The innovative and exquisite world of Fiona Hall
Media Release
16 March 2009
Experience the innovative, provocative and
exquisite world of Fiona Hall
Fiona Hall:
Force Field (selected works), presents the work by one
of Australia’s leading and most inventive artists. Curated
by Gregory O’Brien, Paula Savage (City Gallery Wellington)
and Vivienne Webb (Museum of Contemporary Art, Sydney),
Fiona Hall: Force Field (selected works)
includes two major new works inspired by Hall’s recent
time in New Zealand.
Adelaide-based Hall is not only renowned for her imagination but for her profound fascination with the wonders and complexities of nature. Her work highlights humanity’s increasingly problematic relationship with the environment.
“In my art I am finding ways of bringing together the astounding, magical, uplifting world with the very sobering realisation that we are putting that world in peril,” says Hall.
Hall transforms everyday materials and objects, incorporating a diverse array of techniques that are often domestic in their origins. In Mourning Chorus, 2007-08, plastic containers with attached replica bird beaks are integrated into a startling coffin-shaped display case, as a lament for New Zealand’s extinct birds. In her most well known series of works (Paradisus terrestris 1998-99), sardine tins are reconfigured into miraculous sculptures that reference bodily, ecological and botanical concerns.
Also on view will be Fiona Hall’s 2007 public garden installation, Mown, which inhabits the nearby Pukaka memorial park in New Plymouth and addresses its fraught political and environmental history.
Govett-Brewster Director Rhana Devenport says;
“This selection of powerful key works from the
touring exhibition – especially chosen for Govett-Brewster
audiences –reflects Hall’s passionate and meticulous
investigation of the biological world and the severe
environmental pressures that humanity continues to place
upon it. Throughout her global interrogations, the work of
the hand holds a profound place of
value.
Additionally, the artist’s time in Aotearoa
in recent years has generated a strong body of work
addressing endangered and extinct species, as well as the
plants and animals of Gondwanan ancestry, those shared
historically across ancient Australian and Aotearoan lands.
Fiona Hall casts her net of perception to encompass
biological systems, post-colonialism readings of nature,
strategies of living and sustainability issues through her
extraordinarily beautiful sculptural forms.”
Born in
Sydney in 1953, Fiona Hall established herself as an
important Australian photographer in the 1970s and then
widened her practice to include sculpture and installation.
In 1997 she received the Contempora 5 Art Award and
in 1999 the prestigious Clemenger Art Award. She was
appointed to the Advisory Council of the Australian National University’s
Centre for the Mind in 1998. Hall has exhibited widely in
Australia and internationally, and is represented in every
major public collection in Australia. Hall exhibits
internationally and regularly undertakes commissions,
research and residences with organisations including the
Australian National University, National Gallery of
Australia, Asialink, Adelaide Botanical Garden, Australian
Museum, Queensland Museum and the Queensland Brain
Institute.
Fiona Hall: Force Field (selected
works) opens on 4 April and was made possible with the
assistance of the Museum of Contemporary Art, Sydney and
City Gallery Wellington. The exhibition is accompanied by a
fully-illustrated catalogue.
Image: Fiona Hall
paradisus terrestris Sri Lanka series, Nelun (Sinhala),
thamarei (Tamil) / lotus / Nelumbo nucifera 1990 –
2005
Also showing:
Javier
Téllez: International Artist in Residence
24 March – 21 June 2009
AM I Scared, Boy (EH):
Collection works from then and now
28 March – 21 June 2009
ENDS