SYDNEY.- The Art Gallery of New South Wales (AGNSW), Carriageworks and the Museum of Contemporary Art Australia (MCA) announced four curators and 39 exhibiting artists, collectives and collaboratives for The National 2021: New Australian Art.
The National 2021 is the third edition of the six-year initiative presented in 2017, 2019, and 2021, exploring the latest ideas and forms in contemporary Australian art. Following the success of the initiative, AGNSW, Carriageworks and the MCA have committed to the continuation of The National beyond 2021.
A major collaborative venture connecting three of Sydneys key cultural precincts The Domain, Redfern and Circular Quay the three editions of The National have created career-defining opportunities for 149 contemporary Australian artists. The 2017 and 2019 iterations of The National attracted over 600,000 visitors across the three institutions.
The curators for The National 2021: New Australian Art are AGNSW Curator of Asian art, Matt Cox with AGNSW Assistant Curator of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander art, Erin Vink; independent curator for Carriageworks, Abigail Moncrieff; and MCA Chief Curator, Rachel Kent.
The National 2021 will showcase 39 new and commissioned works by leading contemporary Australian artists from across the country, including, urban and regional centres, as well as remote communities such as the Aṉangu Pitjantjatjara Yankunytjatjara (APY Lands), Yirrkala in north-east Arnhem Land, Zendah Kes (Torres Strait Islands), and Belyuen, on the north-west coast of the Northern Territory.
The exhibition will display a diverse range of works and media including painting, photography, film, sculpture and textiles, as well as installation and performance. As with previous iterations, the 2021 exhibition represents a mix of emerging, mid-career and established artists who will present new and exciting works of ambitious scale. There are overlapping curatorial themes in this large-scale survey of contemporary Australian art, including a focus on the environment, its destruction and our planetary responsibility; global uncertainty; and our relationship to Country, collaboration and inter-generational learning.
Co-curators Matt Cox and Erin Vink said The National 2021 at AGNSW will present 14 artist projects that explore the potential of art to heal and care for fragile natural and social ecosystems.
Just over 50 years ago, the American artist Mierle Laderman Ukeles wrote Manifesto for maintenance art, in which she proposed an exhibition entitled CARE. The National 2021 at AGNSW will consider Ukeles three-tiered approach to care personal, general and earth maintenance with artists reflecting on the relationships between people and nature, as a concept and as lived experience.
The National 2021 at AGNSW will examine different modes of care: how it engenders our relationships with each other, how we navigate these relationships, and in turn the relationships we have with sentient Country. Preferencing Indigenous ways of knowing, seeing and being, the exhibition will explore these ideas of care through varied forms of expression, including languages that are written, spoken or expressed by the body, said Cox and Vink.
Over 40 artists are involved in producing the 13 projects featured in The National 2021 at Carriageworks. Curator Abigail Moncrieff said that the artists selected for Carriageworks respond to the key issues of our time emphasising sociality, collaborative enquiry and works that speak to history and experiences of place.
The artists are connected across generations and brought together by a spirit of collaboration. Embedded within the collaborative relationships intrinsic to the selected artists, a constellation of networks and affinities play out across the space. With an attention to the present moment, many of the works consider responsibility and lived experience through psychological and intuitive responses, alongside some of the most urgent and activist voices from around Australia, said Moncrieff.
Thirteen artists consider diverse approaches to the environment, storytelling and inter-generational learning through their works in The National 2021 at the MCA. Drawing on natural materials and processes, as well as found objects and detritus, they explore notions of planetary caretaking, and our relationship to place in an era of dramatic change.
MCA Chief Curator, Rachel Kent said, Unseen physical forces wind, gases, emissions power some works, while others transform plant matter, kangaroo teeth, echidna quills and plastic waste into powerful statements. Womens practice is central to The National 2021 at the MCA, explored through diasporic and familial histories, labour and learning, and wider mythological narratives. Symbiosis in nature, revealed through the co-habitation of diverse creatures (termites, ants, birds and their eggs) in the termite mounds of north-east Arnhem Land, is an enduring motif in the exhibition, demonstrating patterns of connection and the balance of all things in the natural world.
The National 2021: New Australian Art opens on 26 March 2021 at the AGNSW, Carriageworks and the MCA. Entry to the exhibition is free at the three institutions.