Australian art Open Weekend talks
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Expert insights into the collection
Exhibition talk
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Part of Open Weekend 2012
Saturday 12 & Sunday 13 May 2012, various times
Free
Duration 25 minutes
Image: Grace Cossington Smith The curve of the bridge 1928–29 Purchased with funds provided by the Art Gallery Society of New South Wales and James Fairfax AO 1991 © Estate of Grace Cossington Smith; James Angus Bugatti Type 35 2006 Purchased with funds provided by Andrew Cameron, the Contemporary Collection Benefactors’ and the Rudy Komon Memorial Fund 2006 © James Angus, Courtesy Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery
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Introduction to the Australian collection
Saturday 12 May 10:30am – 10:55am
Sunday 13 May 10:30am – 10:55am
Read the description
Wayne Tunnicliffe, head of Australian art, and Deborah Edwards, senior curator of Australian art, introduce the Australian collection.
Sunday talk interpreted into Auslan.Location: 20th & 21st c Australian art
Charles Meere Australian beach pattern 1940 © Charles Meere Estate
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Australian impressionism: Heidelberg and beyond
Saturday 12 May 12pm – 12:25pm
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Jane Clark, senior research curator, Museum of Old and New Art, Hobart, examines the continuing significance Australian impressionist art.
Location: 19th c Australian art
Jane Clark
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Paradise of waters: the art of Sydney harbour
Saturday 12 May 12:30pm – 12:55pm
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Grace Karskens, associate professor of History at the University of NSW, explores iconic images of Sydney harbour as painted by some of Australia’s most important artists.
Location: 20th & 21st c Australian art
Grace Karskens
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Albert Namatjira and the Hermannsburg School
Saturday 12 May 1:30pm – 1:55pm
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Curator Alison French explores the art of Albert Namatjira and the enduring significance of the Hermannsburg School.
Location: 20th & 21st c Australian art
Otto Pareroultja The hills behind Hermannsburg c1954 © Otto Pareroultja. Licensed by Aboriginal Artists Agency, Australia
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The art of John Olsen
Saturday 12 May 2:30pm – 2:55pm
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Deborah Hart, senior curator of Australian painting and sculpture post-1920, National Gallery of Australia, explores the art of one of Australia’s most important artists, John Olsen, including his masterpiece Five bells.
Location: 20th & 21st c Australian art
John Olsen Five bells 1963 Purchased with funds provided by the Art Gallery Society of New South Wales 1999 © John Olsen
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Ian Burn and Australian conceptual art
Saturday 12 May 3:30pm – 3:55pm
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Dr Ann Stephen, art historian and senior curator at the University of Sydney Art Gallery, collaborated with conceptual artist Ian Burn on various projects, from the Artworkers Union to The necessity of Australian art (1988). In 1996 Stephen curated the exhibition Artists think: the late works of Ian Burn and in 2006 published On Looking at Looking: The Art and Politics of Ian Burn.
Location: 20th & 21st c Australian art
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Violence and sunlight: the art of Sidney Nolan
Saturday 12 May 4:30pm – 4:55pm
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Andrew Sayers, director, National Museum of Australia
Location: 20th & 21st c Australian art
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Lloyd Rees and the South Coast of NSW
Saturday 12 May 5pm – 5:25pm
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Hendrik Kolenberg, senior curator of Australian prints and drawings, discusses the landscape paintings of Lloyd Rees, one of Australia’s most significant 20th century artists.
Location: 20th & 21st c Australian art
Lloyd Rees The road to Berry 1947 © AGNSW
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Enola Gay and the influence of war on Australian art and society
Saturday 12 May 5:30pm – 5:55pm
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Professor Ian Howard, dean, College of Fine Arts, Sydney. In the politically-charged environment of the Vietnam War era, Ian Howard began to make art about the ever-increasing militarisation of our global society. In 1975, using a technique similar to brass-rubbing, he made a life-sized impression of the Enola Gay, the B-29 bomber that dropped an atomic bomb on the Japanese city of Hiroshima.
Location: 20th & 21st c Australian art
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Australian sculpture
Saturday 12 May 6:30pm – 6:55pm
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Deborah Edwards, senior curator of Australian art, discusses the significant developments in 20th century Australian sculpture produced by artists such as Robert Klippel and Margel Hinder.
Location: 20th & 21st c Australian art
Robert Klippel No. 329 1977 D G Wilson Bequest Fund 1998 © Robert Klippel Estate
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Conserving the Australian collection
Saturday 12 May 7:30pm – 7:55pm
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Simon Ives, paintings conservator, discusses the challenges of conserving iconic paintings in the Gallery’s collection, from 19th century oil paintings to contemporary mixed-media works.
Location: 20th & 21st c Australian art
The Gallery’s conservation studio
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John Glover and the colonial landscape
Sunday 13 May 11am – 11:25am
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David Hansen, senior researcher, Sotheby’s Australia, discusses the work of John Glover, one of the finest painters of colonial Australia.
Location: 19th c Australian art
John Glover Natives on the Ouse River, Van Diemen’s Land 1838 Purchased with assistance from Mr and Mrs J K Bain 1985
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Grace Cossington Smith, Margaret Preston and the Sydney Moderns
Sunday 13 May 12pm – 12:25pm
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Deborah Edwards, senior curator of Australian art, discusses the significant contribution to Australian art made by the artists of the Sydney Moderns group.
Interpreted into AuslanLocation: 20th & 21st c Australian art
Grace Cossington Smith The curve of the bridge 1928–29 Purchased with funds provided by the Art Gallery Society of New South Wales and James Fairfax AO 1991 © Estate of Grace Cossington Smith
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The significance of Tiwi art
Sunday 13 May 1:30pm – 1:55pm
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Artist Pedro Wonaemirri and Jonathan Jones, curator of Aboriginal art, discuss the importance of Tiwi art and the significance of the Gallery’s commission, in 1958, of Pukamani poles by Tiwi artists, the first major commission of Aboriginal art by an Australian gallery.
Location: 20th & 21st c Australian art
Laurie Nelson Mungatopi, Bob One Apuatimi, Jack Yarunga, Don Burakmadjua, Charlie Quiet Kwangdini & Unknown (Tiwi, North region) Tutini (Pukumani grave posts) Gift of Dr Stuart Scougall 1959
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Australian artists in the Pacific
Sunday 13 May 2:30pm – 2:55pm
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Natalie Wilson, assistant curator of Australian art, discusses Australian artists’ journeys in the Pacific and the influence of their travels on 20th century Australian art.
Location: 20th & 21st c Australian art
Nicholas Chevalier Race to the market, Tahiti 1880 (detail)
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Australian art from modern to contemporary
Sunday 13 May 3pm – 3:25pm
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Wayne Tunnicliffe, head of Australian art, discusses the movements that link 20th century Australian art with contemporary art of the 21st century in the Gallery’s collection.
Location: Entrance court
James Angus Bugatti Type 35 2006 Purchased with funds provided by Andrew Cameron, the Contemporary Collection Benefactors’ and the Rudy Komon Memorial Fund 2006 © James Angus, Courtesy Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery
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