Mildura Sculpture Triennial: Difference between revisions

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== Venue ==
== Venue ==
[[Mildura]], a regional agricultural centre on the [[Murray River]] in [[Victoria (Australia)|Victoria]] and bordering on [[South Australia]] and [[New South Wales]] was well positioned to attract visitors to the event despite its remoteness, as Elwyn Lynn noted; "that the Triennial, in an isolated city of 30,000, should take place at all, should attract fine entries from as far away as New Zealand and should find such local support are wonders."<ref name=":1" /> But it. Mildura has inherited from the Triennial a significant number of permanent public sculptures displayed on the Mildura Arts Centre lawns and around the town.<ref>{{Cite book|last=Scarlett|first=Ken|url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/6943806|title=Australian sculptors|date=1980|publisher=Thomas Nelson (Australia)|isbn=0-17-005292-3|location=West Melbourne, Vic.|oclc=6943806}}</ref> <ref>{{Citation | author1=Mildura Sculpture Triennial (9th : 1985) | author2=Mildura Arts Centre | title=Mildura Sculpture Triennial | date=1985 | publisher=The Centre | issn=0815-1199}}</ref>
[[Mildura]], a regional agricultural centre on the [[Murray River]] in [[Victoria (Australia)|Victoria]] and bordering on [[South Australia]] and [[New South Wales]] was well positioned to attract visitors to the event despite its remoteness; "...the most unlikely place to sponsor the most way-out art exhibition yet held in Australia," (Nancy Borlase in ''The Bulletin'')<ref>Nancy Borlase, "Sculpture into landscape," ''The bulletin''.Vol. 095 No. 4856, 26 May 1973, p.45</ref> but as Elwyn Lynn noted; "that the Triennial, in an isolated city of 30,000, should take place at all, should attract fine entries from as far away as New Zealand and should find such local support are wonders."<ref name=":1" /> But it. Mildura has inherited from the Triennial a significant number of permanent public sculptures displayed on the Mildura Arts Centre lawns and around the town.<ref>{{Cite book|last=Scarlett|first=Ken|url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/6943806|title=Australian sculptors|date=1980|publisher=Thomas Nelson (Australia)|isbn=0-17-005292-3|location=West Melbourne, Vic.|oclc=6943806}}</ref> <ref>{{Citation | author1=Mildura Sculpture Triennial (9th : 1985) | author2=Mildura Arts Centre | title=Mildura Sculpture Triennial | date=1985 | publisher=The Centre | issn=0815-1199}}</ref>


==History==
==History==

Revision as of 07:52, 24 August 2021

The Mildura Sculpture Triennials took place between 1961 and 1988. Inaugurated in 1961 as the Mildara Prize for Sculpture sponsored by the Mildara Winery, the next event was renamed the Mildura Sculpture Triennial. It was the first event in Australia that promoted large scale contemporary sculpture and incorporated site-specific installations and performance art in an innovative and often challenging program.[1]

Venue

Mildura, a regional agricultural centre on the Murray River in Victoria and bordering on South Australia and New South Wales was well positioned to attract visitors to the event despite its remoteness; "...the most unlikely place to sponsor the most way-out art exhibition yet held in Australia," (Nancy Borlase in The Bulletin)[2] but as Elwyn Lynn noted; "that the Triennial, in an isolated city of 30,000, should take place at all, should attract fine entries from as far away as New Zealand and should find such local support are wonders."[3] But it. Mildura has inherited from the Triennial a significant number of permanent public sculptures displayed on the Mildura Arts Centre lawns and around the town.[4] [5]

History

Inge King's Sculpture Black Sun 1975. Located between Eleventh and Twelfth Streets, on Deakin Avenue, Mildura, Victoria, Australia. Steel, Painted Black, edition 2 239 X 208 x 72 Collection Mildura Arts Centre.

There were ten Triennials between 1961 and 1988. Eric van Hattum established this first national sculpture survey in 1961[6] and managed the second event in 1964. Artist and critic Elwyn Lynn, noting the innovative work in the 1970 Triennial, conceded "that sculpture exhibitions should be more imaginatively conceived and implemented than those of painting is here beyond conjecture."[3]

Thomas (Tom) McCullough,[7][8] directed the triennials until his controversial resignation in 1978,[1] following which the Mildura Arts Centre and the Mildura City Council recommenced the triennials from 1982, directed by Michael Sourgnes, though at a smaller scale.[1] By then there were alternate national, metropolitan events such as the Australian Sculpture Triennial established by McCullough in Melbourne (1981–1993), ANZART (1981–1985), Australian Perspecta (1981–1999) and the Biennale of Sydney (1973 onwards).

At the establishment of the Triennials in the 1960s, the market for modern sculpture in Australia was limited.[9] Sculptor Jan Brown, who started exhibiting at Mildura in 1967, noted in a 1994 interview that "the triennial...had given artists a chance to have their works seen," including 14 sculptors from the Canberra district exhibiting there in 1988, with an increase to 40 of working sculptors in the Australian Capital Territory.[10]

Expectations of a young growing population entering tertiary education in art schools, art history departments and art teacher training and rapid postwar developments in the Australian cultural sector and its institutions, as Anne Saunders has shown,[11] can be traced in the evolution of these triennial events before, between 1978 and 1982, sculpture came to be no longer the favoured medium of an avant-garde engendering new types of art practice,[12] and by 1981, events of national significance shifted to the metropolitan centres. In his review of the 1982 festival, Sasha Grishin detailed these changes, among them a new concern for the environment and a rejection of deconstruction for figuration;

The change in direction lies in the abandonment of more ephemeral forms of sculpture — in other words, the "twigs and feathers" school seems to have exhausted its once creative dominance. Also there is a general disillusionment in the Anthony Caro-like welded steel constructions as that particular dead-end alley has proven itself unproductive. Quite an exciting development in the use of metal is represented in David Wilson's piece, Place and Time, moving away from his earlier brutality of form, while the work of traditionalists in welded steel like Reg Parker and Robertson-Swann has a decisively dated appearance. The change in direction that Australian sculpture seems to be experiencing is not so much a leaning towards any particular style, but a major change in aesthetic attitudes. If the most important factors to emerge from the present Sydney Biennale are the sense of neo-conservativism in styles, a return to the idea of art as an aesthetic object and a return to the aesthetics of humanism, then these are corroborated by the exhibition in Mildura.[1]

References

  1. ^ a b c d "ART Mildura's festival the most critical yet". Canberra Times (ACT : 1926 - 1995). 1982-05-13. p. 21. Retrieved 2021-08-24.
  2. ^ Nancy Borlase, "Sculpture into landscape," The bulletin.Vol. 095 No. 4856, 26 May 1973, p.45
  3. ^ a b Lynn, Elwyn (1880), The bulletin., John Ryan Comic Collection (Specific issues)., vol. 092, Sydney, N.S.W: John Haynes and J.F. Archibald (published 14 March 1970), pp. 52–3, ISSN 0007-4039, nla.obj-1540905954, retrieved 24 August 2021 – via Trove
  4. ^ Scarlett, Ken (1980). Australian sculptors. West Melbourne, Vic.: Thomas Nelson (Australia). ISBN 0-17-005292-3. OCLC 6943806.
  5. ^ Mildura Sculpture Triennial (9th : 1985); Mildura Arts Centre (1985), Mildura Sculpture Triennial, The Centre, ISSN 0815-1199{{citation}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  6. ^ Mildura Prize for Sculpture; Mildura Arts Centre; Mildura Art Gallery; Mildara Winery (1961), "[article title here]", Mildara Prize for Sculpture / organised by the Mildura Art Gallery and sponsored by the Mildara Winery, Mildura Art Gallery{{citation}}: CS1 maint: date and year (link)
  7. ^ McCulloch, A. (1961). The Mildara Prize for Sculpture. Meanjin Quarterly, 20(2), 217–219. https://search.informit.org/doi/10.3316/informit.780355503631909
  8. ^ McCulloch, Thomas G. (1978). Exhibition exposition : a followup publication to the 1978 Mildura Sculpture Triennial. Tom McCullough, Mildura Arts Centre. Mildura, Vic.: Mildura Arts Centre. ISBN 0-9598621-6-1. OCLC 224923884.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: date and year (link)
  9. ^ Parr, Lenton (1961), Sculpture, Longmans, retrieved 24 August 2021
  10. ^ "A city of sculpture in the making". The Canberra Times. Vol. 70, , no. 21, 718. Australian Capital Territory, Australia. 2 October 1994. p. 22. Retrieved 24 August 2021 – via National Library of Australia.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: extra punctuation (link)
  11. ^ Sanders, Anne Elizabeth (2009), The Mildura Sculpture Triennials 1961 - 1978 : an interpretative history, retrieved 24 August 2021
  12. ^ Huxley, Margaret (1973), Trends in Australian sculpture as revealed by the Mildura Triennial, M. Huxley, retrieved 24 August 2021