Alongside his esteemed career as a filmmaker, David Lynch has worked as a visual artist for 50 years, producing an extensive body of paintings, photography and works on paper. 'David Lynch: Between Two Worlds' is a rare opportunity to consider his entire creative vision and the relationships between his practice as an artist, filmmaker and musician.

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    Ground-breaking exhibition at the National Museum of Cambodia

    In the Cambodian capital of Phnom Penh this week, Cambodian artists who have participated in the Asia Pacific Triennial of Contemporary Art (APT) take centre stage in a landmark exhibition, acknowledging the role QAGOMA has played in supporting projects by Cambodian artists through its collecting and exhibition program. Histories of the Future places some of Cambodia’s most prominent contemporary artists at the National Museum of Cambodia, the country’s primary art institution. It is the first time an exhibition of contemporary Cambodian artists has been staged at the museum, which holds some of the most important treasures of Cambodian culture including many of the masterpieces of the Angkor period. Sponsored by the Australian Embassy in Phnom Penh, the exhibition celebrates the relationship between Australia and Cambodia, particularly the aid and support for the arts that Australian institutions and organisations have provided. This includes the restoration of the museum’s roof in the mid-1990s funded by the Australian government along with almost one million dollars raised through an Australian public appeal at the time. From the National Museum’s press release: The historical relationship between Australia and Cambodia serves as a backdrop for this exhibition which focuses on recent artworks acquired or commissioned by Australian institutions. The exchange between Cambodian artists and Australian galleries and festivals has been especially active and fruitful for more than a decade. Notably, the Queensland Art Gallery (Brisbane) has had a very active role in the research and representation of contemporary art from Cambodia for the Asia Pacific Triennial (APT), a well-respected art event for the region. There are seventeen artworks in the exhibition from a variety of mediums, including video, photography, sculpture, prints and installations. Together, many of the works seek to resolve social, spiritual, cultural and economic tensions of the last decade as Cambodia has emerged from a century of conflicts. This close look at contemporary art highlights the importance of institutional cultivation of forms of intellectual, aesthetic and critical expression. The exhibition includes works by Anida Yoeu Ali, Leang Seckon and Khvay Samnang, who recently participated in APT8, alongside artists featured in APT6 in 2009-10: Pich Sopheap, Rithy Panh, Svay Ken whose paintings are currently on display in QAG Gallery 6, and Vandy Rattana who is included in the current GOMA exhibition ‘Time of Others‘. Histories of the Future was collaboratively organised by the Australian Embassy in Phnom Penh, curator Dana Langlois and Director of the Museum Mr Kong Vireak, all valued friends of the Gallery. The exhibition opens July 1 2016 with an opening address by Australian Ambassador to Cambodia HE Angela Corcoran in her first official function as Ambassador, and over the weekend will also include a lecture by Vuth Lyno, who recently presented a paper at the APT8 Conference.
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    APT8: Brook Andrew ‘Intervening Time’ extended

    Brook Andrew’s APT8 installation, ‘Intervening Time’, is a comment on the historical and contemporary narratives that shape our understanding of the Australian landscape, people and culture — it is also a prime example of the dynamic relationship between artists and museums. Over the past several decades, the relationship between the museum and the peoples and cultures it represents has been researched and critiqued locally and internationally, especially by artists, curators, theorists and communities, from inside and outside the museum profession. Through processes of institutional critique and postcolonial reassertion of indigenous identities, traditions and continually evolving cultures, the museum is being fundamentally altered, and artists’ historical research and projects are central to this inclusive, multi-perspective museology. In a productive melding of creation and curation, artists working locally and internationally since the 1970s have been intervening in museum collections in order to rethink the processes of exhibition-making, to question existing narratives and historical positions, and to unsettle or subvert conventional displays by revealing some of the less predictable intersections between works of art and the visual and material culture of different places. Brook Andrew’s project for APT8, ‘Intervening Time’, realised in collaboration with QAGOMA curatorial staff, represents the intervention of art practice into the conventions of museum display through physical transformation. It proposes a layered, complex consideration of the encounters between indigenous and other cultures. Several of Andrew’s recent major installations and graphic works are inspired by patterns found on dendroglyphs (carved trees) and shields specific to his mother’s Wiradjuri nation (in New South Wales). He has applied his contemporary hypnotic pattern in black over the existing wall colours of the Australian collection galleries, and suspended his six-part 2012 installation, TIME, in between the works that currently hang there. One image makes a direct Australian reference: a detail from an earlytwentieth- century group photograph of an Aboriginal man with a Union Jack — the mark of empire — painted on his chest. Others include a British Raj Indian postal worker; people among the rubble of a collapsed European building during World War One; an image of a clock counting backwards to a zero hour (a reference to British atomic bomb tests in the Monte Bello Islands and Maralinga in 1952–63); and the façade of the Australian Museum in Sydney. Each work is speculatively connected to the other through signs of time and historical situations. Their enlargement to monumental dimensions also radically alters their original status as archival documents, while a surface treatment emphasises the historical patina of the original source imagery, creating a tone of remembrance. Andrew has juxtaposed these disparate pictures with works by Rupert Bunny, E Phillips Fox and Vida Lahey, among many others, to construct an open-ended narrative that provokes questions about the fragile and volatile political, social and environmental systems of our contemporary world. The existing historical display in the galleries was changed only slightly, through the inclusion of international works of historical Nepalese and Indian art, in addition to images by Goya, Warhol and Hirschfeld Mack representing states of conflict. Installations such as ‘Intervening Time’ are intended to destabilise, not only to rethink the authority of the museum and the exclusivity of its systems but also the authority of history and the systems of the modern world. By working with museum colleagues, artists declare museums open entities and critically revise the potential meaning of their objects. Watch a fascinating time-lapse of the installation of ‘Intervening Time’ Brook Andrew ‘Intervening Time’ extended to Sunday 22 May 2016 Exhibition Founding Sponsor: Queensland Government Exhibition Principal Sponsor: Audi Australia Principal Partner: Australia Council for the Arts
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