Tuesday, November 29, 2011

Le Flâneur blog on Facebook

Le Flâneur Blog now has a facebook page which you can 'like'.  Blog posts will be syndicated there, along with other content, mainly current or upcoming shows and events of note worldwide:

Le Flâneur blog on Facebook

We're also on twitter: @les_flaneurs

Saturday, November 26, 2011

Australian Art Notes: December 2011

Left: in our opinion, the the standout Australian show in 2011:
Dinh Q. Lê Erasure (installation view), 2011, single channel video, boat, found photographs, rocks, online archive, dimensions variable
Photo: Aaron de Souza. Courtesy the artist and Sherman Contemporary Art Foundation
--------------
David Corbet's National artnotes appear in edited form in Art Monthly Australia (www.artmonthly.org.au)
_________

Are we there yet? (the year in review)
Well, there goes another one – and has it been a good year for the visual arts, nationally speaking? The answer, as always, is mixed. National Artnotes aims to cover issues of national arts policy and funding, the art market, national institutions and significant regional developments. We also try to view Australian art with an international perspective. We get to see some great art, but in general it is left to others to review and evaluate individual artists and exhibitions.

Export
One of our themes has been presentation of Australian art in an international context, whether at home or abroad, and how our governments, funding bodies and institutions perform. With a small population, we need to grow our markets for art and culture beyond our borders. The primary vehicles for offshore promotion are Ozco and DFAT, which support Australian art through institutional touring shows, along with key events like the Venice Biennale. Apart from Hany Armonious in Venice and Papunya Painting: Out of the Australian Desert (National Museum of China, from the NMA collection) it hasn’t been a big year for touring exhibitions. Australian Cultural Attachés in the world’s capitals continue to lament a diminution of resources for presentation. Ozco supports participation (by artists) in overseas biennales, and attendance (by commercial galleries) at art fairs, while many other quasi-government and University-based grant programs support overseas residencies. The commercial galleries play a major self-funded role, and 2011 has been a growth year for commercial art fairs in our region. We saw a significant Australian presence at Art Stage Singapore, India Art Summit (New Delhi, renamed India Art Fair for 2012), Art Hong Kong (recently acquired by Art Basel), the Auckland Art Fair, and the Korea International Art Fair. Further afield Anna Schwartz showed at the invitation-only Armory Show in New York, and Breenspace at VOLTA.

Import
On the import side there was a steady stream of international semi-blockbusters flowing into national and state institutions, including Vienna: Art & Design (NGV); Peggy Guggenheim (AGWA); Saatchi in Adelaide (AGSA); Surrealism (GoMA); The First Emperor, The Mad Square and Picasso (AGNSW); Annie Liebovitz and (from 16 Dec) Rafael Lozano-Hemmer (MCA) and Renaissance (NGA from 9 Dec). Apart from these (often pre-existing) shows, more international art has been seen in institutions, for example the NGA’s excellent Life Death & Magic (Indonesian traditional arts) and AGNSW’s specialist Asian galleries exhibitions. It has been a big year all round for the AGNSW, with the superb Kaldor Collection of late 20th century art now housed alongside the rest of the contemporary collection in spacious new galleries, a spectacular swan song for outgoing director Edmund Capon. But for contemp-o-holics keen to see current and edgy overseas work, the above are slim pickings, with only the MCA consistently programming ambitious stand-alone shows of current international art. In Hobart and Sydney, three privately funded institutions help fill the gap, with MONA, the Sherman Contemporary Art Foundation (SCAF) and White Rabbit Gallery consistently presenting new work. Commercial gallerists Anna Schwartz and Roslyn Oxley operate in the remaining gap, with significant private wealth and some major international artists, alongside a handful of well-heeled dealerships. The prestigious Melbourne Art Fair attracted a smattering of overseas galleries, including a modest Canadian participation.

Biennale-land
It is to Australia’s three major curated international bi/triennials that one must look for currency. The Biennale of Sydney (BoS) and Brisbane’s Asia Pacific Triennial (APT), both with 2012 editions in planning, are regarded internationally as ones to watch, and their attendance figures compare with major events worldwide, in part because of a policy of appointing curators of international renown. The Adelaide International, a de-facto biennial staged alongside the Adelaide Biennial of Australian Art (ABAA), is also well-regarded, with Victoria Lynn’s Restless (from 2 March, various venues) eagerly anticipated. It is expected that the 2nd edition of the NGA’s National Indigenous Art Triennial (NIAT 2012: unDisclosed, re-scheduled for May) will live up the promise of Brenda Croft’s first (2008) instalment, which toured nationally and to Washington DC to some acclaim.

Federal, State and City
Federal Arts Minister Simon Crean has maintained a steady-as-she-goes approach, with predecessor Garrett’s policy initiatives (notably the Resale Royalty Scheme and Indigenous Art Code) proving uncontentious, and a steady stream of reviews and reports under consideration. The arts are not seen as an election-winner by Labour or the Coalition, and hopes that a change of government signifies funding increases, or even enthusiasm, long ago gave way to acceptance that continuation, indexed for inflation, is the best one can hope for. Queensland bucked the national trend, with a 5% real increase in arts funding for 2011/12.

Ozco and the other nationally funded institutions, the NGA, NPG, NMA, NLA, NMM, Artbank, ABAF, Screen Australia and Bundanon Trust, all continue to do good work on limited resources, and we should certainly never take their existence for granted. The University galleries nationwide are an often underrated asset, supplementing a well-developed network of state regional galleries and some arts-aware city and local governments across the country. The major capitals in particular are attempting to nourish an inner city creative revival, with a noticeable increase in small-scale support for beach art, laneway art, urban art projects, ARIs and creative networks of many kinds. It’s not such a bad picture, and art may even be said to be gaining space in the imaginative life of nation.

Markets
Fact: people do buy art. All sorts of people buy it, and they buy it at all levels, from village fêtes to prestige auctions. It’s certainly true that many smaller galleries have been doing it tough for several years, struggling to keep afloat, much less returning to pre GFC (2007) levels. It appears that at the more accessible end of the market ($1-5K), people are keeping their credit cards in their pockets. Above that, it’s all about who’s ‘collectable’, and if you are, the $10-30K range appears surprisingly robust. Above these levels it’s likely there’s already a waiting list for your work, and you’re being re-sold at auction or dealerships. After a bit of re-shuffling, the auction scene has settled down again, with most major players still in the game, and an ambitious, new-ish kid on the block (Deutscher and Hackett) stalking the established houses. It’s widely believed that the heady sales of the noughties, especially for Indigenous art, are over – it was a bubble that was never going to be sustainable. But despite worldwide economic jitters, 2011 has been an encouraging year at re-sale, with clearance rates and revenues holding up in most cases, and a number of million dollar plus individual sales. Verdict: cautious optimism.

The zeitgeist
Across the year and across the nation we’ve seen ample evidence of a diverse art scene that sustains many thousands of artists, many galleries large and small, and a significant curatorial and academic infrastructure, extending beyond capital cities via regional institutions, supported by a broad political consensus that this is a worthwhile use of taxpayer money. Surveys regularly show that more Australians follow artistic pursuits than sporting ones. The audience for contemporary art, including Indigenous artists, is growing modestly, but imported ‘old master’ shows and well-worn favourites like the Archibald remain the most popular offerings. Our educational institutions are adequately resourced. There are reasonable opportunities for young artists with talent and industry to get ahead, get noticed, get a grant, even make a living if they are lucky.

GenY artists in Australia seem a remarkably cheerful bunch, and a self-protective carapace of techno-savvy irony seems to be de rigeur. Self-destructive, garret-like attitudes are out, and passions are not worn on sleeves, or even on lapel buttons. Understatement is what it’s all about, either that or full-on overstatement. GenX artists are establishing themselves in institutional positions to augment modest returns on art practice, and increasingly run University art departments, as the Boomers approach retirement. Across the generations, only a handful of Australian artists have achieved significant international recognition. That most of those are Indigenous artists may tell us something about how we are perceived globally.

We’ve heard it said that it’s all too easy. That a complacent and risk-averse curatariat presides over a parochial system of patronage, meekly followed by a compliant constituency of artists. That without social challenge, political upheaval, blood and guts, great art will not emerge. That most Australian visual art is a half-hearted, cynical business, a watered-down version of what is going on ‘overseas’. That most video art is banal and easy to do. That there is too much unexceptional photomedia, too much dot painting, too much portraiture, too much… well, you know how it goes. We don’t have the answers, but the questions are always interesting. Can you think of any art experience this year past which changed your worldview, made you see with new eyes, provided an epiphany? We can, but if you can’t, get into that studio and start making it!

All best wishes for 2012 – keep the comments and emails coming.

Tuesday, November 01, 2011

Australian Art Notes: November 2011


Artsummit success
The 5th World Summit on Arts and Culture wrapped up in Melbourne in early October, with credit to all concerned it seems. The Summit, themed Creative Intersections, attracted 501 delegates from 72 countries, exploring intersections between the arts and other sectors across health, education, environment, business, international aid, social inclusion and digital technologies. A summary of case studies and papers will be released early in 2012, and the 6th Summit will take place in Chile in January 2014.
www.artsummit.org

Returning antiquities
The Australian government is quietly doing the right thing, with recent returns of precious cultural antiquities to Egypt, Peru and Jordan under the Protection of Movable Cultural Heritage Act 1986. In September, 122 Egyptian artefacts including figurines and miniature amulets, some dating from the fourth millennium BC, were officially returned to Egypt. Nine artefacts, including fragile textile remnants, woven and pottery dolls and gold foil artefacts, were formally handed back to Peru, and two miniature pots have been returned to Jordan. The Federal Office for the Arts said “the Australian Government is committed to the protection of moveable cultural heritage – both our own and that of other nations. Anyone seeking to purchase cultural heritage objects must ensure that they are accompanied by the proper documents such as export permits”.
www.arts.gov.au

National Indigenous centre back on the radar
After a quiescent period, talk of an Indigenous cultural centre in Sydney’s contentious Barangaroo precinct has again been in the news, partly arising from the sudden resignation of Hetti Perkins as head of Indigenous art at AGNSW. Perkins has called for the establishment of a national institution that reflects the range and depth of contemporary Indigenous culture. Arts Minister Simon Crean encouraged her to make a submission to the NCP (see below). A national Indigenous knowledge centre was canvassed at the 2020 summit in 2008, and Indigenous Affairs Minister Jenny Macklin says a feasibility study commissioned last year is still being considered. Powerhouse Museum director Dawn Casey supports a new national institution but says it should avoid ethnographic material and social history, and “be more about where we are today”. Sydney's deputy Lord Mayor, Marcelle Hoff, said Barangaroo would be a suitable site for an Indigenous centre, although not underground, arguing that the symbolism of an Indigenous centre buried below ground would be unacceptable.

Bunker busters
Simultaneously, the Barangaroo Delivery Authority (BDA) has initiated tendering for a 100,000-cubic metre underground ‘cultural space’, situated within a natural-looking headland designed by the US landscape architect Peter Walker, and ferociously championed by Paul Keating, at an overall estimated cost exceeding $90 million. Quickly dubbed ‘the bunker’ by the media, planning documents say usage will be determined in the future ''depending on what Sydney needs''. Sydney University’s Professor Peter Webber says ''No architect in their right mind could design a space like that without knowing what you could put in it”. In a last-ditch attempt to stop the plan, Webber has written to the NSW Premier, backed by more than 60 planning and architectural luminaries, including Richard Leplastrier, Peter Stutchbury, Philip Cox, Penelope Seidler and David Chesterman. The letter suggests the northern point, earmarked for the headland, is an ideal location for a new theatre, which should be built above ground.

BDA says the raw underground space will add just $8 million to the cost of restoring the headland and it cites other successful underground facilities including Hobart’s MONA, Sydney’s Conservatorium of Music and Renzo Piano’s California Academy Of Sciences. According to BDA documents, visitors will experience “a dramatic entry that leads into a large space with natural light reflecting off the warm sandstone wall from numerous skylights above”. It adds that the cultural facility will provide “a diversity of spaces to suit a wide range of exhibition and performance, allowing multiple configurations, heights and views, there are few limitations on how these spaces could be used”.
www.barangaroo.com

New MCA reveals 2012 program
Sydney’s Museum of Contemporary Art (MCA) today announced a reopening date of
31 March 2012, following its $53 million redevelopment. The 2012 exhibition program was also announced, commencing with Marking Time (31 March until 3 June 2012) curated by Rachel Kent, featuring artists from Europe, the USA, Brazil, Japan and Australia, and Volume One: MCA Collection, curated by Glenn Barkley. Next up will be the18th Biennale of Sydney: all our relations (27 June– 16 September) across two levels. Spring shows include Primavera (5 October – 2 December), Ken Whisson - As If (1 October – 28 November) and Claire Healy and Sean Cordeiro (4 October – 28 November). Next summer, artist Brook Andrew will curate TABOO - The Silent Identity (19 December– 24 February 2013) presenting recent work by Indigenous artists from Australia and around the world. Also announced is a series of permanent site-specific works by Australian artists including Brook Andrew, Hany Armanious, Emily Floyd, Grant Stevens and Helen Eager.

Review of the reviews
Comments on the Federal Government’s National Cultural Policy (NCP) discussion paper closed on 21 October, with over 900 submissions received as AMA went to press. Arising from perceived public interest, news media have demonstrated a higher level of attention than is usual for arts policy issues, with News Ltd, Fairfax and Crikey all presenting thoughtful pieces in the run-up to the comment deadline. Some have been critical of the ‘glacial’ pace of a process initiated by (then) Arts Minister Peter Garrett in 2006, with the final policy due in 2012. The review is just one of an acronym-strewn range of arts, culture and media reviews intended to inform a coherent ‘whole-of-government’ policy. National Artnotes has reported on many of these over the last year or so:

The Strategic Digital Industry Plan (SDIP), a.k.a Creative Industries, a Strategy for 21st Century Australia: was released in August, and responses to the discussion paper for Harold Mitchell’s Review of Private Sector Support for the Arts (RPSSA) closed in July, with the final report expected early next year. Also mentioned in the NCP paper is a 2010 election commitment to look at the possibility of a National Design Policy, with proposed draft scope of reference and timeframe expected soon.
www.arts.gov.au

The Australian Curriculum Assessment and Reporting Authority (ACARA)’s revised Shape of the Australian Curriculum: The Arts was published in August, with further content, consultation and revision planned throughout 2012 and final publication TBC.
www.acara.edu.au

Then there’s The Convergence Review, being conducted under the auspices of the Department of Broadband, Communications and the Digital Economy (DBCDE), examining policy and regulatory frameworks for a “converged media and communications landscape in Australia”. A discussion paper was released in September with submissions closing 28 October and final report due March 2012.
www.dbcde.gov.au
Finally, the Australian Law Reform Commission (ALRC) has released a discussion paper on its Review of the National Classification Scheme, with submissions closing 18 November and final report due January 2012.
www.alrc.gov.au

Venice Pavillion update
Expressions of interest for the design of a new Venice Pavillion have now closed. The pavillion, managed by the Australia Council, is due to be completed for the opening of the 56th International Art Exhibition in June 2015, with appointment date for the chosen architect(s) to be announced. The selection panel comprises Luca Belgiorno-Nettis (Chair, Biennale of Sydney), Doug Hall (Biennale 2011 Commissioner), Kathy Keele (Ozco CEO), Simon Mordant (Biennale 2013 Commissioner) and Brian Zulaikha (President, Australian Institute of Architects).
www.australiacouncil.gov.au/venicepavillion

NPG Movember
The National Portrait Gallery has announced the collection based show Jo's mo show (with beards)
(28 October - 1 April) illustrating changes in beards, moustaches and sideburns from the 1780s to the 1980s. The NPG throws open its doors between 5pm - 9pm on the last Friday of every month for exhibition viewings, entertainment and drinks to kick-start the weekend. And a reminder that entries to the $25k 2012 National Photographic Portrait Prize close on 31st October.