An Ocean Inside

An Ocean Inside is a dynamic exhibition of new work by Jewels Stevens in which she continues her bold exploration of inner worlds. Stevens’ unique visual language is inherently bound to a process of evolution and in this series we see a new found freedom of expression and a deeper understanding of her creativity. These exhilarating ‘internal landscapes’ are profound in their honesty, their impact immediate and visceral. Stevens allows the paint to flow in a symbiotic dance with her subconscious without holding back or censoring her deepest intuition and raw creativity. This powerful transcendental expression realises itself through vivid explosions of colour and subtle gradations of tone reminiscent of moving through many layers of consciousness, at once deeply mysterious and powerfully revealing.

Early Paintings Last Drawings

‘The first time I met Andrew Sibley I was not aware of his extensive reputation. I met Andrew in 1975 as an RMIT student and I was coming of age at the tail end of Whitlam-era experimentation. It was a glorious unhurried time and along with Andrew were Jan Senbergs, George Baldessin, James Meldrum, Peter Clarke and Les Kossatz as his formidable teaching colleagues. I did not yet know that he was a significant Australian artist who from the late 1950’s was regarded as a prodigious talent. Nor had I yet encountered his unique ability as a teaching artist to raise in his students a curiosity for the ironies of life and the psychologically dark terrains of human nature. By the time I had met Andrew he had already moved well beyond the simpler narrative and expressionist impulses of his early works and was completely absorbed in developing ambitious multi-layered human entanglements painted on sheets of Perspex. To us, his work looked all at once powerful, innovative, funny, tender and kind of dangerous. He was a huge figure in our young lives – a mischievous and charismatic force.

By 1980, the earlier 1960’s paintings of Andrew Sibley such as those presented here at Kick Gallery became of increasing interest to our artists’ cohort. Unexpectedly the world of contemporary art began to turn back to painted expressionistic images, utilising the figure once more. The early eighties zeitgeist was such that many young artists world-wide had embraced a version of what became known variously as ‘neo-expressionism’, ‘trans avant-garde’ and ‘bad painting’. For those of us who at the time followed Andrew’s work as ex-students we found a prescient quality in these early works. In particular, there was Andrew’s unwavering commitment to painting itself, to painting the human condition (in the face of dominant formal abstraction and conceptual art) and his obsession with what he referred to half-jokingly as ‘the gestalt moment’. And yet Andrew was not particularly feted or even included in this important wider return to figurative painting. Perhaps with an artist like Andrew Sibley the singularity of style and vision marked him forever as a lone wolf. He was not one for shifting even slightly to align with the times.

Looking back now on a work like ‘Couple’ from 1968 for example, I can see clearly how influential he was for us in terms of marking out the joys and sorrows of human encounter and yet the work seems entirely of its own world. The biomorphic forms, the proscenium-like space and the moment of trepidation before touching another human being are forever his. But also there was also and continuously an underlying sense of acute simple observation. And so, turning to the very late drawings presented here, coming as they have right at the end of a very long life of making, we see the artist re-setting and returning to a much earlier mode of looking and putting. Sad as the circumstances of their making are, these drawings properly close the circle. They are immediate, beautiful and insightful renderings that show to the very end his ever-present desire to draw out inner psychologies. Andrew used to say that ultimately painters make the same picture over and over again. He may just have been right.’

Jon Cattapan | Artist | September 2015

Art Stage Singapore 2015

From January 21 – January 25 2015 Kick Gallery will present the work of Mike Portley, Andrew Sibley & Jewels Stevens at the Art Stage Singapore art fair.

The sublime chiaroscuro work of Portley will be offset by the vivacious colour of Stevens, while the booth will also present 6 works by Sibley from the 1970’s. A presentation of work by an established artist of the calibre of Sibley combined with the new work of Portley and Stevens is set to make the Kick Gallery Booth A1 a highlight of the Art Stage Singapore art fair.

Melbourne Art Fair 2014

At the Melbourne Art Fair 2014 Kick Gallery will be presenting a series of paintings by Andrew Sibley that were created in Melbourne in the early 1970’s and then exhibited in Germany in 1972. This set of works first shown in at Galerie Krupp in Hofheim show a period in Sibley’s career when he fully engaged with one of his most consistent and powerful of themes, his investigations in to the human condition.

Set to be a highlight of the Melbourne Art Fair 2014 Kick Gallery is proud to present an unique selection of avant-garde 20th century paintings by a Modern Australian master.

Pivotal

Pivotal is the second exhibition of the work of Andrew Sibley at Kick Gallery. Having exhibited works on perspex created by Sibley from 1974 & 1976 in his first show, the second series to be exhibited at Kick Gallery are works on canvas, as well as some works on paper on board, created in 1971 & 1972.

Once again this important exhibition highlights this pioneering artist’s exploration of ideas relating to the human condition and people’s relationships to each other. They are at times challenging in terms of subject, on other occasions full of whimsy and humanity, what binds the entire set of works is there unmistakable virtuosity.

The second of a series of exhibitions in the coming years that look back to look forward on how Australian art has developed, Pivotal continues to reaffirm and reassert Sibley’s preeminence as a modern Australian master.

1972 – 1976

1972-1976 is a series of pivotal works on multi-layered perspex made in the 1970’s by Andrew Sibley. This important exhibition once again puts a focus on the contribution that this avant-garde artist has made for over five decades. The period being explored in this exhibition highlights this pioneering artist’s exploration of ideas and use of new materials at a time when formal notions of how art was made were in flux. Sibley shows through his carefully constructed and highly sophisticated works on perspex an ability to be experimental and yet retain aesthetic excellence. The first of a series of exhibitions in the coming years that look back to look forward on how Australian art has developed, this exhibition reaffirms and reasserts Sibley’s preeminence as a modern Australian master.