Category Archives: Exhibition Archive

‘WUNDER POND’ 10 February – 10 March

David Capra
Charles Dennington
Hossein Ghaemi
Matthew Tumbers

Curated by Sandra Di Palma

Opening Thursday 9 February 6-8pm

WUNDER POND presents the work of four contemporary Australian artists who create distinctly personal introspective visions.

Working across a range of media, artists David Capra, Charles Dennington, Hossein Ghaemi, and Matthew Tumbers approach their work intuitively, adapting a range of loose, immediate, playful, humorous and apparently disordered styles.

As they create, they explore beyond that which is known or obvious, inviting us into the creation of their abstract narratives and imagined worlds. By bringing together the idiosyncratic interpretations of these artists, WUNDER POND seeks to highlight the role of art as an outlet for the enigmatic mind of the artist and the physical manifestations that are revealed by these visions.

Exhibition runs 10 Feb – 10 March



‘Yarns Between Bubbles’ 10 Feb – 10 March

Anie Nheu
Yiwon Park
Li Wenmin

Yarns Between Bubbles is a collaborative drawing exhibition that explores both the participating artist’s common interest in drawing as an artistic practice and notions of shared culture. The exhibition uses drawing as a conversational framework to highlight the possibilities for deeper understanding of our cultural and personal identity.

The collaboration takes the form of relaying unfinished drawings from one artist to another in a group of three: the third person resolving and finalising the work.  There is no specified subject matter or designated expression of marks, the only requirement is to respond to a given image with a mark. 

While the final images attempt to integrate differences as a whole, it is the interstices where one drawing ends and another begins, which carry most weight in the process.  It is within this intermediate stage where the given images demand a response, and often, it is the differences in content and in mark making by the various artists, that confront the viewer.  According to exhibition coordinator Anie Nheu, the process has facilitated “understanding and awareness of the actions taken following a period of introspection, that has not only been enriching for individual’s practice, it has also been a revelation on a personal level.”

Exhibition opens Thursday 9 Feb 6-8pm

Narelle Jubelin – Vision in Motion

Take a ‘modernist walk’ across the University of Sydney campus as art and architecture come face-to-face in Vision in Motion by Narelle Jubelin.

Tin Sheds Gallery Avago window gallery space work as part of the exhibition until Feb 7th.

Youtopia Exhibition – Sydney Festival 2012

Please join us for the launch of Youtopia 6pm on the 12th of January 2012 at the Tin Sheds Gallery.

Youtopia pursues the dream of other spaces and times, of outrageous and fascinating experiences, of the glamour and lights of Sydney Festival through a series of design explorations. The exhibition will showcase the 2011 design conversation between Sydney Festival and University of Sydney’s Faculty of Architecture, Design and Planning. The resulting design projects animate qualities shared by Sydney Festival and the University of Sydney: bold, progressive, adventurous, intelligent and excellent.

Opening in the Tin Sheds Gallery on January 12th, the exhibition showcases the application of digital technology by advanced design processes in 3D modelling and scripting environments, and the production of prototypes and models through the Architecture Faculty’s Digital Fabrication Lab.

Amongst these, Youtopia exclusively presents four key approaches towards performative spaces: ‘Phosphorescence of the Sea’ by Sean Bryen, ‘Eroded’ by Oliver Hessian and Iain Blampied, ‘Musical Chairs’ by Ellen Rosengren-Fowler and Renee Blyth, and ‘The Spritz’ by Rachel Couper and Ivana Kuzmanovska. These architectural visions generate captivating performance spaces, mechanism for immersing an audience into a Heterotopian environment, especially produced for you. Kaleidoscopic reflections of reality, unreality, performance, self and the immediate create an other-space where anything is possible. Perceptions are challenged, expectations elevated and audience and performers primed to be transported, to be consumed by the moment – a dome, a theatre, a bar, a spectacle.

Dagmar Reinhardt, Lecturer of Digital Architecture Research, developed the project with a team of researchers from digital design, architectural practice, structural engineering and digital fabrication: together with Dirk Anderson and Eduardo de Oliveira Barata of UFO Sydney, Marjo Niemela of the Faculty’s Digital Fabrication Lab, Alexander Jung of reinhardtjung, Harry Partridge of Partridge Partners and Robert Beson of AR-MA. Postgraduate students of the Master of Digital Architecture worked closely with Sydney Festival Director Lindy hume and Head of Programming Bill Harris on concept developments for three boldly contemporary performance spaces for potential theatre locations: Turbine Hall on Cockatoo Island, Festival Garden in Hyde Park opposite the Famous Spiegeltent and The Quadrangle at The University of Sydney. Conversations with leading professionals encouraged transfers into and out of architectural practice, architectural theory, audio and acoustics, digital fabrication, interaction and mediation, structural engineering, theatre and performance studies, and cultural research. Participants to the design dialogue included Associate Professor William L.Martens, Senior Lecturer Densil Cabrera, Luis Miranda, Joseph Buch, Associate Professor Chris L Smit, Lecturer Simon Weir, Directore Patrick Nolan (legsonthewall) and Stage Designer and Head of Design (NIDA) Michael Scott/Mitchell.

The exhibition features works that represent Australia’s most promising young architectural minds, envisioning the ephemeral and captivating synchrony of an interactive landscapes, invoking the sublime, tracing transitions and spatial flows; offering a quilted lounge and other performance concepts exploring prosthetic folds, swarm intelligence, tetrahedal autopoetics, structural trees, Catenary networks, ‘Mise en Abyme’, phenomenal experiences, and multiple angles of vision.

The exhibition at the Tin Sheds, within the Wilkinson Building and the home of Architecture at Sydney, runs from January 12 to January 26, 2012.

aMaze Graduate Exhibition 2011

Running from the 1 to 8 December 2011, aMaze will reveal the reciprocal nature of a creative environment and its output – an explorative exhibition showcasing developments in architectural technology and theory at the University of Sydney.

Taking place in and amongst the Wilkinson Building, including the acclaimed Tin Sheds Gallery, the opening night is a highlight on the industry calendar, attracting thousands of visitors each year.

With generous support from the profession and industries, aMaze will be the most inspiring architectural exhibition Sydney has ever seen. Sponsors include:

Developed by an enthusiastic Exhibition Team drawn from throughout the architecture program at Sydney, the exhibition seeks to activate an architectural discourse with a wide audience, from seasoned practitioners to those contemplating entering design study, in order to promote design in all of its manifestations.

The Faculty of Architecture, Design and Planning invites architectural and allied professionals, the families of our students, staff and students from all universities and schools to join us on the opening night, Thursday, 1 December, and throughout the following week, as well as track the progress of our students online through our blog: www.amaze2011.com.

Installation Photos – The Garden of Forking Paths

If you missed the opening last night here are a few quick shots of the works on display.

Drop by and interact with a selection of historic and contemporary artists’ computer games.

Exhibition runs until November 26.

The Garden of Forking Paths opens 3 November 6pm

Join us for one of our final exhibitions for 2011!

The Garden of Forking Paths opens to the public this Thursday 3 November 6-8pm.

The exhibition takes a look at historic and contemporary artists’ computer games the push the boundaries of the genre by breaking from traditional gaming orthodoxies.

ARTISTS:
Laurie Anderson (USA) with Hsin-Chien Huang (Taiwan), Tale of Tales (Belgium), Jaron Lanier (USA), Michael Nyman (UK), Nina Pope and Karen Guthrie (UK), Anita Fontaine (Australia) and Mike Pelletier (Canada), Andy Deck (USA)

Curated by Neil Jenkins

Exhibition runs 4 – 26 November 2011

For more information visit:

http://www.dlux.org.au/cms/The-Garden-of-Forking-Paths.html

 

The Garden of Forking Paths

AN EXHIBITION OF HISTORIC AND CONTEMPORARY ARTISTS’ COMPUTER GAMES

OPENING NIGHT:
Thursday 3 November 6-8pm

Exhibition dates: 4 – 26 November 2011

The Garden of Forking Paths, curated by Neil Jenkins opens at the Tin Sheds Gallery on Thursday 3rd November.

This is a touring exhibition through dLUX MediaArts.

This exhibition draws together a range of notable historic and contemporary artist created computer games that have all pushed boundaries of the genre by breaking with traditional gaming orthodoxies.

The exhibition includes pieces created by a range of high profile artists, that span the last three decades: from Jaron Lanier’s 1983 Commodore 64 game ‘Moondust’ through to ‘Tale of Tales’ 2009 release ‘The Path’. This exhibition covers a period that has seen incredible advances in gaming technology and the birth of the information age.

All of the works are interactive, inviting the viewer to play: some will be installed on ‘antique’ computers that have been carefully sourced so that viewers can experience the games with authenticity. This highly successful exhibition has already toured extensively, delighting audiences of all ages.

International and Australian artists include:
Laurie Anderson (USA) with Hsin-Chien Huang (Taiwan)
Tale of Tales (Belgium)
Jaron Lanier (USA)
Michael Nyman (UK)
Nina Pope and Karen Guthrie (UK)
Anita Fontaine (Australia) and
Mike Pelletier (Canada)
Andy Deck (USA)



 

Opening this Friday 7th October 6-8pm

A quick reminder that ‘Dirt’ by Iakovos Amperidis and ‘Overlay’ by Cath Brophy open this Friday 7th October 6-8pm.

We hope to see you here!

Iakovos Amperidis
 

Cath Brophy

 

‘Dirt’ by Iakovos Amperidis + ‘Overlay’ by Cath Brophy opens FRIDAY October 7th

On October 7th two diverse exhibitions, both exploring the speculative nature of Sydney’s real estate market, will open at Tin Sheds Gallery, The Faculty of Architecture, Design and Planning, The University of Sydney.

Dirt, by Iakovos Amperidis will be a mixed media installation comprised of samples of “dirt” taken from properties listed for sale across Sydney and Overlay, by Cath Brophy, will be a large scale drawing of the controversial site at the former Rozelle Psychiatric Hospital, in Sydney’s inner west.

Overlay was originally conceived while working for a two-week period in the derelict Wards 17 & 18 of the iconic Rozelle Psychiatric Hospital. Ms Brophy’s intention was to overlay abstracted, geometric drawings onto the architecture of the buildings, thereby playing with perceptions and illusions of physical space. In the process of making, and then photographing the installation, she identified opportunities for incorporating actual photographic images of the architecture into the process of drawing, collaging and manipulating, which had hitherto formed the basis of her art practice.

The former Rozelle Psychiatric Hospital in Callan Park, the basis of this installation, is a site layered with personal narratives and community histories, as well as by continuing and often conflicting debates regarding its future conservation and development. By installing this image in Tin Sheds Gallery, Ms Brophy aims to highlight these multiple narratives and invite viewers to overlay their own experience onto their interpretation of the images.

Dirt is an exhibition created from an ongoing land art project in which a single bucket load of topsoil was stolen by the artist from the front lawn of 100 properties on the real estate market throughout Sydney. The hundred bucket loads of earth were then used as the base material for the show.

From Rose Bay to Bankstown, Vaucluse to Miller, the stolen property in the exhibition makes explicit reference to notions of the commons and private property, both in art and the broader social arena. More specifically, it is a deliberate attempt to ground the romanticism of the Australian landscape through the vernacular of real estate. According to Mr Amperidis it “proposes a more accurate psycheographic account of life in Sydney, retracing our sensibilities of place, inundated as they are, within the ideology of home ownership”.

The objects created for Dirt draw on amateur soil science, mechanical engineering and market analysis. Included in this show are 100 soil monoliths that scale the gallery’s walls, indexed according to a hierarchy of property value; a 1.5 cubic metre block of soil, made from the 100 bucket loads of top soil, steadily destroyed by a motorised pounding mallet; and documentation of the 100 individual square holes left on the front lawns of the properties in the wake of the artist’s thievery.

These two exhibitions will both provide fascinating insights into the complex and contested nature of Sydney’s real estate market.

For more information contact Tin Sheds Gallery: 9351 3115.

Tin Sheds Gallery
148 City Road,
Faculty of Architecture, Design and Planning
University of Sydney, NSW, 2006