series of podcasts featuring interviews with artists, curators, commentators and Melbourne personalities discussing hidden histories and stories, real or imagined.
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