Every second Wednesday, Director Paul Greenaway OAM will highlight one work from a GAGPROJECTS represented artist, and another secondary market work of particular interest, available through GAG ART ADVISORY.
Christian Lock
LIT, 2023
Oil, synthetic polymer, pigment, platinum silicone on canvas
160 x 136cm
$12,000
Christian Lock works in the "expanded field" of abstract painting. His past practice has integrated subcultural influences, especially from surf culture, with gestural expression, colour-field painting, collage and assemblage, locating them alongside the metaphysical concerns of early twentieth-century abstraction. His new work presents ambitious experiments with materials, surface, texture, and spray-painted pigment. These are entry points to explorations of intense visual experience, especially colour experience. For Lock, like the early twentieth-century abstractionists, colour brings with it a spiritual awareness. Lock also finds spiritual potential in technologically-mediated flows of energy and information. The colours, grids and geometric elements of his new work draw on these ideas, giving powerful and moving form to ideas that are at once visual, technological and cosmic.
Colour
Lock tells me that the intense blue that he uses in this series comes from the blue colour one can see when you press or rub your closed eyes. Such colour effects are called phosphenes. For some, these colours are just the electrical flickering of the visual system as it is prodded and pressed. For Lock, these colours are a symptom of another reality beyond or outside our physical world.
Jonathan Meese
GEFANGNIS OHNE MENSCHER, SEI LIEB
also TOLLER SCHLUPPER, 2008 -2009
Acrylic, mixed media on canvas
100 x 80cm
$35,000
Jonathan Meese is a German Conceptual artist working within a diverse practice that includes performance, installation, painting, and sculpture. Concerned with themes of power, desire, and identity, Meese often inserts his likeness into his paintings. “I exhume to consume. My body is the reactor in a huge rubbish-recycling-experiment of leaden world and intoxicated images,” the artist has explained of his expressive and animated works. Born on January 23, 1970 in Tokyo, Japan, he studied at the Academy of Art in Hamburg, but left without a degree. He presented one of his early installation works at the first Berlin Biennale, and has since gone on to exhibit at the Stuart Shave Modern Art in London and the Museum of Contemporary Art in North Miami. Over the course of his career Meese has worked in collaboration with a number of important artists included Albert Oehlen, Jörg Immendorf, and Tal R. The artist’s works are included in the collections of The Museum of Modern Art in New York, the Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris, the Sammlung Goetz in Munich, and the Art Gallery of Ontario in Toronto, among others. He currently lives and works between Berlin and Hamburg, Germany.
Meese's personal interests, including horror films, comic books, Outsider Art, and medieval crusades, are often reflected in his works. German Expressionism reflecting social discontent and the horrific realities of war regularly forms the basis for Meese's artwork. While self-portraits are a common component in many of Meese's works, his image is frequently transformed through a variety of characters, including divas and demons. These characters are commonly used to explore the reality of power. As a collective, Meese's works make gripping narratives. Meese is based in both Berlin and Hamburg. - Artnet
Joseph Häxan
Talisman Cave, 2024
Archival inkjet print
80 x 65cm ($2,750 unframed)
Edition of 8 + 2 AP
Joseph Häxan is often described as a composite photographer and retouch artist whose cinematic imagery captures twisted eroticism and bacchanalian indulgence. While this characterisation is not without merit, it only partially captures the depth and complexity of this thought-provoking artist’s work. Häxan’s photographic oeuvre transcends mere sensationalism, delving into darker, more philosophical realms that provoke reflection on the human psyche and the occult.
The grotesque and unsettling scenes Häxan creates often evoke the sense of ritual, satanic rites, and mesmerism, drawing heavily from the symbolism of the occult. His images suggest an atmosphere of saturnalian excess, where the boundaries between the mundane and the mystical, the licit and the illicit, are blurred. These visuals could well serve as illustrations for Heinrich Cornelius Agrippa von Nettesheim's De Occulta Philosophia (The Philosophy of the Occult), a text that seeks to synthesise natural and celestial forces in a unified metaphysical system. Similarly, Häxan’s work reflects a fusion of these domains, intertwining the natural world with the supernatural, and in doing so, creates a tension that is both alluring and disconcerting.
The photograph in question, shot earlier this year in the Alexandra Crystal Cave in southeastern South Australia, has never before been exhibited. While the image invites multiple interpretations, several elements within the scene appear to point toward the artist’s thematic preoccupations. The figure at its centre wears a talisman bearing a five-pointed pentacle—traditionally a symbol of spiritual protection, representing the classical elements of spirit, fire, water, earth, and air. This emblem may also function as a “Devil’s trap,” suggesting a deeper, more esoteric significance.
The figure itself appears to be both hidden and exposed, trapped within the cave’s stony recesses, as though it is fleeing from an unseen force or presence. There is a palpable sense of impending danger, perhaps even an approaching figure, placing the viewer in the position of the intruder, or the one who is about to disturb the sacred or the profane. The ambiguity of the image leaves room for personal interpretation, encouraging the viewer to confront their own perceptions of fear, protection, and the occult.
Ultimately, the interpretation of Häxan’s work remains open, inviting the viewer to engage in a dynamic and personal exploration of its many layers. The image stands as an enigmatic invitation to step into a world where the mystical, the profane, and the human psyche converge.
Sidney Nolan
African Head, 1963
Oil on compositional board
121 x 90.5cm, signed 'N', 'Nolan' lower right
Inscribed verso: 'Head Africa' 1st Jan 1963
Growing up in the sixties my artistic heroes were many, but the top of the Australian list was Sir Sidney Nolan. In 1992, when I launched my gallery, Kym Bonython, who had shown Nolan in the 1960s in Adelaide, kindly put me in touch with the man himself and one of the first exhibitions I had was that of Sidney Nolan’s paintings. Sadly, he wasn’t feeling well enough to travel to Adelaide for the opening and died suddenly during the exhibition period. This painting is thought to have been exhibited at Nolan’s London Gallery, Marlborough Fine Art in 1963.
This unmistakable Nolan painting demonstrates his loose and sometimes frenetic brushwork, often scraped back and over-laid with another coat with somewhat smudged features that nevertheless capture an ‘attitude' in the pose, of a proud Ugandan, cognisant of his country’s newly gained independence.
GAG ART ADVISORY is proud to offer for sale this major work.
Price is available upon application.
Exhibited
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Africa and Australia, Sidney Nolan Trust, Presteigne, UK, August 2008 no.6 titled 'Africa Head, 1st
January 1963' -
Sidney Nolan 'Heads', Sidney Nolan Trust, Presteigne, UK, 2014, no.13 titled 'Head (African) 1963'
Literature
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Lynn, E., Sidney Nolan: Myth and Imagery, Macmillan, London, 1967, p.42
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Curatorial Notes, Africa and Australia, Sidney Nolan Trust, Presteigne, UK, August 2008 illus. (col)
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Turley, A., "Mr Nolan I Presume?", Look AGNSW Magazine, Dec 2014, p.38 & p.39 illus. (col)
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Turley, A, Sidney Nolan's African Journey, Artist Profile Magazine Issue 41 Nov 2017 illus col. p. 123
Provenance
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Purchased from Lady Nolan in 2014 by current owner