Sydney Ball, Canto no IV, 1965, synthetic polymer paint on canvas, Power Collection,听听漏 Estate of Sydney Ball
A major new exhibition at the University of Sydney鈥檚 Chau Chak Wing Museum presents works from one of Australia鈥檚 strongest collections of late modernist art.
Light & Darkness surveys art from the 1960s to the 1980s and features internationally renowned artists from the era such as Bridget Riley, Roy Lichtenstein and Colin McCahon, Michelangelo Pistoletto and Robert Rauschenberg.
The free exhibition draws on the University鈥檚 Power Collection, established in 1967 after J W Power bequeathed his fortune to the University to bring Australians 鈥渋n more direct contact with the latest art developments in other countries鈥. Acquisitions ceased in 1989, shortly before the collection was moved off campus to form the basis of Sydney鈥檚 Museum of Contemporary Art.
Established when most Australian museums and universities were taking a cautious approach to contemporary art, the Power Collection is an exceptionally rich collection.
鈥淭he Power bequest enabled the University to purchase works, which weren鈥檛 being acquired by other Australian institutions at the time,鈥 said museum senior curator Dr Ann Stephen. 鈥淎s a result, we have one of the country鈥檚 rare holdings of major op and kinetic art by artists such as Riley, Victor Vasarely and Takis.
鈥淭he concepts of light and darkness underpin this exploration of the collection.鈥
鈥楲ight鈥 works were a major theme of the 1960s acquisitions of European-based avant-garde artists who sought to free their work from tradition through alliances with science and new technologies. Such utopian optimism collapsed in the face of the Vietnam War, environmental destruction and racism. Robert Rauschenberg, Edward Keinholtz, Richard Serra and Louise Nevelson are among artists who represent this dark turn in the Power Collection.
In the 80s post-modernists took on the cloak of darkness, said Dr Stephen, 鈥渢o symbolise the endgame of modernism or to question avant-garde originality.鈥 By then the collection had been re-orientated to include Australian, Aboriginal, and Maori art.
笔别迟别谤听罢测苍诲补濒濒
听
detail
A Person Looks At A Work Of Art /
someone looks at something 鈥
LOGOS/HA HA 1984
oil on canvas, synthetic polymer paint on wooden frame, synthetic polymer and copper wire
225.0 x 200.0 cm
Power Collection, Chau Chak Wing Museum, The University of Sydney, PW1987.5
鈥淢any artists had also turned to language, often in search of dialogue or a more collaborative space in which to work,鈥 said Dr Stephen. 鈥淎rtists as diverse as Colin McCahon, Ralph Hotere, Peter Tyndall, Jenny Watson and Janet Burchill, all in the collection, use words as a significant part of their art.
Light and Darkness will be exhibited in the museum鈥檚 largest space, the 420-square metre Ian Potter Gallery until September 2022. A companion exhibition of J W Power鈥檚 own work as a prolific cubist, The Human Calculator, is on display on Level 4 of the museum.
The University鈥檚 Power Institute, which continues the spirit of Power鈥檚 bequest through teaching, research and public engagement, will co-present a number of talks on the collection in upcoming months.