We will eat tonight!

September 1st, 2010 § 0

Tonight between 5 – 6pm you can catch us in the food cart cooking up pikelets. There will also be a picnic discussion with our special guest Sally Parslow, local resident of The Rocks. There’s a new wesbite for the project - www.wewilleatpresently.net - and we’ll be posting more on the journey and the events here soon.

img1

We will eat presently … presently

August 12th, 2010 § 0

Shortly you will see a new work of ours, Gwago patabagun _ _ _ We will eat presently*, roll into the front lawn of the Museum of Contemporary Art, where it will be parked for two months as part of the exhibition, In the Balance: Art for a changing world (21 August – 31 October). We will eat presently consists of a mobile food cart that is home to a hive of native bees, and on occasion will be opened up by us to serve hot pikelets with home-made honey for anyone who stops by. A series of picnic discussions with invited guest speakers will also accompany these edible happenings.

There will be a website with more details – http://wewilleatpresently.net – presently… (nothing up as yet, please wait a few days before visiting). In the meantime, here is a picture of the cart being constructed:

cartprogress1

*The title of this work comes, as always, from a found text. This one is the notebooks of William Dawes, which you can view in full here. In them, Dawes records the extensive study of the Dharuk language he carried out from his hut at the Observatory (just up the hill from the MCA), assisted chiefly by Cadigal woman Patyegarang, in the early, precarious days of the colony. Ross Gibson wrote an excellent article for Meanjin that explores this relationship, which if you’re interested can be read here

Travelling to Utopia and back

August 2nd, 2010 § 0

Utopia
Cao Fei
Institute of Modern Art, Brisbane
2 May – 27 June, 2009

[Highly Commended for the 2009 Frieze Writers' Prize judges were James Elkins, Ali Smith & Jennifer Higgie]


Cao Fei’s Utopia is both a place and a non-place. It is a daydream, a fiction and a collective longing. Then again, it has three rooms, it has light projected on walls and captured on photographic paper, and it can be arrived at through a winding labyrinth of gallery spaces at Brisbane’s Institute of Modern Art. A joint project with Artspace in Auckland, this is the young Chinese artist’s first solo exhibition in Australasia, and it includes work made over a number of years in a variety of media: photography, film and virtual architecture.

Its first sited play between the imaginary and the real is a video projection, Whose Utopia (2006), which takes us into a light bulb factory in the Pearl River Delta. Fluorescent tubes, ordinary globes and miniature halogens dance and whirl with mechanical grace, revealing a hundred tiny movements and component parts. Already, these are no longer the inert, mute objects we switch on and off each day. As workers faces and hands begin to appear, sorting and pushing and hovering as machine-like as possible, we can begin to see the outlines of a narrative around these ubiquitous everyday things that travel to us from so many miles away. As Part II begins, a pair of French tourists sits down beside me and offer popcorn; on screen a lilting piano accompanies the workers surreally performing their personal fantasies on the factory floor, individuals now with their own spreading stories and dreams. Amongst rows of mechanical arms and the continuing rhythms of factory life, they twirl in tutus, play rock star guitar and breakdance in slow-motion. With a yearning whistle, Part III brings portraits of the workers back in their monotonous surrounds, still and expressionless, and staring directly back at us over karaoke words to lulling Indie pop that keeps asking elusively ‘and to whom … do you … beautifully … belong’ long after I’ve left the gallery.

Fei is based between Beijing and her hometown of Guangzhou. Part of an emerging generation of artists born after the more dramatic episodes in China’s communist past, her work inspects the disparities and inconsistencies of the new China, as experienced by ordinary citizens inhabiting a rapidly changing industrialised urban landscape. Whose Utopia comes from a broader project shown at the 2006 Biennale of Sydney, What are you doing here? (2006), in which Fei spent time interviewing the factory employees, making and distributing a newspaper, Utopia Daily, and organising the creation of theatrical performances and installations by (and for) the workers and their families. Rural immigrants with little control over their lives are thus introduced to a different kind of production, one in which their answers to questions like ‘where is your dream’ and ‘what is your utopia’ can ricochet to places as far flung as here.

In the next room, a series of large photographs, UN-Cosplayers (2006), depict figures dressed in the outlandish costumes of fictional characters from pop-culture, embedded (or abandoned) in the stage set of ‘ordinary’ street life. As with her 2004 film COSplayers, this series draws on the contemporary phenomena of cosplay (role-playing in costume) as a form of reimagining both individual identity and the often dehumanised environments we inhabit. In this instance the ‘players’ are older Beijing residents, and the scenes they animate have an eerie quietness – traditional hutong buildings have been reduced to rubble or piled with garbage, empty swathes of road stretch out beneath high-rises. In front, hybrid superheroes pose theatrically with borrowed props (a light-sabre, a laser blaster, a pick-axe), sometimes leaping on rooves or crouching through their built surroundings as though in a video game. Spiderman pops up again and again; in one photograph meeting himself in the way that new players in Second Life must use a standard ‘avatar’ (a fantasy self) also worn by others. In Housebreaker (2006), a Star Wars stormtrooper in electric blue bodysuit wields a shovel before a handful of bemused bystanders, one pauses his bicycle, another looks up from his newspaper; a third turns out to be the unidentified character from a different photograph, his shiny yellow suit and cap recalling some kind of comic wise-man from Monkey Magic. These images are saturated with colour, poised at a moment of stilled tension between crushing reality and a craving for transcendence that is itself pilfered and re-made from imported consumerist visual culture.

From this fractured fantasy of Beijing, the final place I am transported to is, quite naturally, the virtual world of Second Life – the digital heartland of dreams and desire – where Fei has constructed an entire metropolis on the Creative Commons island of Kula under her avatar ‘China Tracy’. RMB City (2008) is encountered here in ‘real space’ as a fly-through video swooping and diving on a rollercoaster tour of the heaving city amidst remodelled icons of Chinese culture and urban life. A huge bicycle wheel spins industriously, factory chimneys pump out flames, flying commuter trains zoom past, and a panda and the new CCTV headquarters swing off either end of a floating crane. Tiananmen square is a leisurely swimming pool, vehicles disappear into and out of tunnels, but there is a curious absence of people. Though wild and fantastical, the experience explodes with physical, felt fiction in every direction, a tumbling sensation akin to my own half-remembered dreams of flying over water. I want to ask, ‘how does this world work?’ ‘Who lives here?’ ‘Is it better than ours?’ ‘what kind of futures are we dreaming of?”.
On my way out towards mangrove-scented air, I pass the words ‘my future is not a dream’ flickering on the wall in the first room. Utopia is always a dream, but futures must eventually be lived. Circling this imaginary territory to re-inscribe the complexities of human desire onto the socio-political (and architectural) landscapes we occupy from Guangzhou to Brisbane, Fei opens up new ways we might conceptualise and orient our potential shared futures. How we get there is another story.

Image credit: Cao Fei, Housebreaker, 2006. Image from www.caofei.com

Public speaking

July 24th, 2010 § 0

Tomorrow afternoon (Sunday July 25th) we’re doing an artist talk at Firstdraft. Starts at 4pm, Luke Thurgate and Bronwyn Carter will be doing their thing too, and it’s your last chance to see all the work before it closes for good at 6pm.

window-draw

Also this coming week we’re taking part in the HotHouse symposium at Sydney Opera House. Lots of exciting speakers and ideas will be floating around, including Hou Hanru, Tony Fry and Michaela Crimmin of the RSA Arts & Ecology project. It runs Tues 27th – Wed 28th July, and we’re speaking on Tuesday afternoon.

HotHouse brings together artists, designers, curators and creative thinkers in a quest to develop models for sustainable environmental change. This “collective experiment” calls upon art and design to offer practical means of transforming spaces, environments, and even cities in ways that are enduring and energising, and that, most importantly, engage all sectors of the community.’

Image credit: Tessa Zettel & Karl Khoe, Colony Collapse, 2010, photograph by Makeshift

Come out to play

July 19th, 2010 § 0

Read a cute little write-up on Colony Collapse by Rachel Fuller at Concrete Playground.

And for those who’ve been meaning to visit, there’s only one week left! Quicksticks… (it looks something like this)

cart-in-sun

The bees live in their hive, inside the orange meat safe. In theory they can fly in and out of the gallery whenever they like, through a pipe leading outside, however Sydney’s still-cold winter has kept them pretty much tucked up in bed. If it’s sunny you might spot them hanging out next to their hive or amongst the blueberries and ‘Happy Wanderer’. Come and talk to them, they’re super sweet!

install1 window1closeup1

Colony Collapse

July 6th, 2010 § 0

We have an exhibition opening at Firstdraft Gallery in Sydney in 2 days time. It’s called Colony Collapse and concludes our studio residency at the new Firstdraft Depot. There will be a hive of native stingless bees, amongst other things (drawings, constructions etc.) relating to the development of our forthcoming project for the Museum of Contemporary Art’s In the Balance exhibition. Also opening at the same time are shows by Bronwyn Carter, Luke Thurgate and Baden Pailthorpe.


Colony Collapse

Tessa Zettel & Karl Khoe

Colony Collapse continues Tessa Zettel & Karl Khoe’s ongoing collaborative project to micro-farm pockets of the city, cannibalising leftover building materials (and other devices of protection/preservation) in the construction of makeshift experiments in urban self-sufficiency. At Firstdraft the artists investigate the possibilities for small-scale mobile honey production in the gallery and beyond, as they prepare to build a hybrid native beehive-food cart destined for Sydney Cove. With food crisis, suburban sprawl and the colony’s precarious histories (and futures) on their minds, Zettel & Khoe invite audiences in to smell the flowers and talk to the bees.

As part of the Firstdraft Emerging Artists Studio Program supported by Australia Council for the Arts

Exhibition opens: Wednesday 7 July 2010, 6-8pm
Exhibition continues: to 25 July 2010
Artist talks: Sunday 25 July 2010 at 4pm

f i r s t d r a f t
———————–

116-118 Chalmers St.
Surry Hills NSW 2010
t: +61 (0)2 9698 3665
open: Wed to Sat, 12-6pm

Make-do wrap up

June 30th, 2010 § 0

Well, the shifting garden at 4A has now packed up and shifted elsewhere (or a variety of elsewheres actually). Thanks to everyone who stopped and had a look, took home a beetroot or kale seedling or a seed packet, or sat down for a cup of tea and a lotus chip and a chat about gardens, cities and other good things. Thank you also to the marvellous team at 4A - Aaron, Summar, Ping, Yu ye, & Sam who did their best to keep everything nicely watered. We’ve amassed quite an archive of photos and will be posting them here over the next little while, in the meantime here are a few from the final weeks.

old-couple2

lantern2sconce2
cart2lotus chips and taro cake at the closing party food2man2

Throw shapes visit

April 30th, 2010 § 0

A nice little article on the Garden (by Lucy Fokkema) on the Throw Shapes blog – read it here.

Workshop One

April 14th, 2010 § 2

Saturday’s workshop saw home-made pumpkin scones with rosella jam & Western Sydney backyard rosellas, lots of tea (lemongrass from the garden and jasmine flowers from China), and various drawings of people’s next-door neighbour’s gardens/architectural plans for what we could do in the gallery. … And the beginnings of a seed exchange, which will continue to take shape over the next week.

scones1

people2

dogarden1 seeds11o

o

o

Enter the Garden

April 8th, 2010 § 0

_mg_3413

Make-do Garden City is up and running, with our starter crop of eggplant, okra, chilli, lemongrass, spinach, various lettuces etc. all doing remarkably well in their greenhouse-shopfront. In the Do Garden, the lotus is dying back for winter but still making an effort to look lovely. We’ve begun unpacking furniture and other assorted things from our cart so conversations can soon get underway there.

There’s a workshop/event happening this Saturday 11am – 1pm, a good time to come down if you haven’t yet visited. It’s going to be a fairly loose affair involving tea and talking, with drawing and seed-swapping on the side. Feel free to bring along your own edible plants, or seeds, and/or drawing materials (although rice paper and ink will be provided).

Here’s how it looked at the beginning:

_mg_3452

and some details

_mg_3467blog2

blog3smallblog1small

o

o

o

o

o

o

o
o

oo

o

o

o

o

o

Stay tuned for more images next week.

Photos by Arunas / Tessa Zettel & Karl Khoe