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Sunday, November 17, 2024 |
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Tolarno Galleries opens an exhibition of works by Tim Johnson |
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Tim Johnson, Modificado 2022, with Daniel Bogunovic, acrylic on canvas, 20 x 25 cm.
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MELBOURNE.- Counterculture comprises small- and medium-scale works which derive their imagery from subjects of longstanding interest to Johnson, including blues music, Tibetan Buddhism and UFOs.
The idea of a counterculture was something I grew up with, says Johnson, who was born in Sydney in 1947 and gravitated towards conceptual concerns early on as an artist.
It was about standing outside the existing system and creating a new culture that was empathetic, peaceful and creative.
As it turns out, many of the things I make art about are like this alternative, non-Eurocentric, initially underground or obscure but eventually widespread.
Johnsons knowledge of, and affection for, early Blues is apparent in a grid depicting 25 legends of the genre, each delicately painted on a 10 x 10cm canvas.
Included are such foundational figures as Leadbelly, Ma Rainey, Blind Lemon Jefferson, Robert Johnson, Memphis Minnie, Lonnie Johnson and Sister Rosetta Tharpe.
While most of the squares are monochrome, colour has crept into several portraits, including those of Janis Joplin and Jimi Hendrix, reflecting advances from black-and-white to colour film in the photographic source imagery Johnson has utilised.
Along with Punk Rock, Blues has been Johnsons music mainstay for decades and he often listens to it while painting.
Robert Johnson influenced rocknroll and Lonnie Johnson influenced jazz, he explains. The blues was appropriated by a white audience as a way of inventing rocknroll, especially through Leadbelly. George Harrison once said: No Leadbelly, no rocknroll.
Just as musicians riff off one another, so do artists, and collaboration has long been a part of Johnsons practice. Included in the show are paintings co-authored with Daniel Bogunovic, a self-taught artist from Los Angeles with whom Johnson has been collaborating for 15 years.
Yamantaka 2022 depicts a Buddhist protector deity. It was created using the pairs paint-and-post method, whereby Bogunovic sends Johnson a canvas on which hes painted a Buddhist figure in the middle and Johnson responds accordingly.
Ive been studying and practising Tibetan Buddhism for more than 30 years, and its become an interesting contribution to my art, says Johnson.
I like the idea of painting as an abstract-expressionist activity but with figurative or recognisable imagery, he says. Im using more colour than usual and brightening everything up. Im also trying to paint straight from the heart a bit more, without research or planning, but rather finding something inside myself.
Other works made collaboratively with Bogunovic include six small UFO paintings on found canvases, and 10 works on paper, titled Entities, featuring flying saucers, aliens and apparitions amid rural landscapes.
Ive been including UFOs in my work for a long time, but just recently the Pentagon established a website to share declassified information about them and its being talked about openly, says Johnson. Once again, something that used to be marginal is now mainstream.
I fuse aspects of different cultures in my works because the imagery is compatible and also because I see parallels between belief systems, says Johnson.
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