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Illustrators Australia, The A3 Show, Melbourne 2010
John Brack – Major Retrospective

John Brack, Australia 1920–1999, Men's wear, 1953, oil on canvas, 81.0 x 114.0 cm, National Gallery of Australia, Canberra, Purchased 1982 © Helen Brack
For the first time in over twenty years, the National Gallery of Victoria is presenting a major retrospective of the work of John Brack, widely considered one of Australia’s greatest twentieth century artists. This important exhibition surveys John Brack’s complete career, incorporating over 150 works from all of his major series.
John Brack 1920 – 1999
For artists and designers, this exhibition of the art of John Brack is a very special event. As an artist, Brack was a skilled draughtsman, and a master of composition. These expert technical skills were matched by an intuitive use of spectacular colour and a sharp eye for detail. His work has inspired comments such as these:
‘a great observer of the absurdity of the human condition’
‘an explorer of social rituals in suburbia’
‘a graphic portrayer of the universal experiences of political struggle, religious difference and war’
‘a painter of modern Australian life’
‘the quintessential Melbourne artist’
The artist in his work
For John Brack, interpreting and documenting the social behaviour of others was an ongoing preoccupation, but occasionally he gave us a glimpse of his private self – by actually appearing in a painting watching others, as in Latin American Grand Final (1969), or by using mirror reflection as in Self-portrait (1955). In this work John Brack looks at both himself in the mirror, and beyond the mirror at the viewer, with the same penetrating, scrutinizing gaze. This painting could perhaps be seen as encapsulating his approach to the world which so strongly informed his art. It may also explain why each piece in his oeuvre is not only the artist’s personal appraisal of the subject matter, but also an opportunity for Brack to indulge his curiosity; to try to understand how other people’s lives, so different from his own, were playing out. As the artist, he was in a position of privilege; to be able to wonder, but to remain at a critical distance. Brack believed that art should be scrutinised. He wanted those who viewed his work to wonder about it, to question the artist’s intentions.

John Brack, Australia, 1920–1999, Self-portrait, 1955, oil on canvas, 81.5 x 48.3 cm, National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne, Purchased with the assistance of the National Gallery Women’s Association, 2000, © Helen Brack
We are told that he was an intensely private person, that he did not enjoy crowds, and neither did he like going to gallery openings. He was also dismayed by some reactions to his work. He wanted people to take time to look more closely, to see how the work could operate on different levels, and he was often disappointed when people reacted superficially. We also know that he destroyed a number of his early works because he did not think they were good enough. His wife, Helen Maudsley, a fellow art student, whom he married in 1949, has commented:
‘He was a serious person. He thought that taking art seriously
as a way of thinking about the world was worth doing.
He was impatient with bad faith and triviality.’
Helen Maudsley (Brack) in The Art of John Brack, by Sasha Grishin,
Oxford University Press, 1990, Melbourne.
Portraiture
While Brack took a serious approach to his art, and the subjects of his works were often judged by him, he also displayed sensitivity linked to a fond sense of humour. In the work entitled Third Daughter (1954), Brack has captured a young child’s frustration and rage with great effect. Brack not only creates a wonderful image, but also strongly communicates mood by means of texture. The medium – drypoint etching – is an immediate and tactile method of seizing a memorable moment. The scratchiness of the lines which make up her hair, her jumper and the crosshatching of the floor under her feet, serve to emphasise her agitation and the pricklyness of her displeasure. Brack’s intuitive understanding of his subjects has produced insightful portraiture: of family members, unknown individuals, and celebrity personalities.
Context and Culture
Informing the artist’s work: Life in the early 1920s and 1930s
John Brack was born into a Melbourne working-class family. He grew up in the period between the first and second World Wars, 1918 -1939. It has been said that despite his family environment providing very little in the way of music, pictures and books, John Brack was an avid reader. He was also a curious and perceptive observer of people and the environment around him. The early 1920s in Australia was a relatively prosperous and relaxed time, but it was followed by a period of radical change, of global dimensions. Culminating in the 1929 Wall Street crash, but initiated by a progressive world-wide collapse of commodity markets and high levels of overseas debt (similar to current global conditions), Australia’s economy fell victim to The Great Depression of 1930. Affecting every family, Australia experienced acute rising unemployment. At the worst stage, 29% of the nation was out of work. With unemployment came poverty, the inability to buy goods, long dole queues, and fighting over jobs. Soldiers returning from war became homeless. In an effort to provide funding for pensions and unemployment benefits, governments increased taxes on simple pleasures which made daily life harder to bear. Many public works projects were initiated to create jobs, but without a formal plan for economic recovery in Australia, progress was slow. By 1939, when World War Two broke out, recovery was still incomplete.
Collins St, 5p. m.
By the age of 16 years, John Brack was working in an insurance office in Melbourne, one of a crowd of daily commuters who trod the pavements to and from their offices. On one occasion in the city, he saw a Van Gogh reproduction in a shop window, and he was so captivated by it that he enrolled in night classes at the National Gallery School. He went on to paint Collins St, 5 p.m. (completed in 1955, and acquired by the NGV in 1956). It is a graphic example of his ability to observe and to communicate not just a scene, but its mood. It is a compelling image. It invites us to wonder about it. John Brack’s intention was to have the painting work on different levels of meaning while appearing deceptively simple. Collins St, 5p. m. is described as having iconic status, and in view of Brack’s impatience with the superficial, one wonders how he felt about this description of one of the NGV’s most popular works.

John Brack, Australia 1920–1999, Collins St, 5p.m., 1955, oil on canvas, 114.8 x 162.8 cm, National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne Purchased, 1956 © National Gallery of Victoria
The Bar
Painted in 1954, The Bar is widely regarded as the companion piece to Collins St, 5p.m. and was only acquired by the NGV in March 2009, with the assistance of the Victorian State Government. Director, Dr Gerard Vaughan, considers it to be one of the NGV’s most important acquisitions of 20th century art. The painting marks a time in Melbourne when hotels were forced by law to close early (first introduced during World War Two and continued until 1966 when 10 o’clock closing became the norm). The phrase ‘six o’clock swill’ was used to describe the behaviour of patrons who crowded around the bars to get a last drink before closing time. In this work, John Brack cleverly uses the device of a mirror behind the bar to make it possible for us to see both sides of the bar at the same time. We stand with the patrons facing the barmaid as she waits on her customers. She looks tired and seems resigned to deal with this unruly crowd and the urgency of their demands – ‘One more beer over here, love!’
Horse Racing
John Brack’s curiousity about his fellow human beings lead him to explore all kinds of popular activities. He painted a series of works documenting his great attraction to the theatre of horse-racing. These images clearly demonstrate his fascination for the racing carnival atmosphere, its rituals and its colourful characters. One of these images, Jockeys heads (1956), is a strong statement, rendered in bold drawing style. The jockeys’ faces are angular and closed with a hint of being part of a culture of secret understandings. Brack was intrigued.
Dance
Dance was a developing popular social activity when John Brack was growing up. Between the two world wars (1920s and 1930s), originating in America, dance marathons became a national craze. These marathons, proclaiming: ‘outlast all others!’, and ‘dance till you drop!’ were physical, emotional and overtly sexual dramas which took place in dance halls, where women went to meet men. These social rituals played out on the dance floor to a hot jazz rhythm. Dance was the new ‘in’ thing; everyone was doing it at Australian dance halls – Ragtime preceded new dances such as the Foxtrot, The Charleston, and the Black Bottom. The 1930s was the era of the Big Bands and Swing music. In the late 1960s it was ballroom dancing competitions which prompted John Brack to create a series of works. He was intrigued by the willingness of human beings to try and master absurd ritual movements to a strict dance tempo. What was this strange behaviour really about? Brack’s stunning use of fluorescent colour highlights the theatricality of these farcical events. In the painting, Latin American Grand Final (1969), Brack can stay behind the canvas no longer, and he paints himself standing at the edge of the dance floor continuing to observe.

John Brack, Australia 1920–1999, Latin American Grand Final, 1969, oil on canvas, 167.5 x 205.0 cm, National Gallery of Australia, Canberra Purchased, 1981 © Helen Brack
Nudes
John Brack’s first series of nudes were painted in 1957 in his North Balywn home. These early female models seem very awkward and uncomfortable in their nudity. They sit or lie in unrelaxed poses. They are not beautiful women, nor are they sexual or sensual. They sit on the edge of chairs communicating an overwhelming sense of unease, which is almost tangible. They are obviously not professional models. They are ordinary human beings who seem not to be enjoying this experience. John Brack, the perceptive observer, records the human condition, not without sensitivity, in all its naked vulnerability. Later studies, such as Nude with a dressing gown (1967) also lacks eroticisim, but Brack has charged the painting with an overlay of brilliant fluorescent green which transforms the image, and removes it from reality.
Abstraction, 1973 onwards
The suburbs of Melbourne had long inspired Brack with a vast landscape of human subject matter for his work. These finely produced images operated like a collection of mirrors, devices which Brack used often in his work. However, these reflections were all skillfully scrutinized by John Brack, and he hoped that the viewing public would think beyond ‘simple images’ and consider how the images could be read . In 1973, John Brack and his wife Helen Maudsley travelled overseas for three months, visiting London, Paris, Brussels, Amsterdam and Mexico City. When Brack returned home, his art underwent a dramatic change in form, from representational to abstract – from comparatively minor suburban happenings to universal issues of major scale. Previously, the human figure had been rendered by Brack in literal form. However, in abstraction, he substituted utensils of all kinds such as cutlery, pens and pencils, playing cards, and others for the human form. These were meticulously positioned on canvases which were underpinned with masterfully gridded frameworks. Mankind en masse was represented metaphorically by these everyday implements with riveting symbolic effect. These images about political struggle, religious difference and war, remain relevant and very powerful today.

John Brack, Australia 1920–1999, The battle, 1981–83, oil on canvas, 203.0 x 274.0 cm, National Gallery of Australia, Canberra Gift of John and Helen Brack, 1992 © Helen Brack
Drawing, grids and increases in scale – a superb draughtsman
John Brack studied at night at the National Gallery Art School under Charles Webber, from 1938-40, and took full time classes from 1946-49. Fellow students included Sam Fulbrook, Yosl Bergner, Clifton Pugh, Fred Williams and John Perceval. Brack’s painting Men’s Wear 1953, his first major work after leaving art school, includes mirror-reflection, which creates another dimension, allowing the painting to be read, as Brack intended, on more than one level. From 1952, for the next ten years, he held the position of Art Master at Melbourne Grammar School, leaving there in 1962 to take on the position of Head of the National Gallery Art School until 1968. Under his management, the school was modernised and its status improved.
John Brack was a very workman-like artist. For the fundamentals of construction of a work, Brack was strongly influenced by Georges Seurat. Rick Amor, one of Australia’s leading painters, was a student of John Brack at the National Gallery Art School (1966-68). Amor learned Brack’s method of working – starting off with rough ‘scribbles’ or sketches in journals, trying the same ‘scribbles’ in different media, gradually increasing the scale and building up the composition. By increasing the scale of the work, everything is placed in an organized space on the canvas. Brack used grids like engineering underpinning to position elements of each compostion. As Rick Amor has commented about his own work -
‘ … that grid I do is terribly important … it is about organizing things on a flat surface … it’s what artists have always done. The use of grid lines gives the work a sort of inevitability inside that rectangle (canvas).’
(extracts: Rick Amor in conversation with Anne McCurdy, 2000).
John Brack’s painting, Up and Down (1971-72), a study of four male gymnasts, is a clear example of his technique of designing a skeletal structure over which the figure layers are intentionally and strategically positioned. The composition of the work is both visually dramatic and satisfying because of the balance created between foreground and background figures in organized space.
John Brack was a skilled and disciplined artist and designer. Understanding the way he worked, makes viewing his art an awesome experience.
24 April–9 August 2009
Open daily 10am–5pm and until 9pm every Thursday
The Ian Potter Centre: NGV Australia
Galleries 17 – 20, Level 3
Admission fees apply
2 October 2009 – 31 January 2010
Art Gallery of South Australia
- Anne Paterson
John Brack – Major Retrospective – Gallery
For the first time in over twenty years, the National Gallery of Victoria is presenting a major retrospective of the work of John Brack, widely considered one of Australia’s greatest twentieth century artists. This important exhibition surveys John Brack’s complete career, incorporating over 150 works from all of his major series.
Illustrators Australia Celebrate 20 Years of Illustration (1989-2009)
The Illustrators Australia 20th Year Anniversary Exhibition will be held over a weekend in June as part of the Northern Exposure Festival at the Northcote Town Hall, Melbourne.
This exhibition gives you the chance to view the creative process as employed by the professional illustrators involved. The work on display ranges from initial concepts and sketches to the final published artwork including original illustrations and prints.
Illustrators Australia (IA) is a non-profit organisation which helps practising Australian illustrators promote themselves and their work. The organisation has over 300 members Australia-wide as well as a number living overseas.
Over 50 illustrators are involved in the exhibition, including Sonia Kretschma, Nigel Buchanan, Christopher Nielson, Jim Tsinganos, Otto Schmidinger, Bob Shields, Nathaniel Eckstrom, Neryl Walker, Cat MacInnes, Anna Walker, Ned Culic, Andrea Innocent, Matt Clare, Danny Snell and Brian Clinton.
One day of the exhibition includes a series of short informal talks by the exhibiting illustrators, offering greater insight into the processes of a practising illustrator.
Celebrating Illustrators Australia’s 20th year, the exhibition will also feature a nostalgic look at the humble beginnings of IA through to its current role of supporting hundreds of professional illustrators across the country.
This is a unique opportunity to view some of Australia’s most well known images and newly published work with an insight into the minds of those who created them.
Illustrators Australia 20th Year Anniversary Exhibition
as part of the Northern Exposure Festival
Northcote Town Hall, High St, Northcote, Victoria
Friday 19th June – Sunday 21st June 2009
Opening night: Friday 19th June 6pm
Illustrator talks: Sunday 1-3pm

Top Arts: VCE 2008

Anna Howkins 'Distortion' oil on canvas 152.5 x 183.0 cm. St Leonard’s College, Brighton East
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The annual showcase of the artistic achievements of VCE Art and Studio Arts students will be on display at The Ian Potter Centre: NGV Australia from 25 March, 2009 in Top Arts: VCE 2008.
Now in its 15th year, this free exhibition is hugely popular with VCE students, teachers, schools and the general public, and attracted more than 190,000 visitors last year over the 72 days that the students’ work was on display.

Ashleigh Kubiak 'All that jazz' synthetic polymer paint on canvas 152.0 x 152.0 cm. Loreto Mandeville Hall, Toorak
This year, 166 Victorian artists were short-listed from over 2,000 applications, and include works from a range of media including painting, photography, drawing, printmaking, ceramics, animation, works on paper, and an installation. Top Arts will display over 70 works by 61 students from government, independent and Catholic schools from across Victoria, giving a voice to students to convey their attitudes and ideas to the public and explore current themes in society.
Frances Lindsay, Deputy Director, NGV said that ‘It’s always exciting for us to see fresh and unique work reflecting the issues faced by today’s young people and the NGV is proud to be supporting and encouraging the next generation of Victoria’s visual artists.’
‘Top Arts,’ she says, ‘provides students with a chance to work alongside arts professionals, reinforcing for them and their peers that the visual arts is a sustainable and significant career path.’

Tim Hopkins 'Crystal-blue vase' raku stoneware 76.0 x 33.0 cm diameter. Lilydale Adventist Academy, Lilydale
For more information about the exhibition, and the range of education and public programs that explore the creative process behind the works exhibited, visit the NGV website.
Top Arts is part of the VCE Season of Excellence 2009 program in Melbourne, a festival of outstanding VCE students’ visual and performing art managed by the Victorian Curriculum and Assessment Authority.
Top Arts: VCE 2008The Ian Potter Centre: NGV Australia, Federation Square from 25 March – 14 June 2009.
Open 10am-5pm and until 9pm Thursdays. Closed Mondays.
Admission is free.
Setting the Scene: Film Design from Metropolis to Australia – Gallery
The Australian Centre for the Moving Image (ACMI) presents an exciting new exhibition, Setting the Scene: Film Design from Metropolis to Australia. Until mid April, this exhibition examines the great achievements in film design in a fascinating display of what goes on behind the scenes. The work of film production designers, art directors, set designers and film architects are displayed in detail, as the exhibition pays tribute to the artists behind seminal works of film from around the world.
Setting the Scene: Film Design from Metropolis to Australia

The Trial (Orson Welles, 1962). Production designer Jean Mandaroux. Courtesy of Deutsche Kinemathek - Museum für Film und Fernsehen.
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A behind the scenes look at international cinema is put on show in this fascinating exhibition celebrating production design, some of which is exclusive to Australian audiences. Kate McCurdy reports.
The Australian Centre for the Moving Image (ACMI) presents an exciting new exhibition, Setting the Scene: Film Design from Metropolis to Australia. Until mid April, this exhibition examines the great achievements in film design in a fascinating display of what goes on behind the scenes. The work of film production designers, art directors, set designers and film architects are displayed in detail, as the exhibition pays tribute to the artists behind seminal works of film from around the world.
A sense of place and space
Setting the Scene is focused on the sense of place and atmosphere of a film, and particularly the artists role in creating these spaces. ACMI’s Screen Gallery features more than 300 original sketches, storyboards and models from iconic films from international cinema, and is displayed in seven parts. These parts represent the different kinds of spaces in which the film’s world exists, namely Spaces of Power, Private Spaces, Labyrinth Spaces, Transit Spaces, Stage Spaces, Virtual Spaces and Location Spaces.

Dante Ferretti. The Name of the Rose (Jean-Jacques Annaud, 1986). Courtesy of Dante Ferretti
Setting the Scene is based on the German exhibition Moving Spaces: Production Design + Film originally produced by the Deutsche Kinemathek – Museum für Film und Fernsehen, Berlin. ACMI has significantly expanded Moving Spaces with two new sections to represent the work of some of Australia’s internationally acclaimed production designers. The Virtual Spaces and Location Spaces sections of the exhibition have been added and include exhibits from Baz Luhrmann’s Australia (2008) and are exclusive to Australian audiences.
Over 80 films are represented across the exhibition featuring the work of more than 30 internationally acclaimed production designers, including Ken Adam, Anna Asp, Dante Ferretti, Frank Schroedter, Robert Heath and Alex McDowell. German production designer Erich Kettelhut is the most heavily represented in the exhibition, with work from nine of his films on display, including work from Fritz Lang’s Metropolis (1927).
Australian production design
Seven of the Australian production designers and art directors, including Owen Patterson (Matrix trilogy and Speed Racer), Roger Ford (Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian), Chris Kennedy (The Proposition and forthcoming release The Road), Stephen Curtis (beDevil and Night Cries: A Rural Tragedy), Catherine Martin (Australia), Karen Murphy (Australia), George Liddle (Dark City) and Steven Jones-Evans (Ned Kelly).

Dir Andrew Adamson and PD Roger Ford on set. The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian (Andrew Adamson, 2008). Production designer Roger Ford. © DISNEY/WALDEN. THE CHRONICLES OF NARNIA, NARNIA, and all book titles, characters and locales original thereto are trademarks and are used with permission.
On set: Baz Luhrmann’s Australia
One of the major attractions of the exhibition is the exclusive display of the work from Baz Lurhmann’s Australia, by double Academy Award winning Australian production designer, Catherine Martin, and her team including Art Director Karen Murphy. This section has been curated by ACMI with Murphy, and features design concepts, sketches, models and research material as well as the living room set of the Faraway Downs homestead from the film.

Catherine Martin with the Australia Faraway Downs Homestead. Australia (Baz Luhrmann, 2008). Production designer Catherine Martin. Image credit: Douglas Kirkland.
Speaking at the opening of Setting the Scene, Murphy reflected on her experience working on Australia: ‘It’s incredibly rewarding working as an art director on a Baz Luhrmann film, because the art department is unique. The production designer, Catherine Martin, is responsible for the images that inform and amplify the story from the research stage through to the final days of post production. The truth is in the strength and layering of the early images you see here in the gallery, and they end up on the screen,’ she said.
‘I’ve loved being involved in this exhibition,’ she adds. ‘It’s a wonderful celebration of the contribution of the talented pool of artists, from set designers, model-makers, set dressers, digital 3D modelers and craftspeople brought together by the production designer to help create those final, rich and memorable worlds we experience in Australia and in all of the films featured here at ACMI.’
A number of interviews with selected Australian production designers have been produced in conjunction with the Australian Film, Television Radio School (AFTRS) in which the designers speak about their work. These interviews are screened in the Screen gallery as part of the exhibition.
From Moving Spaces to Setting the Scene
The original exhibition, Moving Spaces: Production Design + Film was first exhibited in Berlin in 2005 and has travelled to significant venues such as the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences in Los Angeles (2006) and the Hong Kong Film Archive (2007). Apart from the Australia section, the works in Setting the Scene are from the collection of the Deutsche Kinemathek, supplementing international loans from Cinémathèque Française, the Bibliotheque du Film and the Svenska Filminstitute archives among others, as well as material from the private collections of production designers.
The range of films displayed in the exhibition is signified by the title of ACMI’s exhibition: Setting the Scene: Film Design from Metropolis to Australia. Some of the oldest films in the exhibition are significant examples of German cinema such as The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari (Robert Wiene, 1920) and Metropolis (Fritz Lang, 1927), while the most recent film is Australia (Luhrmann, 2008) and the forthcoming release of John Hillcoat’s The Road (2009).

Metropolis (Fritz Lang, 1927). Production designers Otto Hunte, Karl Vollbrecht, Erich Kettelhut. Courtesy of Deutsche Kinemathek - Museum für Film und Fernsehen
International highlights
A highlight of the exhibition is the large-scale model of the ultra-modern house from Jacques Tati’s Mon Oncle (1958). This comedy won the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film in 1959, and one can experience the detail of the film’s set close up with this beautiful model, complete with the dachshund in the driveway.
Other films featured in the exhibition include three Stanley Kubrick films, Dr. Strangelove (1964), A Clockwork Orange (1971) and The Shining (1980); as well as The Apartment (1960), Cabaret (1972), Alien (1979), The Cat in the Hat (2003), Dogville (2003), The Bourne Supremacy (2004) and The Terminal (2004).

Dogville (Lars Von Trier, 2003). Production designer Peter Grant. Courtesy of Zentropa Entertainments3 ApS
For more information about the exhibition, including the Setting the Scene poster competition, visit the ACMI website.
Setting the Scene: Film Design from Metropolis to Australia4 December 2008 – 19 April 2009
ACMI Screen Gallery
Australian Centre for the Moving Image
Federation Square, Melbourne
Admission fees apply
ACMI Presents: Focus on Dante Ferretti

The Aviator (Martin Scorsese, 2005). Production design by Dante Ferretti
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‘I always try to find ways of manipulating reality to accentuate the central focus of the film. I’ll exaggerate certain details and discard others.’
- Dante Ferretti
Film Production Design is being celebrated at the Australian Centre for the Moving Image (ACMI) in its current exhibition Setting the Scene: Film Design from Metropolis to Australia. To coincide with the exhibition, ACMI Film Programs have curated a unique film season dedicated to the significant body of work of Academy Award winning, Italian production designer Dante Ferretti. A showcase of thirteen selected films featuring art direction or production design by Ferretti will take place at ACMI from Friday 20 February to Sunday 1 March in Focus On Dante Ferretti.
Dante Ferretti was both in Macerata, Italy in 1943, and studied set design in Rome before he was employed as an assistant to film architect Luigi Scaccianoce. With now 70 films in his continuing body of work, his first assignment as a designer was for Pier Paolo Pasolini’s Medea (1969) who taught Ferretti to draw inspiration from art history. One of the greatest examples of this influence can be seen in Jean-Jacques Annaud’s The Name of the Rose (1986). The film, adapted from the novel by Umberto Eco, is a medieval monastery-set thriller shot in Italy and Germany, and called for complex interior design to represent the labyrinthine drama. The construction of the interior plaza and abbey was supervised by Ferretti, and a reconstructed model is being exhibited at ACMI as part of Setting the Scene until April, 2009.

Baron Munchausen (Terry Gilliam, 1988). Production sketch by Dante Ferretti
Following The Name of the Rose, Ferretti’s next major project was working on Terry Gilliam’s The Adventures of Baron Munchausen (1988), a film now perhaps better known for its production problems and cost overruns. However, this film can be viewed as a launch of sorts for Ferretti, as following this film his career really took off internationally. Since Baron Munchausen, he has worked with significant directors from all over the world, including Neil Jordan, Claude Chabrol and the late Anthony Minghella. Ferretti has also frequently collaborated with Academy Award winning American filmmaker Martin Scorsese on six feature films to date. Three of these films will be screening as part of the Focus On showcase: The Aviator (2005), The Age of Innocence (1993) and Casino (1995). Scorsese’s new feature, Ashecliffe, with Ferretti as Production Designer, is currently in post-production and due for release later this year.

The Aviator (Martin Scorsese, 2005). Production sketch by Dante Ferretti.
Roberta Ciabarra, ACMI Film Programmer and Curator of the season, says, ‘Dante Ferretti’s vast body of work included ongoing collaborations with some of cinema’s greatest auteurs. In a way this is testament to his significant role in the history of filmmaking. From baroque and neo-realist Italian cinema to the Hollywood machine and some of the really defining moments in film, Ferretti has been part of it all.’
Dante Ferretti has won two Academy Awards in the Best Achievement in Art Direction category, most recently for Tim Burton’s Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street (2008) and in 2005 for Scorsese’s The Aviator. Both of these films will screen as part of the Focus on Dante Ferretti season, as well as The Age of Innocence (Martin Scorsese, 1993), Titus (Julie Taymor, 1999), The Black Dahlia (Brian de Palma, 2006), Interview with the Vampire (Neil Jordan, 1994) and The Adventures of Baron Munchausen (Terry Gilliam, 1988).
Ferretti’s early career in Italy and France will be represented by screenings of a smaller number of arthouse titles such as E la nave va (And the Ship Sails On) (Federico Fellini, 1983), La nuit de Varennes (That Night in Varennes) (Ettore Scola, 1982), Storie di ordinaria follia (Tales of Ordinary Madness) (Marco Ferreri, 1981) and Decameron (Pier Paolo Pasolini, 1971).

The Black Dahlia (Brian de Palma, 2006). Production sketch by Dante Ferretti
‘With the sheer volume of works in his filmography, we could have have done a whole festival,’ says Ciabarra, ‘but these works represent some of Ferretti’s defining moments, as well as those of the directors he has worked with. It’s a chance for ACMI to highlight the importance of production design and visionary directing and perhaps even more so, the deep interpretative skills these artists (quite literally) have. Their ability to get into someone’s head and translate concept into finely woven fabric is really quite something.’
- Kate McCurdy
Focus on Dante FerrettiFriday 20 February – Sunday 1 March, 2009.
Australian Centre for the Moving Image
Federation Square, Melbourne
Admission fees apply
The Works of Andreas Gursky – Gallery
Andreas Gursky was a first for not only the National Gallery of Victoria, but also Australia, as this was the only Australian venue to host the first major exhibition of Gursky’s work in this part of the world. The exhibition from the Haus der Kunst in Munich included twenty-one of Gursky’s major works, hand-selected by the artist himself.
‘Fictions based on facts’: The works of Andreas Gursky
Andreas Gursky was a first for not only the National Gallery of Victoria, but also Australia, as this was the only Australian venue to host the first major exhibition of Gursky’s work in this part of the world.
The exhibition from the Haus der Kunst in Munich included twenty-one of Gursky’s major works, hand-selected by the artist himself.
Andreas Gursky is internationally acclaimed for his large-scale photographs, which generally measure four to five metres, and for his outstanding contribution to contemporary German photography. Gursky is considered to be continuing the ‘new objectivity’ approach, first expressed by artists such as August Sander, Renger Patzsch and Bernd and Hilla Becher.
The son of a commercial photographer, Andreas Gursky was born in Liepzig in 1955 and grew up in Düsseldorf. He attended the Kunstakademie Düsseldorf, Germany’s State Art Academy in the 1980s. It was here that he studied under Bernd and Hilla Becher, known as the ‘godparents’ of modern objective photography, and was heavily influenced by their methodical black and white photographic style. Best known for their collection of photographs of industrial structures and machinery, they used a large format camera to capture their subjects from different angles while maintaining a strongly objective point of view.

Andreas GURKSY German 1955– 'Pyongyang I' 2007 C-Print 307.0 x 215.5 x 6.2 cm © Andreas Gursky /VG Bild-Kunst. Licensed by VISCOPY, Australia. Courtesy: Monika Sprüth / Philomene Magers, Berlin London
In the mid 1980s Gursky began to develop his own style away from the Becher model, most notably by choosing to photograph in colour. However, his work to this day continues to have strong sense of the artist’s objective, observatory and distanced approach to photography.
For example, one of his most recent works, Pyongyang I (2007), gives an objective point of view of political and social structures at work. The event photographed is the annual Arirang Festival in Pyongyang, North Korea, which is held annually in honour of the late Communist leader Kim Il Sung. The precise nature of the choreography is captured beautifully, allowing the viewer to observe and admire the absolute dedication of the individual 100,000 participants to achieve the final spectacular result.
Gursky has travelled the world capturing what he believes to be symbols of contemporary culture. The works produced in this period of travel in the 1980s are considered to be some of the most original achievements in contemporary photography.
All of the photographs in Andreas Gursky are awe-inspiring on first viewing. The sheer size of the works are almost overwhelming, but importantly they also draw one’s eye closer to inspect the intricate detail. A good example is Engadin II (2006) where one becomes aware of what first seems to be ants, but which are are actually hundreds of skiers at play in the popular Swiss alpine valley.

Andreas GURSKY German 1955– 'Engadin II' 2006 C-Print 307.0 x 205.0 x 6.2 cm © Andreas Gursky /VG Bild-Kunst. Licensed by VISCOPY, Australia. Courtesy: Monika Sprüth / Philomene Magers, Berlin London
The scale and complexity of the subjects Gursky photographs is impossible to capture from a single vantage point, such as in the diptych, Paris, Montparnesse (1993). In order to achieve the desired effect, the artist employed digital techniques to assemble the two photographs and to alter and add details.
Similar techniques are also employed in Gursky’s photographs of the Formula 1 pit stops. Three examples of these have been selected for the exhibition, and while these images have obviously been assembled, by doing so the artist is able to capture the intensity of the competitive atmosphere in these heightened moments of activity. These works are actually composed of images from many sources, including some taken from the artist’s own studio, and digitally assembled to spectacular effect. Thomas Weski, Deputy Director of the Haus der Kunst, has described such works as F1 Boxenstopp I as ‘fictions based on facts’.
Dr Isobel Crombie, Senior Curator of Photography at the NGV goes further: ‘[Gursky] takes the principles of objectivity and, through digital imaging and the scale and sophistication of his work, pushes photography to extreme lengths’.
The works of Andreas Gursky capture the scale and detail globalisation in spectacular fashion in which seeing is not always believing.
Andreas GurskyNGV International
St Kilda Road, Victoria
21 Nov 2008 – 22 Feb 2009
Art Deco: 1910-1939 – NGV, Melbourne – Gallery
Art Deco: 1910-1939 is a comprehensive exhibition celebrating the significant period in which its glamour and style influenced design worldwide. Direct from London’s famed Victoria and Albert Museum (V&A), the exhibition is staged exclusively at the National Gallery of Victoria (NGV); the fifth exhibition in the extremely popular ‘Melbourne Winter Masterpieces’ series, and the first to feature the decorative arts with over 300 works on display.
Art Deco: 1910-1939 – NGV, Melbourne

Oliver Bernard (designer) England 1881–1939 Strand Palace Hotel staircase 1930–31 glass (lit), chrome 370.8 x 447.5 x 444.7 cm (main); 261.0 cm (stairs) Victoria and Albert Museum, London © V&A Images/Victoria and Albert Museum, London
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Kate McCurdy
Art Deco 1910-1939
Art Deco: 1910-1939 is a comprehensive exhibition celebrating the significant period in which its glamour and style influenced design worldwide. Direct from London’s famed Victoria and Albert Museum (V&A), the exhibition is staged exclusively at the National Gallery of Victoria (NGV); the fifth exhibition in the extremely popular ‘Melbourne Winter Masterpieces’ series. The first exhibition to feature the decorative arts, there are over 300 works on display.
Exhibition structure
The exhibition explores the chronological development of Art Deco, from its origins in Europe during the years leading up to the First World War, to the explosion of the movement at the 1925 Paris Exposition, and its enormous popularity and influence on design to countries across the globe. Art Deco 1910-1939 pays particular attention to the major influence of Deco in Australia, dedicating an entire section to Australian architecture, fine arts and product design.

AWA, Sydney (manufacturer) Australia 1913– 'Empire State, Fisk radiolette and cigarette box' 1936 bakelite, glass, metal 28.5 x 28.5 x 18.0 cm Private collection, Sydney © Peter Sheridan
A global influence
The scope of Art Deco’s influence is accurately represented in the exhibition by the display of a wide range of artistic media including painting, jewellery, ceramics and glassware, fashion, industrial design, graphic design, film, architecture and interior design, automotive design, photography and furniture design. Also well represented is the spread of Art Deco at a global level, with featured art and design pieces from Europe, the USA, Asia as well as Australia and New Zealand.
Origins
Art Deco first appeared in Europe, in the years before the First World War. The movement developed in many of the cities where Art Nouveau was popular, and in the years following the war Art Deco’s own popularity and influence on art and design grew quickly, its influence spreading worldwide. The highpoint of this time was the 1925 Paris Exposition Internationale des Arts Décoratifs et Industriels Modernes, the first world fair dedicated to modern decorative arts. In the 6-month duration of the exhibition, 16 million visitors came from around the world to view the latest offerings in Art Deco design, which also served to reassert France’s reputation as the arbiter of taste and producer of luxury goods, as well as the centre of fashion, internationally.

Pablo GARGALLO Spain/France 1881-1934 'Kiki de Montpamasse' 1928, cast 1978 Bronze, ed. 2/3 27.5 x 16.5 x 17.0 cm Musée d'Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris Gift of Pierette Anguera-Gargallo, 1981
Inspired by the ancient, the exotic and the Avant-Garde
Art Deco itself is influenced by many factors, most significantly by ancient and exotic inspirations as well as styles from the avant-garde movements. Motifs, symbols and imagery from exotic cultures were widely appropriated to the style of Art Deco designs. Paul Colin’s depiction of cabaret dancer Josephine Baker, featured in the Exotic section of the exhibition, illustrates Art Deco’s fascination for the exotic.
The Avant-Garde also had a strong influence on the development of the Art Deco style, in which the art of French Cubism, Orphism, Italian Futurism and Russian Constructivism gave designers a fundamentally new and modern language of forms. These ideas were applied to graphics and textile designs, decoration of ceramics and glassware, as well as architecture, interior design and photography.

Paul Colin France 1892–1985 'Josephine Baker' 1927 from 'Le Tumulte noir (The black craze)' portfolio, Paris: 'Editions d’Art Succès', 1927 lithograph and pochoir 47.3 x 63.6 cm (sheet) Victoria and Albert Museum, London © V&A Images/Victoria and Albert Museum, London © Paul Colin/ADAGP, Paris. Licensed by VISCOPY, Sydney
The 1925 Paris Exposition
The 1925 Paris Exposition can be regarded as the belated ‘launch’ of Art Deco; the moment at which the style exploded onto the main global stage, while reinstating France’s position as a trendsetter and world centre for style at the time.
The Exposition included paintings from Jean Dupas; furniture design from Jacques-Émile Rulhmann, Sir Edward Maufe, Louis Süe and André Mare; François Pompon’s sculptures including the famous Polar bear; silversmith Jean Puiforcat’s designs; glass pieces from René Lalique, Maurice Marinot and Edward Hald; glamorous jewellery by Louis Cartier and fashion by couture houses Madeleine Vionnet and Maison Myribor.
Also exhibiting at the Exposition were works from designers Jean Dunand , Henri Rapin, Pierre Legrain, Rose Adler, Thayaht, F. Gregory Brown, Gio Ponti and Josef Hoffman.
The Art Deco streamlined lifestyle
A number of these pieces are exhibited in Art Deco 1910-1939, including Louis Cartier’s Tutti Frutti strap bracelet and double-clip brooch, a complex arrangement of coloured precious stones including ruby, emerald and sapphire. These pieces were sold to Cole Porter’s wife Linda Lee Thomas, whose fame adds to the glamorous appeal of this jewellery.
Other glamorous pieces featured in the exhibition are Coco Chanel’s dresses. Extending ideas from pre-First World War designer Paul Poiret, Chanel and Jean Patou created dresses that were designed to reflect the 1920s lifestyle of attending cocktail bars and the cinema. Hair and dresses were cut shorter, the latter to allow women to dance the Charleston, and accessories were designed to match.
The Art Deco style of streamlining influenced not only products and architecture, but the streamlined silhouette was also a coveted style in dress design. A significant practice in fashion design in this time was that of the bias cut in garment construction. This involves the woven fabric being cut on the diagonal to the direction of the weave, which provides greater elasticity and more fluid draping. Designers such as Charles James used this practice to produce sleek designs in matt silk crêpe or smooth glossy satin, which were sophisticated and very Art Deco.

Tamara DE LEMPICKA Poland 1898–1980, emigrated to France 1918, worked in United States 1939–69, Mexico 1962–80 'The telephone II (Le téléphone II)' 1930 oil on wood panel 35.0 x 27.0 cm Wolfgang Joop Collection, London © Tamara De Lempicka/ADAGP, Paris. Licensed by VISCOPY, Sydney
The telephone and the skyscraper
Other highlights of the exhibition include Tamara de Lempicka’s The telephone II from 1930, and the stunning installation of the original architectural elements from the foyer of the Strand Palace Hotel from London’s West End, rescued by the V&A during the demolition of the foyer space in 1969.
Perhaps one of the most significant aspects of Art Deco’s influence on architecture is that of the skyscraper. As well as a striking symbol of modernity, the spectacle of the towering skyscraper also signifies the impact of the new modern style on the art and lifestyle of America. As the style of Art Deco spread from Europe to the United States and the rest of the world, so the American interpretation of Art Deco was shown and promoted to international audiences via the Hollywood film.
Travel and transportation
Travel is also an important inclusion in the exhibition, particularly film footage of the interior design of the Normandie, is featured in the Travel and Transportation section. The depictions of other modes of transport of this era, including grand luxury liners, streamlined trains and motor cars, as well as the exotic tourist destinations communicates the extent of Art Deco’s influence on mass culture and the modern world. Motor vehicle design is featured with the 1937 Cord 812 Westchester sedan, produced by Auburn Automobile Company in Indiana, USA, given a prominent position in the exhibition.

AUBURN AUTOMOBILE COMPANY, Auburn and Connersville, Indiana (manufacturer) United States 1900–27 'Cord 812 Westchester sedan' 1937 160.0 x 180.0 x 500.0 cm Private collection, Melbourne Photo: Courtesy of Brian Scott
Deco Down Under
One section of Art Deco 1910-1939 has an entirely Australian focus, displaying its architecture, fine arts and product design.
Historical photographs highlight the Sydney Harbour Bridge as being one of the most striking examples of this country’s architectural design, although local architecture in cities, suburbs and towns throughout Australia were strongly influenced by Art Deco. From the mass-produced objects of glassware and ceramics to distinctive handcrafted items of similar products, Australian Art Deco reflects unique national characteristics while at the same time embracing international modernity and Australia’s enthusiasm to be considered part of the global community.
This extensive exhibition is at once a nostalgic tour of the past and also a celebration of style that has never truly gone out of fashion.
Art Deco 1910-1939
28 June – 5 October 2008
NGV International
180 St Kilda Road
10am-5pm
Exhibition fees apply
Further information:
www.ngv.vic.gov.au
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Cloud Formation: A Forecast of Dream Shapes

This multimedia exhibition will feature work by architects, artists and designers: Morgan Veness, Haruka Kokubu, Didier Ryan, German Perez Tavio, Malou Dunkley, Patrick Santamaria, Billy Ryan, Sam Painter.
Described as a ‘forecast of dream shapes from concept to reality’ which will explore ‘evolving shapes, surreal qualities, elevated perceptions and floating sensations’, the exhibition will include contributions from Australia, Japan, Spain and the United Kingdom.
August 2nd-3rd, 12-5pm
Surry Hills, Sydney
Further information
Private viewing, RSVP to cloud4m@gmail.com for details of the event and location.


