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Showing posts with label exhibition. Show all posts
Showing posts with label exhibition. Show all posts

Friday, June 29, 2012

Seven Hundred Photos


Last night we were at Seven Hundred Photos, Sydney’s largest live art event, where artists, fashion designers and bands worked together to transform the seven hotel rooms above Sydney’s iconic Darlo Bar into live fashion photo shoots.

Everyone - from professional and amateur photographers, bloggers, to your everyday Johnny with an iPhone - walked from room to room, shooting the live installations and models within, in a papfrenzy of live art and fashion. It was hot, it was busy (like, reallllly busy), there was cheap booze and beautiful people. Basically, it was frickin great.

The night featured installations by the likes of famed designer Phoenix Keating (who has dressed Lady Gaga), fashion film director Alex Goddard, vintage label Laurel & Hector and event organiser Jesse Willesee and offered performances from bands Buzz Kull and Bobbysix's hot tip as one to watch, New Brutalists.

Here are a few snaps:


Photos by Bobby Townsend. See the rest of the pics on our Facebook page.

Friday, April 20, 2012

Getting To Know... Bridie Connell


Ahead of her exhibition at Alaska Projects in Sydney on Thursday, Bridie Connell tells to Bobbysix about art and go-go dancing:

Art is my job. I make art, I write about art, I curate art exhibitions, I’m on the board of an artist-run-initiative and I pay the bills by working in an art gallery. Too much? Probably, but I honestly don’t know any different. I’ve grown up with art and like any long-term relationship it takes a lil’ creativity and dedication to keep the spark alive. We’ve had our ups and downs but at the end of the day I can’t imagine my life without it.

I would describe my style as layered, but my loved ones describe it as “Creepy Chic”! I like honey traps - art that seduces with surface beauty and interrogates on closer inspection. I’m interested in representations of women in art and popular culture and much of my work deliberately toys with virgin/whore clichés of femininity. My inspiration is broad - lots of pop references, girlish nostalgia and Catholic iconography. I’m forever indebted to my mother’s 70s arts & craft journals and while I generally like to start with a concept I’m pretty good with my hands. I like styling and taking snap shots, hand stitch and embroidering, making multiples and little shrines and transforming found objects into treasure but most of all I like a bit of sass – backstage jokes about sex and dancing.

I'm also a go-go dancer. It’s my after-hours job! Think 60s style shimmy shakers rather than the fluffy boot wearing club horrors that come up on a go-go Google search and you’ll get the idea. Dancing is in my blood. I’ve done everything from jazz ballet and modern to cheerleading and burlesque - but I like to trace my love of go-go back to my failure to play an instrument alongside my musical siblings, “Don’t worry,” Mum reassured, “you can always be the go-go dancer for the band.” Fast forward to adulthood. I took a go-go class with burlesque star Tasia, we hit it off and began doing gigs with gorgeous go-girl Nette under the name The Go-Gettes and before I knew it I was getting paid to dance on stage with bands. Mum is pretty amused.


My next art exhibition is all about go-go. It’s at Alaska Projects in Kings Cross and the title, King’s Cross Affair, is taken from a sleazy 60s pulp fiction novel about life and love in Sydney’s red light district – a place that’s always held my fascination. I was inevitably drawn there as a teenager but none of the clubs could ever compete with the old photos of strippers and drag queens and go-girls I poured over as a kid. I was clearly born in the wrong era and this show is essentially an installation-based homage the original Sydney go-girls I idolise – including beautiful Jeanette Luke who worked as a go-go dancer in Kings Cross for over five years and has been so open and generous in sharing her stories of gangsters and ‘crotch watchers’ and sequin sewing backstage. I’m most excited to have The Go-Gettes performing on the opening night and instead of giving another stuffy artist talk I’ll be hosting a go-go dance class with the ever amazing Tasia the following Thursday. Fun. Pony on down!

It might surprise people to learn that I don’t have a stage name. Dancing as a Go-Gette I’ve never had to bother but the more solo and burlesque gigs I’m offered the more people ask. I’ve lots of pet names but nothing I want to take to the stage. Suggestions welcome!

I'd love to take a holiday, fall in love with a sexy rock and roller and live happily ever after.

Be sure to check out Bridie's exhibition at Alaska Projects in Sydney's Kings Cross, from Thursday 26th April. Details here.

Interview by Bobby Townsend

Friday, April 13, 2012

22 Girls Smoking Weed exhibition


In their first-ever collaboration, artist Jesse Willesee, of Seven Hundred Photos fame, and music video director Daniel Havas have combined forces with 22 ladies to create a fun, intimate and thoroughly modern portrait of the enigmatic, fashionable and creative young women of their generation – all who happen to enjoy smoking weed.

The resulting images are a tribute to those acts of ‘casual art’ and self-portraiture found on popular blogging sites like Tumblr. This show marks the first installment of Jesse Willesee’s ‘Tumblr Trilogy”, a series of exhibitions which explore those artistic, pop cultural and personal preoccupations, known as ‘trending topics”, of the ‘Tumblr generation’ – one of which, time and again, is the use and glamorization of marijuana.

Photographed and filmed entirely on iPhone, using fish-eye lenses and filters, the resulting film and collection of over 40 photographs is part of the emerging iPhone-ography movement which sees artists, filmmakers and photographers forgo traditional equipment and instead capture the world as they see it through modern gadgets.

The show will take over the expanse of the now-abandoned Dr Pong bar in Sydney and transform it into a complete 22 Girls experience, with an exhibition featuring over 40 photographs, a large-scale video projection, as well as a live installation, music, a ‘pizza party’ and themed merchandise including tote bags and collector cards.

THURSDAY 19 APRIL 7PM @ 1A BURTON ST SURRY HILLS (THE OLD DR PONGS), SYDNEY

Tuesday, April 03, 2012

Analogue photo exhibition, Brighton


We were lucky enough to be present at the preview of Analogue Brighton's photo exhibition the other day, where we were beguiled by work from a talented group of like-minded enthusiasts of analogue photography, all of whom are still using vintage and lomography cameras. 

Analogue (organised by Collate Presents - who are a curatorial team based in Brighton) features the talents of Tom Welland  Lomokev  Adam Bronkhorst  25ThC  (of Bobbysix fame!) and Captainbonobo and brings together many images - largely of Brighton - in a variety of ingenious and interesting ways. Cross processing slide film, multiple exposures and film swaps are some of the techniques which present iconic shots of the grand old city through different eyes. What is especially refreshing about the exhibition, in an age when everyone thinks they are a photographer and can take a shot 100 times in order to get it right, is the sheer inventiveness of the photographers and the laborious lengths to which they go to create an out-of-the-ordinary image. And, of course, without the immediacy of digital technology, sometimes they have to wait weeks just to see if their efforts have been fruitful.

The exhibition is definitely worth your time and runs from now until the 27th April 12pm-5pm. You can find Analogue at Artist Residence Gallery, 33 Regency Square, Brighton, East Sussex, BN1 2GG

Here's a couple of snaps from the launch, attended by Bobbysix's Alice, Bobby and, of course, 25ThC (below):


Review and photos by Bobby Townsend

Tuesday, February 21, 2012

Beastman & Nanami Cowdroy team up with Smirnoff to design limited edition packs


Isn't it nice when friends team up? Bobbysix's old mate Beastman (Brad Eastman) has joined forces with our buddies at Smirnoff to design one of two limited edition Smirnoff No. 21 packs.

To celebrate his and fellow Australian artist Nanami Cowdroy's designs, for one week only Smirnoff Australia is opening an interactive gallery in Sydney’s hipster haven, Surry Hills. Inspired by the theme of creating something visually stunning from a blank canvas, the Smirnoff Start Pure Gallery will house a one-of-a-kind art installation that allows visitors to help create a piece of artwork that will contribute to the design for a third, and final, Limited Edition pack – only five of which will be created.

The gallery will be open to the public from Friday 2nd until Thursday 8th March, 10am – 5pm daily, and will also allow visitors to see the large scale versions of the pack designs by Beastman and Nanami, as well as exclusive artwork from both artists.

Commenting on his exclusive pack design Beastman said, “I tried to push the theme 'start pure' through the design – conceptually you start with nothing and you add life and you add years of hard work, and then you become something. Creating little stories that mean something to me, that’s what I love that about being an artist. I love that I can trigger people’s thoughts and trigger people’s emotions.” Remarking on her design, Nanami said, "I found the Smirnoff concept of 'purity' to be ideal, as I'm accustomed to starting with a blank canvas, which I find is always exciting and enticing. I was inspired by the unique twisting design of the Smirnoff Limited Edition pack - which sparked the idea of a playful octopus, its tentacles coiling around and embracing the bottle within.”

Visitors to the gallery will be able to view both artists’ designs first hand, as well as produce their very own of pieces of art using the paper chromatography process - a method for testing the purity of compounds and identifying substances. Once produced, each individual artwork will be stored in a display case on the gallery walls, contributing to the overall artwork, which will evolve over the duration of the gallery opening period. Following their visit to the Smirnoff Limited Edition Gallery, participants will be able to visit the Smirnoff Australia Facebook page  and tag their piece of art. The wall of art created by the gallery visitors will be captured and printed as a third Limited Edition bottle pack, and the five copies will be offered as prizes in competitions (deets to be announced).

The Smirnoff Start Pure Gallery will be located at 374 Crown St, Surry Hills, Sydney and will be open to the public from Friday 2nd until Thursday 8th March 2012 – 10am-5pm daily. Admission is free. 


The limited edition Smirnoff No. 21 packs designed by Beastman and Nanami Cowdroy will be available to purchase from Coles, Woolworths and local liquor retailers for a limited period. Drink responsibly, fools.

Saturday, January 07, 2012

John Martin - Apocalypse exhibition








John Martin's Apocalypse is on at the Tate Britain for a few more days. Alice Parsons checked it out for Bobbysix.com:

THE END IS NIGH, YOU WILL BE JUDGED, REPENT!!! These are phrases that spring to mind when looking at a John Martin painting. You feel as if you could walk right into one of his works (some of his biggest paintings must be a couple of metres across each way) and stumble endlessly across the craggy, barren landscapes. Cutting your bare feet on the sharp rocks, dodging lava, desperate for an icy drink and salvation’s touch.

When I heard about his recent exhibition at the Tate, the first major collection of his works in 30 years, I knew I would be going and that I would inevitably be paying the £12.70 entry fee to get in (If that scares you, remember this is also the going-rate to see a film these days – Puss in Boots 3D anyone? No, I didn’t think so). The Tate eases you in with Martin’s gentler works. Serene scenes of Paradise, Eden, castles... nothing too sinister. However, on closer investigation, even the seemingly harmless depictions of London parks and British Tourist attractions harbour foreboding, swirling skies. Silent storms building up in the distance, hinting at what’s to come.

Then it starts to get exciting, John Martin’s ‘blockbuster’ oil paintings take over one room. In their day, they were the equivalent of going to see a new Bond movie. Belshazzar’s Feast (below - possibly my favourite) is breathtaking. I confess now, I wouldn’t have had a clue what was happening if not for the Tate's handy guide, based on Martin’s original descriptive catalogues. So, here follows my rough assessment: The Hanging Gardens of Babylon are gently caressed by moonlight in the distance. To their left, the tower of Babel is caught in a raging, lightning-stabbed sky. In the foreground everybody else is running around like headless chickens (there is quite certainly more to it than that). The contrast of light is otherworldly and the Hall of Astarte (seen in the midground) appears to be never-ending. I love that; looking at a painting that doesn't have an ending, it has a story and a world of its own that has been playing out for untold years already and will continue to do so into the future.


In his lifetime Martin drew up engineering plans for the improvement of London’s sewers, the Thames Embankment and even a metropolitan railway, but his plans never got off the ground and were criticised by others. Shunned by the Royal Academy, who felt his ‘blockbuster’ paintings were not sophisticated enough for the elite of the art world, Martin was always something of an outsider. Looking at The Great Day of His Wrath, I really can’t imagine why. Martin’s final work, The Judgement series, is comprised of three large paintings. The Tate has set up The Last Judgement, The Great Day of His Wrath, and The Plains of Heaven on one wall facing tiered seating. Every 30 minutes the lights go out and an interesting experience takes place. Some kind of clever projection light-show illuminates different sections of the paintings and then slowly warps and distorts parts to mimic lava flow, earthquakes or ash falling. Little animated lightning forks poke about and the whole effect is rather hallucinogenic. Unfortunately the overexcited actors they’d recorded over the top narrating were indeed a bit over-the-top. But then I’d probably get carried away if you asked me to act out a bible-bashing Victorian pastor.


Martin’s figures are not great. They don’t have memorable faces, they’re a bit soft and squidgy and I sometimes felt that they spoilt what would otherwise have been a great painting for me. That’s not to say that I don’t think he should have painted people, full-stop. They are the best scale markers for his epic work imaginable. Without the tiny figures of Adam and Eve being cast out of Eden in The Expulsion of Adam and Eve from Paradise (top), we would have no sense of their plight, of the fear they must have been feeling on seeing the expanse of dead land they had been cast into.

I want to wear John Martin’s paintings as fabulous evening gowns, swim in the still lakes and frolic in the green fields. Because not all of Martin’s paintings feature the end. Some depict the calm after the storm. The misty morning that marks the start of a new world. In Fantasia, the bit after A Night on Bald Mountain, when the devil hears the church bells and goes back to bed and all the nuns come down from the nunneries chanting Ave Maria... PHEW, safe again.

I celebrated my survival of the apocalypse with a suitably mammoth scone piled high with clotted cream and strawberry jam in Tate Britain’s very reasonable cafe.


John Martin: Apocalypse is only on at London's Tate Britain until the 15th of January, so don't delay. Admission is £12.70, while concessions can get in for £10.70.


Review by Alice ParsonsAll images kindly provided by Tate Britain

Friday, November 25, 2011

Harry Potter Exhibition at the Powerhouse Museum, Sydney


We went to the preview of the Harry Potter Exhibition at Sydney's Powerhouse Museum. Bobbysix.com's resident Harry Potter nerd, Heidi Pett, spent much of the time gazing wide-eyed at the exhibits saying, "This is brilliant," to anyone who would listen. Here's her review:

It was with huge excitement that I headed along to the launch of the Harry Potter exhibition at the Powerhouse Museum. I’m an unashamed Harry Potter dork - with a back catalogue of books, movies, Harry Potter parties, more-knowledgeable-than-thou arguments and a Deathly Hallows tattoo to prove it - so this exhibition (in the largest temporary exhibition space in the Southern Hemisphere) was, if you’ll allow me to get all Anchorman on you, ‘kind of a big deal’.

READ MORE...

Monday, July 05, 2010

A year in film...

A Year In Film is the debut solo photographic exhibition by Christos Christou and features double exposures, film swaps and cross processing.

Christos is an Eastbourne-based photographer who uses 35mm film and a range of classic and new analogue cameras. His first exhibition showcases some of the techniques he has been employing, such as taking a picture of an everyday image like a telephone kiosk, then rotating the camera 180 degrees and taking another shot before winding on the film. What is created is abstract and until the film is processed there is no way of knowing how whether it has worked. Another technique is film-swapping. Christos invites Flickr users to shoot a roll of 35mm film, then rewind without processing and send it to him. He then, without knowing what is on the film, shoots the entire roll again.

Christos' exhibition takes place at Okto in Eastbourne, East Sussex, England from Thursday 8th July until 8th August.

To see more of Christos' work, check his Flickr stream.