There is an incredible documentary about Louise Bourgeois on ABC iView at the moment. It is called The Spider, The Mistress and the Tangerine. If you miss it on iView, it is on Youtube too.
Here is the iView link: http://iview.abc.net.au/programs/louise-bourgeois-the-spider-the-mistress-and-the-tangerine/ZW0451A001S00 I took the above photo of Bourgeois' Spider at the Guggenheim in Bilbao, Spain. In the doco it mentions that there are versions of this sculpture in about eight cities around the world. She says the spider is her mother - totally reliable but without a burst of passion. Bourgeois was born in Paris in 1911 and moved to New York City in 1938 after marrying an American in Paris. She was quite an outsider, objecting fiercely to Surrealism in the early 20th century and again not falling into the Formalism that defined a majority of American sculpture in the mid 20th Century. She said "you have to be aggressive to be a sculptor - to want to change things - not to accept them as they are." She believed that the purpose of sculpture was self knowledge. Louise Bourgeois died in 2010 aged Ninety Eight. http://www.moma.org/explore/collection/lb/index During a day trip to Canberra at the end of last year, we visited the National Museum to see the Encounters exhibition. We were going to drop in here for two hours then go on to the National Gallery to see the Tom Roberts show, but the Encounters show kept us riveted until we had to pull our selves away to drive back to Sydney.
The exhibition shows 150 Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander objects from the collection of the British Museum. There is come controversy surrounding how these objects were originally acquired and whether or not they should be returned to Australia permanently. The exhibition is well put together including objects that are from Australian collections interspersed with very moving video interviews. The exhibition does nothing to try hide or gloss over the controversy and the questionable tactics of explorers and settlers as they collected these objects. The oldest pieces are from James Cook's arrival in 1770 including a shield which has what appears to be a bullet hole in it, following a confrontation at Botany Bay in April 1770. The photo above is of a Jawun (bicornual basket) (Photo by Dave Hickson) Collected from Rockingham Bay by John Davidson in 1866-68 Made by The Rainforest Peoples of Rockingham Bay. Woven out of Lawyer Cane and used to carry food. Larger ones were sometimes used to carry children. Read more about the Jawun here: http://collectionsearch.nma.gov.au/object/106885 I was looking up other examples of this basket and found a smaller one (about 25cm high and wide) that Sotheby’s had sold last year for 6875 british pounds. It seems strange that pieces collected in Australia in the 19th century are on the private auction market. http://www.sothebys.com/en/auctions/ecatalogue/2015/aboriginal-art-thomas-vroom-collection-l15321/lot.7.html There was also a panel discussion that was aired on the ABC’s Big Ideas that has some fascinating perspectives on the show. Well worth listening at the link below: http://www.abc.net.au/radionational/programs/bigideas/2015-12-07/7002234 The exhibition is on until 28 March 2016 and is free. http://www.nma.gov.au/exhibitions/encounters |
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