group show

FEVER DREAMS Group exhibition at Counihan Gallery

'Fever’Dreams' explores the fertile and shifting borderlands between abstraction and figuration. In the work of ten contemporary artists, figuration swells and ebbs away. Figuration surfaces here and there like alligators from the hot dark of the swamp.

Colour is lurid and mutable. It is the catalyst for the combustion of figurative imagery out of abstraction. Colour is also the vehicle by which that imagery becomes alien and elusive.

Nothing is stable in 'Fever’Dreams'. The works offer a fertile playground of shifting visions. In these visions, uncertainty and ambiguity are positive, even optimistic properties.

This exhibition includes work by Ingmar Apinis, Naomi Bishop, Mitchel Brannan, Harley Ives, Luke King, Elyss McCleary, Ted Mckinlay, Valentina Palonen, Bundit Puangthong, and Paul Yore. This exhibition is curated by Mitchel Brannan.

“I often think of how imagery is collected, remembered or responded to in the seen and unseen senses of our time here. Once when I was 16, I decided to draw a black and white photo from a library book.Since then I can return to this image in my head, etched in like a pop icon poster. Periodically I watch YouTube videos or read about his life.Sometimes mashed up scenes drip into dreams. I made these flat like stage paintings for and about Nijinsky, a reverie of set designs for portals of thought, desire and acceptance of the in-between spaces of movers and shakers.”


LINK TO COUNIHAN GALLERY

Elyss McCleary, Parts of a reverie tableau of watchers and dancers in the wings, oil on linen, 71cm x 83.5cm, 2023

Extended Gestures at Arcade Projects

Drooping Style, oil on linen, 51cm x 41cm. 2017

Elyss McCleary, Drooping Style, oil on linen, 51cm x 41cm. 2017

EXTENDED GESTURES

Peter Aldrich Matthew Engert Elyss McCleary Khi-Lee Thorpe

The title for this show is borrowed from the writers Claude Cernuschi and Andrzej Hercyznski who in their essay, The Subversion of Gravity in Jackson Pollock’s Abstractions, describe Pollock’s employment of gravity as a means “to extend the duration of his gestures”.1 In easel painting, finding new ways to form gesture, be it, by the brush or through other more unorthodox means (Brice Marden with his extended stick serves as a good example), has been an important pursuit by many artists.

The four artists in Extended Gestures build on this endeavour. Their marks are records of bodily activity, as they pursue methods that are provisional and intuitive. Bold strokes of colour are applied with careful attention to the stroke’s intensity and speed. They innovate ways to disperse paint, be it, through maximum thinning, or strokes that are at once, abbreviated and extended. In Extended Gestures the gesture is distilled, the painting process renovated and the very orthodoxies of easel painting challenged.

Aaron Martin
Curator

1. Cernuschi, Claude, and Andrzej Hercynski. "The Subversion of Gravity in Jackson Pollock's Abstractions." The Art Bulletin 90, no.4(2008):616-39.


Opening Friday, May 18th 6-9pm
Exhibition runs: May 16th -June 2nd 2018

Arcade (back space)
suite 2, level 1 / 119 Hopkins St, Footscray
open wed - sat 12-5pm

(Arcade Project Space is a Five Walls initiative)