Monday, January 20, 2020
The University Art Gallery Show :: Visual Arts Paintings Art
The University Art Gallery Show    Its bright, It's brash it's stimulating. It's Art Express '06! This  years show displayed at the University Art gallery, demonstrated the growing  interest in contemporary issues and cultural awareness. The Show was  set up in separate sections, with similar artworks placed around the  same sections of space. There were two glass presentation boxes going  along the centre on either side of the room, with three main walls,  leading onto smaller walls, presenting the HSC selected works. The set  up was cleverly done, as it was very easy to casually walk around and  view all the works with out any trouble. As always publicized in each  year's art express, it was impossible not to notice the extreme range  of different media and forms of works the students used. Ranging from  medias like a clothesline to neon lights to print making. You couldn't  help but be thrown into the world of the giant splurges of creativity  around you; it will make you want to run home and sort through your  local tip or bring out the old brushes to whip out something exciting.    The term 'Major work is no longer ' used but replaced by 'Body of  work'. The difference being before the student only had to complete  one work to complete their practical. Now students have to complete a  number of works all interrelating between each other. One of the most  outstanding body of works shown that I think boldly stood out from the  pack was "Mon Inversion Fragmentee (My fragmented inversion)" by Cara  Lee, from Kambala. This work explored the social representation of  women. 300 black and white photos each depict a close up image of a  fragment of the divided female body. The rigidity of each individually  hung photo exemplifies the restriction of the female and the extent to  which they're boxed by society and social conventions. The strengths  of the works this year were that the individual works challenged your  way of thought. These students are not afraid to share their opinions  to the public. It's become a trend that the general public will find  it harder to just view a work and simply decide whether it is  aesthetically appealing to them or not, with out also stopping to  question the world around them or within themselves. Mon Inversion  Fragmentee, Scientific Research; Cell your soul Manipulate and Hidden    					    
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