This review by Robert Nelson was published in the Age - Culture, Art & Design,10 March, 2004; response to the Helen  Lempriere National Sculpture Award
  
When you are ready to return to the Library or another space in the gallery, please press the appropriate button below.
Helen  Lempriere National Sculpture Award
        the age march 10, 2004
      
The Age    Culture  Art & design 
      Helen  Lempriere National Sculpture Award
March 10, 2004 — 11.00pm
        Werribee Park, K Road, Werribee, until May 9 
        This year's Lempriere contains five or six  strong works. In a class of 25, this is not an impressive score. 
        The outstanding work is meme by Phin Murphy,  Marie Sierra and Jim Sinatra. Cobweb brushes are packed into refractive bands  in the form of a cocoon. 
        Three of these large organic nests are hoisted  high into the sensuous boughs of lemon-scented gums, apparently bursting with  wriggles like clusters of caterpillars or some hairy slugspawn in iridescent  envelopes. 
        This strange woven  construction compares with the huge Cocoon by Cat Macleod and Michael  Bellemo. A great egg is screwed together from thin bands of wood, cloaking a  volume with a permeable exoskeleton. 
        You peer inside and it's tempting - especially  for children - to enter, as if spermatozoa hard-wired to impregnate the ovum. 
        I'm not sure about the vertical poles that  transfix this tender haven. They work as engineering, but reduce the magic of  the organic temple to an olive stabbed by too many toothpicks. 
        The form might have worked better if suspended  entirely and without the shafts. 
        
        Another excellent work is Shift by  Gerard McCourt. A sheer plane displays a photograph of the Werribee Mansion. 
        When approached within four metres by a person  of average height, the photograph can be lined up to match exactly the  proportions of the Victorian building. 
        So while most of the vista is reality, a thin  strip of artifice is arrantly inserted into your unmediated field of truth. 
        
        Amanda Triffitt's Travellers, a cluster  of lilac domes under the trees, is very pretty, with some slight connotations  of mushrooms and forest floor growth and a rippling effect created by the  different sizes. 
        
        Life forms are curiously replicated in Mathew  Harding's Symbiosis, seeds writ large and rusty, maybe a bit corny. 
        
        The winning work has none of the poetry of  these five. Richard Goodwin's Prosthetic Apartment B is a vessel hoisted  on steel scaffolding over four tents. 
        
        It may seek to refer to refugees but, with its  stainless steel and handsome skulling vessel, only speaks a language of classy  technical contraptions. 
        The work is derivative, borrowing from Tony  Trembath's 25 Telecom Tents of the 1970s, but with none of the humour  and conceptual rigour of Trembath's installation. 
        
        The remaining work is as bad and sometimes  even more literal, more clunky, like the ugly block by Anne Ferguson, naively  and temerariously dubbed Ithaca. 
        
        Andrew Rogers's Weightless is a large  metal plane that behaves like a piece of cloth. You marvel at the bizarre  behaviour of the material. There's little point wondering about its meaning. 
        
        Julie Callinicos's Dreamers is an  unsightly bunch of metal cushions floating in the pond, now garnished with  water marks and bird-droppings. 
        
        Michele Beevors's Psycho Killer and  Friends shows old heroes of animation, like Mickey Mouse, in camouflage and  sporting guns. 
        
        The allegory of popular culture having a link  with US military imperialism is worth exploring; but the treatment seems  supercilious and complacent. 
        
        Arthur Wicks's solar-powered boat that runs on  a track like a train is a trifling toy of flippant allegorical aspect. 
        
        Deobrah Edwards's well-crafted Mind-Set enlarges the headphones with ornaments in a way that doesn't seem to tally with  any credible interpretation. It's handsome corn. 
        
        Mathieu Gallois's Blind recreates in  white the normally colourful play equipment of suburban parks and gardens. 
        
        Gallois's bland treatment, with amateurish  surfaces, picks up on no useful institutional associations. 
        
        The transformation from joyful design to  cryptic art reveals the dead hand of artificial conceptualism. 
        
        Heather B. Swann's Man Barrow Forkers maybe relates old tilling equipment to the sexual propitiation of the harvest,  by making the rusty farm equipment a bit convulsive in shape. 
        
        But the work is sentimental, with the  nostalgic pseudo-antiques somehow cruelled by their replication in an array.  The number seems arbitrary. 
        
        Louisa Dawson's Itinerary/Itinerant is  a snaking stack of suitcases. It's so corny: technical cleverness and  capricious imagery in the service of mannerism, almost as corny as Endra  Che-Kahn and Marco Mattucei's Contraption. 
        
        Jodie Goldring deserves credit for approaching  the mansion; however, her woven tyre-rubbers don't relate to the building
        . 
        Lisa Roet's allegory of evolution versus God  seems facile and pompous, like the hand-of-God theme of Mike Nicholls.
        
        Richie Kuhaupt and Geoffrey Drake-Brochman's Torso in marble and stainless steel doesn't successfully evoke the past or present  but falls between both in a pit of bad taste. 
        
        robert.nelson@artdes.monash.edu.au
To visit the Virtual Gallery Wing dedicated to the 3 man Boat machine click HERE