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New Acquisitions

eX de Medici The wreckers 2019 Viewed in the light of the devastating pandemic, The wreckers has a startling prescience. Extending across almost six metres of chaos, this powerful allegorical statement was initiated by an impending sense of global calamity. eX de Medici’s miniaturist technique and technical virtuosity draws from her experience as a tattooist. Subverting the conservative medium of watercolour, she applied her detailed brushwork to this large-scale coded interrogation of entwined power and trauma. Over 12 months the artist painstakingly constructed a violent tableau from archived images of vehicle, drone and plane wreckage. With a backdrop of warring flags, the anarchic sprawl is approached through samples of local vegetation and petrol-station flowers. Unfurling along the base is a damning list of ‘the worst people responsible for doing the worst things in the world’. The wreckers is a formidable act of endurance.   By Dr Sarina Noordhuis-Fairfax, Curator, Australian Prints and Drawings

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nga.gov.au

Sanné Mestrom Me & You 2018 Sanné Mestrom speaks to the life of images, exploring how they repeat and recur, grow resonant and endure. Described as ‘gently counter-canon’, her work mimics and subtly undermines the language of modernism, including the sculpture of Constantin Brancusi and his Mlle Pogany 1912/1913. In speaking of the lives of images, Mestrom also touches on the lives of people, and she considers how each inflects the other. She says: ‘In many cases those closest to us are the most difficult for us to see: we are merely mirrors to each other. This indistinction is important to me, because we are so dependent on those closest to us for definition. Without the mirror of another we may cease to exist.’ Me & You will feature in the forthcoming exhibition Know My Name: Australian Women Artists 1900 to Now.  By Elspeth Pitt, Curator Australian Painting & Sculpture (20, 21 centuries)


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THE ART OF GIVING Directors of the National Gallery’s Foundation Board

9min
pages 64-67

PARTNERSHIPS

6min
pages 62-63

GARDEN OF TREASURES The history and highlights of our Sculpture Garden

10min
pages 56-61

A CHAPTER IN PRINT Retiring Senior Curator Roger Butler reflects on helping founding Director James Mollison form the print collection

5min
pages 54-55

VALE JAMES MOLLISON, AO

11min
pages 50-53

POLES APART

1min
pages 48-49

LOANS IN LOCKDOWN What happens when an artwork on loan is temporarily stranded in lockdown?

5min
pages 36-39

COVID ON COUNTRY Coronavirus has left an economic, social and emotional impact on vulnerable Indigenous communities and their arts centres

5min
pages 32-35

OUT OF THE BLUE

10min
pages 40-47

WHEN VIRTUAL BECOMES REALITY Jess Johnson, in New York, and Simon Ward, in New Zealand, collaborated virtually during lockdown

6min
pages 30-31

CREATION IN ISOLATION From embracing TikTok and producing art on toilet paper to virtual galleries, how some Australian artists responded to the pandemic

7min
pages 26-29

NEW ACQUISITIONS

3min
pages 10-11

DIRECTOR’S WORD

4min
pages 6-7

HEART IN THE DARKNESS Bill Henson, who released new works of a pre-pandemic Rome during lockdown, talks isolation and artistic process

7min
pages 22-25

#MUSEUMFROMHOME

7min
pages 12-13

ART CLASS

3min
page 9

CHALLENGE ACCEPTED The Vincent family became an Instagram

3min
pages 14-15

EDITOR’S LETTER

3min
page 8

APPLAUSE Artist Angelica Mesiti, who spent the lockdown in her home studio in Paris, reflects on connection in isolation

3min
pages 18-19
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