Happy late Easter RAYGUN bloggers and don’t forget to swing by the space this week to check out Sal’s show if you haven’t already. We miss you Sal xx
BRAD BUCKLEY (AUS) IN MAY AT RAYGUN
SHARING LOVING GIVING – MAY 2014
Getting ready for Copenhagen!! Stay tuned xx
Richard Serras East West Landscape in the Qatar Desert
SAL RANDOLPH IN SYDNEY AT ALASKA PROJECTS
On Friday night RAYGUN was in Sydney with Sal Randolph. It was our first, one night only ‘pop up’ show in Sydney at ALASKA PROJECTS (Thanks Seb). We loved sharing Sal with Sydney xxx
The next set of images is for Seth (Thanks for lending us Sal xx)
RAYGUN PRESENTS SAL RANDOLPH AT ALASKA PROJECTS IN SYDNEY!!
Venture down to the Kings Cross Car Park this Wednesday night at 6pm to join us for a ONE NIGHT ONLY event!
RAYGUN for the first time is hosting an event in Sydney and it is our great pleasure to present Sal Randolph at ALASKA PROJECTS.
Alaska Projects is located on Level 2 of the Kings Cross Car Park,
9A Elizabeth Bay Rd Elizabeth Bay (directly behind the Kings Cross Police station).
http://home.alaskaprojects.com/
REFLEX Wall Painting Project AUSTRALIA
The first post about the first wall painting project REFLEX Projects, Australia. REFLEX invites up to 3 artists a year to participate in the project. Check it out. www.reflexprojects.org
Reflex is an exhibition site undertaken to demonstrate the varied, complex and extremely broad spectrum of divergent phenomena which comes out of painting. Reflex is solely a wall painting exhibition project; where through the creation of wall paintings, it can lead to an intervention of meaning being established in a site as not a decorative function but as an artistic statement and / or proposition of intention or conceptual statement. Reflex’s aim is to create an exhibition site that displays a wide range of national and international artists and their individual painting concerns. Each year 3 artists will be invited to execute a wall painting, where through this process a dialogue will be created that demonstrates the unity of architecture to wall design (painting) that can be established through each invited artists own personal intensions. The aim is not to display wall painting as decoration but wall painting as expanded painted intent.
Due to paintings expansion and limits, the wall (determined by a buildings architecture) becomes a field of open possibilities (not unlike a blank canvas) however in this field, the laneway, the street, the town, the city, and the meandering passer by all become locked into the subdivisions of colours, geometry and form that at once attempts to exploit the wall (as plane) and also tries and overcome it by expanding on its possibilities into new semi-permanent visual outcomes.
Reflex is situated in the small city of Toowoomba, Qld. The city is situated 125km (77 miles) west of the capital, Brisbane. Reflex is run by two practicing artists Tarn McLean and Kyle Jenkins whose practices are firmly based within methods of painting that investigate the connections between formal and informal, conceptual and visual methodologies of abstraction. They are not curators of the space and as such artists are invited on the basis that they are able to execute any work they wish. It is from this direction that the project is inexistence.
SAL RANDOLPH – Library of Art Expanding Universe RAYGUN edition OPENS!
Sal Randolph’s exhibition ‘Library of Art, RAYGUN edition opened on Friday night! The opening was a smash hit and we just loved having Sal in Toowoomba and at RAYGUN. The installation consisted of three sets of Sal’s Library of Art with special editions for RAYGUN. One set of the volumes were installed on the gallery walls and the other two were placed on the table for visitors to use.
Sal describes the books as an artwork which is also a system with which to create an artwork. The books are filled with a list of 150 words with one word per page. The clearest way of explaining the work is to give an example of how the books might be used. Here goes, if one wished to make a sculpture, they might choose three (or however many) volumes with titles such as material, structure, and subject. The participant opens the books, and is presented with three words (one from each of the different volumes chosen), these three words result in an instruction such as ‘paint Styrofoam flowers’. If the participant likes the instruction they can write it down in the book titled ‘participation’ (which is filling up!).
Two books in this expanded version operated in a different system, the volumed titled ‘biblio’ (a list of books that relate to the subject and ‘anthology’ (a list of instructional text works) are incomplete. Visitors to the exhibition are invited to contribute to these volumes via the additions sheets. There is also space on these sheets to make suggestions for new titles of volumes, and for other comments.
Visitors to the show loved the work and Sal diligently explained the work to people floating around the table. The Library of Expanding Art will ‘pop up’ at ALASKA PROJECTS in Sydney for a one night only show on Wednesday the 9th at 6pm.
Below is a sneak peak of some of Sals adventuring in the last few days. We have had lots of delicious food (thanks Tarn and Kyle Zevenbergen) and conversation (also delicious).
NEW WALL
We realised the wear and tear on the large wall in the space is showing its age after having a few works installed on it, so yesterday we were lucky enough to have the amazing Anthony wave his magic wand and fit a new one. In just hours it will be painted and perfect, ready for hanging again. Thanks Anthony (and Ali) his assistant.
VICENTE BUTRON AND THE IDEA OF FREE EXCHANGE
While we are on the theme this month with Sal Randolphs idea of free exchange, it is interesting to look back at the work of our previous contributing artist Vicente Butron. An engaging idea that both the social practitioner and the painter reference the idea of contemporary art coming full circle from the modernist idea of art as commodity. Possibly the fundamental premise that makes up the foundation of how and why we continue to ignite RAYGUN, giving it life with such informed and brilliant minds. Check out his work titled AUTO-DISSOLUTION / A LIMITED ACTION from his 2010 exhibition at Sydney Gallery Factory 49
Here are Vicentes thoughts from his show with us….
auto-dissolution / a limited action of September and October 2013
Deliquesence briefly…
Throughout its relatively short history in art, those set of values and systems that we call modernism have appeared to strive towards a linear and historical end game. Towards what has been called the post-modern and now, to the dissolute condition we witness. A condition where it desperately clings to converted histories and where it wantonly aspires to include and be included in all things. Where it exists almost solely by virtue of currency, value and exchangeability of any kind.
This is a condition where art no longer simply presents or represents, abridges, challenges or proposes, nor does it any longer afford any significant behaviour that is steeped in ritual. It now almost solely exists by the integrity of its status as a consumable product. This re-positions cultural exchange outside of the artist and the viewer to an exchange between product (and supplier) and the consumer. A state that accounts for the requirements of exchange as being for it’s own sake – a positivistic state that determines it’s principles and meanings only through it’s own systems to the disregard of external or relative influences. Thus, art has become the token consumed and now disempowered of its autonomy.
All this would be fine, if only were it not that art is itself depreciated of it’s cultural potential; of it’s cultural privilege. In as much as we (cultural producers) are willing to presume, all that is left now is for a sense of assessment of it’s condition or indeed – for it’s own dissolution. This is in order for art to flourish independently, to allow art to reclaim any cultural privilege it has lost and to become pertinent and abundant in its effects.
This work here, on one level proposes to fulfill the modernist charter of inclusion and then to go beyond the overworked idea of the readymade as something to be re-instigated and re-presented as art. It proposes to re-situate art and its activities and induct it un-autonomously into that which is not normally regarded as part of its enterprise and to truly make it “everyday”. It claims the routine, commonplace and mundane activities, the daily craft of life as itself the nexus of cultural pursuits. I would like to take the example left by Conceptual Art – where the idea became the work of art and to extend this further – so that we can now begin to consider that it is art itself that is simply the idea.
These prints, reproductions, designs, objects, etc. consist of a sampling of work that I have made within the past year as part of daily, work-a-day life and interests. I do inevitably make the compromise once again here in the way these are re-presented within the ‘framework’ of an artwork by utilizing the white picture frame beloved by Conceptual artists of the 1960s and 1970s. However I try doing so without concession to a contemporary conventional work of art. As indexes, notes almost, this Limited Action asserts that a work of art need not exist exclusively as a conventional art object to be exchanged as commodity. They are not for sale.
As it’s final point I would like this work to assert that in this auto-dissolution, all activities, services and actions are a central to a total art practice and integral to a cultural and visual exchange in itself. I wish to show that the experience of an artwork persists and is prolonged through numerous implications and it’s numerous lives. To paraphrase and extend Kyle Jenkins’ work and statements in his exhibition prior to this here: “If you don’t care, then why think about it?” – to, if you do care then you must think about it.
Rita Carlos for Vicente Butron
Vicente Butron
lives in Sydney, born in the Philippines 1959, migrated to Australia 1973, attended Sydney College of the Arts 1981-1984, exhibited locally and internationally, not too many solo exhibitions, not too many collections, works whenever he can, exhibits when he wants.









