brick vase clay cup jug
Kirsten Coelho The crossing 2019, Art Gallery of New South Wales © Kirsten Coelho
A space between gallery storage and gallery display where magical associations are conjured
brick vase clay cup jug
Art Gallery of New South Wales
South Building
Lower level 2
Guest curator Glenn Barkley selected the artworks in brick vase clay cup jug by typing the words of the exhibition title into the Art Gallery of New South Wales’ online collection database, retrieving objects linked only by a word or medium. Unlike the typical approach to making an exhibition, where works are grouped conceptually according to meanings or historical associations, this selection process is non-hierarchical and echoes the random groupings seen in gallery storage. Usually guided by pragmatic considerations – maximising space and access or caring for the collection – these incidental groupings can create inspiring and surprising links between disparate objects, art-handling equipment and exhibition furniture.
Barkley has then taken cues from these search results, either aesthetic or conceptual, to cast a wider net through the collection, creating new connections – many of which are personal, visual, intuitive and emotional – between artworks.
In addition to the 270-plus collection objects, the exhibition also includes a new iteration of The Wonder Room, a house decorated with terracotta tiles made by people from the community in Shoalhaven, NSW in a project with Barkley and Shoalhaven Regional Gallery. A video work by Dean Cross, Untitled (self-portrait as water and clay) 2015, on loan to the Art Gallery, is projected inside this space.
Aleks Danko ‘just a pile of tricks’ 1972, Art Gallery of New South Wales © Aleks Danko
Thanakupi Mosquito corroboree 1994, Art Gallery of New South Wales © Estate of Thanakupi
Richard Long River Avon mud drawing 1983, John Kaldor Family Collection © Richard Long
Pat Larter Ceramic bra c1970s, National Art Archive, Art Gallery of New South Wales © Estate of Pat Larter
André Derain Still life 1921–22, Art Gallery of New South Wales © Estate of André Derain / ADAGP. Copyright Agency
Ewer with double dragon handles 618–907 (Tang dynasty), Art Gallery of New South Wales
Max Dupain Untitled (potter's hands at wheel) c1951–52 from the album Photo illustrations 1951–52, Art Gallery of New South Wales