SALA – Heartland – AGSA – 3.5K

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By Peter Maddern

Heartland is the latest in contemporary art exhibitions to hit the Art Gallery of South Australia, this time with a very local, home grown feel about it. The Heartland topic refers to not only local artists (some immigrants, some now emigrants) but the spiritual connection the artists used feel for the state, represented in all manner of urban and outback settings. Its connections with the Samstag’s Revealed #2 are that both connect with the citizens of the state but here the collecting is done by a public institution rather than private collectors but both represent their sincerity in supporting the development of the artists they sponsor.

Certainly some exhibition spaces make quite an impact upon their entry or their approach. In the centre of it all are all manner of works from the artists of the Amata-Tjala communities, a brightly coloured and lit area where large canvases encircle child-like monster toys that hang and float that make you feel like you have entered a Darryl Lea chocolate shop only the sweetest things can’t be eaten.

Before it is a dimly lit room of Kate Breakey’s 1 metre square sepia toned photographs. I have to say for this reviewer here there was a significant gap between impact and quality. Shafts of light through cloudy skies and views down an embankment after a bush fire may make for a whole but individually they don’t seem much more than the output you would expect from a new photographic enthusiast. I trust these weren’t part of the collection that was specially commissioned for which taxpayer money was used. Though, it has to be said they had more going for them than most of Ian North’s happy snaps from the 70’s.

Early on visitors will happen upon James Darling and Lesley Forwood’s River to Ocean, an ambitious installation of the Coorong area including the great lakes and the mouth of the Murray which is made entirely of mallee roots.  Its scope and diligence of construction delivers on the timeless nature of this area as well as the narrowness of the sand dune wall that separates an ecologically fragile area from pounding seas with no break til you reach the bottom of the earth. There is a solemnity about the work that matches the feel one gets from the nature of the land when one visits it. God only knows where this goes when the exhibition gets packed up!

As one proceeds past the sweetness of the Amata items, one’s attention gets captured by the view of a rotating, upturned bare tree in the end room ahead. It is part of Angela and Hossein Valamanesh’s What Remains? that will find poignancy for migrants from the northern hemisphere as it speaks of the mirror world of loss and memory from the place from which they came. Theatre goers will also remember it from the staging of the very successful Andrew Bovell’s play When the Rain Stops Falling that was premiered at the 2008 Festival Arts. Their video of snails crossing before a still camera provides an alternate take on a mesmerising work.

The Heartland initiative would seem one that could emulate the Samstag’s commitment to the state’s local collectors; that is by being a regularly appearing exhibition. Replacing or alternating with the Biennial of Australian Art at Festival time is one suggestion. Perhaps also a greater array of local artists could be represented for at its core six artists alone dominate most of the wall space utilised. But, for superficial visual impact, curators Nici Cumpston and Lisa Slade have done a good job.

SALA – Revealed #2 – Samstag

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By Peter Maddern

Revealed is an initiative of the Samstag Art Museum to tap into the art treasures of some of Adelaide’s leading collectors and have them, well, revealed to the public. The first in the series of three exhibitions was held last year (see Our Review Here) and the last will be in 2015, after which a book covering them all will be available.

As Gene Sherman (of the Sherman Contemporary Art Foundation) in her most useful essay in the program states ‘Now seen as a professional of sorts, the collector circles the globe in a constant quest to view and be viewed…. In the 21st century the collector stands as a patron, philanthropist and cheer squad leader endowed with significant acquisition budgets.’

This stanza in the trilogy of Revealed has a clear focus on the particular interests of the individual collectors, and how the singular paintings work towards that desired sense of the whole. This is perhaps distinct from say looking at the individual works purely in and of themselves. To that extent, at least, this is a different and laudable kind of exhibition.

For example, Mark and Jill Awerbuch home in on works that appear disjointed, especially Thomas Hirschhorn’s Walk Through Fire. While the Michell family seem taken by images that examine young women at risk, exposed and vulnerable. Julian and Stephanie Grose have taken a liking to the photography of James White, with his Another Hotel #4 the stand out to this reviewer.

Meanwhile, Rick and Jan Frolich explore darkness and the colour black in a series of images that despite their starkness perhaps appear as the most complete or rounded of the collections. This also includes one of the two Bill Henson images on display. Finally, Vivonne Thwaites presents her happenstance array of objects that are concerned with domesticity, feminist ideas, the garden and the seasons.

As mentioned, Revealed #2 is a different kind of exhibition but one that carries a great sense of this State’s often hidden faces of art patronage.

DANCE – Happy As Larry – Playhouse Til 17th Aug – 4K

SMA Kryztoff banner Jul 13 02 100dpiHappy_As_Larry_940x528By Peter Maddern

Shaun Parker’s Happy As Larry is a delightful expose of our often incongruous and mostly fruitless search for happiness. Timothy Ohl welcomes us with his doodling on a black board that later reveals itself to be just one face of a shipping container size backdrop that floats and swirls its way across the stage. As such it eschews, whether driven by a search for originality or financial pragmatism, the high tech light shows that seem too often to sit in contemporary dance productions as the attraction rather than the dancing itself.

Here, it is inventive in the extreme as the container presents variously as a wall, diving board and source of propulsion. Ohl’s scribble fest to the tangled beats of Nick Wales’ and Bree Van Reyk’s musical score that produced something almost Pollockesque was but one highlight of the night.

The dancers, eight of them, decked out in casual fare, present as if plucked off any Sunday’s Bondi boardwalk – young, athletic and without latte pretensions. Lewis Rankin’s roller skating added not only variety but his brief but touching pas de deux with Marnie Palomares was also memorable.

That a dance production is held together – directed and constrained – by something so ephemeral as sticks of chalk speaks to the skill of the choreography and child-like mood that happiness is synonymous with. The dancers then take us forward and back between the adult and child worlds where the search gets muddled by dreams, expectations and the involvement with others.

A delightful respite from cold winter evenings and increasingly bleak economic conditions, all contemporary dance fans should see it.

Adel Festival of Ideas Announces Speakers

SMA Kryztoff banner Jul 13 02 100dpiThe Adelaide Festival of Ideas today announced world renowned physicist Paul Davies will lead an eclectic, entertaining group of speakers at this year’s October event, with tickets on sale from today.

Adelaide led the way with the Festival of Ideas, presenting the first one in 1999 – and this year, the “lean in” Festival will present new activities and guests from all over the world and across Australia. Joining forces for the first time with the Adelaide Film Festival (October 10-20), the Adelaide Festival of Ideas will help take over October for a new month of festival activity across South Australia.

Adelaide Festival of Ideas Director Sophie Black said this year’s Festival is to be dedicated to Davies – the world renowned physicist, cosmologist, astrobiologist and best selling author.

“Paul Davies embodies the spirit of big thinking that the Adelaide Festival of Ideas has always championed,” Ms Black said. “It doesn’t get much bigger than the nature of time, or the search for life in the universe. Prof Davies’ research interests have centered around brain melting concepts such as the origin of the universe to the origin of life. More recently, he’s been engaged in applying concepts from physics and astrobiology to the problem of cancer – and he’ll be presenting his “alternative theory of cancer” at the Festival.”

Prof Davies is the author of such bestsellers as The Eerie Silence: Renewing our Search for Alien Intelligence, How to Build a Time Machine and The Mind of God.  He will present “Ideas Whose Time Has Come: from Cosmology to Cancer”, on the opening night of the Festival, Thursday October 17, at the Freemason’s Hall, 254 North Terrace, Adelaide, at 6.30pm. Book online today at adelaidefestivalofideas.com.au

Prof Davies said: “My years in Adelaide convinced me that South Australians are among the most creative and innovative people on the planet. Adelaide was the first major city to hold a Festival of Ideas, and it remains the perfect venue for it. I am greatly looking forward to my return to a city and to an intellectual milieu for which I have both fond memories and a high regard.”

Minister Assisting the Minister for the ArtsChloë Fox said: “This year’s Festival Of Ideas provides a fantastic opportunity for audiences across the State to engage with some of the world’s best thinkers to discuss the big issues of today and the future.”

Chair of the Adelaide Festival of Ideas Advisory Committee, Robert Phiddian said: “When the Festival of Ideas started in Adelaide, there was nothing like it in Australia. Now there are many imitators. There is an appetite for deep and civil discussion of ideas and issues. In this year’s Festival – the first to coincide with the Adelaide Film Festival in the new Spring festive season – we have asked our speakers to think about what matters more abidingly in their fields, and to discuss ‘the real value of…”

Other international guests announced today:

Jeff Speck (US) – Speck is a new urbanist, city planner, walkability advocate and architect who advocates internationally for smart growth and sustainable design. Author of Walkable City: How Downtown Can Save America, One Step at a Time and co-author of Suburban Nation: The Rise of Sprawl and the Decline of the American Dream, Jeff serves as a Contributing Editor to Metropolis Magazine.

Professor Örjan Sölvell (Sweden) – Prof Örjan Sölvell, Stockholm School of Economics, has studied international competitiveness and clusters in various nations and regions.He co-published the widely acclaimed Cluster Initiative Greenbook in 2003.  Prof Sölvell’s latest book, Building the Cluster Commons published in 2013, was co-authored with Mats Williams, a recent visitor to South Australia.

Amy Parish (US) Dr Parish is a biological anthropologist, primatologist, and Darwinian feminist who has taught at University of Southern California in the gender studies, arts and letters, anthropology, and preventive medicine programs and departments since 1999.  She has been studying the world’s captive population of bonobos for the last twenty years. In all of her research, Dr. Parish uses an evolutionary approach to shed light on the origins of human behavior.

Gary Greenberg (US) – Psychotherapist Greenberg, author of The Book of Woe: The Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM) and unmaking of psychiatry and Manufacturing Depression, is a contributing writer for Mother Jones, and a contributing editor for Harper’s Bazaar.  He is a vocal critic of the practice of psychiatry and the pharmaceutical industry.

These guests will appear in a number of sessions across the Festival, with ticketing available from September 17, when the full program is announced.

The Festival of Ideas has launched an Instagram campaign, asking audiences to share their visual interpretations of the program. The best images will be selected to feature across the Festival of Ideas website and printed program, with prizes also up for grabs.

Head to www.adelaidefestivalofideas.com.au for ticketing to the Paul Davies event and more on the Instagram campaign.

SALA – Andrew Clarke and AIPP (Light Gallery)

SMA Kryztoff banner Jul 13 01 100dpiBy Peter Maddern

Andrew Clarke is a young Adelaide artist developing his style and his most recent exhibition is at The Corner Store, Dulwich.We first came across his work at SALA 2011 (http://www.kryztoff.com/RAW/?p=3893). Then, his six works focussed on landscapes and outdoor figurative scenes.

This solo exhibition, entitled Archetypes, is more of that figurative style with a greater emphasis on portraits. The development of his own aesthetic is also progressing apace with these highly reminiscent of 18th and 19th century Flemish art with peasantry going about their work (The Hunter, The Weaver) and the portraits have a hint of the Rembrandt in them, particularly Puer Aeternus (The Eternal Boy).

Others may well also recognise a style not dissimilar to local celebrity artist, Robert Hannaford, though in no way does there appear any attempt has been made to emulate him.

Full credit to Clarke if for nothing else than having the courage to stay away from decorative forms to attract those only keen on filling up a wall.

This year’s local AIPP competitions included one for a series of photos and the best of these are now on show at The Light Gallery, Richmond. There is little doubt Hilary Hann’s Elephant Song series is the stand out of the six photographers represented.

As its title suggests, they are about elephants, or about not having elephants as they track a Chinese world once replete with the gracious monsters through one where the biggest and best are cut down for their ivory leaving a landscape of orphans and discarded bones that in time is morphing into just massive mammal free savannah. The images carry a nostalgic, old world feel about them that adds to the poignancy of the message.

I also liked Brendt Leidersitz’s Insistence, images of women insisting on the ‘right to be free form gender roles imposed by society [and] restraints of choice implied by the fashion, entertainment and media industries.’ While the theme is not without precedent, it is not used here as an excuse for images of the butch or unkempt. On the contrary, what we are presented is six sharply contrasted images of a raw beauty that remind one of 1950’s chic but with modern affectations such as nipples painted with a cross and lip rings.

Leanne King’s Elements series is also of great note where nature is used to clothe and decorate her younger women models, creating elaborate head pieces and elemental gowns from her leaves, twigs and branches. Earth is my favourite but others are certain to look elsewhere in the collection which was shot last autumn at Brownhill Creek.

TRACKS STARRING MIA WASIKOWSKA TO OPEN ADELAIDE FILM FESTIVAL

SMA Kryztoff banner Jul 13 01 100dpi The Adelaide Film Festival today revealed its first phase of announcements, with the much-anticipated feature film, Tracks to have its premiere on the Festival’s opening night.

Tracks, starring internationally acclaimed Australian actress Mia Wasikowska and filmed in South Australia, will lead a 10-day film-fest across Adelaide. Tracks will premiere at the Festival Theatre on October 10, with tickets on sale from today at BASS.

Festival CEO and Director Amanda Duthie also announced today:

·         Respected and well-loved film critics Margaret Pomeranz and David Stratton have signed on as Festival patrons

·         Acclaimed artist Daniel Crooks has been commissioned to present his new work during the Festival.

The Adelaide Film Festival – which runs October 10-20 – again promises to highlight the best of local, Australian and internationally produced films, with an eclectic mix of cinema, television, art and the moving image. 

Tracks to open the 2013 Adelaide Film Festival

Tracks, starring Mia Wasikowska (Jane Eyre, Stoker) and Adam Driver (HBO’s Girls) and directed by John Curran (The Painted Veil, We Don’t Live Here Anymore), tells the inspirational true story of Robyn Davidson’s 2700km solo trek from the harsh centre of Australia to the Indian Ocean, aided only by her faithful canine companion Diggity, four camels and the National Geographic photographer who chronicled this epic modern adventure.

Charismatic young New Yorker and National Geographic photographer Rick Smolan traveled from the other end of the earth to capture, at intervals, this epic and remarkable journey into one of the world’s last great wildernesses. Robyn reluctantly agreed to a visiting photographer in return for much needed trip funding and could only see Rick’s visits as intruding on her solitude and compromising everything the journey meant to her. However, this uneasy relationship between two very different people would slowly develop into an unlikely and enduring friendship.

Set against one of the wildest and most breathtaking backdrops on the planet, this unprecedented journey pushed Robyn to her physical and emotional limits and taught her that sometimes we have to detach from the world to feel connected to it.

From See-Saw Films, Tracks is produced by Academy Award® winning producers Emile Sherman and Iain Canning. It will be distributed in Australia through Transmission Films.

Tracks producers Emile Sherman and Iain Canning said: “Having shot the film largely in South Australia, and received such great support from the Adelaide Film Festival as well as the South Australian Film Corporation, we’re thrilled to be able to premiere the film at the Festival. It has been a long journey to bring this story to the screen and we look forward to sharing it with the Festival audience.”

Tracks will premiere at the Festival Theatre, Thursday October 10, at 7pm. Tickets on sale from 9am today from BASS.

 

The full program for Adelaide Film Festival will be announced late August. Announcements on key speakers and events for Festival of Ideas will be revealed over the coming months.

PHOTOGRAPHER – Leanne King Wins SA Portrait Photographer of the Year

SMA Kryztoff banner Jul 13 02 100dpi942013_10151471163763591_502227775_nAt the recently held South Australian Professional Photography Awards, The AIPP South Australian Portrait Photographer of the Year for 2013 winner is Leanne King from Crackerjack Photographic Studios & Gallery. Leanne is also a Finalist (runner-up) in the Contemporary Photographic Art category. The awards are held over 4 days and the prints are judged and scored by a panel of 5 master photographers from around Australia….all the awarded prints have been on exhibition at the wine centre and the CPA will be on exhibition at the Light Gallery during SALA for August.

Leanne was awarded her first Gold award for Elements –‘ Water ’ in the Contemporary Art Category, and went along to also achieve success with individual awards with  5  Silver Distinctions and 5 Silver Awards. The exhibition illustrates how nature can engulf and clothe without the need for all the trappings of the modern day and the result is a series of portraits of ethereal natural beauty in our autumn environment. All the images were shot locally at Brownhill creek.

In My Room – ‘Elements’ will be on exhibition for SALA from Aug 1st until 15 at her Goodwood Gallery.

Leanne King has been a photographer for many years, first picking up her camera on safari in Africa in the late 80s. Her love of photographing people exploring their environment and revealing facets of their personality within has led her to a career that has seen enormous success in recent years. Leanne King brings a breath of fresh air to modern portraiture.

Leanne’s business “Crackerjack Photographic Studios” is about to officially open at her new address on Goodwood Road  Goodwood, just in time to showcase artwork for the 2013 SALA Exhibition. The studio is the base for her unique and very conceptual portrait shoots. Sittings are conducted in studio and on location to incorporate variety and an individual approach to each client and family. Leanne’s strength is in revealing the beauty of each client’s story and she uses various media to achieve this including full make up transformations and body painting with the final product hand printed on the finest quality Art Papers. 

DANCE – Stomp – 27 Aug – 1 Sept – Her Majesty’s

SMA Kryztoff banner Jul 13 01 100dpiDSC_2418STOMP – THE BROADWAY, WEST END AND INTERNATIONAL SENSATION
RETURNS TO AUSTRALIA FROM 13 AUGUST, AND IT’S BETTER THAN EVER!

‘Stomp brings the house down’ The Independent on Sunday, UK

‘Brilliant and very funny’ New York Times
‘Pure stage magic’ The Sunday Telegraph, UK

The Broadway, West End and international sensation STOMP is back, and it’s better than ever!  

Following their acclaimed performance at the Closing Ceremony of the London 2012 Olympics, STOMP returns to Australia from 13 August, with new routines, new choreography and new music. 

STOMP will perform in Adelaide at Her Majesty’s Theatre from 27 August to 1 September

Wordless, witty and fun, STOMP has become a global phenomenon over the last 22 years.  Its universal language of rhythm, theatre, comedy and dance has resonated with audiences throughout the world, setting feet stamping, fingers drumming and adrenalin rushing for over 15 million people in 50 countries across 5 continents.  STOMP is currently playing in the UK, US, throughout Europe and South America. 

Eight performers use everything from supermarket trolleys to Zippo lighters, plastic bags to bin lids, and even the kitchen sink to hammer out an explosively feel-good rhythm.

STOMP is a show that continues to evolve – new music and choreography now join a fresh array of ordinarily mundane objects, onto which the cast work their musical magic.  Two new routines that have been introduced in 2013 include “Trolleys” and “Frogs”.  Trolleys taps into the everyday experience of negotiating a busy shopping aisle with a fully laden supermarket trolley, with the piece transforming into STOMP’s first ever fully fledged drum corps march. Certainly an eye-catching spectacle.  Frogs explores the bizarre sonic possibilities of a variety of plumbing fixtures.  It has to be heard to be believed! 

In one spectacular routine, paint cans are tossed between the performers, as they simultaneously build an astonishingly complex rhythm over every surface of the airborne cans.  With the emphasis very much on ‘spectacular’, the Stompers are also joined by inflated monster truck inner tubes strapped around their waists to create both a dance of bobbing, whirling rubber skirts and pounding, portable drum kits – the ultimate redefinition of ‘surround sound’. 

Still remaining is STOMP’s signature high-octane mix of slick choreography, tight ensemble work, industrial percussion, and continuous comedy; as the irrepressible troupe of eight performers turn brooms into soft shoe partners, clapping into intricate conversations and water cooler bottles into sophisticated instruments. 

Producer James Cundall, CEO of Lunchbox Theatrical Productions says “STOMP has to be one of my favourite shows.  It is a unique and supremely clever idea, to create music from everyday objects and combine it with side-splitting comedy and intricate choreography to produce a polished theatrical performance, the likes of which you’ve never seen before.” 

Loved by audiences of all ages, this multi-award winning show has just celebrated its most successful year yet in its 11-year run in London’s West End, breaking the record for highest annual audience ever at the Ambassadors Theatre.  And on Broadway STOMP is enjoying its 20th year, breaking the record for the longest-running show at the Orpheum Theatre.   

The fun started back in 1991 at the Edinburgh Festival in Scotland, with a single drum hanging around Co-Creator/Director Luke Cresswell’s neck.  STOMP was an instant hit, becoming the Guardian’s “Critic’s Choice” and winning the Daily Express’s “Best of the Fringe” award, and went on to play to capacity audiences around the world.  In 1994 STOMP received an Olivier Award nomination for “Best Entertainment” and won the award for “Best Choreography in a West End Show”.  With appearances at the Oscars, the Emmy’s, on prime-time US TV shows such as Letterman and Leno, and most recently at the London 2012 Olympics, STOMP has become a household name across the world. 

STOMP last visited Australia in 2009 and enjoyed a sell-out season.  “We are really excited about coming back to Australia,” says STOMP’s Co-Creator/Director Steve McNicholas.  “If you’ve never seen STOMP you should come and see what all the noise is about, and if you’ve seen it before then this show has plenty of new routines to enthral.”

 

Adelaide Season

27 August to 1 September

Venue

Her Majesty’s Theatre

Bookings

Bass.net.au or 131 246

FILM – Chennai Express – Bollywood Blockbuster – Out Today (Aug 9)

SMA Kryztoff banner Jul 13 02 100dpiCHENNAI EXPRESS - IMAGE 05CHENNAI

EXPRESS

 “You often meet your destiny on the road that you take to avoid it!’’

 

Chennai Expressis the entertaining, action-packed, hilarious story of a 40-year-old bachelor, Rahul (Shah Rukh Khan), who lands up on a totally unexpected journey that makes him realize the importance of love, life, relationships and sacrifice. The romantic action comedy features dazzling dance sequences, and fabulous action scenes featuring trains, bridges, cars and much more in a joyful Bollywood blockbuster.

 

Mumbai local Rahul boards the Chennai Express headed towards a small town in Tamil Nadu to fulfil the last wish of his grandfather to have his ashes immersed in the holy waters of Rameshwaram. En route, he meets a South Indian girl (Deepika Padukone). As they travel through the exuberant lands of South India, Rahul finds himself in new surroundings and challenged with an unfamiliar language. Despite this clash of cultures they find true love.

 

 

Chennai Express stars Shah Rukh Khan, adored by millions around the world, acting in his only role this year, alongside Bollywood star Deepika Padukone and is directed by Rohit Shetty, director of some of India’s most successful blockbusters.

 

Released Nationally: 9 August 2013

 

Country of Origin India  Ÿ  Language Hindi  Ÿ Subtitles English Ÿ

Running Time TBC Ÿ Website:chennaiexp2013.com

THEATRE – East of Berlin – Bakehouse – From 5th Sept

SMA Kryztoff banner Jul 13 01 100dpiBerlin cropped800BAKEHOUSE THEATRE COMPANY presents

EAST OF BERLIN

By Hannah Moscovitch

East of Berlin was nominated for the Dora Mavor Moore Award for best New Play 2008

Questioning redemption, love, guilt, and the sins of the father, East of Berlin is a tour de force that follows Rudi’s emotional upheaval as he comes to terms with a frightening past that was never his own.

As a teenager, Rudi discovered that his father was a doctor at Auschwitz. Trying to reconcile his inherited guilt, Rudi lashed out against his family and his friends, and eventually fled to Germany. While there, he followed in his father’s footsteps by studying medicine, and fell in love with Sarah, the daughter of a Holocaust survivor.

Now Rudi is standing outside his father’s study in Paraguay, trying to work up the courage to go in. It has been seven years since he stood in that same spot. Seven years since he left his family and their history behind him.

Directed by: Peter Green
Featuring:  Adam Carter, Clare Mansfield and Tom Cornwall
Set Design: Manda Webber;  Lighting Design: Alexander Ramsay

WHEN:
Previews: Thursday Sept 5th and Friday  September 6th
Opening Night: Saturday  September 7th
Season Continues: Wed to Sat until Sat Sept 21st .  All shows at 8pm (duration 70 mins)

WHERE:
Bakehouse Theatre, 255 Angas Street, Adelaide.

TICKETS:
Adult $28; Conc $24; Fringe Benefits $20; Groups (6+) $20; Students (Secondary, Tertiary, Drama) $15; Previews all $20

BOOKINGS: www.bakehousetheatre.com or at the door (subject to availability)