Four epic immersive installations have taken over Carriageworks in Sydney

Four large-scale artworks are setting off the 2020 arts program at Sydney’s iconic Carriageworks. Presented free to the public, they will remain in the venue for quite some time, highlighting new works by leading Australia artists.

These four, described below, all make use of light as a medium by which to explore our basic interconnectivity as humans, continuing Carriageworks’ long and storied history of procuring challenging works that hold deep meaning for humanity.

“Carriageworks is a site imbued with history, yet each of these projects are firmly anchored in the present day,” said Head Curator Visual Arts Beatrice Gralton. “They reflect the capacity for artists to navigate a cultural compass that embraces paradox and shapes beauty in a troubled world.”

Rebecca Baumann: Radiant Flux (Until 14th June 2020)

Radiant Flux is Rebecca Baumann’s response to the unique light and space of Carriageworks’ architecture. Spanning over 100 metres in length and nearly 15 metres high, every glass surface of the building’s exterior has been covered by Baumann with dichroic film. This luminous material simultaneously transmits tones of blue, magenta and yellow, and reflects gold, green and blue. When viewed from different angles the colour range shifts dynamically, ensuring the work is never experienced in the same way twice.

Known for her mesmerising kinetic sculptures, installations and performance works, Radiant Flux is Baumann’s most ambitious project to date. Simultaneously immersive and participatory, the perception of the building’s immediate environment seen through the glass creates a visual ambiguity between what is inside and outside. As the sun passes over the building, filtered light moves through the space like a sundial, throwing dense hues of colour across the floors and walls, and drawing attention to the heritage and contemporary architecture of Carriageworks.

Daniel Boyd: VIDEO WORKS (Until 1st March 2020)

Daniel Boyd is a Kudjala/Gangalu artist who works across painting, video and installation. VIDEO WORKS is a site-specific reconfiguration of three major video installations produced by the artist between 2012-18.

VIDEO WORKS proposes an immersive journey through time and space, an experience that simultaneously evokes the molecular properties of matter and the expansiveness of the universe. A Darker Shade of Dark #1-4 (2012); History is Made at Night (2013); and Yamani (2018) will map the walls of the gallery with Boyd’s infinite cosmos of dynamic compositions and prismatic colour. The artist’s signature motif of the circular lens is used to fragment and disrupt Eurocentric perspectives of history, revealing that knowledge is both lost and found through information shared and obstructed. Set to scores by Ryan Grieve and Leo Thomson, VIDEO WORKS is an experience that is both otherworldly and grounded. The works will commence simultaneously and continue to loop in an ever-changing sequence of image and sound.

Kate Mitchell: All Auras Touch (Until 1st March 2020)

All Auras Touch presents a snapshot of contemporary Australia in colour. Taking the Australian and New Zealand Standard Classification of Occupations as the starting point, artist Kate Mitchell will photograph the aura of one representative for each of the 1023 officially recognised occupations. Captured using the Aura Camera 6000 – an ‘electromagnetic field imaging camera’ invented by American innovator Guy Coggins in the 1970s – each aura portrait will replace an occupation placeholder. As each job title is swapped out over the course of the exhibition, all auras touch.

The role of work is both subject and process in Mitchell’s practice. Mitchell’s art is her labour. Known for her often humorously staged action-based performance work, the artist tests the relationship between art and life as she collects and catalogues each participating sitter’s aura. To complete the undertaking Mitchell must perform multiple roles: she is at once a conceptual artist, photographer, archivist and counsellor. The first, which does not appear as one of the 1023 census occupations, officially exists as unrecognised labour.

In All Auras Touch Mitchell considers the relationship between what we do and who we are. A picturing of the sitter’s ‘psyche’, the aura photograph, appears as an ethereal portrait awash in colour. For Mitchell colour is a means to connect what we feel to what we see. Interested in interpretations of colour, Mitchell uses aura photography as a visual device to conjure up the immaterial and unseen. Through colour All Auras Touch questions how our work defines and connects us.

Privileging how we feel over what we do, the evolving installation makes each census occupation become indistinguishable from the other. Pixelated placeholders – an empirical representation of working Australia – are replaced by an empathetic imagining of the workforce. In an era where empathy is lacking in public discourse, All Auras Touch reminds us that we are all complex beings made up of the same matter.

Reko Rennie: REMEMBER ME (Until January 2021)

For almost two decades, Reko Rennie has made art that references his identity as a Kamilaroi man living and working in an urban environment. Working broadly across painting, sculpture, video and installation and with a practice firmly grounded in the origins of street art and graffiti, Rennie’s signature style is one of high-key colour and complex composition. His finely tuned visual language adapts the shapes and symbols of his Kamilaroi culture with Australian colonial history, interwoven with text and camouflage patterning.

Commissioned by Carriageworks, REMEMBER ME is one of Rennie’s most stripped-back, minimal installations to date. Spanning some 25 meters in length and 5 meters tall, this monumental work is both searing and tender. In the 250th year since Captain James Cook’s first landfall at Kamay Botany Bay and the HMB Endeavour’s charting of the east coast of Australia, Rennie has created a present- day memorial in recognition of the frontier wars, the massacres and the survival of the original sovereigns of this country – the Aboriginal people of Australia. He asks us to consider the personal impact of our past and how history is made today.

Carriageworks

Address: 245 Wilson St, Eveleigh NSW 2015
Contact: (02) 8571 9099

Photo: Daniel Boyd: VIDEO WORKS by Zan Wimberley.

Chris Singh

Chris Singh is an Editor-At-Large at the AU review, loves writing about travel and hospitality, and is partial to a perfectly textured octopus. You can reach him on Instagram: @chrisdsingh.