The latest instalment of the museum鈥檚 Contemporary Art Project introduces new works by Sydney-based artist Consuelo Cavaniglia, including a sitewide installation responding to the building鈥檚 interior.
The Contemporary Art Project is an ongoing series commissioning contemporary artists to create new works inspired by the museum's vast collections of art, antiquities, natural history, ethnography, science and historic photography.聽
Previous editions of the project have been exhibited in its dedicated space, the Penelope Gallery. But in seeing through you, opening on Saturday this week, Sydney College of the Arts alumna Cavaniglia was asked to extend her works across the entire museum.
Consuelo Cavaniglia: seeing through you, 2024, hand blown glass, acrylic, courtesy of the artist and STATION. Photo by: David James.
Her site-specific installation will see the museum鈥檚 lantern ceiling transformed with yellow fabric, subtly shifting the light filtering through the building鈥檚 multilevel atrium. On the glass surfaces within the museum, including windows, doors and balustrades, coloured vinyl works shift the experience of the architecture.聽
In the Penelope Gallery, new handmade glass works by Cavaniglia have been created in response to objects from the museum鈥檚 collections, including ancient glass from the Mediterranean. Cavaniglia will also include artworks by two women artists in the centenary of their birth 鈥 Lily Greenham鈥檚 mixed media collage 高清福利片 in visual perception (1962鈥67), Martha Boto鈥檚 light and kinetic work Labyrinthe diagonal (1965) 鈥 and a selection of instruments from the museum鈥檚 scientific collection.
A third component consists of responses from the museum鈥檚 women and gender diverse staff, who were invited by Cavaniglia to speak of their perspective on the museum and their role within it. These stories will feature through the museum as wall labels.
鈥淭hese responses create alternative narratives to the museum鈥檚 more formal voice, reframing the museum,鈥 said Cavaniglia.聽
seeing through you聽builds on Cavaniglia鈥檚 longstanding interest in how space is structured and perceived.
鈥淚鈥檓 interested in how space is structured through its architecture, and through the intangible qualities that shape it, such as hierarchies and politics.鈥
Optical instruments chosen by Cavaniglia to sit alongside her colourful glass works extend what the human eye can see. With lenses and prisms that bend and filter light, they perform literally what Cavaniglia鈥檚 work does metaphorically.聽
鈥淭hey play to my ideas around perception, where you鈥檙e looking from, how we see things.鈥
Consuelo Cavaniglia: seeing through you (installation view), Chau Chak Wing Museum, 2024. Photo by: David James.聽
Cavaniglia said she felt privileged to have the opportunity to respond to the museum鈥檚 collections.
鈥淚t has been great to access artwork and objects through conversations with various curators who have shared their knowledge, insights and expertise.
鈥淭he project has allowed me to return to Canberra Glassworks and take my initial engagement with handmade glass, in 2022, further, testing unexpected and unconventional approaches.鈥
鈥淚t鈥檚 been fantastic to see Consuelo work on a project of this scale,鈥 said Michael Dagostino, Director of the聽Chau Chak Wing Museum. "Her expansive work across the museum is spectacular. We鈥檙e also invigorated by her amplification of authorship through the involvement of museum staff who are often in the public eye but not heard.鈥
Cavaniglia has held solo exhibitions at Perth Institute for Contemporary Arts, Perth/Boorloo; Gertrude Contemporary, Melbourne/Narrm; and University of NSW Galleries, Sydney/Gadigal land. In 2019 she was included in the inaugural Macfarlane Commissions exhibition at the Australian Centre for Contemporary Art. She studied at the University of Western Australia followed by Curtin University. In 2017, she received a Master of Fine Arts, from the Sydney College of the Arts.聽
Consuelo Cavaniglia: seeing through you聽is supported by the Copyright Agency鈥檚 Cultural Fund and supported by the Australian Government鈥檚 Creative Australia.
Hero image:聽Consuelo Cavaniglia: seeing through you (installation view), Chau Chak Wing Museum, 2024. Photo by: David James.聽