Exhibition
09.04.10 - 08.05.10
Front and Main Gallery
Opening Lines
ARTISTS: Joyce Hinterding, Susan Jacobs, Katie Lee, Alex Martinis Roe, Phil Samartzis. CURATOR: Emily Cormack
In our daily life we are oblivious to the many guiding forces that inform our behaviour. Often discretely camouflaged
and sometimes invisible, these parameters are activated by our movement against them. It is only as we unwittingly
push up against these forces, facilities and thresholds that we become aware of their form.
Opening Lines charts our moments of encounter with these restraining forces, examining the friction generated by our
collisions. The works in Opening Lines employ actions such as burrowing, intercepting and recording in an effort to
scramble these corralling thresholds, disorientating them and probing them into activity. Once a threshold is activated,
its form, shape and structure is bared, inviting the viewer to skew its intention, thwarting the system it prescribes, and
with each incremental transgression the threshold’s potential for porosity is realised. Whether the artist is using
electro-magnetic sensors, architectural deconstruction, free association or urban design, these works render the
parameters, restraints and coded behaviours that delineate our passage totally arbitrary.
Alex Martinis Roe and Joyce Hinterding tap into human thresholds such as consciousness and audibility.
The human ear is unable to detect eletromagetic frequencies, however
Joyce Hinterding’s work in this exhibition allows us to experience this energy
as sound. Hinterding’s gold and graphite drawings operate as aerials that translate and amplify this otherwise inaudible energy into the gallery. Likewise Alex Martinis Roe
employs the act of writing to elucidate thoughts and fantasies that are
embedded within the hidden human unconscious through her interactive,
performative sessions.
Katie Lee’s sculptural installations isolate the tools employed in civic
infrastructure to steer human behaviour. Drawing attention to the arbitrary
nature of much of the guiding poles, handles, platforms and markings that
impose a particular order on our built and mediated world.
Phil Samartzis and Susan Jacobs draw attention to architectural thresholds
within gallery spaces, reconfiguring them, freeing them from
function and revealing their sculptural and metaphorical properties.
By deconstructing our various collisions and intersections with these
parameters, Opening Lines realizes the possibility for play and transgression
that defies the rigidity of our seemingly inflexible spheres. |