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with thanks to Eric B
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IF I was running the NGV, I would also ban the wearing of bifocal glasses. How dare those people get two views of the same works.
Brad Hooper, Drummond
If we were dictator, we would make mindview-bifocals the minimum permissible aids of regard, and would encourage the use of mindview-polyfocals
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Dice (solo piano), Felix Werder - World premiere
H Factor : string quartet, Felix Werder - World premiere - performed by Silo String Quartet
Ill Tempered Clavier (solo piano), Felix Werder - Australian premiere - performed by Michael Kieran Harvey
Quinny on the Roof : percussion, Felix Werder
Recipe for disaster : percussion (2000), Felix Werder - performed by Eugene Ughetti
The Tempest : electronics by Felix Werder
Champion of the new tweaked conservative noses
... He was an ardent champion of the new, and frequently delighted in tweaking the noses of his conservative, middle-class audience. Never one to suffer fools gladly, he brought a sense of forthright aesthetic debate into Australia. To his aesthetic opponents he could be a formidable adversary, but to those he worked with, both musically and educationally, he was unfailingly polite...
read full article here
Warren Burt
9 May 2012
Some years after writing Australian Piano Music of the Twentieth Century, I find myself in a quandary yet again, faced with the problem of writing about Felix Werder...
article here
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Duck Dunn, whose simple but inventive bass playing anchored numerous hit records and helped define the sound of Memphis soul music, died early Sunday in Tokyo, where he had been on tour. He was 70.
Peter Keepnews / NYTIMES13 May 2012
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Pencil us inOpposite that newspaper letter an article by painter and critic Ronald Millar :
OVER 40 years, I've been lucky enough to draw in some of the biggest and smallest museums all over the world. A sketchbook is my constant travel companion. Images once sketched are never forgotten. There is camaraderie between artists drawing in art galleries. At the Lahore Museum in Pakistan, cups of tea were offered and a curator talked about objects as I sketched them. An attendant brought me a chair - very civilised! I have been hounded out of only two galleries - Toronto's Royal Ontario and the NGV in my native Melbourne. At an NGV exhibition, three attendants heavied me when I began to draw a Joseph Hoffman gilt brass bowl. I knew that I had seen it before. At home, I trawled through old sketchbooks and found the bowl, drawn on 31/7/1997 at the good old V&A in London. Keep drawing alive. Let artists draw, please.
Alexandra Copeland, Malvern East
Critical vision cloudy
IT'S a pity that Age critic Robert Nelson came away from the Fred Williams retrospective feeling sad. A critic's job is hard enough without being dragged along to shows that make you downright miserable. Yet I suspect he would have been vastly outnumbered by those who found the exhibition exhilarating.
read full article hereMillar's article is in response to The Age art critic Robert Nelson's review (below) of the Fred Williams retrospective :
Dogged dabs of a blobby dazzler
... The works lack atmospheric credibility and seem instead to be a dogged rehearsal of a style or manner. No feature in a Williams landscape has any anchorage: the trees have no shadow and nothing is rooted into its home. We find incongruous lines turning up on horizons or delineating the edge of trees. Spatially, they are incoherent, and little respect is paid to any botanical or geological formation.
In producing these dull spotty things, Williams was in a no-lose situation. If the works lack space, they could be lauded as abstract. If they show no sensitivity for foliage or shadow or air or water or rock, they could be credited with marvellous gestural independence and commitment to paint. And because the abstract tendency had no conceptual basis, the works could still be honoured as belonging to the great tradition of Australian landscape.
More problematically...
read full article here
Despite being pestered by NGV staff throughout my sketching visit to Fred Williams: Infinite Horizons, this was one of my most enjoyable experiences ever of another artist's endeavour.
When he was alive, it was often said of Fred that he had "a great eye". This was an acknowledgement of his visual (sic) erudition and discernment. And it was this, applied to his own artistic lineage practice, that now appeared to this NGV visitor as winnowed, masterly achievement. Though long an admirer of Fred's contribution, it had never before appeared as fresh and innovative as it did on this occasion.
The previous evening I had participated in a forum directed to young artists. As I buzzed anew, I wished they might also consider this exhibition.
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IF I was running the NGV, I would also ban the wearing of bifocal glasses. How dare those people get two views of the same works.
Brad Hooper, Drummond
Editorial, The Age18 May 2012online here
A groundswell of anger about its restrictions on visitors sketching, painting or even taking notes has the gallery scrambling to amend and defend its guidelines. And a group of eminent local artists has joined a campaign to persuade those in charge to throw open its doors freely to those who want to paint before its great works...
The gallery also revised several similar prohibitions on its Fred Williams retrospective yesterday in response to a public backlash. Several recent letters to The Age have detailed visitors being advised that sketching or writing notes was forbidden.
Gina McColl, Arts Editor16 May 2012Read full article here
Dr Vaughan said while no such prohibition existed for the permanent collection, with temporary exhibitions such restrictions were often loan conditions. These have been renegotiated for the Williams exhibition and sketching and writing would be allowed - pencils only, and crowds permitting.
Ancient painters used to practice putting dots on paper in artistic disorder. This is rather difficult. Even though you try to do it, usually what you do is arranged in some order. You think you can control it, but you cannot; it is almost impossible to arrange your dots out of order. It is the same with taking care of your everyday life. Even though you try to put people under some control, it is impossible. You cannot do it. The best way to control people is to encourage them to be mischievous. Then they will be in control in its wider sense. To give your sheep or cow a large, spacious meadow is the way to control him. So it is with people: first let them do what they want, and watch them. This is the best policy. To ignore them is not good; that is the worst policy. The second worst is trying to control them. The best one is to watch them, just to watch them, without trying to control them.
Shunryu Suzuki
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The NGV prohibits sketching, noting taking/making and photography at the exhibition Fred Williams : Infinite Horizons. What do you reckon?
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Don’t see the Fred Williams exhibition, “Infinite Horizons” at the NGV. I won’t be reviewing it because of the NGV’s “no sketching, no note taking” policy that is clearly stated at the entrance of the exhibition. I’ve written about the NGV’s “no sketching, no note taking policy” in 2008 this blog.
The reason for the prohibitions on sketching and note taking are difficult to...
CLICK HERE TO READ FULL ARTICLE
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