Exhibition
30.07.10 - 28.08.10
Front and Main Gallery
Benjamin Armstrong, Christian Capurro, Martin Soto Climent, Alicia Frankovich, Marco Fusinato, Fernanda Gomes, Lou Hubbard, Laresa Kosloff, Jean-Luc Moulène, Tom Nicholson, Stuart Ringholt, Shimabuku CURATORS: Alexie Glass-Kantor, Emily Cormack, Chris Sharp
Still Vast Reserves
Gertrude Contemporary presents Stage Two of the international
exchange exhibition Still Vast Reserves. Stage One of Still Vast
Reserves was presented at Magazzino d’Arte Moderna, Rome,
Italy in September 2009, where Gertrude Contemporary took
participating artists to Rome as part of a reciprocal exchange
exhibition. Stage One of this project was curated in collaboration
with Roman Curator Francesco Stocchi, and Stage Two has been
developed in collaboration with Paris-based Curator Chris Sharp.
Initially Still Vast Reserves explored ideas of the kinetics of
compression, encouraging a sculptural interpretation of the body and
the self in relation to architecture. This second exhibition extends and
skews these ideas fore grounding interpersonal encounters through the
psychosexual and socio-sexual aspects of the body, particularly in
relation to urban or civic spaces. The works in this exhibition employ a
range of materials and tactics to investigate ideas of the uneasy body,
exploring its possibilities for immateriality and metaphor.
Still Vast Reserves 2 features new work by all of the artists in the original exhibition, along with a selection of
work by international artists who explore and expand on these ideas. The works span a range of disciplines and
feature new works by Alicia Frankovich, Benjamin Armstrong, Laresa Kosloff and Lou Hubbard. This exhibition
also showcases a large-scale work by Christian Capurro, a performance- installation event by Marco Fusinato,
video and photographic work by Stuart Ringholt and a new photographic work by Tom Nicholson.
Complmenting these works are sculptural installation works by Brazilian artist Fernanda Gomes, photographs
by Mexican artist Martin Soto Climent and French artist Jean-Luc Moulène. Japanese artist Shimabuku will also
be presenting a poetic sculptural installation that invites viewer participation.
Conceptually Still Vast Reserves explores the highly-charged intersections between the body and civic or social
contexts . Through focusing on the interplay between the intimate/domestic and the public/structural this
exhibition reminds the viewer of their own physicality, referring to the dynamics of compression, intimacy and
release.
This exhibition is a reciprocal project, stemming from GCAS’s International Curatorial Residency Programme
undertaken by both Francesco Stocchi (2008) and Chris Sharp (2009). This revolving exhibition concept ensures
that artists, curators, patrons and writers from each country establish firm and ongoing relationships with new
networks and audiences, further extending their creative communities.
In conjunction with the exhibition GCAS has produced a second volume to the 100 page publication designed by
Australia’s leading Graphic Design Company Fabio Ongarato Design, with images and essays. Still Vast Reserves
2 is made possible with support from the Australia Council for the Arts. Phase One of Still Vast Reserves was
made possible through assistance from Arts Victoria. |