Art Genève 2015: the lakeside extension

Yesterday, I discovered the lakeside extension of Art Genève 2015 too late to take any photos. I returned this morning for a closer look. Impressive! I chose these three impressive works.

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Yarisal and Kublitz, “I make honey sweeter than the bees, faster than a tropical disease,” 2015, Oxidised copper, coconuts and steel.

This dollar-palm tree is completely inappropriate for a freezing January day in Geneva. I love it though!

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These unexpected raw-wood-sloppy-lipstick-vaguely-phallic pieces work on the lakeside. But then I’m a sucker for anything with a fundamental biological appeal.

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This massive and striking steel tube outline of a hand frames Heinz Schwarz‘s “Adolescent and horse” (1976). There is an immediate recall of the tragic story of the young boy who drowned in the lake swimming with his horse. His hand reaches up over the horses back – or out of the water – as if appealing for help. A masterstroke of placement of new next to old.

Go for a wintery stroll down by the lake and see the rest. More surprises await you!

Art Genève 2015: Go!

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If contemporary art is your thing – or you think it might be your thing – Art Genève 2015 at Geneva’s Palexpo offers you a sumptuous feast of beautiful stuff. Go this weekend.

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General Idea, “Fin de Siècle,” 1990, Mixed media

Last year, the visitor was greeted by enormous uprooted trees hanging from the ceiling. This year’s entry-point-punch-between-the-eyes is an installation by a 1980s collective of Canadian artists known as General Idea. They piled hundreds of polystyrene rectangles mimicking a compressed ice flow.

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In the middle, lie three irritatingly unreal white seal pups; they are obviously fluffy toys. This is “Fin de Siecle” (End of the Century). This is so tacky, it must be making fun of something. I consult the exhibition catalogue. I read that it’s a parody of natural history museums and romantic landscape painting. Really? The catalogue also describes the work as “cute, pathetic and cold.” I agree! Nevertheless, I would maybe add “intriguing.”

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Just opposite “Fin de Siècle” – for those of a more conservative perspective – is the gallery Mayoral from Barcelona. The space is understated, stylish and amazingly offers up small but exquisite works by Miro, Chagall, Picasso, Calder and Dali. Put the prices aside: this space alone makes a visit to Art Geneve worthwhile.

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David Zink Yi, “Octopus.” Year and medium unknown

A major event dedicated to contemporary art carries with it – almost by definition – the banal stuff, the puzzling stuff and the frankly disappointing stuff. I have difficulty connecting with huge photos of clouds, bricks on the floor (does this really still excite people?), torn paper and small ragged monotone canvases. Amongst all this though, there are many fabulous surprises. I am stopped in my tracks by David Zink Yi’s huge dismembered “Octopus.” It is fun, technically brilliant and just a little bit disgusting.

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Mounir Fatmi, “Coupe,” 2013, Cut saw blade on pedestal

I love this sculpture presented by the Keitelman Gallery of Brussels. A huge circular saw blade has beautiful Arabic letters cut out of it. It is at once delicate and vicious. Somehow, this unusual mixture of forms brings to mind everyday news of violent jihad. Perhaps it shouldn’t, but it does!

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Isa Genzken, Schauspieler, 2013, mannequin and mixed media.
Valentin Carron, Untitled, 2006, Fibreglass and acrylic paint.

This juxtaposition in the extensive Syz Collection catches my eye. Conventional and moral versus unconventional and immoral?

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Detail of “The Living Room” curated by Samuel Gross

In the all-white “The Living Room” curated by Samuel Gross I find this not very forgettable tongue-in-cheek piece.

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Marta Dell Angelo, “The Prow,” 2010, oil on Canvas 8m x 2m (approx.)

There is, however, one work that really captivates me. Congratulations to the Geneva-based foundation Art for the World for having the courage to show just one painting. And what a painting! “The Prow” by Italian painter, Marta Dell Angelo, is a huge canvas impressive in dimension and concept. At first pass, the viewer is among a crush of half-clad people who occupy and obscure the prow of a ship. All are exposed to the blazing sun.

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Detail of “The Prow”

I look closer and see people of every race, age and physical condition. Some are sunburnt; some are active; some simply lie or sit. There is a definite genital theme.

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Detail of “The Prow”

In detail, this painting is deeply disturbing. Everyone has flat and unseeing eyes. There is no obvious visual contact between anyone. The lack of human communication appalls somehow. Perplexed, I ask what this is about. The answer: migration with all its indignity and inhumanity. What have these poor, roasting and compressed souls left behind them? What awaits them? Just different versions of poverty, humiliation and exploitation?

With my mind spinning from three hours in Palexpo, I grab my bicycle and head for home unaware that I am in for yet another surprise. The wind on Quai Wilson bites. It is beginning to snow. In the dark, I notice yet more great sculptures on the lakeside lawns. This is a generous public extension of Art Genève 2015. Bravo!

Discovering David Stacey’s natural world

I spent Christmas with my daughter who lives in Kuranda, a tourist destination in Tropical North Queensland, Australia. This small, unique village sits atop a mountain range cloaked with ancient rainforest and is accessed from the coastal plain below by a colonial style railway, a winding, mountain road and a cable car. In the 1960s its famous Hippie Market established it for tourism; hence its art galleries, souvenir shops, small zoos and various eateries.

In his small, walkthrough gallery in Kuranda’s centre, David Stacey sat working on a pencil drawing in the corner as I walked through to get coffee in the square beyond. I never got beyond. I was stopped in my tracks by the unusual and amazingly colourful, original paintings and reproductions by Mr Stacey.

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My first impression was that his work lay somewhere between graphic design and picture painting and that the colourful renditions of his rainforest subject matter would appeal to the tourist market and that he would do good business selling his professionally presented greetings cards, prints etc. But there was an element about every work that appealed to something deep within me that kept me looking and kept me very interested. Mr Stacey was botanical artist, landscape painter, scientific illustrator and graphic designer all rolled into one.

Some of his paintings were conglomerations of maps, landscapes and the creatures and features contained within. I felt that each painting was conveying ideas, feelings, incidents and stories. I was convinced that he was telling of and expressing, in an holistic way, his affinity with, his understanding and appreciation of and respect and love for the surrounding country; particularly the rainforest. I was not therefore surprised that when I eventually spoke to him and asked him what his favourite work was he told me it was the Flaggy Creek Triptych above.

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I realised why Mr Stacey’s work was reaching me. Although he does not paint in a strictly realistic style I noted the accuracy of his drawing in his portrayals of different species of flora and fauna; from forest fruits to birds and frogs. I applaud accuracy and this level of it only comes from an intimate familiarity, born of respect and love, for these denizens of the forest. As a student and illustrator of Natural History and familiar with many of his subjects, including some of the landscapes, I believed myself qualified to make such judgements but nonetheless was eager to test my ideas by asking the artist himself.

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David, from Sydney, came to Kuranda already a lover of Nature in the 1980s. He confirmed to me that he spends much time in the bush and rainforest walking the tracks and studying the species. He uses a headtorch, like me, to find and encounter the nocturnal species such as the wonderful Waterfall Frog – Litoria nannotis in this painting which coincidentally I went on to photograph at Davies Creek that night after speaking with him! It is no wonder he loves this landscape. Davies Creek is the most gorgeous of places and the habitat of this endangered and beautiful Frog is so well portrayed in his painting.

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David agreed that his style was not unlike Aboriginal art in the way that it expresses his world in an holistic way rather than concentrating on a single subject. However he stated that his style had evolved from his personality rather than having been influenced by Aboriginal art. I thought convergent evolution manifests itself in more ways than we think! The Aboriginal and David Stacey both expressing their world by painting it in their own individual way but in a way that displays much similarity.

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When I asked David “why do you paint?” he thought for a while then said “what else can you do?” We discussed what he meant by this and agreed that, like me again, he is driven to recreate that which he finds aesthetic; only in his case it is a whole ecology that he has to recreate and thus his conglomerate paintings reflect this. He says that in this modern world he believes that “people are losing their sense of aesthetic and beauty.”

He is a thoughtful man; never answering a question without pause for consideration and whilst reflecting on our interview I later wondered if David Stacey was in his gallery in body but his mind was wandering the rainforest where he was most happy?

David is creating a book with a publisher already very interested. It is an illustrative narrative about the journey of water in a certain creek from source to sea. I was very privileged to be shown some of the plates for the book. It will be unique and quite stunning. It will be for young and old and filled with all the plants, animals, geology, stories and ideas provoked by a long love affair with the natural history of the rainforests of Tropical North Queensland. I shall certainly buy a copy.

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David Stacey sells well to the tourists. His limited prints are extremely well produced. This does not devalue his work but I believe that it was not created for this reason. His are works of passion; expressing his world of the rainforest. I think it sells well because it is simply very beautiful stuff about very beautiful stuff.