Heide Museum of Modern Art unveils major new exhibition exploring the significance of hair in contemporary culture

The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Wednesday, June 26, 2024


Heide Museum of Modern Art unveils major new exhibition exploring the significance of hair in contemporary culture
Hair Pieces installation view, Heide Museum of Modern Art, photograph: Christian Capurro.



MELBOURNE.- Heide Museum of Modern Art has unveiled a new exhibition exploring the complex significance of hair in contemporary culture through a selection of Australian and international works of art. Presented until 6 October 2024, the exhibition titled Hair Pieces brings together historic and recent works encompassing a wide array of media such as painting, photography, video, installation, sculpture and recorded live performance.

For millennia hair has been a resonant and compelling site of meaning, transmitting ideas about gender, mythology, status and power, the body, psychology, feminism and notions of beauty. At once radiant and repellent, and often richly symbolic, it has always assumed a particular importance in relation to the self, history and society. Hair Pieces examines the myriad ways in which artists utilise hair to investigate themes encompassing growth, empowerment and transformation.

Spanning five decades and eight countries, the exhibition features works of art by 38 artists from Belgium, China, Japan, Nigeria, South Africa, United Kingdom, United States, and Australia. Highlights include Cuban-American performance artist Ana Mendieta’s work Untitled (Facial Hair Transplant), which documents the artist methodically glueing individual strands of her friend’s beard to her upper lip. The work forms part of Mendieta’s important experimentations during the early 1970s that involved the artist altering her physical appearance through a range of cosmetic interventions. These intimate private actions and live performances often employed hair and wigs to question and rupture gender constructions and stereotypes.

Also on display is Relation in Time by renowned collaborators Marina Abramović and Ulay, a physically demanding performance work that saw the artists seated back-to-back, with their hair bound together in a tightly formed coil for 17 hours. One of many iconic works that the duo performed together throughout their 12 years of collaborative practice, Relation in Time utilises hair as an intimate extension of the self, an indicator of time and the dynamic impermanence of life. Other performance works featured in the exhibition include British artist Sonia Boyce’s Exquisite Tension, and Bahamian-born artist Janine Antoni’s Loving Care, for which the artist dragged her ponytail saturated in black hair dye across a gallery floor like a brush.

From Belgium, artist Edith Dekyndt’s video work Indigenous Shadow shows what appears to be a shredded and torn flag raised on a makeshift pole. Created from long strands of black human hair, the ‘flag’ was filmed in Côte du Diamant at the burial place of radical poet and philosopher Édouard Glissant. Not far from Glissant’s grave, in 1830, a clandestine merchant ship carrying enslaved people from Africa went aground. Moving in the wind, the seemingly shredded flag performs as a marker of this historical event, and a spectral trace of the millions of individuals from around the globe whose lives were stolen and remain largely unrecorded.

Preeminent Australian artist Christian Thompson’s three channel video installation Heat portrays the hair of three young female protagonists hypnotically floating, free of gravity. The work explores Thompson’s memories of growing up in the desert surrounding Barcaldine in Central West Queensland, capturing the sensation that he associates with being on his country: the dry wind blowing through his hair. Another video work by cross-disciplinary artist S.J Norman titled Magna Mater documents 12 First Nations people who identify as men, having their hair brushed 100 strokes each day over the same moon cycle.

Occupying the Kerry Gardner & Andrew Myer Project Gallery is the work of early career Australian artist Christina May Carey. Carey’s installation resembles a chaotic, precariously balanced home office setup of mobile telephones, and laptop screens, asynchronously showing the same sequence of video of hair being braided and upbraided. Titled Hypnagogia which refers to the sensation of slipping in and out of control of the body, between wakefulness and sleep, Carey’s project is a response to a contemporary feeling of disequilibrium, as boundaries between work and leisure dissolve, and the distinction between screen spaces and the physical body blur.

Heide Museum of Modern Art Senior Curator and Hair Pieces Curator Melissa Keys said: “Intricately socially coded, materially rich and symbolic, hair is everywhere in art and life. Rather than tracing a series of narrow themes the Hair Pieces exhibition samples a wide array of ideas and approaches and reflects on the uncanny, strange and alluring presence of hair and its importance to us.”

Participating artists include: Marina Abramović (USA) and Ulay (USA), Francis Alÿs (MX), Janine Antoni (US), Georgia Banks (AUS), Polly Borland (US), Sonia Boyce (UK), Christina May Carey (AUS), Sadie Chandler (AUS), Edith Dekyndt (BE), Karla Dickens (AUS), Jim Dine (US), Peter Ellis (AUS), Tarryn Gill (AUS), Mona Hatoum (US), Zhang Chun Hong (US), Lou Hubbard (AUS), Jiang Jian (CN), Nusra Latif Qureshi (AUS), John Meade (AUS), Ana Mendieta (US), Hayley Millar Baker (AUS), S.J Norman (US), J.D ‘Okhai Ojeikere (NRA), Patricia Piccinini (AUS), Wes Placek (AUS), C. J Pyle (US), Chuxiao Qu (AUS), Julie Rrap (AUS), Charlie Sofo and Debris Facility (AUS), Christian Thompson (AUS), Kemang Wa Lehulere (SA), Helen Wright (AUS), Ai Yamaguchi (JPN), Shih Yung-Chun (TW), Louise Weaver (AUS).










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