Did you catch Charles Lomu talking to Patrick Abboud on The Feed SBS VICELAND?
Charles, a self-taught local barber and all-round good guy, and his 5 apprentices feature in our next exhibition Garage Barbershop.
Featuring new work by renowned photographer Harold David, and candid video interviews with men from Western Sydney, Garage Barbershop opens on Thursday, 11 May 2017 at Blacktown Arts Centre.
Garage Barbershop is presented in partnership with Information and Cultural Exchange (ICE).
exhibition
The film industry has long cherished the romantic notion of the lone-genius auteur, despite the inherent collaborative nature of movie making (much like raising children, transferring dreams to celluloid takes a village). This makes for an added joy in the forced anonymity of the mashups created by Tracey Moffatt and Gary Hillberg, as they divorce scenes from their intended filmic narrative to create meta-commentaries on our cultural concerns.
This suite of montage films, produced over 16 years of collaboration between Moffatt and Hillberg, engage in a dialogue with the history of the moving image, and with the audience themselves, culling from cult classics, forgotten b-movies and blockbusters without discrimination. They play like the logical byproduct of our increasingly digital age, smartly anticipating the rise of the online supercut and video essay – the ‘readymade’ of the 21st century, where fans (and artists) recut and reframe existing films to either create their own story or draw attention to specifics of the director’s craft.
Shown separately, these pieces have maybe been overlooked in the past in favour of other elements of Moffatt’s artistic output. Stylistically, flashier and more labour-intensive pieces such as Christian Marclay’s real-time masterwork The Clock (2010) and documentaries like Thom Andersen’s informed and delightfully cranky Los Angeles Plays Itself (2003) have mined similar veins. However, gathered in one place and shown in a continuous loop Moffatt and Hillberg’s videos are dazzling and devastating love songs to the mechanics of cinematic stereotypes.
There’s a steely effectiveness in this repetition – love breaks down at 24 frames a second, the world’s end appears to be endlessly at hand. Some of the pieces engage in the precise emotional manipulation they’re exposing, whether playing the clichés for laughs in Artist or deliberately stringing together multiple tear-jerking moments in Mother. It doesn’t matter that you’re aware of what they’re doing and how, it still makes you want to cry.
Elsewhere, Other takes on the troubled eroticisation of the colonial gaze, and there’s a continued relevance in Lip’s succession of black actresses sassing their way through the extremely limited Hollywood roles open to them. And once Love takes a beautifully bitchy record-scratch into infidelity, Moffatt and Hillberg are unsparing, revealing the distressingly prevalent seam of domestic violence running through so many screen stories. It’s infinitely more confronting when there’s no context for the brutality we’re witnessing – not that there can ever be a justification – and it raises the uncomfortable question of audience complicity.
The collected montages of Moffatt and Hillberg present a rare opportunity to get film-schooled by an inspired pairing of iconoclastic artist and editor.
By Johanna Roberts
Montages: The Full Cut, 1999 – 2015 was curated and developed by Artspace, Sydney and is touring nationally in partnership with Museums & Galleries of NSW.
Photo credit
Montages: The Full Cut, 1999 – 2015 Tracey Moffatt and Gary Hillberg, installation view Blacktown Arts Centre, 2017. Photograph by Sharon Hickey.
Blacktown Arts Centre is transforming its gallery space into a cinema to showcase the work of one of Australia’s most influential contemporary artists.
Montages: The Full Cut, 1999 – 2015 presents the eight montage films created by Tracey Moffatt and Gary Hillberg over the course of their 16 year collaboration.
Tracey Moffatt is internationally regarded as one of Australia’s most important contemporary artists and, this year, will become the first Australian Indigenous artist to present a solo exhibition at the Venice Biennale.
Gary Hillberg, a respected experimental filmmaker and music video producer is Moffatt’s long-time collaborator.
Curated and developed by Artspace, Sydney, Montages: The Full Cut, 1999 – 2015 is touring nationally in partnership with Museums & Galleries of NSW through 2019. Blacktown Arts Centre is the first location in NSW to present this exhibition.
“Montages offers a unique opportunity for Western Sydney audiences to engage with the early work of Tracey Moffatt, who will represent Australia at the Venice Biennale later this year,” said Alexie Glass-Cantor, Executive Director, Artspace.
Each montage explores notions of stereotyping in film and popular culture and features samples from an extensive collection of iconic Hollywood films, telemovies and arthouse cinema.
Lip (1999) (punctuated by the soundtrack of Aretha Franklin’s Chain of Fools and Think) displays excerpts of black actresses ‘giving lip’ in subservient roles of maid, servant or slave.
Artist (2000) portrays the clichés of creative genius and the trope of the tormented artist.
The eight films run on a continuous loop for a total of 1 hour and 40 minutes.
They range in length from less than 10 minutes, to more than 20.
Audiences are welcome to relax in the comfy seating provided and watch the entire suite of films, or just pop in for a short time and experience 1 or 2 films.
Local, young Aboriginal people are also invited to explore the works, and gain skills in digital arts and photography in a series of free workshops facilitated by digital artist Troy Russell.
“Young people from Blacktown can benefit immensely from experiencing this exhibition,” said Mr Russell.
“Participants in the workshops will discuss how these, and similar, works relate to their own lives. They will obtain skills in design conceptualisation, digital photography and image manipulation, and will collaborate with other participants to create posters which celebrate concepts of their own identity.”
The workshops will be held in March and April at Blacktown Arts Centre.
For more information, on the exhibition or workshops contact Blacktown Arts Centre on 9839 6558.
Montages: The Full Cut, 1999 – 2015 was curated and developed by Artspace, Sydney and is touring nationally in partnership with Museums & Galleries of NSW.
KEY DATES
Exhibition | Thursday, 23 February 2017 – Saturday, 22 April 2017
Panel Discussion | 6.30pm – 8pm on Thursday, 20 April 2017
Workshops | 7 and 21 March and 4 and 18 April 2017
Image
Tracey Moffatt & Gary Hillberg
Artist (still), 2000 , 10 minutes, looped video, sound
Courtesy the artist, Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery and Tyler Rollins Fine Art, New York.
Sydney Festival is coming to Blacktown in January 2017!
The Colo Lane Car Park will be the backdrop for the world premiere of Home Country, a ground-breaking work by Urban Theatre Projects.
In celebration of this landmark event, Blacktown Arts Centre is making the surrounding streets come alive through a program of live entertainment, installations and projections.
Start your evening at any of the five Summer Streets sites and soak up the Festival atmosphere in our own backyard.
Download the Summer Streets Map and Program.
Summer Streets
11 January – 22 January 2017
Blacktown CBD
4pm–11pm
No performances on Monday or Tuesday
Photo
Joshua Morris
For the first time, all prizes in the Blacktown City Art Prize have been won by women or predominantly female collectives.
“The Blacktown City Art Prize has once again shown itself to be the premier art prize in Western Sydney,” the Mayor of Blacktown City, Councillor Stephen Bali said.
“Blacktown City Council is proud of its long history and we congratulate this year’s winners.”
Jane Giblin from Lutana in Tasmania won the $15,000 major prize for her watercolour and mixed-media painting, Lilu Stands to Izzie.
The judges were instantly drawn to “the skill, boldness of subject and emotional power” of the winning work.
Blacktown artist Melissa Chapman’s Irrational Logic was awarded the Local Artist Prize and was Highly Commended in the main category.
Melissa’s “compelling” 3D work “demonstrates artistic skill and flair”, said the judges.
The Aboriginal Artist Prize was awarded to the Bankstown Koori Elders Group for their ceramic work, Murris and Kooris.
“The material and composition of the piece was unexpected,” said the judges.
“Each element was uniquely resolved and worked together to form a compelling visual whole.”
Amala Groom’s Read Before Consuming, The Sane Ones by Nerissa Lea and Rosalind Stanley’s My World received the remaining Highly Commended awards.
The judging panel, comprised of internationally acclaimed artist Khadim Ali; leading Sydney gallerist and arts advocate Janet Clayton; and Indigenous writer, curator and academic Stephen Gilchrist said they faced a difficult task when selecting winning works from the pool of 400 entries.
“We were impressed with the overall standard of the entries which included nationally-recognised artists alongside emerging local artists,” the judging panel said in a statement.
“The diversity of work across cultural practice, art forms, genre, scale and intent required us to look beyond the form and materiality to the intrinsic qualities of each work.
“We were ultimately drawn to works of art that offered singular artistic statements and revelled in the exploration of their chosen media.”
This year, for the first time, everyone will be able to view all the artworks in the exhibition on Instagram (@blacktowncityartprize), and cast a vote for their favourite work.
The 2016 Blacktown City Art Prize will be exhibited from Saturday, 3 December to Saturday, 28 January 2017 at Blacktown Arts Centre. Admission is free.
The 2016 Blacktown City Art Prize is proudly supported by Ford Land Company, Westlink M7, Blacktown Workers Club, Atura Hotel Blacktown and Blacktown City Council’s Sustainable Living program.
Exhibition | 2016 Blacktown City Art Prize
3 December 2016 – 28 January 2017
Blacktown Arts Centre
Artworks
Winner 2016 Blacktown City Art Prize
Jane Giblin, Lilu Stands to Izzie, 2015
Winner Aboriginal Artist Prize
Bankstown Koori Elders Group, Murris and Kooris, 2016
Winner Local Artist Prize and Highly Commended
Melissa Chapman, Irrational Logic, 2015
Highly Commended
Nerissa Lea, The Sane Ones, 2016
Highly Commended
Rosalind Stanley, My World, 2016
Highly Commended
Amala Groom, Read Before Consuming, 2016
Photos
Jennifer Leahy
I was lucky enough to catch all the Blacktown Studio Artists Collective members for an hour as they were beginning to install works for their first exhibition Blank Slate. I had already enjoyed meeting Nazanin Marashian, Jan Cleveringa and Alex Cyreszko; now there was a chance to meet Rosalind Stanley and Susannah Williams before I officially opened their exhibition on Saturday, 5 November 2016.
Each of the five artists was the recipient of a creative residency at Blacktown Arts Centre’s Main Street studios, and some, including Susannah Williams, have had their work exhibited at Blacktown Arts Centre.
I was really struck by the openness and friendliness of each of the artists in discussing their work and ensuring that their installations complemented each other rather than just appear as individual responses to the concept of Blank Slate.
After weeks of culling, archiving and discarding a mass of my own history files up to 45 years old, I was reminded of all sorts of experiences of creative people in those earlier years in Blacktown and across Western Sydney. Isolation and distance were the outstanding characteristics and a longing to share resources and skills and build audiences was a common factor.
By contrast, the newly formed Blacktown Studio Artists Collective is awash with ideas, social and environmental concerns and the stimulus of members sharing and constantly expanding the depth of their enquiries and the audiences they reach.
Do visit Blank Slate at Blacktown Visitor Information and Heritage Centre, Civic Plaza, opposite Blacktown Library, where the exhibition continues until January 28, 2017.
You are bound to find great interest and connection to your own experience.
By Katherine Knight
Connect with the Blacktown Studio Artists Collective
Facebook Blacktown Studio Artists Collective
Connect with Katherine Knight
Katherine’s book Passion, Purpose, Meaning: Arts Activism in Western Sydney is available at Blacktown Arts Centre for $24.95 (20% off RRP).
Blog Western Sydney Front
From left: Jan Cleveringa, Nazanin Marashian, Susannah Williams, Rosalind Stanley and Alex Cyreszko
Image
Emily McTaggart
The judges have selected 92 artworks in the 2016 Blacktown City Art Prize.
View the complete list of 2016 finalists.
The winners will be announced at the official opening on Friday, 2 December 2016.
The exhibition will be open to the public from Saturday, 3 December 2016 – Saturday, 28 January 2017.
Tell us about The Migration Project – your large public commission in Wollongong – and, in particular, the process of working with the community and fabricators to realise it?
I saw this commission advertised by Wollongong City Council and, because it was about migration, I decided to apply for it. It was a major landmark site which demanded that it be a silhouette shape and quite tall. Responding to the theme and site, I designed a skeletal boat frame with ladders. I knew I wanted to use steel because being in Wollongong it made sense, and I knew I wanted it to be made locally, as opposed to suggestions that I send it offshore for fabrication. During the process of figuring out how I was going to make it, the cost kept escalating and I realised that I couldn’t afford to use the stainless steel that I’d proposed, so I put out an email to the migrant community who had been instrumental in instigating the project. I had a generous response from a man offering help at every stage from steel fabrication to in-kind support for installation. It was such an exciting development because he also wanted to involve local people and I realised the project was going to have that real community involvement. In the end, his support meant that I was able to work closely with this fabulous steel manufacturing company. Then, Council came back to me and said they wanted more work. From what I’d already submitted they chose one that involved three laser-cut steel panels on poles. Fortunately, there had previously been an historian commissioned to do local research, so I was able to draw on that work, as well as on local photographic archives for my imagery, which helped connect it to the community. It took more than a year to realise it.
Last year, Blacktown City Council commissioned you to undertake another public artwork at the Glenwood Community Hub. Can you describe the process of community engagement in realising that project?
Again, this was a commission for which I was invited to apply. I believe they picked my submission because I mentioned there would be an extensive community engagement process in the lead-up to it. Glenwood is a relatively new Western Sydney suburb hemmed in by three major motorways. It is also home to a Sikh Temple, so a lot of Sikh people live there, but beyond that it’s a very diverse community, so I felt the project needed to be about diversity. I got the idea to make the project about plants through observing my Sri Lankan neighbour. She was a terrific gardener and she grew all the things that she had in Sri Lanka – okra, chillies, lime – and I realised I had planted kangaroo paw because I’m from Western Australia. I thought these plants have meaning for her in the same way as this plant has meaning for me. I was curious to know what plants the people of Glenwood planted to remind them of home. I decided to conduct a survey through a series of drawing workshops with kids from Glenwood High School, with people who use the Glenwood Community Hall, and I went to the Sikh Temple and had talks with people about the plantings there. Marigolds featured prominently in that research. Then, in more depth I had engagement with a group of Indian women. I spent more time with them and realised that they did henna painting, and so they loved doing really intricate drawings of plants. I was surprised by some of the plants which were popular with them – basil, for instance, frangipanis, mustard, and cherry blossom. There was a whole range of plants that came up. I chose eight of the plants which featured most and then created the designs which were to be a row of laser cut steel panels to be installed outside a glass wall of the new addition to the Glenwood Community Hub. I’d collected comments which formed the basis for texts etched onto the glass in front of the panels. The effect was a layering of meaning. When people came to the centre they knew what the work was about – they had had some input to it and therefore had some context for it. The design came from me, but the content came from them.
Your work has a very poetic quality. What artists have influenced your own practice?
I look at work all the time, but there’s one I’ve been thinking about – Krzysztof Wodiczco. Even though he’s a video artist and that’s not my medium, I really like the way he works with people and the content of his work. I’ve read about the way he engages with people and he really manages to get under the surface of issues. His projections are on public sites, often monuments, and that means they change the perceptions of that place. Even after the projection is gone, it lingers in the memory. His work is often about people who are marginalised, people who don’t have a voice. That approach appeals to me – how artists can be successful in bringing those issues to the fore. Closer to home, I am interested in Hossein and Angela Valamanesh because their work is so poetic and beautifully made and, again, has that cross-cultural aspect. It speaks about coming from somewhere else and how one culture is laid over another, because Hossein comes from Iran. Other artists whose work has interested me recently have been Alfredo and Isabel Aquilizan. They come from the Philippines, and work closely with the Filipino community gathering things – objects and stories – and also allowing the process of participation in building installations.
Like many artists, you also work as a teacher. How has teaching influenced your practice?
It is a way for me to hone my skills in communication and understanding other people, so I feel more confident stepping into a situation where I’m working with groups. When you work in a socially engaged art project, the criticism often is that you fly in and fly out again. The challenge for the artist is to really meet people, get to know them and that can take time. I think that teaching has given me the skill – a way to give something back, to get people involved. It’s also a way to survive as an artist. Apart from that I do really enjoy it – the energy of engagement. I feel it’s a great privilege to be in that role.
Your personal circumstances have changed dramatically this year with your cancer diagnosis. Could you talk a little about the impact this has had on the way you are thinking about your practice?
Yes, we should perhaps explain that this interview is happening in Day Therapy (at the Chris O’Brien Lifehouse Cancer Centre) while I’m receiving chemotherapy. I’ve had a lot of time to reflect on how things were before I got the diagnosis and then after I got the diagnosis. Before diagnosis, I was about to start a project in Blacktown called Social Scaffold working with people who were learning English and I was very disappointed not to be able to do that – it really stopped me in my tracks. I’ve thought a lot about how I would love to get back to doing that project. I’d also just embarked on a PhD at Sydney College of the Arts and that had to go on hold too. Getting well, taking care of myself, has been like a full-time job. In the beginning I thought that I’d put everything on hold and come back to it, but I think something deep within me has shifted – it has to because it’s a life-changing experience. I’m sure there’ll be some way that I can use the process of making art to work through this, maybe not right now, but it will come out later. My friends have been a great help to me, and I really value the support offered by the staff at Blacktown Arts Centre and being included in the Diaspora-Making Machines exhibition. Also I’ve been thinking about the artist residency program here in this terrific building (Chris O’Brien Lifehouse). When I was first diagnosed and coming along to appointments here, I met Renuka Fernando, who was artist in residence. I was here with my son and we got the chance to participate in her workshop. It was a role reversal for me; usually I’m the one facilitating that kind of activity. I realised how important and enriching it was, and now every time I see that space where she was working, I really miss her presence. It wasn’t until then that I thought, ‘Ah we artists really do make an impact on the people around us’, which was very affirming. I thought maybe when I’m finished all this I might like to do something here. But I don’t know where this will lead, what’s coming up next, but this situation is bound to impact on my practice.
By Elin Howe
Exhibition | Diaspora-Making Machines
Thursday, 29 September – Saturday, 5 November 2016
Diaspora-Making Machines is an exhibition that explores the systemic devices (the machines) that generate movement and the dispersal of communities (the diaspora). Blacktown is a site of continuous waves of migration. Since Governor Macquarie issued the first land grant to Nurragingy and Colebee in 1816, communities have been moving to Blacktown – sometimes by choice, sometimes by force. Eight artists engage with Blacktown’s historic place as a centre of migration, our attitudes to newcomers, and notions of belonging and assimilation.
Elin Howe is an art historian and writer with an interest in contemporary art. She has taught art history/theory at university and TAFE.
Artworks
Cultivations, public artwork for Glenwood, 2015, eight Corten steel panels.
Migration Project, public artwork in Wollongong, 2015, stainless steel and Corten steel.
For many years, the central theme in your studio works is migration and its aftermath. What draws you to this subject, and what sustains your interest in it?
I wanted to make art about things that are happening around me and things that I observe and think are important. Migration is an issue in Australian culture that is important, and it’s good for artists to be thinking about these things: to have a greater understanding of what it means to be in somebody else’s shoes, and to understand what other people have gone through. It’s not my own experience – it’s experience within the community, and I’m curious to learn what it is they’ve experienced.
Your practice alternates between studio and community-based projects. What is attractive about these different practices?
I really like working with people. When I work on public art commissions I want to engage with the community that is going to be living with the work. I’ve realised this engagement with community has become one of the strengths in my practice, and it’s something that I’m really attracted to, but I also find it can be quite exhausting. So that time in the studio on your own is another way of reflecting on those experiences. One feeds into the other. I also find developing a body of work on your own is very valuable and gives you time away from all that really hard work of engaging with people – it can be very stimulating, but it takes a different form of energy. I’ve also been taken with what the philosopher Roman Krznaric writes – the importance of empathy to balance out the focus on the individual in a consumerist world. We have been encouraged to focus on the individual, to search within ourselves. However, there is a need to look outside, to consider our place in and our impact on the world. Participating in socially engaged artwork can lead to an empathetic experience.
As a child were you creative?
Yes, I’ve always thought of myself as an artist. I can remember being five and thinking to myself, I’m either going to be an artist or a musician. I don’t know why I thought that because we didn’t know anyone who was either an artist or a musician. In my family it wasn’t thought to be a realistic career option. I was just really attracted to making things and to being creative. I played classical guitar and clarinet when I was growing up, but it wasn’t until I went to art school that I thought, ‘Ah, this is what I’m about. This is where my people are.’ All along I’ve felt like a real oddball, and now I fit in.
In 2006, you did a six-month residency in Hue, Vietnam. How has that experience influenced your work?
That was absolutely transformative – very much a life-changing experience. Although I hadn’t had much opportunity, I was itching to travel all of my adult life and finally I got the chance in 2004. I received an invitation to be part of a sculpture symposium in Vietnam, but I didn’t have enough funds to go there for the full month, so I was going to pass it up. Then I was given this great gift by the College of Fine Arts, UNSW. The Dean, Ian Howard, awarded me a grant to go there for three weeks and do some research and it was just fantastic. I didn’t have the chance to participate in the symposium, but I travelled around and met a lot of people. I met some terrific people at the Hue College of Arts and I came up with the idea for my sculpture Life Boat on that trip. It was two years before I could go back in 2006 and participate in the sculpture symposium collaborating with another Australian artist, Claire Martin. We built a work – a public artwork – which is there in Hue, as part of the sculpture symposium. I then stayed for six months to work on the Life Boat project. I had really thought that work through, really knew what I wanted to do, and had fostered these relationships. That meant I had connections to help me realise the work – connections to help me get a studio space and accommodation, someone to help with translation, local craftspeople with boat-building skills who could help me with fabrication. It was a big time, and then I was offered the opportunity to display the sculpture in Hanoi at the Museum of Ethnology, and then to transport it to Sydney. It was a big risk, I didn’t have a budget for this, I just did it and it really paid off. It was exhibited in Sculpture by the Sea, and then selected for the Helen Lempriere Awards where it won the Popular Choice, and then it was purchased by artsACT and is permanently on display in the Civic Library, Canberra. It was a huge turning point in my career and my life. It made me feel free because I realised I could make something so big, and take a big risk.
Tell us what that work is about, and how it fits into your migration theme.
When I was growing up in Perth, I knew Vietnamese people who had come here by boat. So when I went to Vietnam, I thought about that issue, but in Vietnam, obviously I didn’t want to make a work about boat people. The work is about boats, and life on the water and its spiritual significance in Vietnam. But when I moved the work from Vietnam to Sydney, a shift in the meaning occurred. The work was inspired by the bodhisattva, the multi-armed deity. Instead of oars, it has arms. The hands are carved from recycled timber – wood from old Vietnamese houses – and coated in Vietnamese lacquer. The work is about compassion and connection, but when I exhibited it in Sydney, Vietnamese people identified with it differently – they told me it articulated the story of their journey here. In fact a friend who had come here by boat purchased the smaller version, the maquette, and wrote a story about his journey in response to the work. It was an issue that I thought a lot about. It’s not my own experience, but rather the work grew in meaning by knowing people and listening to their migration stories.
Your work often distils complex meaning in a single motif, for example, the anchor featured in the Diaspora-Making Machines exhibition. Why did you choose this motif?
Sometimes things just come together like in the Life Boat – the boat and the arms. It’s almost magical. You know you want to make a work about boats and then you see the arms and then the arms become the oars of the boat and that just works. With the anchor – I knew I wanted to make a work about an anchor. My father was a sailor and at the front of our house he had installed an anchor. As a child I used to think that the anchor was holding the house down. Years later, some 25 years later in fact, I went back to see the old house and the anchor was still there, so that stayed in my mind. The trigger for using it as a motif in a sculpture was witnessing the largest number of people displaced in Europe since World War II. In 2015, on television screens, from the comfort of our lounge rooms, we watched waves of displaced people at sea in small flimsy boats, being hoisted from the ocean, or walking long distances in search of freedom. I was feeling a mix of empathy and powerlessness. The sculpture speaks of opposition – the anchor symbolising safety and security. However, this anchor is covered in checked plastic – the type associated with cheap carry bags, poverty and mobility. I also recently read this story by Debra Adelaide called ‘The Master Shavers’ Association of Paradise’ (in A Country Too Far, 2013, eds Rosie Scott and Tom Keneally). It’s about a man, a refugee, who was given one of those plastic carry-all bags, but he had so few belongings to put in it that it just looked like a crumpled heap. I thought about that checked plastic and how everyone has a relationship with it. We use it to move our belongings from one house to another, but what if that was the only thing you had to contain all your belongings and what if, even then, everyone else’s looked like a nice square little brick and yours just looked like a crumpled heap. That story really struck me. So in that way the two things came together – the anchor being about security, being anchored and the plastic being about poverty and mobility.
By Elin Howe
Exhibition | Diaspora-Making Machines
Thursday, 29 September – Saturday, 5 November 2016
Diaspora-Making Machines is an exhibition that explores the systemic devices (the machines) that generate movement and the dispersal of communities (the diaspora). Blacktown is a site of continuous waves of migration. Since Governor Macquarie issued the first land grant to Nurragingy and Colebee in 1816, communities have been moving to Blacktown – sometimes by choice, sometimes by force. Eight artists engage with Blacktown’s historic place as a centre of migration, our attitudes to newcomers, and notions of belonging and assimilation.
Elin Howe is an art historian and writer with an interest in contemporary art. She has taught art history/theory at university and TAFE.
Artworks
Life Boat/Thuyen Cuu Roi, 2006, 650 x 3350 x 5050 mm, wood, steel, lead, lacquer.
Between Certainties, 2016, 1040 x 1870 x 1320 mm (plus chain), plywood and woven plastic bags.
Photographs
Nerine Martini by Joshua Morris.
Between Certainties by Mike Buick.
Now in its 21st year, the Blacktown City Art Prize is one of the most respected art prizes in Western Sydney, with cash prizes of $20,000 and acquisitive awards. Artists are invited to submit entries for drawing, painting, sculpture, ceramics and mixed media.
In addition to the $15,000 main prize, three supporting prizes will be awarded:
- Aboriginal Artist Prize ($2,000)
- Local Artist Prize ($2,000)
- People’s Choice Prize ($1,000).
“The Blacktown City Art Prize has been a key cultural event for over 20 years,” said Mayor of Blacktown City, Councillor Stephen Bali. “It showcases the breadth of artistic talent coming from the Blacktown region and beyond, and demonstrates Council’s commitment to art and culture playing a major role in the life of our city.”
This annual exhibition has built a reputation for showcasing the creativity of the region and elevating the profiles and careers of the finalists.
Francois Breuillaud-Limondin was awarded the main prize last year for his sculptural work, Prisms. Previous winners include highly successful Western Sydney-based artists Catherine O’Donnell and Abdullah M. I. Syed, who have gone on to exhibit with Blacktown Arts Centre and other prestigious venues since their involvement with the Prize.
“The Blacktown City Art Prize brings tremendous awareness to the vast arts community in Western Sydney. I am proud to be part of such an exciting event,” said Hiren Patel from Kellyville Ridge, winner of the 2014 Local Artist Prize and 2015 finalist.
The Blacktown City Art Prize also celebrates the creativity of local young people through an environmentally-themed Children and Young Artists Prize. This section is open to 5 – 15 year olds who live or go to school in the Blacktown Local Government Area.
Selected works will be exhibited at Blacktown Arts Centre from Saturday, 3 December 2015 – Saturday, 28 January 2016.
Entries for the 2016 Blacktown City Art Prize are now open. The fee is $25.00 per entry with a limit of two entries per artist. Photography, film, video and installation works will not be accepted.
How to enter:
- Read the 2016 Blacktown City Art Prize Terms & Conditions
- Take a good quality photograph of your artwork (jpg file only, 2MB maximum)
Complete the Blacktown City Art Prize Online Entry Form by 5pm on Tuesday, 11 October 2016.
Image
Lucas Road at Night (outside my place), 2015, Alexandra Byrne, charcoal, graphite and pastel on Stonehenge paper
Winner of the 2015 Local Artist Prize