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“The work I am producing for the upcoming exhibition ‘By The Sea’ at Harvey Galleries is a themed group of pieces, exploring the figure, at the beach…… Continue reading
Continue reading“The work I am producing for the upcoming exhibition ‘By The Sea’ at Harvey Galleries is a themed group of pieces, exploring the figure, at the beach. Of course the beach is implied through the group of figures in beach attire. In this they act as an installation where I intend to build spatial relationships between individual pieces that will contribute to the meaning of particular works. My choice of theme and subject continues my exploration of the figure and where, in the past, I have often worked with the nude, my intention is to contemporise this through the addition of beach-ware and accessories. The figures remain the focus but they are no longer timeless or purely traditional representations but contemporary “classical style” works. This combination is where my current practice sits. I am intrigued by the crossover between what is conveyed through traditional process and aesthetic whilst exploring contemporary subject matter. Without their clothes, or in other attire, these figures could be derived from Canova’s oeuvre. However, by removing the allegorical and historical themes, I engage my figures in the small, insignificant experiences of contemporary life that the audience engages with based on personal experience.
My interest in the figure is as a timeless subject yet one which provides relevant subject matter in a contemporary context. In my work I explore aspects of human experience; experience that is not dramatic or based on great actions but rather, my focus is the experience of emotions and thoughts, expressed through gesture and expression. In particular, the human face and portraiture are a major interest, having focussed some attention on exploring notions of thought and contemplation through expression. This theme links in closely with my process, where the time spent in the studio is crucial, in a sense, a meditative process in itself, where a work can involve for example, over 50 hours of hand sanding alone. Process for me, is inextricably linked to the finished work, where the time spent somehow imbues the quiet, static sculptures with a more substantial presence. This is a feeling that impressed itself upon me in my late teens when I stood observing great, classical sculpture in European museums – the time taken and how the artists achieved the incredible surfaces and forms. My intention is, as a contemporary hero of mine Rick Swallow has stated of his own work, ‘to slow down time for the viewer’. In an artworld where there is so much screaming at us, my concern continues to be with the ability to quietly contemplate an object and to empathise with the simple human experience that is conveyed.
My studio practice is more or less self-taught, having begun by making small works at school for art projects, my interest in sculpting and sculpture motivated me to continue working, developing and extending my skills, working often in decorative relief and then in-the-round. At uni I focused on ceramics, the opposite process to reduction carving which I enjoyed and reinforced my spatial awareness in sculpting. I have been fortunate enough to have had the opportunity to work in Huon Pine, an exceedingly fine and receptive material. This has become my medium of choice, having sourced a significant quantity of large pieces from Tasmania. The material for me, with its fine grain and light colour, resembles marble, the medium of classical sculpture from where, in many ways, my inspiration is derived. In more recent years, I have produced small works in marble, while visiting the sculpture studios in Carrara, Italy. Marble is an ultimate material for me in many ways in its purity and austere coolness. However, the living nature of timber provides elements of aesthetic interruption where I deliberately leave voids in space and the subject is cropped by the natural boundary of the material. I enjoy playing with the surfaces and abstract qualities offered by the dynamism of the once living tree.”
BORN
Newcastle 1980.
Artist’s statement
As a sculptor, my inspiration is drawn from the human form. More specifically, my interest lies in what the human form conveys through gesture and expression. I am interested in human experience expressed through the body and how the viewer interprets from an empathetic perspective, yet at the same time, how each interpretation can vary based on the individual’s experiences. I am also interested in aesthetics as a mode of expression. From my early influences of Renaissance sculpture in particular, having visited Rome and Florence as a teenager, my frames of reference have expanded over the years to include contemporary practitioners such as Ricky Swallow, Alex Seton, Ron Muek, Antony Gormley, and Marc Quinn. While my traditional process-driven practice continues to draw from classical roots, in the pluralistic art context of today I am interested in exploring the way traditional process and classical aesthetic can represent a moment in contemporary human experience.
EDUCATION
He attended the Newcastle Waldorf School from kindergarten till year 12. He matriculated from high school in 1999 and in 2001 commenced a bachelor of Fine Art at the University of Newcastle, completing an honours degree in Fine art in 2007, winning a traveling scholarship and spending two weeks sculpting marble in the home of Renaissance marble carving, Carrara, Italy. He then commenced a Masters of Teaching at the University of Newcastle in 2009 and graduated in 2010. Gareth is an art teacher at the Newcastle Waldorf School.
SOLO EXHIBITION
2005 New Works at Tighes Hill Gallery
2006 An Exhibition of Ceramic Sculpture at Tighes Hill Gallery
2008 Felons at The John Paynter Gallery Newcastle
2009 New Work at John Miller Gallery Newcastle
2011 In Stone at the John Paynter Gallery Newcastle
2013 Trevor Victor Harvey Gallery, Sydney NSW
2019 Harvey Galleries, Sydney NSW
GROUP EXHIBITION
1999 ArtExpress Regional Tour
2004 Graduation Students Award Exhibition at Inner City Clayworkers Sydney
2004 Joint at Back to Back Galleries
2004 The Artisan Art Prize at John Miller Gallery
2004 9+2 at Tighes Hill Gallery
2005 Figurative at The Art Lounge Wooloomooloo
2006 Art2Muse exhibition at Simmer on the Bay
2006 Honours, Masters, PhD Ceramics Invitational at Watt Space Gallery Newcastle
2006 Stock Room Show the Best of the Best at Tighes Hill Gallery
2008 Collectors Care invitational Front Room Gallery Newcastle
PRIZES
Awarded Top student 1998 for 3 unit visual art at OTEN
Highly commended in Mattara Miniature Sculpture competition 2003
Second prize for Mattara Sculpture Competition 2003
Awarded the 2006 Jennie Thomas Travelling Scholarship
Won Newcastle Regional Show Art (sculpture section) competition 2004, 2005, 2008
PUBLICATIONS
The journal of Australian Ceramics National Pictorial Survey 2006
Hunter Lifestyle Magazine August/September 2006
Postgraduate Paths, Six Artists, Three Spaces –University of Newcastle 2008
COLLECTIONS
St Marks Anglican Church Islington
William Wilkins Memorial Collection
Newcastle Region Art Gallery
Private collections in Australia and Internationally have produced commissions for the John Hunter Hospital, The Belmont Birthing Centre, the GPT group redevelopment of Charlestown Square
RVSP for Gareth Graham ‘By The Sea’ Exhibition
Harvey Galleries was founded by the Harvey family in 1994 with an eye to establish a dynamic and inclusive contemporary art space on the North Shore of Sydney. For almost three decades we have expanded our reach to over three gallery locations and an ever expanding stable of the best artists Australia has to offer.
Harvey Galleries acknowledges the traditional custodians of the lands upon which our galleries stand. The Guringai people (Seaforth), the Gadigal people of the Eora Nation (Sydney), and the Bunurong Boon Wurrung and Wurundjeri Woi Wurrung peoples of the Eastern Kulin Nation (Melbourne).
We pay our respect to Elders past and present.
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