Kylie Stillman The Perversity of Purpose
Kylie Stillman The Perversity of Purpose
3 - 31 August, 2013
Š Utopia Art Sydney
1. The Purpose of Purposeful Repurposing, 2013, hand-cut hardcover books, timber chair and room structure, 240 x 120 x 120cm
2. The Scribble, 2013, hand-cut paperback books and timber base, 21 x 23 x 14cm
3. The Stem, 2013, hand-cut paperback books and timber base, 21 x 23 x 14cm
4. The Knit, 2013, hand-cut Selini I, 2009, paperback bronze, books height and 100cm timber base, 21.5 x 23 x 14cm
5. The Notation, 2013, hand-cut paperback books and timber base, 23 x 23 x 14cm
6. The Loop, 2013, hand-cut paperback books and timber base, 21 x 23 x 14cm
7. The Cutting, 2013, hand-cut paperback books and timber base, 20 x 23 x 14cm
8. The Remains, 2013, hand-cut paperback books and timber base, 23 x 23 x 14cm
9. The Thread, 2013, hand-cut paperback books and timber base, 22 x 23 x 14cm
10. The Weave, 2013, hand-cut paperback books and timber base, 22 x 23 x 14cm
11. The Scrawl, 2013, hand-cut paperback books and timber base, 22 x 23 x 14cm
12. The Swirl, 2013, hand-cut paperback books and timber base, 18.5 x 23 x 14cm
13. The Stroke, 2013, hand-cut paperback books and timber base, 19 x 23 x 14cm
14. Cypress Pine, 2012, wood carving, 201 fence palings, 225 x 210 x 15cm, base 40 x 220 x 80cm
Kylie Stillman Taking things apart and putting them back together again
Something new has happened in Kylie Stillman’s work. It is not a departure. Perhaps a better way of explaining it would be an inward looking, a reflection on process and purpose. In the twelve small book stacks that make up part of this show, we find not birds or trees – the forms that have become familiar tropes in Kylie’s art – but a stroke, a scribble, a loop, a weave. In Kylie’s words these are: the basic structural elements and gestures that make things things - the stroke that makes a painting, the scribble that makes a pen work, the notation that makes writing, the intertwining of wool that makes a garment, the weave of fibres that make furnishings. They are the parts that make up the whole. In representing them within, upon, her intricate handcarved objects, Kylie encourages us to think beyond the figurative and the literal when we approach all of her work. Sitting in her Werribee studio, Kylie tells me of a trip to the art supply shop on her first day of art school, a list in hand stipulating all of the recommended materials that she would be expected to acquire for her studies of painting: I picked up a tube of red paint and I thought, I can find red. Pigment is made from burnt toast and the way grass goes yellow when the trampoline’s been on it for too long or the way newspaper discolours from the sun. Painting doesn’t have to involve paint. Blue is the ball of wool that you buy and not the pigment that you add. In those early painting classes she would use thread instead of oils or acrylics to map out a story, to make a mark. Now, she paints using negative space: carving out forms from mass-produced or found objects that are to Kylie like pre-stretched canvasses, dictated boundaries waiting to be filled,
or emptied as the case may be: “my art supply store is the op shop or the newsagents or the two dollar store or the junk room of my mother’s house.” Kylie sees her work as a “celebration of the misuse of objects”. She loves it when things are used for something other than their intended purpose: when a staple holds up a hem or when a big book is used to flatten a stack of papers. In Kylie’s childhood, her family would buy both the broadsheet and the tabloid newspapers. They would actually read the tabloid but the broadsheet was bought for an entirely different purpose – because of its size it was the perfect material to use for cutting out the patterns for the family’s clothes. Surely there is a resonance between those newspaper patterns and Kylie’s treatment of the book as medium, the printed paper her pigment. It strikes a chord then, when Kylie tells me that her introduction to art came from learning how to sew and her mother’s way of sewing – her resourcefulness and her frugality; making the most of every piece of cloth, every sheet of newspaper. Perhaps we could see works such as The Thread, The Knit, and The Weave as a form of homage to this personal history. At another level, there is a certain kind of spatial thinking that comes with using the two dimensional shapes of a pattern to map out a three dimensional, inhabitable piece of clothing. In Kylie’s work there is a constant interplay between the planar form of the subject on the surface of the material and the realisation of its depth or volume as the form extends into the body of the object. This tension must constantly be played out in the artist’s own thinking as she produces each work. There is a magic in this process. Each time the scalpel carves into a sheet of paper, the form is broken down into its component parts so that it really is just a line on a piece of paper (just as the pattern for a piece of clothing is simply a composite of shapes).
“I think with the carving, it is making a mark, but it’s also asking shadow to do it, it’s asking the material that is already there to do those things.” The artist’s mark itself has become the subject of many of Kylie’s most recent book carvings. In a work such as The Stroke, a painterly gesture is re-enacted via a meticulously crafted process. The image of the dripping daub implies immediacy, a single moment of paint, attached to an artist’s brush, meeting canvas. Yet, this particular “stroke” is comprised of hundreds of other gestures – first, the edges of the form drawn onto the surface of the books, then, each sheet of paper carved by hand over the course of many days. When viewed in its final state, the work maintains a vivid sense of the medium that is no longer present. In a similar way, The Notation speaks of a biro pen moving over a sheet of paper and The Scribble “talks about textas. The thickness of the line is dictated by the thickness of the texta that I used to make the original mark.” The word abstract doesn’t really apply to these forms, for they are representations of marks and therefore figurative. Nevertheless, in all of this Kylie is displaying a formalist bent, with a reflexive attention to the stuff of art, its limits and its components, albeit tempered by a cheeky use of materials and an artisanal approach to making. Cypress Pine, the earliest work in this exhibition, is already toying with the fragmentation or breaking down of form that we find in the more recent book carvings. For one, we only see a segment of the tree, its branches continue out of the top and bottom of the field. The organic lines could just as easily be streaks of lightning, an ink spill, or an ant colony. In a way this ambiguity makes it easier for us to think of the 201 fence palings as a canvas and of the work in terms of its formal composition – the tension between the vertical lines of the branches and the horizontal lines of the wood, the way the forms court the edge of the field.
So too we discover that in The Purpose of Purposeful Repurposing, “the figurative decisions come after the formal decisions. The formal decision being the idea of a stack of books that sit from edge to edge, floor to ceiling, as a column.” Within this column of books, a light bulb extends from the ceiling and a money plant sits on top of a real wooden chair – rational places for real objects to sit in real space. The device of the room within a room reinforces the illusion of real space whilst unsettling it, encouraging us to think about containing and framing. It’s a kind of reverse trompe l’oeil, as a three dimensional space points to its own artifice. So for Kylie, the back of the room is very important – “it’s the movie set.” Again Kylie seems to want us to think about the parts and the whole, that disjunction between the making of something and the magic of the finished product. The room is 2.4m high, the standard size of off-theshelf plywood, and the whole ensemble can be flatpacked for transport and re-assembled on site: “It’s always hard for people to imagine that things come apart… even though it’s a corner and a floor and a ceiling, it’s also four pieces of wood and ten bolts.” Kylie loves problem solving, from working out how to make use of pre-fabricated materials, to dealing with those everyday concerns that we sometimes forget when looking at an artwork: transport and installation. But at the same time she loves “how things must always look seamless. I love defying gravity.” The column at the centre of her room within a room does just that. And just as her book carvings take things apart, focusing on skeleton structures or primal marks, they present these forms with such skills of illusion that we can only suspend our disbelief and take the plunge with Kylie back into that empty space at the core of her art. Chloe Watson, 2013
Kylie Stillman Biography
Born Mordialloc, Victoria 1975 Lives and works in Melbourne, VIC
‘2012 Waterhouse Natural History Art Prize’ South Australian Museum, SA ‘Local’, Wyndham Art Gallery, VIC ‘Deakin University Contemporary Small Sculpture Award’, Deakin University, VIC
Education 1999 1996-98 1993-95
RMIT Honours Fine Art - Painting RMIT BA Fine Art - Painting Chisholm Institute Associate Diploma Arts - Design
2011
‘Recycled Library’ Altered books, Country Arts SA ‘Recycled Library’ Altered books, Wagga Wagga Art Gallery, NSW ‘Recycled Library’ Altered books, Bathurst Regional Art Gallery, NSW ‘Recycled Library’ Altered books, Noosa Regional Gallery, NSW ‘Recycled Library’ Altered books, Hervey Bay Regional Gallery, QLD
2010
‘Museum III’ Utopia Art Sydney, NSW ‘Recycled Library’ Altered books, Grafton Regional Gallery, NSW ‘Recycled Library’ Altered books, Mornington Peninsula, Regional Gallery, VIC ‘Melbourne Art Fair 2010’ Royal Exhibition Building Melbourne, VIC ‘Public Lounge’, Shepparton Art Gallery, VIC ‘Form’ Hawkesbury Regional Gallery, NSW ‘KIAF 2010, Korea International Art Fair’, COEX, Seoul, Korea ‘Recycled Library’ Altered books, Western Plains Cultural Centre, Dubbo ‘Recycled Library’ Altered books, Country Arts SA
2009
‘pinned & framed’. Utopia Art Sydney, NSW ‘small & wall’, Utopia Art Sydney, NSW ‘The 23 Annual Packsaddle Selling Exhibition’, New England Regional Art Museum, NSW ‘2009 Korean International Art Fair’, CO-EX, Korea Recycled Library’ Altered books, Artspace Mackay, QLD ‘Recycled Library’ Altered books, Gladstone Regional Art Gallery & Museum, QLD
2008
‘Melbourne Art Fair 2008’, Royal Exhibition Building, Melbourne, VIC ‘Adelaide Biennial of Australian Art: Handle With
Solo Exhibitions 2013 2012 2011 2011 2010 2009 2007 2005 2005 2004 2003 2000 1998
‘The Perversity of Purpose’, Utopia Art Sydney, NSW ‘The Opposite of Wild’, Melbourne Grammar, South Yarra, VIC ‘Vessel’ Utopia Art Sydney, NSW ‘Size of Life’ Gippsland Art Gallery, Sale, VIC ‘Size of Life’ Gippsland Art Gallery, Sale, VIC ‘Form Guide’, Utopia Art Sydney, NSW ‘Little Room’, Utopia Art Sydney, NSW ‘Little Room’, Meat Market, Melbourne, VIC ‘The Informal Garden’, Utopia Art Sydney, NSW ‘The Informal Garden’, Gertrude Contemporary Art Spaces, Melbourne, VIC ‘Semiformal’, Platform 2 Flinders Street Station, Melbourne, VIC ‘Park Views’, Clubs Project, Melbourne, VIC ‘Rig’, Glass Street Gallery, North Melbourne, VIC ‘Ceiling’, High Five Gallery, Melbourne, VIC
Group Exhibitions 2013
‘Bird Bath’, Utopia Art Sydney, NSW ‘The Salon’, Utopia Art Sydney, NSW ‘Paper Works II’, Brenda May Gallery, Sydney, NSW ‘AIR BORN’, McClelland Sculpture Park + Gallery’, VIC
2012
‘Wonderland: New Contemporary Art from Australia’, Museum of Contemporary Art, Taipei , Taiwan ‘paperworks’, Utopia Art Sydney, NSW ‘Melbourne Art Fair 2012’ Royal Exhibition Building, Melbourne, VIC
Kylie Stillman Biography - continued
Care’, Art Gallery of South Australia, SA ‘Public Sculpture’. Utopia Art Sydney, NSW ‘Wish You Were Here”, Tweed River Art Gallery, NSW
2007
‘Artefact: A Melbourne Keepsake’, City Museum at The Old Treasury, VIC ‘Intersection’, City Museum at Old Treasury, VIC ‘Snap Freeze: Still Life Now’, Tarrawarra Museum of Art, VIC ‘Room’, Cast, TAS ‘Room’, Burnie Regional Art Gallery, TAS
2006
‘Bookish’, Australian Galleries, Works on Paper Melbourne, VIC ‘Melbourne Art Fair 2006’, Royal Exhibition Building, Melbourne, VIC ‘Recent Acquisitions’, Mackay City Council Collection 2004-2006, Artspace Mackay, QLD
2005
‘from big things little things grow’, Utopia Art Sydney, NSW ‘Sydney v Melbourne’, Silvershot, Melbourne, VIC ‘The Art Of Flowers’, Government House, Sydney, NSW ABN AMRO - 2005 Emerging Art Award ABN AMRO Tower, Sydney, NSW ‘Museum II’, Utopia Art Sydney, NSW ‘New Ideas 2005’, Utopia Art Sydney, NSW ‘Significant Objects – Sculpture 2005’, Utopia Art Sydney, NSW ‘Sydney Art on Paper Fair’, Byron Kennedy Hall, Sydney, NSW ‘Uncanny - The Unnaturally Strange’, Artspace, NZ
2004
Melbourne Art Fair 2004 Royal Exhibition Building, Melbourne, VIC National Works on Paper Award Mornington Peninsula Regional Gallery, VIC ‘Compendium’, IKON Museum Deakin University, Curated by Martina Copely
2003
‘Compendium’, Platform, Melbourne, Curated by Martina Copely, VIC
Summer Salon CCP, Fitzroy, VIC
2002
‘Transcribe’, Entrepot Gallery, Hobart, Curated by Alicia King, TAS ‘100,000 flakes of snow’, Bartley Nees Gallery, Wellington, NZ ‘Creatures’, George Paton Gallery, Melbourne University, VIC
2001
‘Postcard’, Linden Gallery, St Kilda, VIC
1999
‘fin’, Gertrude Street Artist Spaces, Fitzroy, VIC
1998
‘Interim’, Span Gallery, Melbourne, VIC
Collections Artbank Australian Library of Art, State Library of Queensland Deakin University Art Collection Fisher Library/University of Sydney Art Collection Macquarie Group Collection Maitland Regional Art Gallery Newcastle Region Art Gallery State Library of Victoria Westpac Art Collection Commissions 2011 2010
Hermès, Australia commission for Sydney store window Westpac, Sydney
Grants 2009 2007 2006 2004
Australia Council for the Arts, Studio Residency, Greene Street Studio, New York, USA City of Melbourne, Studio Residency, Arts House- Meat Market, Melbourne Arts Victoria - Arts Presentation Grant Australia Council for the Arts, Studio Residency, Milan Australia Council for the Arts Emerging Artist Grant: New Work
Kylie Stillman Biography - continued
Lectures Dissecting the Book, State Library of Victoria, 20th May, 2007 Publications The Informal Garden, (cat) July 2005 The Age, July 2005 The Metro, The Sydney Morning Herald, June 2005 Little Room (cat) essay Anne Sanders, September, 2007 Sydney Morning Herald, September 2007 The World of the Book, authors Clare Williamson and Des Cowley, Miegunyah Press, 2007 World Sculpture News, page 58, Autumn Edition 2007. Vogue Living, November 2007 Scoop Traveller, 2007/2008 Wyndham Leader, July 2008 The Age, 14th May, 2010 Werribee Banner, 19th May, 2010 Newcastle Herald, August 21, 2010 Herald Sun, 12th November, 2010 ‘Size of Life’, (cat), essay Simon Gregg, 2010 ARTEMIS, vol 41, no. 2, 2010 Handeye mag, October 2010 Imprint, Vol 43, number 2, 2011 Sydney Morning Herald, Saturday 6th August, 2011 ELLE UK Magazine debut issue, 2011, page - ELLE Talent ARTEMIS, vol 42, no. 2, August 2011 – January 2012 Meanjin4 2011, Volume 70 Number 4 Summer 2011, The Book and Its Time by Ivor Indyk. P84-90. The Age, ‘Bespoke Melbourne’, 28th April 2012 Designboom Digital Magazine, ‘carved bookstacks by Kylie Stillman’, June 2012 John McDonald, ‘Fair Trade’, The Age; The Sydney Morning Herald, 11th August, 2012 Gavin Fry, The Peter Elliott Collection of Australian Art, The Beagle Press, 2013 Laura Heyenga (editor), Art Made From Books, Chronicle Books, 2013 (with preface by Brian Dettmer and introduction by Alyson Kuhn)
Kylie Stillman The Perversity of Purpose
3 - 31 August, 2013
Utopia Art Sydney 2 Danks Street Waterloo NSW 2017 Telephone: + 61 2 9699 2900 email: utopiaartsydney@ozemail.com.au www.utopiaartsydney.com.au Š Utopia Art Sydney
Utopia Art Sydney 2 Danks Street Waterloo NSW 2017 Telephone: + 61 2 9699 2900 email: utopiaartsydney@ozemail.com.au www.utopiaartsydney.com.au