Summary |
Architectural Fictions; Apparitions of Home from Elsewhere |
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Start Date |
27th Sep 2012 12:30pm |
End Date |
27th Sep 2012 1:30pm |
Venue |
Lecture Theatre 1A181 | School of Visual and Performing Arts | Academy of the Arts | Inveresk Cultural Precinct | Invermay Rd | Launceston |
RSVP / Contact Information |
Contact - Dr Sue Henderson P: 6324 4431 E: Susan.Henderson@utas.edu.au |
ArtsForum is a series of free public lectures held at the University of Tasmania's School of Visual and Performing Arts, in the Inveresk Cultural Precinct. Students and members of the public are welcome to attend. Lectures are presented by staff, visiting scholars from Tasmania, mainland Australia and overseas, industry professionals and artists-in-residence.
Architectural Fictions; Apparitions of Home from Elsewhere
Carmen Reid's stint here as the current Artist-in-Residence marks a certain homecoming. Originally from northern Tasmania and currently based in Melbourne, she is here to explore the complexities of place, location, memory and belonging that underpin a sense of home. Some of these outcomes will culminate in a solo-exhibition at Sawtooth ARI next month. In recent years Carmen has consistently exhibited new work, participated in collaborative projects and occasionally been involved in Art Production for local Theatre Companies. In Melbourne she is a committee member with Artist Run Space, Brunswick Arts and works with Counihan Gallery, Brunswick. This forum will provide an introduction to Carmen's practice with a focus on works and recent projects that inform development of her current body of work. Key themes and influences will also be discussed.
Carmen's practice is grounded in sculptural installation. Persistent themes are drawn from architecture, cinema and neurology and motivated by the expression of movement, tactility and tensions between physical states and mental concepts. Recent work has centered on notions of movement and narrative in architectural space in which inhabited environments are approached as mental terrains that blend perceived, lived and imagined notions of occupying space. Often resulting in site-specific installations of large fragmented architectural forms that address the functional and poetic fluctuations of time and place, they offer an encounter with works that set a scene, imply a narrative and disrupt the spatial expectations of an existing site.
Authorised by the Director, Events & Protocol
24 September, 2012
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