Foyer Exhibition

Event / For Artists

Growing Art SALA Exhibition

 

As South Australia’s home of youth arts, Carclew connects children and young people to a world of creative possibilities, as artists, learners and audiences. This exhibition offers a delightful experience of the creative potential possessed by children participating in Carclew programs.

Growing Art is a testament to our dedication to nurturing creativity and providing a platform for young artists to express themselves.

The featured artworks showcase the unique perspectives and imaginative visions of children who have participated in our programs. We believe in the power of art to inspire, educate, and bring joy. Carclew’s 2024 SALA youth exhibition celebrates the incredible potential and creativity within our community.

This exhibition presents the impressive work of children and teenagers, encompassing a diverse range of mediums. You’ll get a sneak peek into the art being created within our Schools Programming and Pom Pom studios. We invite you to experience this unique exhibition and to support the young talented artists of Carclew.

Exhibition Dates: Thursday, 8 August to Friday, 30 August 2024

Open Days and Times: 9AM-4:30PM Monday to Friday

 

Past exhibitions

Exhibition dates: 13 October 2023 – 15th January 2024
Where: Carclew House
Artists: Lia Karabatsos, Billie Nøhr, Ryan Denner, Miles Dunne, Benen Hamon, and Sean McGowan.

Immerse yourself in Carclew’s final exhibition for 2023, Zoom In / Zoom Out, presented by Curator in Residence Lia Karabatsos.

With a love for both science and art, Lia describes Zoom In, Zoom Out as: an exploration under the microscope; examining the magical microcosms that, when repeated cyclically in the world, make up the ‘macro’ of life.

The exhibition delves into the contrast between our perceptions of the world on a macro and micro scale. It’s a true celebration of how art and science can blend harmoniously to create a mesmerising exhibition.

Using reclaimed materials, emerging Adelaide young artists explore the physical, spiritual, and emotional building blocks of life by focusing on the microscopic recurrent coincidences that animate us.

Visitors will have the chance to look through a magnifying glass to explore the artwork in detail and challenge their perceptions of the world around them.

Zoom In / Zoom Out will official launch with an opening event on Friday 13 October and be on display 9am-5pm weekdays, til 15 January at Carclew House.

Featured Artists

Billie Nøhr
Graduating with Bachelor of Creative Arts degree as a printmaking major, Billie Nøhr’s artistic practice has always intended to serve as a conduit for the exploration of creativity and personal experience. Her work frequently embraces recurring motifs, high-contrast lines, vibrant colour palettes, and abstract automatism. This artistic approach allows her to play with surreal imagery drawn from the nuances of everyday life, effectively establishing a visual language that promotes mindfulness, self-reflection, and self-expression. Employing diverse drawing mediums and printmaking techniques, she conveys abstract thoughts and emotions – often emphasising the power of visual aesthetics to enhance the perceptual experience. This is celebrated particularly in the context of individuals with different sensory perceptions, such as herself as a deaf artist.

Ryan Denner
Ryan Denner is a visual artist and graphic designer living on unceded Kaurna Yerta. He is a current member of the 2023 Carclew sharehouse residency program and has been exhibited in several galleries and many foyers.

Miles Dunne
Miles Dunne, is a multi-disciplinary artist working in creative technology, design, and installation. His work centres around creating immersive experiences that entice audiences to absolve boundaries and participate in its delivery. Often inspired by his own experiences of discarding social barriers through interaction with Art, Dunne’s work is heavily grounded in exploring the interaction between light, and physical space and form. Being of a generation that experienced the rapid advancement of digital technology throughout their formative years, Dunne is very familiar with the seemingly ‘magical’ feeling of experiencing new forms of technology for the first time. He seeks to replicate this feeling through his work, by using technology in meaningful ways to deliver unique, awe inspiring and highly personal experiences to viewers. Dunne continues to expand his practice by exploring the interaction between digital forms of media and physical space, and objects, through interactive and immersive light installations.

Benen Hamon
Benen Hamon is a visual artist living and working on Kaurna Country, Adelaide, South Australia. Benen’s art practice engages with the processes of expanded painting and sculpture with found objects and conventional building materials. Benen’s references and responds to overlooked and unnoticed peculiarities within his surrounding everyday urban and suburban material environment. He incorporates processes of casting and assemblage to present a collision of found materials and cast objects. Benen aims to explore the new and unexpected outcomes that emerge from material play and thinking. Through his sculptural relief paintings Benen highlights and expresses his own curiosity in the banality of the objects and built features that occupy space in our living environment.

Sean McGowan
Adelaide/Kaurna-based artist Sean McGowan has been creating ambient electronic music inspired by the unhurried dances of clouds since 2021. Through a combination of analog synthesisers, organs, and accordion, Sean seeks to transport listeners to a place where time slows and skies flow. Each track takes its name and inspiration from one of the many species of cloud to conjure unique and meditative escapes from the day-to-day hustle and bustle.

Exhibition dates: 8th December 2022 – 27th January 2023
Where: Carclew House
Artists: Jayda Wilson

In English, Wangga (Gugada) and Wanggaga (Wirangu) translate to: language, to speak or to send a message. Bringing these words that translate the same in English together, deepens the understanding of the richness and relevance of language embedded in country. Although Gugada and Wirangu are neighboring countries on the Far West Coast of South Australia, the language differs.

Through mediums of installation, print and sound, the work in this exhibition documents Jayda’s journey of reclaiming language as a Gugada and Wirangu woman. By exploring the differences and connections between linguistics and identity, their work highlights individuality within Aboriginality, and the influence of an imposed colonial language on the process of learning their mother tongue.

Jayda’s Instagram: @jyduhh
Asha’s Instagram: @ashasouthcombe
Website: http://www.ashasouthcombe.com

Exhibition dates: 23rd September – 26th November 2022
Where: Carclew House

‘Tutu Karralikanungku’, curated by Samantha Kearney (Barkindji), with mentoring by Lilla Berry (Yankunytjatjara) and Christina Lauren.

Named for Carclew House’s Kaurna name (meaning Looking Out From Above), this retrospective exhibition looking back over 29 years of Carclew’s First Nations Programming will feature multi-disciplinary works from Carclew’s arts programs and collaborations with First Nations Elders, artists, communities, schools, and young people across South Australia.

Opening night included performances by local Anangu Inma dancers, led by Tapaya Edwards (Pitjantjatjara), speeches from key Elders and community members, and a celebration and acknowledgement of Carclew’s former Patron Uncle Lewis Yerloburka O’Brien (AO).

Throughout the exhibition there were be public art-making workshops with award-winning artists Cedric Varcoe (Ngarrindjeri/Narungga), Jay Milera (Kaurna/Narungga) and Sonya Smith (Boandik).

Exhibition dates: 4th August – 9th September 2022
Where: Carclew House
Artists: Keira Simmons, Sam Lau, Wolfie Genesis, Hannah Coleman, Thea Martin and Chloe Noble

Curator-In-Residence, Asha Southcombe presents Carclew’s SALA 2022 Exhibition: Embodiment.

This year the Sharehouse artists in residence have been working in mediums of painting, sound, film, music, sculpture, and mixed media to present an enhanced experience for SALA audiences.

Embodiment embodies very personal feelings from these young emerging artists who have transformed them into a multidimensional exhibition reflecting on their own personal identity, encounters, experiences and artistic practice.

Embodiment represents an immersive, multi-sensory experience dispersed across the Carclew grounds. Through engagement with art installations and performace, this exhibition brings attention to your own presence in the space and is influenced by your interactions with the work. It encourages you to become more aware of how we each individually experience and interpret the world in different ways.

Exhibition dates: 29th June – 29th July 2022
Where: Carclew Foyer Gallery
Artists: Bianca Pibworth, Marie Thong, Camille Fitzgerald, Lauren Bzowy and Ruhi Yangangi

Sharing and documenting memories is a way to pass them on and hope that they will be remembered; but the more we share our memories and reminisce on them, the more they fade and are altered.

Ephemeral Memory explores this through the works of Bianca Pibworth, Marie Thong, Camille Fitzgerald, Lauren Bzowy and Ruhi Yangangi. Using mediums ranging from textile, poetry, painting, ceramics, and film, each artist reflects on how we document and share our memories, as well as the effects time can have on altering our perception of them. The artists explore memories of their own, ones that have been passed on to them and nostalgia, to remind us of our own memories and the ephemerality of each passing moment.

Exhibition dates: 25th March – 29th April 2022
Where: Carclew Foyer Gallery
Artists: Talitha Benson, Lucy Keatch and Renee Pastore

Contemplating Balance, curated by Asha Southcombe, seeks to explore where the line is drawn between control and acceptance of the uncontrollable within prints by Talitha Benson, the performance work of Lucy Keatch and sculptural installations by Renee Pastore.

Finding this balance between control and the uncontrollable is a constant and ever changing challenge that is affected by our past experiences and knowledge. It affects how we deal with our own emotions, relationships, the decisions we make and our outlook on life. The artists showcased in Contemplating Balance navigate the boundaries of control through their medium, personal experience, identity and emotions, in an attempt to understand where this balance lies.

Exhibition dates: 18th February – 10th March 2022
Where: Carclew Foyer Gallery
Artist: Mali Isabel
“I’ve always had a love for colours, how it can be used to compliment or contrast with another. Colour is everything, it is joy, it is energy, and it is soulful. But most importantly, I believe that nobody can feel sad while looking at a rainbow, and I want to spread that positivity around the world.”  – Mali Isabel

Drawing inspiration from the old proverb ‘in a sky full of clouds, be a rainbow’, these artworks create a kaleidoscope of colour throughout the gallery, creating an atmosphere of joy. This energy, coupled with the uplifting and empowering titles encourage viewers to confront the challenges of life with a mindset of positivity and hopefulness – choosing to embrace the good, instead of focusing on the negative.

 

Exhibition dates: 12 November 2021 – 14 January 2022
Where: Carclew Foyer Gallery
Curator: Christina Lauren
Artist: Wolfie Genesis

Wolfie Genesis’ ‘Everything is Alive and Looking At You’ is an undeniable ode to the powerful nature of the human mind to find patterns of sentience everywhere we look. Their series that took inspiration from their experience in finding a series of eucalypts ‘looking back’ at them, explores the parallels in all living creatures and beings to ourselves. The possibility of all life being sentient is somewhat unnerving, and in some capacity, unimaginable.

Wolfie Gensis’ works hold gravity in their ability to somehow portray this strangeness, the intertwining of life, death, being and perceiving through strange depictions of creatures. These creatures hold an underlying humanistic quality, with an alienness depicted in their forms and expressions, that actually feel quite familiar to human emotion. A visual portrayal of how it sometimes feels to be alive through a deflection to animalistic representation, Wolfie Genesis challenges the effectiveness of human portraiture through this exhibition, and its need to be the only route to act as a reflection to the human viewer. Wolfie Genesis’ stylistic ability contributes greatly to this visceral response through their works. Recognisably holding inspiration and roots from street/pop artists of the 80’s, such as Keith Haring and Jean-Michel Basquiat, there is an element of punk to the series. Wolfie Genesis captures a nostalgic likeness within their paintings, and revitalises 80/90s street pop-art ambiguity within the contemporary scene.

Exhibition dates: 6 August – 28 October 2021
Where: Carclew Foyer Gallery, Ballroom & Morning Room
Curator: Christina Lauren
Artists: George Gilles, Mali Isabel, Harrison Vial, Jamila Main, Maddie Grammatopoulos, Motus Collective (Felicity Boyd and Zoe Gay)

Inspired by ‘refraction’, the act of light passing through a glass vessel at one angle on entry, and refracting to another upon exit, the Carclew Sharehouse Residents act similarly, with creativity. Each artist utilises the innate human experience of creativity and creation that enters into their being, refracts it at a different, unique angle, to produce a distinctive style or channel of art.

In this analogy, not only can the artist’s being or body be thought of as similar to a glass vessel, but so can Carclew House. All eight residents practice from the Carclew House and allow its presence to influence and shape their work. A unique annual experience, the 2021 Carclew residents have a tremendous amount of talent, creativity, opinions, narratives, experiences and techniques to share.

The foyer and ballroom galleries will transform into a kaleidoscope of artistic refractions, with live performances, an interactive film experience, vivid and vibrant paintings, animations and illustrations. With topics explored such as disability, mental health, human connection, belonging and physical form and movement, the residents showcase not only their diverse talents, but their deeply personal and moving experiences.

Exhibition dates: 16 June – 22 July 2021
Where: Carclew Foyer Gallery
Curator: Christina Lauren
Artist: Jake Yang
Jake Yang | Introspection, curated by Christina Lauren, discovers the multitude of unique talents possessed by Jake Yang, an emerging artist currently studying a Bachelor of Visual Arts at Adelaide Central School of Art.
Jake Yang | Introspection delves into Yang’s self-reflective, contemplative and identity explorative work through a wide range of media; from ceramics to oil paint to fabric paint on curtain material, Yang’s adaptability is paramount. Unearthing the complexity within while raising discourse on ‘duality in identity’, where Yang explores being ‘ethnically Chinese raised within the Australian culture’, each work presents as an insight into the life of Yang.
Born and raised in Adelaide, Jake Yang is currently studying a Bachelor of Visual Arts at Adelaide Central School of Art. His evolving practice explores various disciplines, notably sculpture, drawing and painting. Yang’s practice is based on an exploration of identity and self, with strong links to his Chinese heritage and the influences of contemporary Western culture. Yang’s combination of traditional and non-traditional media with his colourful thematic references results in an engaging and diverse practice.

Exhibition dates: 6 November 2020 – 27 January 2021
Where: Carclew Foyer Gallery
Curator: Christina Lauren
Artist: Gemma Rose BrookNicole CliftKienan McKay

Relaxing Tensions, curated by Christina Lauren, seeks to unfold the complex experiences of the 2020 Carclew resident artists Gemma Rose Brook and Nicole Clift and writer Kienan McKay faced during this year, represented through their deeply reflective yet diverse works.

Exhibition dates: 19 August 2020 – 28 October 2020
Where: Carclew Foyer and Ballroom Galleries
Curator: Christina Lauren
Artists: Carly Dodd (Kaurna, Narungga, Ngarrindjeri)Cedric Varcoe (Ngarrindjeri, Narungga), Chantal Henley (Nughi, Mununjali), Iteka Sanderson-Bromley (Adnyamathanha, Narungga, Yarluyandi)Jimblah (Larrakia), Mali Isabel (Arabana, Kokatha), Rachael Anderson (Adnyamathanha)Shane Mankitya Kookaburra (Guwa, Wulli Wulli)Temaana Sanderson-Bromley (Adnyamathanha, Narungga, Yarluyandi)

Gathered places emphasis on the importance of appreciating, listening to and understanding First Nations peoples’ voices. The need for racial equity has always existed and been fought for, yet recent events and protests have propelled this fight. This exhibition serves as a gathering point for individuals to come together to support and celebrate First Nations artists and their strong ability to express their culture and experiences through visually and conceptually compelling contemporary art.

Gathered 360

Exhibition dates: 1 February 2020  – 13 August 2020
Where: Carclew Foyer Gallery
Curator: Christina Massolino
Artist: Ella-Maude Wilson

Ella-Maude’s seven-piece photographic series Fig Leaves explores ‘the relationship between photography and nudity within contemporary media,’ through depicting herself as a Eurocentric marble sculpture, self-censoring her breasts and genitals. Paying reference to nude Renaissance sculptures and imagery, such as Michelangelo’s statue of David (c. 1501-1504), the photographs possess a strong marble-like quality in their visual paleness and posed, structural composition. Remarking on the ‘Fig Leaf Campaign,’ the obsession within Christianity, particularly during the Middle Ages, to censor genitalia within art, Ella-Maude draws comparisons to censorship within contemporary art, particularly photography. In her artist statement, Ella-Maude speaks of the connection with how in our contemporary society, ‘sexting and pornography have influenced societal understandings of nudity and consent within photography’ which makes it difficult for society to accept artistic ‘nude’ images, even if they have been ‘fig-leafed’, or covered by the artist’s own hands.

Exhibition dates: 14 November 2019  – 31 January 2020
Where: Carclew Foyer Gallery
Curator: Jack Mc Bride
Artists: Austin Carr, Maria Petroff, Grace Plunkett, Daniele De Nardis, Emily Egglestone, Frances Rogers

It’s human nature to explore, capture and share experiences that have an impact on us. However, technology has not only changed how we consume works of art; it has changed how we create, critique, share and exhibit it. No Flash Photography aims to explore these notions of digital engagement with artist’s and their work, exhibiting works from six emerging South Australian artists who have never exhibited before. The exhibition plays as a sarcastic conjunction with the rationale, forcefully asking the audience, would you know of these artists and their work if you didn’t see them?.

Exhibition dates: 7 August – 25 October 2019
Where: Carclew Foyer Gallery
Curator: Jack Mc Bride
Artists: Loren Orsillo, Felicity Townsend

Exploring both compliance and rebellion against rules, conventions and forces that construct our reality, both artists employ installation to push boundaries both real and imagined. From the fundamental interconnectedness of sub-atomic forces through to mundane specimens of material culture, this exhibition examines the micro-conditions that collectively govern our lived realities.

Exhibition dates: 6 June -26 July 2019
Where: Carclew Foyer Gallery
Curator: Jack Mc Bride
Artists: Seiichi Kobayashi

In recent history, the idea or concept behind a work of art has been an important focal point and measure of what makes good art, art. Seiichi Kobayashi resists meaning, and allows his paintings to just be, with works becoming a rolling sensation for viewers. The purpose of art for Seiichi is not separate from the purpose of technology and with this; he pushes past traditional painting and brush stroke methods, instead painting through silkscreen to create new possibility.
Functional challenges viewers to look beyond the conceptual and into an exhibition of actuality.

Exhibition dates: 28 March -17 May 2019
Where: Carclew Foyer Gallery
Curator: Jack Mc Bride
Artists: Christina Massolino, Felicity Townsend and Loren Orsillo

“We cannot change the fact that people act in a certain way. We cannot change the inevitable. The only thing we can do is play on the one string we have, and that is our attitude.” – Charles Swindoll.

The inevitable or the concept of inevitability is the quality of being certain of what is going to happen or the outcome. Change can often be difficult for an individual to accept; these conflicts are inevitable to the human existence and are a necessary part of human life. All connected by the human condition, our quest is to discover who we are and what we want. We are constantly learning about ourselves, and those who surround us. Even at this point in humanity, we are only just beginning to recognise the most precious, dynamic and valuable facets of our lives.

South Australian artists Felicity Townsend, Loren Orsillo and Christina Massolino explore themes of inevitability and the dynamics of the human condition in their exhibited works. Townsend’s work explores the concept of inevitability through change and the grief that can accompany this, particularly when memories fade, creating a sense of loss. In other works, this is portrayed through the inevitably shifting sense of ‘home’ in a childhood of changed locations. Inevitability is explored also through Orsillo’s works, depicting our human attachment to ‘things’ and the significant value we place on objects to form our sense of self, ultimately becoming victims of our capitalist climate. Through Orsillo’s work, explored is the notion that our peripheral vision is inevitably littered with ‘stuff’ however the meaning or hidden language within these objects is what’s uncertain. Lastly, Massolino explores the dynamics of the human condition through multi-layered works, commenting on the contrast between our physical and mental existence and the power of the human psyche. Works touch upon the various struggles in our mind and our often strange perceptions of self.

Exhibition dates: 12 December 2018 – 14 March 2019
Where: Carclew Foyer Gallery
Curator: Gabi Lane
Artists: Ruby Chew, Jonathon George, Arlon Hall, Mitch Hearn and Jessica Martin

When we are young, we see the world in vivid colour, shape and textures. For children, art becomes an essential conduit for uninhibited self-expression and amazement. It is not just about creativity, but about the person they are becoming while they are creating.

Pom Pom, Carclew’s contemporary art space located in Davoren Park, offers hands-on workshops led by leading artists who support children and their families with enchanting contemporary arts experiences. South Australian artists Ruby Chew, Jonathan George, Arlon Hall, Mitch Hearn and Jessica Martin translate their individual practices into exciting experiences to engage the children of Pom Pom.

The exhibition Never Grow Up explores how these artists use their visual arts practice to cultivate the creative lives of children who visit Pom Pom. In order to create workshops inspired by their own artistic practice, these artists must channel a childlike sense of wonder and curiosity. The artworks celebrate the work of these local artists transformed for, and in turn inspired by, the children of Pom Pom.

Exhibition dates: 3 October 2018 – 30 November 2018
Where: Carclew Foyer Gallery
Curator: Gabi Lane
Artists: Ruby Allegra, Chelsea Farquhar, Chiranjika Grasby, They/Them Collective
Opening performance by W.M.N

Curator’s statement

Queer has become a catchall term for sexual and gender minorities who do not conform to what has been called ‘heteronormative’ labels. History has had a habit of objectifying and sexualising the queer body. In this exhibition, the artists use their bodies to express their identities. By asserting control of how their own bodies are governed, the artists reaffirm consent over the queer body. Then using their bodies, conceal and reveal the facets of their experiences.

In Gestures, queerness represents broadly. The work reflects varied experience and unique personal expression by each artist. Material and performative processes are central and abstraction manifested. Traces of movement reflect experiences of the self and self-representation, codifying the queer experience. The exhibition exists within an expanded field, which resists categorisation and labelling, giving audiences the opportunity to recognise and realise new ideas.

Exhibition dates: 14 June 2018 – 23 July 2018
Where: Carclew Foyer Gallery
Curator: Gabi Lane
Artist: Steph FullerBernadette KlavinsSarah Sturm and Sorcha Yelland.

Curator’s statement

Solastagia is a term, coined by philosopher Glenn Albrecht, that describes the emotional distress caused by environmental damage.   It describes what sensitive people already feel but cannot express in language. The exhibiting artists in Discontented Nature endeavour to distil wider social and environmental concerns and visually articulate them in their work.

It seems, as a society, although infatuated by nature’s capacity for spectacle and omnipotence,; we are dismissive of our own impact. The work in Discontented Nature references our existence amidst the Anthropocene, an era of significant human impact and environmental upheaval. Moreover, these representations become a metaphor for the human condition; there is an undeniable symbiotic relationship between human beings and nature. We see ourselves both as part of nature and affected by it.

Discontented Nature is a meditation on how we, as human beings, effect change in the world we live in and how it, in turn, can inform our understanding of ourselves. The body becomes a site in which tensions and harmonies with the natural world are played out.

Exhibition dates: 11 April 2018 – 31 May 2018
Where: Carclew Foyer Gallery
Curator: Gabi Lane
Artist: Rosina Possingham

Curatorial Statement
This exhibition marks the first solo show for emerging Adelaide artist Rosina Possingham. The series of photographs in this exhibition is shown as a narrative characterised by synergistic connections; between the photographer and her female subject, the woman and nature, and the woman and her own body.

Through complete immersion in the natural world, the woman comes into her identity, emboldened by the restorative power of nature and confident in her body. Through an Australian landscape equal in vigour, Possingham channels female empowerment.

The female figure has long had a place within the historical art canon, bound by its association with sex and submission. SYNERGY reclaims the female form and invites us to examine a woman as a part of nature’s beauty. Possingham captures the intimate journey of discovery and transformation, from states of calm to euphoric elation.

Exhibition dates: 1 March 2018 – 10 April 2018
Where: Carclew Foyer Gallery
Curator: Gabi Lane
Artists: Felicity TownsendClaire Lontis and Anna Revesz

Curatorial Statement

Written words have a clear and finite meaning, each word has a definition and each sentence a string of parts which form a cohesive whole. Images, on the other hand, are potentially infinite in their meaning. When words are located within the realm of art, the reader becomes a viewer and together written word and image find new meaning.

With and Without Words explores the interaction between text and visual imagery and invites new ways of perceiving meaning. Artists Anna Revesz and Felicity Townsend and writer Claire Lontis use the interplay between text and image to thoughtfully explore the concepts which underpin their work. Throughout the series of works presented, nature emerges as a common vessel for symbolic meaning.

Exhibition dates: 1 August – 24 September
Curator: Olivia Kubiak
Artists: Emma Sullivan and Imogen Porteous

Women In Abstraction, was part of the South Australian Living Artists (SALA) and Feminist Renewal Art Network (FRAN) festivals.

We don’t often hear about great female abstract artists. Abstraction developed during the modern period and, as Griselda Pollock writes in Modernity and the Spaces of Femininity, ‘all those canonised as the initiators of modern art [were] men.’ Emma Sullivan and Imogen Porteous will deconstruct traditional notions of femininity through abstraction, challenging the hierarchy of this seemingly patriarchal style. They aim to invert the female gaze so that she looks inwards rather than outwards.

Women In Abstraction was curated by Carclew’s Curator in Residence Olivia Kubiak and featured artworks by Carclew’s Artists in Residence Imogen Porteous, Emma Sullivan, utilising Carclew’s Ballroom Gallery.

Exhibition dates: 5 June – 30 July 2017
Curator: Olivia Kubiak
Artists: Emilija KasumovicHanah WilliamsTim CasieroSarah Boese and Jack Lowe

Curatorial Statement

I have always had an obsession with Spain’s romantic artist, Francisco Goya and his concern for the fate of humanity. Goya’s internal conflict came as a result of “man’s duty to be rational, and of the irrational elements in nature which ma[de] this task so hard” (Michael Levey, Rococo to Revolution). Unlike artists before him, he did not glorify war. Rather, Goya depicted torture with satire and darkness, commenting on the contradiction of humanity’s inhumane and disgusting treatment of one another – and for what?

As a result, he frequently depicted themes connected with night and darkness. He was fascinated with the irrational nature of dreaming and the fact that, unlike when you are awake, when one dreams, one never knows what is going to happen. This exhibition is titled after one of my favourite pieces by Goya titled, The Sleep of Reason Produces Monsters. “While the artist dreams, deserted by reason, night monsters float frighteningly about him.” (Michael Levey, Rococo to Revolution).This etching shows Goya sleeping with his head resting on a table while surrounded by an imagined gathering of giant owl and bat-like creatures. To his side sits a peaceful, wide-eyed lynx, juxtaposing the sleeper’s disturbed state of mind. These haunting creatures emerge from the unconscious.

In this exhibition, the artists will create works depicting what one sees when all reason and rational thought is abandoned. How do our dark thoughts translate into haunting nightmares when we are in insensible states? Artists guide us through how they link conscious and unconscious states of mind and reveal how unbearable monsters are created when one’s imagination is abandoned by all reason. Our psychological awareness can be our biggest enemy. Imagination is the mother of art and the basis of curiosity and wonder.  How are the artists haunted by these nightmares and how do these visions translate into their work?

Exhibition dates: 10 Apr – 28 May 2017
Where: Carclew Foyer Gallery
Curator: Olivia Kubiak
Artists: Christina Peek, Georgina Chadderton, Amanda Ng, Tayla Carlaw

Curatorial Statement

The rococo was an artistic style and movement which started in France in the 18th century. This movement has always fascinated me with its inviting style. It is charismatic, whether it be the elaborate detailing and luxurious gold finishes of its decorative arts or the soft pastels colours used in its images of cherubs, nymphs, and young women picnicking dressed in their pretty gowns.  However, the themes that surround the rococo fascinate me even more. Love, flirtation, pleasure, eroticism, myth, youth and playfulness dominate the genre, which is captivating in itself as there are not many other art movements that purely depict the light-hearted things in life. Leisure and play were the subjects at the forefront of rococo art.

Echoes of Rococo aims to reflect how these ideas, so strongly associated with the rococo period,  are still prevalent in the work of today’s contemporary artists. The artists cheekily and playfully express the associated themes of this movement as they reinterpret the rococo. I want to explore how these themes are characterised in art in 2017. I think that the spontaneity and playfulness of this movement reverberate through contemporary art, and that wistful allegories have an important place in this exhibition which disengages us from reality- even if just for a little while. The rococo implied a life of leisure, which is something most of us desire – after all, who doesn’t enjoy a bit of fun?

The four artists in this exhibition mirror themes of the rococo in very different ways. Georgina’s work is orientated with innocence and youth, and her charming sketches take us all back to our childhoods. The work of Christina is orientated around romance and her works are inspired by love stories. Tayla focuses on beauty and women in the natural world, and Amanda is fascinated with myths and eroticism.

Exhibition dates: 23 February – 24 March 2017
Where: Carclew Foyer Gallery
Curator: Olivia Kubiak
Artists: Alaska Young, Cara Pearson, Gabrielle Cirocco, Lucy Timbrell and Viray Thach

Curatorial Statement:
A place can leave a lasting impression on people; it can be nostalgic, familiar or possess a certain charm. This exhibition explores how these impressions can be preserved and how artists respond to and work with the urban environment. Beyond These Walls aims to portray how the architecture, people, nature and popular image-making have impacted artists and what it is about a certain place that speaks to them. The artists are observers and document cultural experiences and this is demonstrated through the subject matter in their art. They are the critics and fringe dwellers of society and may be considered as ‘outsiders’ examining living culture and society. Some artists situate their work in the urban space by working on the streets and others by creating work in studios which have been influenced by the way culture is manifested in the city and beyond. Art influenced by the urban environment tells individual stories of the artists and Beyond These Walls will give the audience a glimpse into what these stories are about. The artists showcased in Beyond These Walls are actively making statements about contemporary visual culture in the lived environment. What role does the living environment have on our everyday lives? Does it say something about us? Often it reflects societal and cultural priorities and aims to find what is important.

Art can be peaceful or radical, hostile or sympathetic, impressively executed or childish, unique or imitative but all artists who contribute to this type of art have formed some sort of connection with the lived environment and understand how to communicate within it or outside of it. They form a connection with the place and its citizens and their art can be statements of protest, criticism, satire, humour, beauty or rebellion – urban spaces and natural environments can be a cultural hub of ideas and expression. Beyond These Walls will demonstrate these ideas and show the audience artists engage with the urban environment and beyond.

Exhibition dates: 1 December 2016 – 10 February 2017
Where: Carclew Foyer Gallery
Curator: Ingrid Goetz
Artist: Chelsea Nichols

Curatorial Statement:
I am fascinated by the way that we curate our lives online – what we share, and what remains hidden. We are a generation that has grown up with social media and even if we wanted to, we can’t escape it. It’s worked its way into our personal and professional lives, it’s too late to untangle ourselves from it now.

To me Chelsea’s works speak to the idea that behind the images of perfection we see on our screens lie people who are many faceted, with darker sides and sharper edges. By examining these fractured faces in their overly ornate frames, the viewer is left to wonder -if we could see past the high gloss and fairy floss we share with each other on social media, what, or who, would we see?
Ingrid Goetz, Curator

We use social media to self-curate an image & construct an identity piece-by-piece, creating a projection of ourselves that fits an ideal. Using candy colours and embellishments, I create the vague shape of a face. My painting style is my own personal brand of torture. I construct an image and then proceed to tear it to pieces in an attempt to create a balance between opposing marks. I force elements into the image, layer upon layer, until an equilibrium is reached between what is revealed and what is obscured.
Chelsea Nicholls, Artist

Exhibition dates: 29 September – 25 November 2016
Where: Carclew Foyer Gallery
Curator: Ingrid Goetz
Artists: Anna BailesAlexandra LekisGeorgina Chadderton, Jack Lowe and Viray Thach

Carclew’s Digital Art exhibition is showcasing work by emerging artists who create their work either wholly or partly in a digital format. Highlighting the versatility of the medium, the exhibition will showcase different styles, subjects and themes.

Digital Art is curated by Carclew’s Curator in Residence Ingrid Goetz and features artworks by Anna Bailes, Alexandra Lekis, Georgina Chadderton, Jack Lowe and Viray Thach.

Exhibition dates: 22 May – 24 July 2016
Curator: Ingrid Goetz
Artists: Lana Adams, Steph Fuller, Maya Kolega and Alice Blanch

Dreaming / Awake explores the way in which images can inspire in us a dream-like state, can change our mood and convey emotions, simply by capturing a moment in time in a certain way.

Through the lenses of Alice Blanch and Lana Adams we are transported to New Zealand, a country we may never have visited. While viewing these works we imagine ourselves to be in the expansive, majestic and visceral landscape, which can inspire feelings of wonder, perhaps a sense of calm, or even wanderlust. We are in a dream and yet we are awake.

Maya Kolega’s work carries us away into a dreamscape that plays with the idea of partially forgotten dreams, capturing the moment of waking, the identity of our dream self instantly forgotten. Steph Fuller’s images pull the viewer into a place and time, a feeling and a state of mind, through the way in which she captures her world, as though for the first time, after the death of a loved one.

These images inspire feelings within us, we are enveloped by them, transported to another realm… it’s as though we are dreaming and yet we are awake.

Exhibition dates: 30 March – 22 May 2016
Curator: Ingrid Goetz
Artists: Seirian Kitchener, Aida Azin, Chelsea Nicholls and Jessica Nolan

What shapes our identity?

How do the spaces that we inhabit, our family history or ethnicity, memories of events (real or imagined), or our appearance contribute to our sense of who we are as unique individuals? How do these and many other influences interact to contribute to our sense of identity?

Strands of Identity illustrates some of the different strands that weave together in the process of forming our identity.

Exhibition dates: 19 November 2015 – 31 January 2016
Curator: Lauren Mustillo
Artists: Véra Ada, Elise Bonato, Olivia Kathigitis, Jenna Pippett, Tara Rowhani-Farid

Experimental Self Portaraiture brings together a group of emerging artists who have turned their gaze back on themselves, looking at an expanded field of self-portraiture in contemporary art. The self-portrait operates as affirmation of existence and agency in the world. Functioning as an extension of self, the self-portrait can extend beyond a purely physical documentation, expressing an inner state of being. The self-portrait can also jostle in a state between truth and fiction – revealing and concealing – performing the self. Through the use of self-portraiture, I hope the artists will explore their relationship to their bodies and their own personal worlds; constructing identity and narrative and experimenting with pushing the boundaries of what portraiture is.

Exhibition dates: 18 September – 16 November, 2015
Curator: Lauren Mustillo
Featuring: Sarah Thame

This and the other
Sarah Thame’s work operates in a state of in-between-ness. Her delicate black and white prints are simultaneously of this world and other-worldly. Familiar imagery from the natural world immaterialises into abstract forms, evoking a sense of the micro and the macro of the cosmos.

Imagery undulates and spills over itself, free flowing. These abstracted worlds are perceptually disorientating, without any clear indicator of anything fixed or solid, creating a sense of infinite space.

These abstracted forms are visceral and evocative, expressing the emotional and the personal, used to explore external world, mediating and exploring the interconnectedness of our many states of being.

Exhibition dates: 18 May until 16 July 2015
Curator: Lauren Mustillo
Featuring: Soroor Soolaaf Masieh

Through my eyes is a collection of figurative and portraiture paintings by Ahwazian artist Soroor Soolaaf Masieh that concentrate on portraying a spectrum of human emotions. To see the world through another’s eyes is to attempt to understand a different point of perspective on a truly human level. By portraying a variety of emotions, Soroor aims to instil the viewer with a sense of commonality that spans across race, ethnicity, age and gender, to highlight similarities rather than differences.

Exhibition dates: 9 December 2014 until 27 February 2015
Curator: Caitlin Eyre and Craig Robert Middleton
Featuring: Lana Adams, Alice Blanch, Lucy Brewin, Eric W Brumfield, Natasha Filippi, Mitch Hearn, Madeline Reece and Lucy Timbrell

South Australia boasts long summers, stunning beaches and award-winning wine, events and festivals. The unique landscape and culture is a muse to artists in all creative fields. This group exhibition explores the use of South Australian landscapes, icons and landmarks as subjects for young South Australian artists. The works presented reference different experiences, meanings and ideas of what it is to be South Australian and the aesthetic splendour of our great southern state. South Australia: it’s Heaps Good.

Exhibition dates: 13 November – 5 December 2014
Curator: Craig Robert Middleton
Artists: Chris Callaghan and Julia Townsend

La Danse Macabre presents the work of two contemporary visual artists working in two opposing mediums who explore the theme of death in very different ways. Death is something that, as humans, we cannot escape. The theme of death has always had an important place in art history and has been interpreted in countless ways to remind us of the inevitability of death and the fragility of life. Julia Townsend and Chris Callaghan present just a slice of how diversely Australian contemporary artists explore the human preoccupation with death.

Exhibition dates: 16 October – 11 November 2014
Curator: Caitlin Eyre
Artists: Amy McNamara

Technicolour Dreaming presents a vibrant and eclectic series of watercolour and mixed media illustrations by emerging local artist Amy McNamara. The artist combines bright colours, ornate patterns and a delicate painting style to produce highly atmospheric and dreamlike depictions of both real and imagined worlds. Vividly coloured and gracefully rendered, this charming series brings light to the enchanting inner world of the artist, deftly blurring the boundaries between the realms of reality and the surreal.

Exhibition dates: 14 September – 15 October 2014
Curator: Craig Middleton
Artists: Lucy Brewin

Urban Playground presents a new body of work by emerging artist Lucy Brewin. Approximately 20 works will be exhibited that present a deconstruction of the New York City landscape. Preoccupation with landscape and cityscape imagery is ever present in the history of art and this exhibition embodies how contemporary artists continue to reinterpret land and cityscapes. The works take on the artist’s own reminiscence of the city while creating a sense of nostalgia for viewers. Lucy’s watercolours are thoughtful representations of travels past and a New York state of mind.

Exhibition dates: 4 July – 5 September 2014
Curator: Caitlin Eyre
Artists:Jennifer Allnut, Meaghan Coles, Kate Kurucz and Katie Long

Lady Face explores the representation of women in contemporary art and culture by showcasing a survey of female portraiture by young female visual artists. Throughout the history of art, paintings of women have largely been commissioned and produced by men for the pleasure of the male gaze. Lady Face counters this tradition by celebrating the insight and skill of female artists in representing the physical, psychological and emotional attributes of their female subjects through the intimacy of portraiture.

Exhibition dates: 31 May – 2 July 2014
Curator: Craig Robert Middleton
Artists: Samantha Webb

Unconquered Spirit explores an artistic and personal connection to the land, particularly taking influence from the traditions of trance states, spirit guides and natural connections. The exhibition features illustration, portraiture and wood works that explore the themes of storytelling and the environment. It is the artist’s active connection to the natural work that is paramount to the execution of her work. The exhibition boasts strong associations with and is representative of a nomadic lifestyle; the desire to wander, walk and travel is synonymous with a need to collect, gather and create.

Exhibition dates: 29 April – 28 May 2014
Curator: Caitlin Eyre
Artists: Alex Carletti

Alex Carletti is a young South Australian contemporary visual artist and self-styled yogi whose artistic practice is primarily focused on exploring themes of mysticism, mythology and spirituality.

Genesis offers a visual exploration of the mysticism surrounding the human lifecycle and particularly focuses on the constantly regenerating cycle of life and death. The exhibition features powerful depictions of the womb as a sacred and nurturing space at the beginning of each cycle and mystical representations of death at each conclusion. This narrative of existence emphasises the circular nature of life and death and the spiritual need to return to the womb between each cycle in order to reconnect with the source of life and all creation.

Exhibition dates: 29 April – 14 May 2014
Curator: Caitlin Eyre
Artists: Akex Carletti

Hieros Gamos explores the sacred harmony that results from forging together two equal yet opposite elements, namely the masculine and the feminine. The exhibition’s title is drawn from the Greek word for ‘holy marriage’ and refers to a unifying sexual rite that is enacted between a god and goddess.

This marriage represents the perfect union of masculine and feminine elements and suggests the sacred balance that is gained from honouring the genders equally. Through this body of work, the artist seeks to honour the inherent nature of masculine and feminine elements while imparting the balancing effect produced by perfect duality.

Exhibition dates: 3 December – 10 January 2014
Curator: Jemimah Davis
Artists: Kate Kurucz

Through the body of work showcased in Likeness, emerging artist Kate Kurucz explores different facets of portraiture and what it can provoke – envy, desire, empathy and curiosity. Kate uses the luscious materiality of oil paint to depict the identities of those that regularly surround her. For Kate, this process of working is a reaction to our natural instinct of wanting to create personal connections. Not only do we relish in the technical expertise of Kate’s paint work but we also become intrigued about the identity and character of the faces that she portrays. Kate is an emerging artist who graduated with honours from Adelaide Central School of Art in 2012 and is one of three co-founders of Mint Artist Studios.

Exhibition dates: 4 October – 31 October 2013
Curator: Jemimah Davis
Artists: Dominique Keeley

Non-threatening Boys explores past and present teen idols in all of their pastel, glittering glory. Dominique Keeley’s paintings are inspired by the imagery and language of ‘pop’ from magazines, advertisements and poster pin ups. Her works investigate the notion of young men as a consumable commodity marketed to a female audience and the subsequent conflict that arises between the image and individual.

Michael Jackson is still a pretty young thing, Justin Bieber wants to be your boyfriend and One Direction let you know what makes you beautiful. These sweet frozen moments of transient boyhood, beauty and fame. Who are they or where are they now?

Exhibition dates: 4 September – 30 September 2013
Curator: Serena Wong
Artists: Margaret Lloyd and Jennifer Allnutt

now you see me is an exploration into the ambiguities found in the relationships between animals and humans. It represents in between spaces, whose fluidity allows us to permeate the definite lines of categorisation that supposedly separate us from animals. When giving human traits to animals we are anthropomorphising, yet we lack a similar language to investigate the way in which we use animals to disassociate ourselves with qualities we do not value or perceive in human nature.  now you see me is a narrative between the fantasy and the real, the animal and the human.

Exhibition dates: 2 August – 31 August 2013
Curator: Jemimah David
Artists: Jayson Fox

A narratively driven body of work from Jayson Fox depicting what it means to be a social rogue, a miscreant, an uncouth youth and a street urchin. thepilsburyharlet.com

Exhibition dates: 3 August – 23 August 2013
Curator: Carly Snoswell and Katia Carletti
Artists: Carly Snoswell and Katia Carletti

An exhibition by Carclew’s 2013 artists in residence for South Australian Living Artists Festival 2013

Carly Snoswell and Katia Carletti explore concepts surrounding the home and the objects, images, and rituals that occupy this space.

Exhibition dates: 10 June – 27 July 2013
Curator: Serena Wong
Artists: Donovan Christie

When we look at the city how much do we actually see? Donovan Christie’s snapshots of the city cut and paste the objects of our everyday lives, bringing them into focus with acrylic and canvas. These paintings of the streets remind us of what surrounds us, what we walk past on the way to work, in the alleyway beside our favourite bar, or next door to the best coffee in town. They de-construct the blur of our day to day life, bringing the streets of Adelaide into view.

Exhibition dates: 1 May – 20 May 2013
Curator: Jemimah Davis
Artists: Zoe Woods and Sam Trevaskis

Microanalysis showcased works by two South Australian emerging artists Zoe Woods and Sam Trevaskis, investigating the visible regularities of form found in the natural world. Each artist responds to their observations and presents rather contrasting outcomes, both visually and materially.

Through her glass work, Zoe Woods alludes to the fantastic and exotic world of microscopic nature. The distortive and reflective qualities of thick glass explore patterns and forms found in our microscopic world. Her works are an investigation into the ability of the object to elicit the same feeling of wonder that is experienced when looking through a microscope lens.

Sam’s work investigates unexpected relationships between nature and the industrialised world through the abstract representation of camouflage. His work explores functions of patterns in nature: to disorient spatially, and to appear at once alluring, confusing and repellent. The juxtaposition of organic forms within a geometric composition alludes to the relationship between the natural world and our constructed one

Exhibition dates: 8 March – 15 April 2013
Curator: Serena Wong
Artists: Sam Evans

Sam Evans is Gary Phillips

Exhibition dates: 29 January – 25 February 2013
Curator: Adele Sliuzas
Artists: Andrew Humphreys

Andrew Humphreys is an emerging South Australian painter operating in the borderland between illustration and ‘fine art’― the one a pursuit of technical excellence in traditional visual storytelling, the other an endeavour to preserve in the postmodern gallery setting the modernist conception of style as theme. The negation of that stylistic focus in much of contemporary art goes hand in hand with the pigeonholing of classically-skilled painters into the often undervalued role of the commercial illustrator, and it’s a conscious exploration of this present situation that gives Humphreys’ work its theoretical dimension, as he applies both storybook-esque character design and a nostalgic painterly formalism to a very gallery-oriented goal. But underlying this fusion of aestheticism with more self-reflexive conceptualism is Humphreys’ longest-term project, a graphic novel of epic proportions, for which all of today’s paintings are essentially practice ― the tip of a much bigger, darker, wetter iceberg.

“Above is what I typically say to make my long-term direction understandable to others, but it’s all very theoretical compared to my everyday art-making concerns, such as where can I paint, firstly, but also how can that place then double as a meeting point for models I need to photograph, curators I wish to show work to, or other collaborators from the art community. For me, the location of the Carclew loft studio, its nearness to the centre of the Adelaide art scene, is what has really made my residency here worthwhile, because so many connections I’ve made have been aided by that centrality. And of course, besides the benefit of location, the studio space itself is flexible and large, allowing for the creation of small to medium-sized works like those in this exhibition, as well as much larger mural-sized paintings which I’ll be exhibiting at a later date (the ground floor of the studio is especially ideal for big works thanks to its high ceiling). I recommend the residency to any emerging artist, painter especially!” – Andrew Humphreys

Exhibition dates: 11 September – 5 October 2012
Curator: Adele Sliuzas
Artists: Katia Carletti

Kissing Across Oceans presented work by sculptor and painter Katia Carletti. Having just returned from residency in Iceland funded by a Carclew Project and Development Grant, much of the work in this exhibition reflected on time spent in a distant and strange land. Carletti’s haunting lanscapes sit somewhere on the edge of belonging, sometimes appearing and then vanishing, sometimes ruptured by black holes.

“Iceland was the furthest away from home I had even been by myself and as a result of this removal from all that I know, I often found myself overwhelmed and upset by homesickness or other parts of my brain. At the same time, I was constantly in awe at my surroundings; endless sea, volcanic fields, snow capped mountains, swaying grass, the moon hanging low in the blue sky of midnight. These surroundings became familiar and homely, and as I swallowed them, digested, the craggy peaks and foggy tunnels became my hollow chest and warring head.” – Katia Carletti.

Exhibition dates: 20 July – 27 August 2012
Curator: Adele Sliuzas
Artists: Kat Botten, Alexander Carletti, Andrew Humphreys and Glenn Kestell

This exhibition brought together a group of artists who have turned their work back on themselves. Through self-portraits Kat, Alex, Andrew and Glenn begin to examine their own personal worlds, construct their identities and challenge the space of their being. As contemporary artists these works are a reflection of the art world much as they are of the artist’s personal world. Through paint, photography and print, these artists reconstruct pieces of a fragmented realm, intensely questioning themselves and implicating the viewer.

Self Portraiture involves the inward finding of the self, manifest through the externalisation of the features of the face. In a sense, it involves being present on two planes of existence, the plane of being of “self” of “my” awareness, and my physical manifestation. These works are attempts to recontextualise the act of looking at ones reflection, through looking through the eyes and looking inward as statements of being.” – Alexander Carletti

Exhibition dates: 18 May – 17 July 2012
Curator: Adele Sliuzas
Artists: Claire Marsh

Claire Marsh’s practice explores the body; its force, its thresholds and its relation to the self and other bodies. Through processes of visual and physical mutations, Marsh talks about what she calls “the silent, the creaturely and the horror of the self.”

Exhibition dates: 4 April – 15 May 2012
Curator: Adele Sliuzas
Artists: Malia Wearn

To Be Alone With You presented a collection of Malia Wearn’s recent work. Her paintings, embroideries and installations extend from a place that is imbued with considerations of the self and its place within the world.

Exhibition dates: 28 February – 30 March 2012
Curator: Adele Sliuzas
Artists: Harry Freeman, Dan Health and Lise van Konkelenberg

GET HURT featured work that sit on the margin of music and art. The exhibition rested on the dynamic between pop culture, visual culture and music culture; a creative intensity that is visual and aural.

In Adelaide, as in most creatively clued-in cultures, there is a symbiosis between the world of art and the world of music. Creative people, trained and untrained, are not restrained by historical definitions of ‘the artist’, there is a movement and hybridity between music and visual. Flow. And each feeds into the other.

The posters featured in GET HURT created a visual identity to support a parallel music community, these posters are independent artefacts of a specific culture.

Banner image: Carclew House foyer during ‘Refractions’ exhibition – Photo taken by Sophie Addison (BRAW Media)