This Review by Robert Rooney for The Age 13 March 1980 contains a reference to my solo exhibition at Stuart Gerstman's Gallery Melbourne. The works in that exhibition contained prints from various performance works at that period.
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Review by Robert Rooney 1980
Art review
Robert Rooney
The University of Melbourne's selection at Monash University
Gallery emphasises the earlier periods of Australian art — tonal painting and early modernism.—which form ths,core of a collection some 100 years old, '
About two-thirds of the paintings i on display are gifts to the university, and a number of these,' including works by de Maistre, Shore, Lawlor, and Vassilieff, presented by Joseph Brown.
Overall, my impression was that small is beautiful, traditional is best, and modern is OK when safe (as in the more recent works).
Portraits by Tom Roberts, Violet Teague and Hugh Ramsay dominate the show. Ramsay's 'J.S. MacDonald (study)' towers above the rest with a masterful
display of tonal modelling that avoids the slippery bravura of his more Sargent-inspired portraits.
MacDonald's youthful presence seems far from his later public image as the "ogre" of anti-modernism.
Ramsay, who died prematurely at the age of 29, is one of the"ifs" of Australian art. He had a keen sense of structure that would have set him apart from Meldrum and his followers.
Sandwiched between the portraits are two small oil sketches by Rupert Bunny, painted in a style that recalls the pale color patches of Nabi intimism. These were among my favorite paintings. Tonalists Alexander Colquhoun and Max Meldrum are also well represented. Meldrum's 'Olinda Falls Road and Mt. Donna Buang' (1932) is one of those occasional flukes where he almost makes it compositionally.
George Bell, a pioneer of Melbourne modernism, is represented by a fine early example of his tonal style 'Edwardian Lady in Green Costume'.
Among the more recent' works I liked the paintings by Fred Williams, John Brack, and Ralph Balson's 'Abstract' (1954).
Not so good was the bloated scale and unpleasant poly-vinyl surface of Arthur Boyd's charcoal drawing 'Nude in a Cornfield'.
THE Monash University collection is less than 20 years old, and built up from acquisitions by a shrewd art advisory committee.
The selection from Monash, at the Melbourne University Gallery, places greater emphasis on the works of younger artists, mostly Victorian, who emerged during the 1960s. Some even entered the collection before their recognition by the State galleries.
Paul Partos is represented by an early stained and collaged Gorky-like painting 'Mer Black and Grey' (1964), while the paintings by Peter Booth, Robert Hunter, and myself, come from a slightly later period. From the imaginary "Banal School of Melbourne" beloved of art historians is Hickey's excellent painting of dark green tiles arranged in a cruciform pattern, and my "Slippery Seals 2' (1967).
Booth's 'Untitled' (1970) is a powerful painting with the simple structure of two rectangles — one red and the other cream — and a tough, thick skin. There are also good works by Mike Brown, Robert Hunter (a white on white painting), Irene Barberis, Kevin Connor, and Dick Watkins.
I found a lot of the 1970s purchases less interesting. Two exceptions were John Brack's painting of pens and pencils on the march, and 'Sir Louis Matheson' (1976), by Fred Williams, a portrait that wins by virtue of its awkwardness.
THERE is a touch of megalomania in the installations, video, and prints by Arthur Wicks (priced $50-$900) at Stuart Gerstman Galleries, Hawthorn. In 'Kit for Grasping the World' he wants to "reduce the world 'till it's within a hand's grasp", and like King Canute he desires to hold the tide at bay in 'Fragment for Against the Tide'. Can artists walk on water, too? you may ask.
Wicks certainly knows how to over-kill a simple idea. Not content to present an event as a video, or photographic document, he has to surround it with aesthetic packaging, and merchandise it in the form of prints.
His work is a type of rococo style, quasi-conceptualist documentation, where information in the form of notebook jottings and instructions are rendered as ornament, photos are "artified" by adding touches of color, and backgrounds are spattered with decorations.
'4 Steps 3 Times' and the many versions of 'Fragment for Against the Tide' and 'Sand Memories' are typical examples. The only things missing are the rubber stamps so popular in this sort of art.
The Age 13 March 1980