Brian Robinson: men+GODS
Words, voices and images: Connecting to cultures around the world
Words, voices and images: Connecting to cultures around the world
Brian Robinson tells Peter Hylands about his men + GODS exhibition (KickArts, Cairns, North Queensland, 2012). Brian’s exhibition takes us on a visual journey through a world of mythology, a journey of tension between men and Gods.
With a joyous intelligence, Brian goes on to describe his thinking when developing the exhibition.
The essence and the basis for the exhibition is that it was a story telling exhibition. Just like any other exhibition really, they are all story based. But the uniqueness of the men+GODS exhibition was that it took Indigenous mythology and elements and juxtaposed these with classical western notions of art and beauty and romance. These are the myths and legends that also came from western culture, specifically from the Greeks, who had a very strong mythology.
There was a lot of research and if you look into my studio, it is part library because I have so many books and I am constantly referencing and researching various art forms, ideas, images and things like that to pull back into my work. The exhibition men+GODS was a perfect example of that.
I spent about a year on actually creating the exhibition so that was a really intensive period of time when I created the images and sculptural works. Probably the thing that assisted the most was a twelve monthlong residency that I had at Djumbunji Press. This had allowed me the full year to develop particular images for that exhibition.
There are a lot of Gods in these images as they relate to earthly beings and I think that is the beauty of lots of myths and legends internationally. That is they bounce ideas between the God figures and their high status and everyday man on earth. The clashes and all the stuff that happens between them, this tension is always present right throughout other cultural works. There are always similarities between the myths and legends of different cultures.
With a joyous intelligence, Brian goes on to describe his thinking when developing the exhibition.
The essence and the basis for the exhibition is that it was a story telling exhibition. Just like any other exhibition really, they are all story based. But the uniqueness of the men+GODS exhibition was that it took Indigenous mythology and elements and juxtaposed these with classical western notions of art and beauty and romance. These are the myths and legends that also came from western culture, specifically from the Greeks, who had a very strong mythology.
There was a lot of research and if you look into my studio, it is part library because I have so many books and I am constantly referencing and researching various art forms, ideas, images and things like that to pull back into my work. The exhibition men+GODS was a perfect example of that.
I spent about a year on actually creating the exhibition so that was a really intensive period of time when I created the images and sculptural works. Probably the thing that assisted the most was a twelve monthlong residency that I had at Djumbunji Press. This had allowed me the full year to develop particular images for that exhibition.
There are a lot of Gods in these images as they relate to earthly beings and I think that is the beauty of lots of myths and legends internationally. That is they bounce ideas between the God figures and their high status and everyday man on earth. The clashes and all the stuff that happens between them, this tension is always present right throughout other cultural works. There are always similarities between the myths and legends of different cultures.
We leave the River Cam and go now to a very different body of water, the blue and turquoise sea with its coral cays and volcanic islands of the Torres Strait so many thousands of miles away.
Bully Saylor and Peter Hylands are on Erub in the Torres Strait close to the corner of Australia’s north eastern boundary and close by the Great Barrier Reef and New Guinea.
As the rain hammers down on the streets and buildings of tropical Cairns it was once again time to visit master printer Theo Tremblay in his print workshop Editions Tremblay NFP (no fixed press) at Canopy Artspace.