The 2008 Biennale of Sydney ~ Australia's Biggest Art Exhibition

Print E-mail
Friday, 20 June 2008 02:24

aiPotu (Andreas Siqueland / Anders Kjellesvik) - Iceberg, 1-3 August 2005 - Public social sculpture, Sørfinnset, Norway Dimensions Variable -  Photo: © aiPotu 2005


Sydney, Australia- A horse suspended from the roof of the Museum of Contemporary Art, a bronze-cast tree in the Royal Botanic Gardens, the Art Gallery of NSW covered in chalk drawings, large-scale video installations on Cockatoo Island: these are just some of the projects to see and experience in the 2008 Biennale of Sydney. The 2008 Biennale of Sydney opened Wednesday, 18 June and runs until Sunday, 7 September.

The exhibition opens in seven venues clustered around the harbourside plus a world-first online venue. The city’s leading galleries and spectacular outdoor sites host the visions and voices of more than 180 of the world’s most exciting artists, all for free. From the quirky to the comic to the controversial, the exhibition establishes that Sydney in 2008 is the place to discover contemporary art.

Under the theme Revolutions – Forms That Turn, the exhibition explores the urge to rebel. The unique vision of artistic director Carolyn Christov-Bakargiev has materialised as art works have been installed over the past week, transforming the city under her watchful eye into a truly remarkable place. She says: “I think art can be experienced by everybody – whether they are someone who reads about and sees a lot of art regularly, or someone who works hard all week and simply wants to see an art show on a Sunday afternoon. The Biennale of Sydney is for everyone!”

Cockatoo Island is teeming with 35 works of art including an underground tunnel that rocks to the beat of psychedelic music, a lone voice singing ‘The Internationale’ in an abandoned industrial space, and a shadow play in the old air raid shelter. There’s a sculptural model based on Sydney’s Olympic Stadium, and Shaun Gladwell’s new piece based on mountain bikes and inspired by Duchamp’s famous Bicycle Wheel (on show at the Art Gallery of NSW).

With the generous assistance of The Balnaves Foundation and Sydney Harbour Federation Trust - a free ferry shuttle service will operate to Cockatoo Island between 9.45 AM and 16.45 AM, seven days a week. Biennale visitors can take the free ferry from Commissioners Steps (outside the MCA) around to Wharf 2 at Pier 2/3 and on to the island.

Tamy Ben-Tor The Dance of the Albino Rat, 2006, Performance at Stux Gallery, NY - Courtesy of the artist & Zach Feuer Gallery Photo: Zach Feuer Gallery At the MCA see a horse suspended from the ceiling, a field of 1000 tiny snakes sculpted from rice husks, and Alexander Calder’s magnificent mobiles Hanging Spider and Roxbury Flurry. A rock band of over-eighty year olds plays the Sex Pistols’ version of ‘God Save the Queen’ and transforms a gallery space into a band drop-in centre. Australia’s international art star Tracey Moffatt presents the world premiere of her new film REVOLUTION. And mother and son Mary Kelly and Kellie Barry present works including their first into which Kellie was literally born making him a living art work!

For true spectacle, see the Concert Hall of the Sydney Opera House transformed for 24 hours, into a magical forest on 9 and 10 July. While in The Studio, Dora García presents her ‘re-imagining’ of the notorious Lenny Bruce comedy performance of the 1960s. At Artspace come on a journey to Utopia or witness our collective behaviors captured on film by UK art star Jeremy Deller in his new project for the Biennale of Sydney, I’m with this Idiot.

Combining key works of the past century with the best in contemporary art today, the Biennale of Sydney celebrates 35 years as Sydney’s trail-blazing showcase of contemporary art. With more than 180 artists and 65 new works, it is truly a world of art, here, now.


Click on logo below to add this article to your favorite Social Website ~