SYDNEY.- The
Museum of Contemporary Art Australia (MCA Australia) and the Power Institute at the University of Sydney announce a new research partnership on contemporary art and visual culture.
The projects bold ambition is to establish a new way of conducting and presenting research on art and visual culture. Over three years, the two organisations will identify a set of discrete research projects, digging into the Museums collection, exhibitions and archives, and informed by the ideas emerging from the Power Institutes new Visual Understanding Initiative. This work will be aided by a local and international network of curators, artists, and scholars from across the humanities and sciences. The partnership aims to not only unearth new ideas, but to produce new ways of thinking that will inform both organisations work into the future.
Along the way, audiences will be invited to join the conversation through public lectures, seminars and other events, as well as through publications and digital offerings. In 2023, for example, MCA Australia and the Power Institute will present Image Complex 2023, a free public lecture series bringing together leading thinkers of visual culture from around the world to discuss the subjects of art, visuality and power.
This partnership signifies a renewed alignment between the MCA Australia and the Power Institute, enlivening their shared history of research, interpretation and presentation of contemporary art for broad and diverse audiences.
The organisations both owe their existence to a bequest made in 1962 to the University of Sydney by Australian expatriate artist John Joseph Wardell Power (18811943). The goal of the bequest was to connect the Australian public with the most important ideas in art and visual culture from around the world. This led to the creation of not only the Power Institute, with its public programs and publications, but also the discipline of art history at the University of Sydney, as well as a collection of contemporary art and a dedicated museum to house it. In 1991 that museum became the MCA, today Australias leading museum of contemporary art, dedicated to exhibiting, collecting, and engaging the work of living artists.
Suzanne Cotter, Director Museum of Contemporary Art Australia said: This new partnership with the Power Institute is a natural fit for the MCA Australia which is a defining platform for contemporary art and ideas in Australia. Our two institutions have a shared history through the vision of J.W. Power who believed in the power of art to broaden horizons and inspire artists and the broader public. We are thrilled to be able to bring together what MCA Australia and the Power Institute do best in making contemporary art a visible and accessible catalyst for research and understanding.
Professor, Mark Ledbury, Director Power Institute, University of Sydney said: We are delighted to be partnering with the MCA Australia on research initiatives that will explore fundamental questions of art and visual understanding in the twenty-first century. Were all very much looking forward to working closely with the diverse and brilliant team of curators and staff at the MCA and our collaboration will focus on the vital role contemporary art practice plays in helping us understand how we see the world.
The Image Complex 2023 lecture series includes:
Nick Mirzoeff: The Strike Against White Sight is a Feminist Strike online, Thursday 27 April; Orit Halpern: Smart Power online, Thursday 11 May, Krista Thompson: The Evidence of Things Not Captured; Christopher 'Dudus' Coke and the fugitive photograph in postcolonial Jamaica online, Thursday 3 August and Jack Halberstam: All Fall Down: Post-Industrial Demolition Projects and the Aesthetic of Collapse at MCA Australia, Friday 15 December.
The Museum of Contemporary Art Australia
The Museum of Contemporary Art Australia (MCA Australia) is Australias leading museum of contemporary art, dedicated to presenting, collecting, and engaging with the art of our time. Located on the edge of Sydney Harbour, at Tallawoladah, the land of the Gadigal people of the Eora Nation, MCA Australia provides a vital platform for contemporary art and ideas in Australia and beyond. MCA Australia makes contemporary art and ideas widely accessible through its exhibitions, public engagement, learning, access, and social impact programs. The Museums Collection, including over 4,500 artworks, is the only public collection in Australia dedicated exclusively to contemporary art. Over a third of the Collection is represented by works by Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander artists.
The Power Institute
The Power Institute is a Foundation at the University of Sydney that focuses on generating and exchanging ideas on art and visual culture through diverse forms of research collaboration and public communication. We run one of Australias leading art libraries; curate a regular program of public talks, symposia and workshops; publish award-winning titles under our Power Publications and Powered by Power imprints; work with local and international organisations to develop regional scholarly networks; and provide opportunities for collaborative research and connection through our visiting scholars and residency programs. Our partnership with the MCA is made possible by Penelope Seidler, who has provided seed funding for us to explore a new "Visual Understanding Initiative" (the VUI). The VUI seeks to connect experts in critical looking and creative expression with leaders from a range of fields, such as science, technology, and media, to share new knowledge about how we see and develop a deeper collective understanding of our complex visual world.