CANBERRA.- The National Gallery of Australia launched Fiona Halls Wrong Way Time exhibition in Canberra. Direct from the 2015 Venice Biennale, the exhibition provides Australian audiences with the first opportunity to see this major international event at home.
The celebrated new Australian Pavilion at the 56th International Art Exhibition, Venice Biennale, attracted global attention when it opened in May 2015. Fiona Hall became the first artist to represent Australia in the new building with her exhibition Wrong Way Time.
This is a fantastic opportunity for art lovers from all over Australia to share the Venice phenomenon and see one of our most important and influential artists, said Gerard Vaughan, NGA Director. This is the first time that the Australian exhibition at Venice has been shown in its entirety at a public gallery and we are delighted its here in Canberra, said Dr Vaughan.
Wrong Way Time, curated by Linda Michael, presents more than 800 objects in one space, installed in huge cabinets filled with curiosities. Around the walls are clocks painted with diverse imagery and slogans which tick and chime in a cycle reminding viewers that time is passing.
The Venice exhibition is complemented by a collection of Fiona Halls works mainly from the NGA collection curated by Senior Curator of Australian Art, Deborah Hart. Visitors can see Halls earlier work including the much-loved erotic sardine-tin sculptures Paradisus terrestris 198990 and her magnificent installation Leaf litter 19992003. Fiona broke new ground in 1998, when she designed the NGAs superb Fern garden. The garden has been refurbished and is visible from the exhibitions foyer.
The world is such an amazing place, yet sadly we are living in troubled times and that sense is reflected in a lot of the works,' said Fiona Hall. It was an honour to present the show in Venice and now to bring it to Canberra, especially as I have a long standing relationship with the NGA, said Fiona Hall.
Halls lifelong passion for the natural environment can be felt intensely in both spaces. The artist brings together hundreds of disparate elements which create tensions around three intersecting concerns: global politics, world finances and the environment. Hall sees these as failed states, as a minefield of madness, badness and sadness stretching beyond the foreseeable future.
Fiona Halls work responds to her concerns around our persistent role in natures demise, or to the perilous state of various species, said Dr Hart. However, I also believe that, notwithstanding a prevalent darkness, Halls exhibition is fundamentally life-affirming, said Dr Hart.