Extended Gestures Extended

Ben Pell
Charlie Harding
Georgie North
Sean Mcdowell
to May 18
Five Walls
Melbourne



Charlie Harding


Ben Pell


'The title for this show is borrowed from the writers Claude Cernuschi and Andrzej Hercyznski who in their essay, The Subversion of Gravity in Jackson Pollock’s Abstractions, describe Pollock’s employment of gravity as a means “to extend the duration of his gestures”.1 In easel painting (and in some forms of sculpture), finding a new way to form the gesture has been an important pursuit by many artists, albeit, by the brush or through other less unorthodox means (Brice Marden with his extended stick or Richard Serra with his frenetic lead flinging, both serve as appropriate examples of this type of activity).

The four artists in Extended Gestures Extended build on this endeavour. They pursue methods that are provisional and intuitive and form marks that reference bodily activity. Bold strokes of colour are applied with careful attention to the stroke’s intensity and speed. They innovate ways to disperse paint, be it, through maximum thinning, or strokes that are at once, abbreviated and extended.

In Extended Gestures Extended the gesture is distilled, the painting process renovated and the very orthodoxies of easel painting challenged.' Aaron Martin Curator


Georgie North


Sean Mcdowell



Don Voisine

To June 9
McKenzie Fine Art, NY. 



Orange Zip, 2019. Oil and acrylic on wood panel 40 x 40 inches



Don Voisine installation image


Pan Out, 2019. Oil on wood panel, 24 x 24 inches. 
 
‘With each new exhibition, it becomes more apparent that Don Voisine is adding his own earned options to the legacy of geometric abstraction... 

The urban aspect of Voisine’s paintings underscores his alertness to everyday sights and how they might inspire the forms that he places into his paintings...’ excerpts John Yau ‘Excavating the Radical Roots of Abstract Painting’ Hyperallergic, May 9,2019


Images McKenzie Fine Art, NY. 

Colour/Field Two

Opening May 17, 6 pm
Cross Gallery
Bundaberg


Installation at Cross Gallery

Including works by 

Roland Orépük 
Louise Blyton 
Louise Gresswell 
Steffen Schiemann
Marlene Sarroff 
Christian Flynn 
Jo Katsiaris 
Brent Hallard 
Nicolo Baraggioli 
Deb Covell 
Stuart Fineman 
Terri Brooks 
Beverly Rautenberg 
Simon Kilvert 
Louise Tuckwell 


Featured artist Roland Orépük based in France

Roland Orépük installation at Cross Gallery


Roland Orépük's installation Outside Wall Work, at Factory 49 in Sydney, 2008

In south-east Queensland in the town of Bundaberg Clinton Cross is running a gallery which has consistently shown leading artists, particularly in the area of non-objective, reductive and abstract art. Not only leading Australian artists but also leading international artists in this field including 
Roland Orépük featured here. Clinton an artist himself is passionate about art in the best way and has his eye on what is exciting in the art world. Please look up and support his gallery either on instagram @crossgallerybundaberg or on the web https://www.cross-gallery1.com/ Clinton's gallery is the only Australian gallery I am aware of with such a continuous line up of leading international artists.

Colour Field Two features national artists as well as artists from France, Germany, America, Britain and Italy.


Renée Levi

Istanbul (Turkey) 
Lives & works in Basel (Switzerland)



Renée Levi

'In 2018, the artist was awarded the art prize of the Société des Arts de Genève, and CHF 50,000 in prize money. She studied architecture at the HTL Muttenz/Basel and fine arts at the Hochschule für Gestaltung und Kunst Zürich.' Excerpt Langmatt website


Renée Levi

"Renée Levi is known for working in public space, but perhaps it would be more accurate to say that she works on public space, on its re-elaboration, whereas it is on the point of becoming undone from palpable space. Far from rejecting this, Levi takes it as her starting point, such that her pieces, although physically inscribed in public places (schools, working-class housing complexes, banks, hospitals, cantonal assemblies and so on), go beyond the framework of the in situ work of art.” Excerpt CCNOA (Center for Contemporary Non-Objective Art) website 


Renée Levi


Artist book: Kill me afterwards, 2003.

Interpretations of Place

Pamela Honeyfield
Vanessa Ashcroft
Kathleen Rhee
Jana Hunt
Ros Auld
Barry Jackson
Felicity O'Connor
Claire Primrose
30 April - 19 May
FORM Studio and Gallery
Queanbeyan NSW


Selected images:

Pamela Honeyfield

 10% of sales and all of the $20 tickets sales to the catered opening event Friday 3 May, 11.00 am are going to the Australian Cancer Research Foundation. 

Felicity O'Connor


Barry Jackson

Ros Auld

The advent of photography aside, Abstract art during the Modernist period developed from a myriad of influences drawn from pre-Renaissance Western art, non-Western cultures and a broadening of traditional landscape, still life and portrait painting. A multitude of styles known as isms developed during the course of the Twentieth Century.

Turner, Manet’s loose brushwork, Monet and the Impressionists,The Fauves and The Blue Rider paved the way for late modernist influential abstract landscape painters including Willem de Kooning, Richard Diebenkorn, and Helen Frankenthaler.



Frank Stella

Recent Work
To June 22
Marianne Boesky Gallery
New York 



Frank Stella installation at Marianne Boesky Gallery


Frank Stella installation at Marianne Boesky Gallery


Frank Stella installation at Marianne Boesky Gallery


‘Stella combines interlocking grids with more fluid and organic lines, creating a dynamic interplay between minimalist and gestural visual vocabularies.’ Excerpt Marianne Boesky Gallery website

Ruth Root

Forum 81 
Curated by Eric Crosby 
April 19 - August 25, 2019
Pittsburgh, USA  


Installation photo courtesy of the artist, Carnegie Museum of Art



Installation photo courtesy of the artist, Carnegie Museum of Art


Untitled, 2017, Fabric, Plexiglas, enamel paint, and spray paint, 50 1/2 x 75 in (128.3 x 190.5 cm)
Andrew Kreps Gallery NY


Carnegie Museum of Art (CMOA) debuts a new body of work by American painter Ruth Root (b. Chicago, 1967) in the 81st installment of its Forum series dedicated to contemporary art. With a jolt of pattern and shape, Root’s eccentric paintings dazzle and perplex with their play of geometry, color, and found images. These new works are composed of two parts involving a shaped panel painted with acrylic and spray paint suspended from a flexible sewn form covered with the artist’s own fabric designs. Incorporating found imagery from news media, art history, online search engines, and objects from CMOA’s own collection... ‘ excerpt CMOA website





Angel Alonso

Angel Alonso, 1923-1994. Spanish/French
Solo exhibition, Art Paris 2019

 Selected works from the artist.


White Tear on Red Background, mixed media on board, 57 x 47.5 cm. 



Untitled, 1988, mixed technique on wood, 96 x 48 cm.


Untitled, 1994, Mixed media on wood panel, 24 × 36 cm.


Link, mixed media on cardboard, 24.5 x 20 cm.

Marlene Sarroff

365 Days: You get what you choose

To April 23
BSA Project Space
Mullumbimby NSW


An installation of 365 works created over 365 days.


Installation at Byron School of art

From 'You get what you choose', Byron School of Art.

‘The result is a culmination of a disciplined daily practice of making an artwork everyday, incorporating a multi-media process, combining Social Media, Technology and Art. Instagram is an important component in the creation of the project, the works were posted daily. Each day is different and presents a spontaneous creation pertaining to the day of the artist.

The work is made from a diverse range of found things. It is an investigation of the ordinary from the perspective of the found - be it the rejected, the disposable, the overlooked that becomes an intrinsic part of the creative process and through the method of Assemblage the work is created.’ Excerpt artist statement Marlene Sarroff 2019.

Raymond Carter

An Imaginary Constellation
03.04.18 – 20.04.18
Five Walls Projects

1/119 Hopkins St., Footscray 

Installation detail: ‘An Imaginary Constellation’installed at Five Walls. Medium: tape on MDF board.

‘An Imaginary Constellation describes the illusion of a connection between groups of separate objects. Constellations were the creation of schematic patterns by linking stars of varying sizes, colours and brightness. Constellations appear to travel across the sky according to the movement of our planetary circuit and their location was seasonally specific...

In my multi-panel installation, I have made an Imaginary Constellation exploring interactions between the coloured highlights and the repeated alternating vertical and horizontal background pattern. The radiating coloured lines combine to form diagonal grid-like array apparently randomly scattered across the field. Based on pattern and chance relationships the constellation can be viewed as a positive or negative schema.’ Excerpt Raymond Carter, 2019